Goethe developed and practiced a phenomenological science parallel to the objective/quantitative science of Newton. Like William Blake, Goethe saw deeply, and saw embodiment and the senses as the gateway to understanding nature and being, in opposition to figures like Newton who preferred to obscure the world behind intellectually focused mathematical descriptions.
This book discloses Goethe's way of science in a revelatory way, showing how so many of today's problems, and philosophical problems, are simply side effects of the dominant science in play. Goethe's science sidesteps so many of them! And has its own problems… but to add a second science seems akin to becoming bilingual in Nature… the whole is greater than the sum of its parts (or aspects…)
This book is poetry, drawing together sociology, history, politics, linguistics among other things. There's a lot about light/colour, and biological morphology, the two main case studies for the core epistemological and phenomenological explorations.
A perfect companion to David Bohm's Wholeness and the Implicate Order (Bortoft was a student of Bohm's).
I wish there was an exercise book for Goethe's science. Learning to see in his way seems worthwhile, but this book describes it, gives tantalising glimpses, makes the sale, but does not attempt to guide the way towards developing this capacity in oneself…