<P><B>An influential thinker distills years of work on the philosophy of movement into one accessible account</B><BR/><BR/><BR/> Why are city dwellers worldwide walking on average ten percent faster than they were a decade ago? Why are newcomer immigrant groups so often maligned when migration has always constituted civilization? To analyze and understand the depth of the reasons, Thomas Nail suggests that it serves us well to turn to a philosophy of movement. Synthesizing and extending many years of his influential work, <I>The Philosophy of Movement</I> is a comprehensive argument for how motion is the primary force in human and natural history. </P><P> </P><P> Nail critiques the bias toward stasis at the core of Western thought, asking: what would a philosophy that began with the primacy of movement look like? Interrogating the consequences of movement throughout history and in daily life in the twenty-first century, he draws connections and traces patterns between scales of real