Friday 26th April 2024

    On the Link Between Great Thinking and Obsessive Walking


    From Charles Darwin to Toni Morrison, Jeremy DeSilva Looks at Our Need to Move

    Charles Darwin was an introvert. Granted, he spent almost five years traveling the world on the Beagle recording observations that produced some of the most important scientific insights ever made. But he was in his twenties then, embarking on a privileged, 19th-century naturalist's version of backpacking around Europe during a gap year. After returning home in 1836, he never again stepped foot outside the British Isles.

    He avoided conferences, parties, and large gatherings. They made him anxious and exacerbated an illness that plagued much of his adult life. Instead, he passed his days at Down House, his quiet home almost twenty miles southeast of London, doing most of his writing in the study. He occasionally entertained a visitor or two but preferred to correspond with the world by letter. He installed a mirror in his study so he could glance up from his work to see the mailman coming up the road - the 19th-century version of hitting the refresh button on email.

    Darwin's best thinking, however, was not done in his study. It was done outside, on a lowercase d-shaped path on the edge of his property. Darwin called it the Sandwalk. Today, it is known as Darwin's thinking path.

    Continued here

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