How Walking Fosters Creativity: Stanford Researchers Confirm What Philosophers and Writers Have Always Known
A certain Zen proverb goes something like this: “A five year old can understand it, but an 80 year old
cannot do it.” The subject of this riddle-like saying has been described as “mindfulness”—or being
absorbed in the moment, free from routine mental habits. In many Eastern meditative traditions,
one can achieve such a state by walking just as well as by sitting still—and many a poet and teacher
has preferred the ambulatory method.
cannot do it.” The subject of this riddle-like saying has been described as “mindfulness”—or being
absorbed in the moment, free from routine mental habits. In many Eastern meditative traditions,
one can achieve such a state by walking just as well as by sitting still—and many a poet and teacher
has preferred the ambulatory method.
This is equally so in the West, where we have an entire school of ancient philosophy—the “peripatetic“
—that derives from Aristotle and his contemporaries’ penchant for doing their best work while in
leisurely motion. Friedrich Nietzsche, an almost fanatical walker, once wrote, “all truly great thoughts
are conceived by walking.” Nietzsche’s mountain walks were athletic, but walking—
Frédéric Gros maintains in his A Philosophy of Walking—is not a sport; it is “the best way to
go more slowly than any other method that has ever been found.”
—that derives from Aristotle and his contemporaries’ penchant for doing their best work while in
leisurely motion. Friedrich Nietzsche, an almost fanatical walker, once wrote, “all truly great thoughts
are conceived by walking.” Nietzsche’s mountain walks were athletic, but walking—
Frédéric Gros maintains in his A Philosophy of Walking—is not a sport; it is “the best way to
go more slowly than any other method that has ever been found.”
Gros discusses the centrality of walking in the lives of Nietzsche, Rimbaud, Kant, Rousseau,
and Thoreau. Likewise, Rebecca Solnit has profiled the essential walks of literary figures such
as William Wordsworth, Jane Austen, and Gary Snyder in her book Wanderlust, which argues
for the necessity of walking in our own age, when doing so is almost entirely unnecessary most
of the time. As great walkers of the past and present have made abundantly clear—anecdotally at
least—we observe a significant link between walking and creative thinking.
and Thoreau. Likewise, Rebecca Solnit has profiled the essential walks of literary figures such
as William Wordsworth, Jane Austen, and Gary Snyder in her book Wanderlust, which argues
for the necessity of walking in our own age, when doing so is almost entirely unnecessary most
of the time. As great walkers of the past and present have made abundantly clear—anecdotally at
least—we observe a significant link between walking and creative thinking.
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More generally, writes Ferris Jabr in The New Yorker, “the way we move our
bodies further changes the nature of our thoughts, and vice versa.”
Applying modern research methods to ancient wisdom has allowed psychologists
to quantify the ways in which this happens, and to begin to explain the reasons
why. Jabr summarizes the experiments of two Stanford walking researchers, Marily Oppezzo and her mentor Daniel Schwartz, who found that almost two hundred
students tested showed markedly heightened creative abilities while walking.
Walking, Jabr
writes in poetic terms, works by “setting the mind adrift on a frothing
sea of thought.” (Hear Dr. Oppezzo discuss her study in a Minnesota public radio interview above.)
bodies further changes the nature of our thoughts, and vice versa.”
Applying modern research methods to ancient wisdom has allowed psychologists
to quantify the ways in which this happens, and to begin to explain the reasons
why. Jabr summarizes the experiments of two Stanford walking researchers, Marily Oppezzo and her mentor Daniel Schwartz, who found that almost two hundred
students tested showed markedly heightened creative abilities while walking.
Walking, Jabr
writes in poetic terms, works by “setting the mind adrift on a frothing
sea of thought.” (Hear Dr. Oppezzo discuss her study in a Minnesota public radio interview above.)
Oppezzo and Schwartz speculate that “future studies would likely determine a complex pathway
that extends from the physical act of walking to physiological changes to the cognitive control
of imagination.” They recognize that this discovery must also account for such variables as when
one walks, and—as so many notable walkers have stressed—where. Researchers at the University of Michigan have approached the where question in a paper titled “The Cognitive Benefits of Interacting
with Nature” that documents a study in which, writes Jabr, “students who ambled through an
arboretum improved their performance on a memory test more than students who
walked along city streets.”
that extends from the physical act of walking to physiological changes to the cognitive control
of imagination.” They recognize that this discovery must also account for such variables as when
one walks, and—as so many notable walkers have stressed—where. Researchers at the University of Michigan have approached the where question in a paper titled “The Cognitive Benefits of Interacting
with Nature” that documents a study in which, writes Jabr, “students who ambled through an
arboretum improved their performance on a memory test more than students who
walked along city streets.”
One wonders what James Joyce—whose Ulysses is built almost entirely on a
scaffolding of walks around Dublin—would make of this. Or Walter Benjamin,
whose concept of the flâneur, an archetypal urban wanderer, derives directly
from the insights of that most imaginative decadent poet, Charles Baudelaire.
Classical walkers, Romantic walkers, Modernist walkers—all recognized the creative importance of this simple movement in time and space, one we work so hard to
master in our first years, and sometimes lose in later life if we acquire it.
Going for a walk, contemporary research confirms—a mundane activity far too
easily taken for granted—may be one of the most salutary means of achieving
states of enlightenment, literary, philosophical, or otherwise, whether we
roam through ancient forests, over the Alps, or to the corner store.
scaffolding of walks around Dublin—would make of this. Or Walter Benjamin,
whose concept of the flâneur, an archetypal urban wanderer, derives directly
from the insights of that most imaginative decadent poet, Charles Baudelaire.
Classical walkers, Romantic walkers, Modernist walkers—all recognized the creative importance of this simple movement in time and space, one we work so hard to
master in our first years, and sometimes lose in later life if we acquire it.
Going for a walk, contemporary research confirms—a mundane activity far too
easily taken for granted—may be one of the most salutary means of achieving
states of enlightenment, literary, philosophical, or otherwise, whether we
roam through ancient forests, over the Alps, or to the corner store.
http://www.openculture.com/2015/07/how-walking-fosters-creativity.html
posted by Satish Sharma at 12:43
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