Lexington Books
Pages: 210
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-4985-4781-9 • Hardback • January 2020 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-4783-3 • Paperback • March 2022 • $41.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-4985-4782-6 • eBook • January 2020 • $39.50 • (£30.00)
Douglas Hochstetler is professor of kinesiology and director of academic affairs at Penn State Lehigh Valley.
Contents
Foreword:
Amby Burfoot
- Introduction: The nature of American philosophy and endurance sport
Douglas Hochstetler
- Running and musing: Living philosophically
Douglas Anderson
- When continentalism meets pragmatism - Enduring life in the strenuous mood
Ron Welters
- Floyd Landis, endurance sport and the aesthetics of tension
Tim Elcombe
6. Sunrise, Sunset: Reflections on what makes an aging biker’s life significant
Scott Kretchmar
7. Representative endurance athlete
Peter Hopsicker
8. Cooking up a plan: Pragmatism and training
Pam R. Sailors and Cody D. Cash
9. Dewey goes the distance: Situated habit and ultraendurance sports
Jesús Ilundáin-Agurruza, Shaun Gallagher, Daniel D. Hutto, Kaarina Beam
10. “The will to believe,” the will to win, and the problem of self-transcendence
Jeffrey Fry
11. On meaning and motive in endurance sport: An experiential romp through the grand whys
Scott Tinley
12. Circles of life: Evaluating goals and preparing for the future
Douglas Hochstetler
Bibliography
Contributor Biographies
Readers may wonder whether this book, as edited by Hochstetler (Pennsylvania State Univ. Lehigh Valley), represents the response of its various authors to the modern growth of endurance sport or to life in a world that rarely allows for time to be with oneself. Perhaps it is both, with contributing authors examining in the process the foundations of the American philosophical tradition. Hochstetler asks “to what extent, and in what ways, does endurance sport play at least a small part in our quest to live a meaningful and gathered life in a world that is so harried?” This question is examined through the lens of American philosophical thinking in the nine essays gathered here. These are densely written pieces, demanding that readers take time to contemplate and reflect. Only athletes thoroughly devoted to their craft would attempt to run a fifty-mile race. So too should the reader of this text be schooled in philosophical reasoning. The demand on readers ensures that this book is not for novices, but the reward for those willing to engage with the text is a highly stimulating, even life-changing examination of the aspiration and training required for performance in endurance sport. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals.
— Choice Reviews
"In this book, American philosophy merges creatively and innovatively with endurance sport, and the other way around. What emerges is, borrowing from George Santayana, an outstanding 'work of imagination' that invites us to conceive ourselves through engagement with endurance sport as well as through critical reflection of that engagement. This excellent book highlights that crafting a life of significance is possible for those who take chances in endurance sport and for those who take chances ruminating about it."— Cesar R. Torres, State University of New York Brockport
"Endurance Sport and the American Philosophical Tradition provides thoughtful perspectives on just why endurance sport and philosophy are intertwined. Enduring one’s physicality provides the opportunity for existential clarity, and one’s ability to describe this state of being is enhanced by the perspectives of these scholars. As Scott Tinley notes, 'As endurance athletes, by definition we must go to our borders to find our center.' These essays will help both the thoughtful endurance athlete and the enduring, physical intellectual do just this."— Steven Estes, Middle Tennessee State University
"Endurance Sport and the American Philosophical Tradition makes evident that endurance athletes and American philosophers are fellow travelers in the search for the makings of a meaningful life. The key themes of American philosophy will resonate with endurance athletes. The experiences of endurance athletes will provide a source for philosophical musings. The essays in this collection insightfully intertwine endurance sport and American philosophy, leaving the reader with a deeper appreciation of both."— Douglas W. McLaughlin, California State University