Correct option is D
Strabo, an ancient Greek geographer and historian, is not considered a humanistic geographer. Humanistic geography focuses on the human experience, cultural perceptions, and the meaning people attach to places. It emphasizes understanding the relationship between humans and their environment, often integrating philosophy, history, and subjective human experience into geographic studies.
Information Booster:
- Humanistic Geography emphasizes the subjective and qualitative aspects of geography, focusing on human values, experiences, and the meanings attached to places.
- Yi-Fu Tuan is known for his theories on "topophilia," the emotional bond people form with places.
- David Harvey, though often associated with Marxist geography, also contributed to humanistic geographic thought by focusing on human understanding of space and place.
- Kropotkin contributed to the understanding of human society's development in relation to geography and the concept of mutual aid, especially in his studies of human behavior and cooperation in societies.
- Strabo, while being an important geographer, focused more on objective geographical descriptions of the known world rather than the subjective, human-centered approach of humanistic geography.