Stephen Harrod Buhner

The Lost Language of Plants

Notify me when the book’s added
To read this book, upload an EPUB or FB2 file to Bookmate. How do I upload a book?
This could be the most important book you will read this year. Around the office at Chelsea Green it is referred to as the «pharmaceutical Silent Spring.» Well-known author, teacher, lecturer, and herbalist Stephen Harrod Buhner has produced a book that is certain to generate controversy. It consists of three parts:

A critique of technological medicine, and especially the dangers to the environment posed by pharmaceuticals and other synthetic substances that people use in connection with health care and personal body care.
A new look at Gaia Theory, including an explanation that plants are the original chemistries of Gaia and those phytochemistries are the fundamental communications network for the Earth's ecosystems.
Extensive documentation of how plants communicate their healing qualities to humans and other animals. Western culture has obliterated most people's capacity to perceive these messages, but this book also contains valuable information on how we can restore our faculties of perception.

The book will affect readers on rational and emotional planes. It is grounded in both a New Age spiritual sensibility and hard science. While some of the author's claims may strike traditional thinkers as outlandish, Buhner presents his arguments with such authority and documentation that the scientific underpinnings, however unconventional, are completely credible.

The overall impact is a powerful, eye-opening expos' of the threat that our allopathic Western medical system, in combination with our unquestioning faith in science and technology, poses to the primary life-support systems of the planet. At a time when we are preoccupied with the terrorist attacks and the possibility of biological warfare, perhaps it is time to listen to the planet. This book is essential reading for anyone concerned about the state of the environment, the state of health care, and our cultural sanity.
This book is currently unavailable
422 printed pages
Original publication
2002
Publication year
2002
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
👍👎

Quotes

  • Jaimito Jchhas quoted6 years ago
    guistic phrases cannot be accurately translated into other languages, only approximated.
  • Jaimito Jchhas quoted6 years ago
    , an experiment carried out over extremely long lengths of time. The language each culture develops encodes unique aspects of what they have experienced and found important as a culture. (And the loss of any language represents the loss of unique information about the nature of the Universe that took perhaps a hundred thousand years or more to gather.)

    The more unique experiences are described and refined in language, the mor

On the bookshelves

fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)