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Philosophy Walk: On Travel
September 28 @ 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
FreeWhat We’ll Explore
According to urban legend, some famous novelist (maybe Tolstoy or Dostoyevski?) once quipped that there are only two stories: “A stranger comes to town” and “Someone goes on a journey.”
Regardless of who first said it, there’s something to the notion that travelling is essential, both to the ways we live, and to the stories we tell to help make sense of those lives.
In this walk, we’ll explore some of the ways that travel can be a space of encounter, transformation, and meaning. We’ll compare modern experiences of travel with traditional theories and practices, including:
- the deliberate, mindful walking of philosophers across the ages, from Aristotle (whose school became known as the “Peripatetics,” literally, “the people who walk around”) to Henry David Thoreau
- the practice of pilgrimage in literature and in human life, from Chaucer and the traditional travels that inspired the Canterbury Tales, to contemporary spiritual journeys to shrines, temples, and other numinous sites around the world
- the traditional account of human beings as “self-movers,” in that we’re choosers and initiators of action and motion, not just passively getting bounced along by external forces.
As we walk and talk together throughout the morning, we’ll think through what each of these three case studies can illuminate for us, regarding contemporary practices of travel:
- How might different approaches to travelling enhance (or impede) our fundamental human capacities and abilities?
- How can travel create (or obstruct) opportunities for meaningful, transformative encounters?
- In what ways can the journey itself — or the even the mode in which we travel — be just as significant as the destination, or even more so?
- And when we travel — whether close to home or to exotic destinations, whether as a vacation or as part of our daily routine — how can we dance between purposeful planning & mindful openness to the unexpected?
When
Saturday, September 28th from 10:00am-1:00pm
Where
Spring Meadow Lake (Our group will meet in the main/North side of the lot at the far end of the entrance)
RSVP
Cost
FREE (Donations appreciated)
Other
Wear weather appropriate attire & comfortable shoes
Walk Leader
David Nowakowski is a philosopher and educator in the Helena area whose professional work is dedicated to helping people of all ages and backgrounds access, understand, and apply the traditions of ancient philosophy to their own lives. David began studying ancient philosophies and classical languages in 2001, and has continued ever since. A scholar of the philosophical traditions of the ancient Mediterranean (Greece, Rome, and North Africa) and of the Indian subcontinent, reading Sanskrit, Latin, and classical Greek, he earned his Ph.D. in philosophy from Princeton University in 2014. His work has appeared in a variety of scholarly journals, including Philosophy East & West, Asian Philosophy, and the Journal of Indian Philosophy, as well as in presentations to academic audiences at Harvard, Columbia University, the University of Toronto, Yale-NUS College in Singapore, and elsewhere.
After half a decade teaching at liberal arts colleges in the northeast, David chose to leave the academy in order to focus his energies on the transformative value of these ancient philosophical and spiritual traditions in his own life and practice, and on building new systems of education and community learning that will make this rich heritage alive and available to others.
A hermit by nature and by committed choice, he balances contemplative solitude with his active work in teaching, counseling, and the healing arts. David can be reached at [email protected] or via his personal website.
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