The Botany of Romanticism: Plants and the Exposition of Life

Comparative and Continental Philosophy 8 (3):315-328 (2016)
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Abstract

German Romanticism is a thinking of life as exposed. Philosophical conceptions of botanical life are paradigmatic of this. Goethe, Schelling, and Hegel each address the plant in their respective philosophies of nature. This article traces the connections and divergences in their thinking of plants, focusing on the role of love, lack, and exposure in order to present the plant as a peculiarly apt figure for considerations of life as exposed.

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Andrew John Mitchell
McMaster University

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Werke.Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Eva Moldenhauer, Karl Markus Michel & Helmut Reinicke - 1969 - (Frankfurt am Main): Suhrkamp. Edited by Eva Moldenhauer & Karl Markus Michel.
Ideas for a Philosophy of Nature.Errol E. Harris & Peter Heath (eds.) - 1988 - Cambridge University Press.

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