
From Here to There
The Art and Science of Finding and Losing Our Way
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ISBN 9780674260412
Publication date: 08/17/2021
A Wired Most Fascinating Book of the Year
“An important book that reminds us that navigation remains one of our most underappreciated arts.”
—Tristan Gooley, author of The Lost Art of Reading Nature’s Signs
“If you want to understand what rats can teach us about better-planned cities, why walking into a different room can help you find your car keys, or how your brain’s grid, border, and speed cells combine to give us a sense of direction, this book has all the answers.”
—The Scotsman
How is it that some of us can walk unfamiliar streets without losing our way, while the rest of us struggle even with a GPS? Navigating in uncharted territory is a remarkable feat if you stop to think about it. In this beguiling mix of science and storytelling, Michael Bond explores how we do it: how our brains make the “cognitive maps” that keep us orientated and how that anchors our sense of wellbeing. Children are instinctive explorers, developing a spatial understanding as they roam. And yet today few of us make use of the wayfinding skills that we inherited from our nomadic ancestors.
Bond tells stories of the lost and found—sailors, orienteering champions, early aviators—and explores why being lost can be such a devastating experience. He considers how our understanding of the world around us affects our psychology and helps us see how our reliance on technology may be changing who we are.
“Bond concludes that, by setting aside our GPS devices, by redesigning parts of our cities and play areas, and sometimes just by letting ourselves get lost, we can indeed revivify our ability to find our way, to the benefit of our inner world no less than the outer one.”
—Science
“A thoughtful argument about how our ability to find our way is integral to our nature.”
—Sunday Times
Praise
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The abilities that are cultivated in wayfinding—imagining things from different viewpoints, moving the mind backward and forward in time, seeing situations from other perspectives, weighing alternatives subtly against one another before making the best decisions, seeking information from others and giving it freely in return—might be the same abilities that contribute to a resilient, equitable community or polity. If this is wayfinding, then we need it now more than ever.
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One of the most fascinating books I have read for a long while…If you want to understand what rats can teach us about better-planned cities, why walking into a different room can help you find your car keys, or how your brain’s grid, border, and speed cells combine to give us a sense of direction, this book has all the answers.
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Fascinating…Makes a compelling case that our ancient abilities to get from A to B aren’t just a matter of geography…Bond is not only interested in how we find our way, but also in how we get lost and how it affects us.
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At the heart of this book is a detailed account of the neuroscience of navigation. It is fascinating…Ultimately, ‘we are spatial beings’ and [From Here to There] skillfully and at times movingly makes the case for how deeply that is true.
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An excellently researched popular science book which explains how people—including experienced travelers—get lost, and why some individuals have superior navigational skills than others.
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Bond guides readers through the neurological research and anecdotal tales that show how the brain supplies the equipment upon which our species has built its wayfinding skills…He concludes that, by setting aside our GPS devices, by redesigning parts of our cities and play areas, and sometimes just by letting ourselves get lost, we can indeed revivify our ability to find our way, to the benefit of our inner world no less than the outer one.
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Fascinating…He explains why people don’t get lost more often, how brains makes ‘cognitive maps,’ and how an ‘understanding of the world around us affects our psychology and behavior.’…Adventure-loving readers will be richly rewarded.
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A scientifically rich look at how humans manage to get around in the world.
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An important book that reminds us that navigation remains one of our most underappreciated arts.
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A fascinating excursion into the very nature of exploration. Absorbing stuff, for armchair travelers and rough ’n’ tough adventurers alike.
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In the modern world of road signs and GPS, it is easy to ignore our natural navigational instincts. I hope this book will inspire people to explore and experiment with those abilities, for if they do, they will be in for a wonderful surprise.
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A fascinating and engaging look at how we navigate, from the first humans to modern-day hikers zombified by overuse of GPS. Bond has collected in one place many of the important studies on wayfinding, with riveting anecdotes of real situations where life or death hangs in the balance.
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[An] absorbing exploration of the intersection of neuroscience and geography.
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A thoroughly engaging book, essential reading for anyone who regularly spends time outdoors or wishes to better understand how our brains make sense of the spatial cues in the diverse environments which we pass through.
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A fascinating exploration of how we learn to find our way as children and how we may risk unlearning it from lack of use thanks to GPS or from the damage of Alzheimer’s Disease. Through that arc of life, Bond explores the different ways we think about finding our way and what parts of the brain are likely to be involved…Illuminating.
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Highly engaging…Bond makes a compelling case for why the reader should become more interested not only in avoiding becoming lost, but also in enjoying the experience of getting lost!
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We are biologically hardwired to orient ourselves in space, but a lot can go wrong with the system—which is, in some ways, even more interesting…But Bond also warns of the potential to squander our evolutionarily endowed spatial awareness through pure neglect. An era of GPS and self-driving vehicles may be convenient but also profoundly forgettable.
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Bond invites us to ditch the GPS and follow him on a wayfinding adventure through evolutionary history, cultural anthropology, and cognitive neuroscience to discover why the ability to navigate is so critically important to the human condition.
Author
- Michael Bond is a science writer and former Senior Editor at New Scientist. His work has appeared in Nature, Aeon, Discover, the New York Times, Foreign Policy, Financial Times, and elsewhere. His book The Power of Others: Peer Pressure, Groupthink, and How the People Around Us Shape Everything We Do won the British Psychology Society Science Book of the Year Award.
Book Details
- 304 pages
- 5-1/2 x 8-1/4 inches
- Belknap Press
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