From the Outside Looking in At the Inside Looking Out

&dquo;The Image&dquo; is back. It retumed to psychology by a side entrance and its conceptual foot seems firmly wedged in the door. Within geography, however, the burgeoning field of environmental perception provided a clear road for the incorporation of imagery and its baggage: borrowed methodology, a pot-pourri of concepts, and liberal doses of borrowed theory. The way ought to have been paved much earlier in the century. In 1913, C. C. Trowbridge, in his &dquo;Fundamental Methods of Orientation and Imaginary Maps,&dquo; introduced &dquo;ego-centric&dquo; and &dquo;domicentric&dquo; as terms denoting the two modes of orientation he observed. This is