|

About
Formative Forces
in the Plant World
by Dick van Romunde
Original drawings by Elly van Hardeveld
About
Formative Forces in the Plant World by Dick van Romunde is the culmination of
decades of ‘inner observation’ of many members of the plant world in
the manner of what has come to be known to as Goethean observation,
after it’s principle founder and exponent, Johann Wolfgang von
Goethe. The book guides the reader through the different stages of
Goethean examination and contemplation of several plants and
includes for each plant, delicately rendered colour drawings by
artist, Elly van Hardeveld.
The following is excerpted
from the Introduction to About Formative Forces in the Plant
World:
In Goethe's views about the
plant world, the results of which are written in his book
Metamorphosis of Plants, art plays an important role and
penetrates his whole work. His intensely experiential way of
thinking differs from the approach to natural science typical in his
time and still current today. This vitalized thinking is based upon
a way of perceiving that leads to an inner rendering of the object.
Goethe characterized this way of perceiving as based on a gift he
called the talent of artistic rendering. Every human being
can develop this talent by silencing intellectual thinking and
judgment while remaining devoted to the act of perceiving. Through
this activity, the perception has a stronger effect on a person's
organism and will ultimately bring about a conscious experience of
artistic rendering. Through this process of perception a much
clearer and more definite memory picture is created as a mental
image. If this intensified image is repeatedly brought into
one's consciousness while excluding all other images, then the inner
rendering activity is also re-experienced. This activity will sooner
or later lead to a consciousness of the gesture; the gesture
language of what is perceived - the leaf, the stem, the flower -
will appear in one's consciousness.
Following this path, Goethe
felt that he could have a conversation, so to speak, with the plants
through the help of the gesture language. He spoke about an open
mystery in the plant world kept from those who do not yet know
its gesture language, yet open because everyone can learn the
language. Just as an actor perfects him- or herself in human
gestures, the Goethean scientist creates for him- or herself the
possibility of understanding the gesture language of natural
phenomena.

Dick
van Romunde was born October 20, 1916 in the Netherlands. He studied
electro-technical engineering at Delft University of Technology and
worked as a teacher in the Geert Groote School in Amsterdam for
twenty-two years. Since 1971 he has worked with the Goethean Natural
Science Foundation. He is the author of several books on natural
science based on a phenomenological approach. He currently lives
with his wife in Amerongen, the Netherlands.

Elly van Hardeveld was born April 1, 1938 in the Netherlands, and
graduated from the Royal Academy of Art at The Hague. She currently
teaches at several colleges in Apeldoorn, and pursues her interests
in nature, art, and classical music.
Jannabeth Röell (Publisher)
Translated by Jannabeth Röell and James
Lee
163pp; hardback
ISBN: 0 9675056 1 5
To purchase this title,
click here:
About Formative Forces in the Plant World -
van Romunde
Other
titles by Dick van Romunde:
Perceiving Plants: Experiencing Elemental Beings
See also:
New Eyes for Plants by M.
Colquhoun & A. Ewald

Prompt
delivery within the United Kingdom and overseas.
Copyright © 2003 Skylark Books
|