CONCEPT
The Garden as Kinesthetic Practice
Han's garden reframed through Sheets-Johnstone's framework: not metaphor or therapy but a <em>cognitive infrastructure</em> that activates the full range of the body's intelligence.
Byung-Chul Han gardens in Berlin. He does not garden as recreation. He gardens as intellectual work. The soil, the seasons, the resistance of the earth are not interruptions of his thinking — they are its medium. Segal, in You On AI, treats Han's garden with admiration tinged with distance, naming it as a 'counter-life, the path I did not take.' Sheets-Johnstone's framework transforms the garden from symbol into mechanism. The garden is a site of kinesthetic engagement whose cognitive function can be described with phenomenological precision — and whose value is not aesthetic or therapeutic but cognitive in the deepest sense.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Start with what the body does in a garden. It bends — engaging the proprioceptive system across its full range as the torso lowers, the center of gravity adjusts, the muscles of the lower back and abdomen and legs coordinate to support altered posture. It lifts — bags of soil, pots, rocks, watering cans full of water — engaging the body's force-calibration systems