ABSTRACT

Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, Virginia Woolf, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, André Breton, Rousseau, Simone de Beauvoir: who could imagine a better group of walking companions? In this engaging and invigorating book, Bruce Baugh takes us on a philosophical tour, following in the footsteps and thoughts of some great philosophers and thinkers.

How does walking reveal space and place and provide a heightened sense of embodied consciousness? Can walking in André Breton’s footsteps enable us to "remember" Breton’s experiences? A chapter on Sartre and Beauvoir investigates walking in relation to anxiety and our different ways of responding to our bodies. Walking in the Quantocks, Baugh seeks out the connection between Coleridge’s walking and his poetic imagination. With Rousseau and Nietzsche, he examines the link between solitary mountain walks and great thoughts; with Kierkegaard, he looks at the urban flâneur and the disjunction between outward appearances and spiritual inwardness. Finally, in Sussex and London, Baugh explores how Virginia Woolf transposed a Romantic nature pantheism to London in Mrs. Dalloway.

Philosophers’ Walks provides a fresh and imaginative reading of great philosophers, offering a new way of understanding some of their major works and ideas.

chapter 1|15 pages

Getting to know the neighbourhood

chapter 2|13 pages

Ambulo ergo sum

The mind-body problem in Gassendi and Descartes

chapter 3|26 pages

Walking in André and Nadja's footsteps

A reminiscence

chapter 4|21 pages

A closer walk with Sartre and Beauvoir

The exemplarity of walking in Being and Nothingness

chapter 5|37 pages

Coleridge, or the ambulatory imagination

chapter 6|35 pages

Kierkegaard, the flâneur of Copenhagen

chapter 7|56 pages

Rousseau and Nietzsche

Solitude and the pathos of distance

chapter 9|4 pages

Coda

Ambulo ergo sum (reprise)