Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Special Section on Goethe and Idealism
- Introduction—Goethe and Idealism: Points of Intersection
- Goethe and Spinoza: A Reconsideration
- Goethean Intuitions
- Goethe's Notion of an Intuitive Power of Judgment
- “Idealism is nothing but genuine empiricism”: Novalis, Goethe, and the Ideal of Romantic Science
- The Quest for the Seeds of Eternal Growth: Goethe and Humboldt's Presentation of Nature
- Hegel's Faust
- Goethe contra Hegel: The Question of the End of Art
- Goethean Morphology, Hegelian Science: Affinities and Transformations
- Die Gretchenfrage: Goethe and Philosophies of Religion around 1800
- Civic Attachments & Sibling Attractions: The Shadows of Fraternity
- Margarete-Ariadne: Faust's Labyrinth
- Save the Prinz: Schiller's Geisterseher and the Lure of Entertainment
- Walsers Trilogie der Leidenschaft: Eine Analyse seines Goethe-Romans Ein liebender Mann im Kontext der Tradition der Ulrike-Romane
- Review Essay: What's New in the New Economic Criticism
- Book Reviews
The Quest for the Seeds of Eternal Growth: Goethe and Humboldt's Presentation of Nature
from Special Section on Goethe and Idealism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Special Section on Goethe and Idealism
- Introduction—Goethe and Idealism: Points of Intersection
- Goethe and Spinoza: A Reconsideration
- Goethean Intuitions
- Goethe's Notion of an Intuitive Power of Judgment
- “Idealism is nothing but genuine empiricism”: Novalis, Goethe, and the Ideal of Romantic Science
- The Quest for the Seeds of Eternal Growth: Goethe and Humboldt's Presentation of Nature
- Hegel's Faust
- Goethe contra Hegel: The Question of the End of Art
- Goethean Morphology, Hegelian Science: Affinities and Transformations
- Die Gretchenfrage: Goethe and Philosophies of Religion around 1800
- Civic Attachments & Sibling Attractions: The Shadows of Fraternity
- Margarete-Ariadne: Faust's Labyrinth
- Save the Prinz: Schiller's Geisterseher and the Lure of Entertainment
- Walsers Trilogie der Leidenschaft: Eine Analyse seines Goethe-Romans Ein liebender Mann im Kontext der Tradition der Ulrike-Romane
- Review Essay: What's New in the New Economic Criticism
- Book Reviews
Summary
[G]enau um die Zeit, da Kants Werk vollendet und die Wegekarte durch den kahlen Wald des Wirklichen entworfen war, begann das Goethesche Suchen nach den Samen ewigen Wachstums.
WALTER BENJAMIN'S CLAIM brings an important element of Goethe's work into sharp focus. Debates linger over the value of the scientific side of Goethe's quest for the “seeds of eternal growth,” with some thinkers casting doubt on his work as a scientist, wondering if we would even bother with Goethe's science if it were not for his poetry (Charles Sherrington), joining claims that Goethe's scientific interests were a “real crime against the majesty of his poetic genius” (J. G. Robertson). Some others look most favorably upon Goethe's contributions to the natural sciences. W. Troll, for example, writes, with no risk of understatement, that “in a fully reasoned study of Goethe's morphology” we find the “focal point of his whole mental life.” One thing is clear: Goethe himself did not consider his work in the natural sciences to be a mere hobby. As is well known, Goethe's trip to Italy (1786–88) opened him to a universe of new flora and fauna—providing him with material that lasted the rest of his life. A particular palm in Padua fascinated Goethe and left its traces in his work for years to come.
An obsession with palms and a serious engagement with the quest for the seeds of eternal growth was shared by a figure who, like Goethe, fused art and science in a seemingly effortless way (and a way that may bewilder scholars in our overspecialized times).
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- Information
- Goethe Yearbook 18 , pp. 97 - 114Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2011