Walking is an activity that always unfolds within a certain landscape. Tim Ingold has used the notion of “taskscape” to denote pragmatic uses of terrain. Whilst walking, we come to intersect with a variety of taskscapes. As Julia Tanney has highlighted, formal language can only get us so far when thinking about spontaneous, non-theoretical and non-representational activities. Borrowing Gilbert Ryle’s distinction between “knowing that” and knowing how”, I argue for a concept of walking that does not privilege intentions. When somebody walks, they melt into a taskscape not entirely of their own design. Mind is inherently ecological. It is enacted within a certain ecology, and is actually inseparable from its environment. Mind is the sum of in...
Despite its importance to how humans inhabit their environments, walking has rarely received the att...
Walking at first appears to be a relatively simple, mundane behavior that should pose no great puzzl...
Walking is an everyday practice for able-bodied folk. Yet it can cultivate much more than getting yo...
In the second half of the twentieth century, habit had received little attention in the cognitive sc...
Walking is one of humankind’s most basic acts. Yet, beyond its everyday utility and purposefulness, ...
Walking methods or accompanied visits are increasingly being used to investigate people?s encounters...
This book’s keywords of re-enactment, replication and reconstruction pose a distinction between an o...
The field of Artificial Intelligence, which started roughly half a cen- tury ago, has a turbulent hi...
The aim of this paper is to consider cognition as a special type of movement by emphasising the impo...
Sweet Waters: walking as epistemology. A walking arts practice exploring intra-action of body an...
A widely shared assumption in the literature about skilled motor behavior is that any action that is...
Using Tim Ingold’s (2011) assertion that walking provides the opportunity for 'mobilising all of our...
This book explores walking as a method of research and practice in the humanities and creative arts,...
ABSTRACTIn this paper, we propose to redefine the classical studies of urban trails and wanderings b...
What role do our sensory experiences and bodily experiences play when we saunter in a landscape? As ...
Despite its importance to how humans inhabit their environments, walking has rarely received the att...
Walking at first appears to be a relatively simple, mundane behavior that should pose no great puzzl...
Walking is an everyday practice for able-bodied folk. Yet it can cultivate much more than getting yo...
In the second half of the twentieth century, habit had received little attention in the cognitive sc...
Walking is one of humankind’s most basic acts. Yet, beyond its everyday utility and purposefulness, ...
Walking methods or accompanied visits are increasingly being used to investigate people?s encounters...
This book’s keywords of re-enactment, replication and reconstruction pose a distinction between an o...
The field of Artificial Intelligence, which started roughly half a cen- tury ago, has a turbulent hi...
The aim of this paper is to consider cognition as a special type of movement by emphasising the impo...
Sweet Waters: walking as epistemology. A walking arts practice exploring intra-action of body an...
A widely shared assumption in the literature about skilled motor behavior is that any action that is...
Using Tim Ingold’s (2011) assertion that walking provides the opportunity for 'mobilising all of our...
This book explores walking as a method of research and practice in the humanities and creative arts,...
ABSTRACTIn this paper, we propose to redefine the classical studies of urban trails and wanderings b...
What role do our sensory experiences and bodily experiences play when we saunter in a landscape? As ...
Despite its importance to how humans inhabit their environments, walking has rarely received the att...
Walking at first appears to be a relatively simple, mundane behavior that should pose no great puzzl...
Walking is an everyday practice for able-bodied folk. Yet it can cultivate much more than getting yo...