Around two hundred years ago Goethe made the statement: 'Let us not seek for something behind the phenomena - they themselves are the theory'. This would appear to be the antithesis of the claim of certain contemporary schools of epistemological thought, that a 'theory' is a construction of the human mind. Yet Goethe's scientific aims are resonant with a present day ecological need: to find a form of 'nature study' which springs from a desire to care for things rather than merely to explain them, which can help to create a harmony between human and non-human nature. Goethe's approach is phenomenological in that it seeks to uncover things 'on their own terms'; it is integral in that it embraces both art and science. A Goethean methodology is used to study four Australian native plants: Grevillea buxifolia, Scaevola remosissima, Banksia integrifolia and Kunzea ambigua. It is suggested that Goethe's way of 'nature study' fulfils the contemporary need for a participatory knowing which is responsible for the thing being researched, and various possibilities are indicated for further research and application - in the biological sciences and in disciplines such as architecture, landscape design and environmental education.
Date of Award | 1994 |
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Original language | English |
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- philosophy of ecology
- plant ecology
- spider flowers
- honeysuckles
Goethe's notion of 'theory' : Goethean phenomenology as a new ecological discipline
Hoffmann, N. (Author). 1994
Western Sydney University thesis: Master's thesis