Covering interesting and varied philosophical terrain, Cycling - Philosophy for Everyone explores in a fun but critical way the rich philosophical, cultural, and existential experiences that arise when two wheels are propelled by human energy. Incorporates or reflects the views of high-profile and notable past-professional cyclists and insiders such as Lennard Zinn, Scott Tinley, and Lance Armstrong Features contributions from the areas of cultural studies, kinesiology, literature, and political science as well as from philosophers Includes enlightening essays on the varieties of the cycling experience, ranging from the ethical issues of success, women and cycling, environmental issues of commuting and the transformative potential of cycling for personal growth Shows how bicycling and philosophy create the perfect tandem Includes a foreword by Lennard Zinn, author and owner of Zinn Cycles Inc.
Ein Buch voller Kurzgeschichten über die vielen Facetten des Radfahrens – mal inspirierend, mal etwas sperrig. Einige Geschichten sind stark philosophisch geprägt, was das Lesen stellenweise trocken und mühsam gemacht hat. Erst gegen Ende wurde es für mich interessanter. Wer das Radfahren nicht nur als Sport, sondern als Lebensphilosophie betrachtet und Lust auf tiefere Gedanken hat, könnte Freude daran finden. Wer eher eine leichte, unterhaltsame Lektüre sucht, könnte sich schwer damit tun. Ich persönlich werde es nicht noch einmal lesen, obwohl Radfahren eine große Rolle in meinem Leben spielt
<2012, library copy> A vibrant offering of creative essays on cycling that hit philosophical cord, pregnant with lucid language, e.g.,
“The standard bike is a piece of low tech, the nearly divine epitome of sustainability, and an absolutely necessity when cities have to be rethought and redesigned without the present profusion of noisy, space-hogging, energy-consuming cars. In contrast to the several years of gasoline-engine monotheism and tailpipes, the cycling polytheism will open many possibilities of otherness and gliding unpredictable processes.” (32)
Shared experiences from the essayist, e.g.,
‘On one 80-mile ride in a rainstorm I remember feeling like a mechanism, tucked in rhythmic pistons, water sluicing over like machine oil, hammering out the miles. There was a sort of perverse pride I felt, riding all day in the cold rain and getting coated in road grit. It was only through obedience to the implicit orders of cycling that I could learn its virtues, the silent, solitary, almost survivalist nature of riding far from home. To ride is to reduce life to simplicity, with no other demands but to keep pedaling. “Why should we live with such hurry and waste life?” Thoreau writes in Walden. Simplify, simplify.’ (164)
A mixed bag. Some really excellent philosophical pieces that really made me think, using cycling as a subject and material for philosophy, but some weak ones as well that were more focused on making a strained analogy between cycling and philosophy. I will be interested to see if I think about my cycling differently as a result of reading it.
I suffered many chapters with their horrendous puns and the editors’ efforts at making everything somehow a forced analogy with cycling. A few chapters are beautifully written and truly reflect the title.
A collection of essays covering a wide range of things around cycling, from commuting by bike in urban environments to professional cycling, doping and bike packing. The topics and styles were pretty much hit or miss to me.
Die Tour de France wird, anders als andere große Sportereignisse, auf ganz normalen Straßen ausgetragen. Eine Straße, die sonst von Bauern auf ihrem Weg zum Weinberg passiert wird, eine Autobahn für den Weg zu Arbeit, ein Gebirgspass für die Wochenendurlauber, ein Verkehrskreisel in der Ortschaft – all diese Orte werden für einen kurzen Moment zu geheiligtem Boden […].
Where did they find so many philosopher-bikers? You fell the breeze on your face as you wheel across this collection of articles about cycling - urban, mountain, road. Lots of information, great stories, and of course philosophy-on-a-saddle. Less than 24 hours after turning the last page, I was buying a new bike.
This book is fine. Using the word "philosophy" is pretty generous. I would call this a collection of short reflections at best. I'm just getting back into cycling and my motivation is sky high. I'm ready to gobble up anything even remotely good. And this book was just "meh."
Maybe too much "racer consciousness" here for my personal liking. I'm considering a blog post reflecting my own "bicycling philosophy" in coming weeks.