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The Art of Way Finding (2/2)
<!--HTML-->In modern era we've become accustomed to instantaneous transfer of information filtered by applications that act as a kind of guardian of information. In the realm of finding one’s way, we use GPS and devices that take us from point A to point B without giving it a second thoug...
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Lenguaje: | eng |
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2015
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Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2113235 |
_version_ | 1780949026258026496 |
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author | Huth, John |
author_facet | Huth, John |
author_sort | Huth, John |
collection | CERN |
description | <!--HTML-->In modern era we've become accustomed to instantaneous transfer of information filtered by applications that act as a kind of guardian of information. In the realm of finding one’s way, we use GPS and devices that take us from point A to point B without giving it a second thought. Are we slowly losing the cognitive processes that our ancestors had, and at what price? I use the theme of navigation as an avenue to explore the question of what we’ve lost in the information age. Cultures, such as the Polynesians, the Vikings and the early European explorers developed navigational schema that relied on a person’s relation to the environment to find one’s way. The concept of navigation often takes on a metaphorical meaning of how one lead’s one’s life or achieves goals. Recent work on the organization of cognitive processes in the context of navigation has shown that this may be more than a simple metaphor: that navigation is a kind of template of how we organize our thoughts around future actions.
Lecture 2: Wave piloting in the Marshall Islands
Of all the Pacific Island navigation cultures, the practice of wave piloting in the Marshall Islands is perhaps the most curious. Indigenous navigators employ the patterns of wave reflections and refractions with respect to the dominant swell to find their way among islands. Stick charts are a teaching aid and also a kind of map of wave formations for the apprentice navigator. Somehow the navigators are able to extract subtle information of the wave patterns in the presence of large backgrounds from wind-blown chop and the dominant swell. In this lecture I explore these practices, and the ingenious design of voyaging canoes in the Marshall Islands. |
id | cern-2113235 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2015 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-21132352022-11-03T08:15:39Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2113235engHuth, JohnThe Art of Way Finding (2/2)The Art of Way Finding (2/2)Academic Training Lecture Regular Programme<!--HTML-->In modern era we've become accustomed to instantaneous transfer of information filtered by applications that act as a kind of guardian of information. In the realm of finding one’s way, we use GPS and devices that take us from point A to point B without giving it a second thought. Are we slowly losing the cognitive processes that our ancestors had, and at what price? I use the theme of navigation as an avenue to explore the question of what we’ve lost in the information age. Cultures, such as the Polynesians, the Vikings and the early European explorers developed navigational schema that relied on a person’s relation to the environment to find one’s way. The concept of navigation often takes on a metaphorical meaning of how one lead’s one’s life or achieves goals. Recent work on the organization of cognitive processes in the context of navigation has shown that this may be more than a simple metaphor: that navigation is a kind of template of how we organize our thoughts around future actions. Lecture 2: Wave piloting in the Marshall Islands Of all the Pacific Island navigation cultures, the practice of wave piloting in the Marshall Islands is perhaps the most curious. Indigenous navigators employ the patterns of wave reflections and refractions with respect to the dominant swell to find their way among islands. Stick charts are a teaching aid and also a kind of map of wave formations for the apprentice navigator. Somehow the navigators are able to extract subtle information of the wave patterns in the presence of large backgrounds from wind-blown chop and the dominant swell. In this lecture I explore these practices, and the ingenious design of voyaging canoes in the Marshall Islands. oai:cds.cern.ch:21132352015 |
spellingShingle | Academic Training Lecture Regular Programme Huth, John The Art of Way Finding (2/2) |
title | The Art of Way Finding (2/2) |
title_full | The Art of Way Finding (2/2) |
title_fullStr | The Art of Way Finding (2/2) |
title_full_unstemmed | The Art of Way Finding (2/2) |
title_short | The Art of Way Finding (2/2) |
title_sort | art of way finding (2/2) |
topic | Academic Training Lecture Regular Programme |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2113235 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT huthjohn theartofwayfinding22 AT huthjohn artofwayfinding22 |