•  3
    Creative Bodies Walking Developmental Being Discussing “When I Dance My Walk”
    with Carolina Bergonzoni
    Phenomenology and Practice 21 (1). 2026.
    We are co-writing this piece as a phenomenological movement, with Don reflecting on ideas that sprung out of Carolina’s When I Dance My Walk: A Phenomenological Analysis of Habitual Movement in Dance Practices (When I Dance My Walk) published in Phenomenology & Practice in 2017, and with Carolina responding about how these ideas have become new trajectories in her newer work. We offer these thoughts, as a written artefact of a spontaneous discussion, that the two of us had about thinking in move…Read more
  •  4
    Moving into Being: The Motor Basis of Perception, Balance, and Reading
    In Kirsten Jacobson & John Russon (eds.), Perception and its Development in Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology, University of Toronto Press. pp. 123-141. 2017.
  •  49
    In The Birth of Sense, Don Beith proposes a new concept of generative passivity, the idea that our organic, psychological, and social activities take time to develop into sense. More than being a limit, passivity marks out the way in which organisms, persons, and interbodily systems take time in order to manifest a coherent sense. Beith situates his argument within contemporary debates about evolution, developmental biology, scientific causal explanations, psychology, postmodernism, social const…Read more
  •  45
    From Biomimicry to Biosophia
    Environmental Philosophy 18 (2): 259-278. 2021.
    Biomimicry promises great progress in ecological design. Advocates, hinging on the work of Janine Benyus, argue that biomimicry enhances sustainable technologies. This essay suggests conceptual and ethical improvements to biomimicry: first by considering Michael Fisch’s concept of bioinspiration through studying Neri Oxman’s Silkworm Pavilion and second, through the articulation of a new concept of biosophia, drawing on Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s late Institution and Nature lectures. His investigat…Read more
  •  134
    The Sense of Space (review)
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 11 (1): 183-187. 2007.
  •  64
    From his earliest work in The Structure of Behavior, Maurice Merleau-Ponty abrogates accounts of organic form that posit the organism as either passively ordered by the environment which precedes it, or as actively constituting its environment. I argue that Merleau-Ponty first develops what I term a genetic concept of form, in which the organism-environment relationship unfolds developmentally. This account of genetic form, however, requires a further concept of generative form to overcome the c…Read more
  • In The Birth of Sense, Don Beith proposes a new concept of generative passivity, the idea that our organic, psychological, and social activities take time to develop into sense. More than being a limit, passivity marks out the way in which organisms, persons, and interbodily systems take time in order to manifest a coherent sense. Beith situates his argument within contemporary debates about evolution, developmental biology, scientific causal explanations, psychology, postmodernism, social const…Read more