Flora Unveiled

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Idealism and Asexualism j 461

461 461


Self- caressing
Through its own clear reflection.
Thus you invent the theme
of Narcissus fulfilled.


  1. Aulie, R. P. (1961), Caspar Friedrich Wolff and his Theoria Generationis, 1759. Journal of
    the History of Medicine and Allied Science 16(2):124– 14 4.

  2. von Goethe, J.  W. (1817), Natural Science in General; Morphology in Particular, vol. i,
    no. 1. Cited by Mueller, Bertha (1790/ 1952), Goethe’s Botanical Writings, trans. Bertha Mueller.
    University of Hawaii Press, pp. 176– 181.

  3. von Goethe, J.  W., Maxims and Reflections:  An English translation of Maximen und
    Reflexionen, accessed at http:// wolfenmann.com/ goethe- maxims- and- reflections- full- text.
    html

  4. Opening lines of “Hegira” by Goethe, written in 1814. In Spender, S.  (1958), Great
    Writings of Goethe, trans. Michael Hamburger. Mentor Books, p. 262.

  5. From West- East Divan, trans. Michael Hamburger.

  6. Williams, J. R. (2001), The Life of Goethe, Blackwell, p. 44.

  7. Idem., p. 48.

  8. Translated by the authors.

  9. von Goethe, J. W., Faust, Part Two, trans. David Duke. Oxford University Press.

  10. von Goethe. Pollination, volatilization, and exudation, pp. 105– 114.
    67. Ibid.
    68. Ibid.
    69. Ibid.

  11. von Goethe J.  W. (1807/ 1952), Formation and transformation, in Goethe’s Botanical
    Writings, trans. Bertha Mueller. University of Hawaii Press, pp. 21– 29.
    71. Ibid.
    72. Ibid.

  12. Schelver, F. J. (1812), Kritik der Lehre von den Geschlechtern der Pflanze. Braun, Heidelberg.
    Translated in Žarský, V., and J. Tupý (1995), A missed anniversary: 300 years after Rudolf Jacob
    Camerarius’ “De Sexu Plantarum Epistola.” Sexual Plant Reproduction 8:375– 376.

  13. Cited by Žarský and Tupý, A missed anniversary.

  14. In Snow, D. E. (1996), Schelling and the End of Idealism: The Horizons of Feeling. SUNY
    Press, p. 107.

  15. Goethe had used a similar argument in his Theory of Colors (1810), in which he dismissed
    Newton’s results because the light had been forced to pass through a prism, which was equiva-
    lent to “torturing” Nature.

  16. Krell, D.  F. (1998), Contagion:  Sexuality, Disease, and Death in German Idealism and
    Romanticism. Indiana University Press.

  17. In some versions of the Demeter/ Persephone myth, the goddess Baubo is an old woman
    whom Demeter encounters while, disguised as an old woman herself, she searches for news
    about Persephone’s whereabouts. Baubo tries to cheer her up with ribald jokes and finally makes
    her laugh by suddenly lifting her skirt and exposing her genitals. See Foley, H.  P. (1994), The
    Homeric Hymn to Demeter. Princeton University Press, p. 46.

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