BOOK REVIEW: Philosophy for Gardeners by Kate Collyns

Philosophy for Gardeners: Ideas and paradoxes to ponder in the gardenPhilosophy for Gardeners: Ideas and paradoxes to ponder in the garden by Kate Collyns
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Amazon.in Page

Out: March 1, 2022

This book can benefit not only gardeners interested in philosophy, but also philosophers interested in gardening. [If you’re in the intersect of people expert in both philosophy and gardening, the book probably won’t hold a great deal of intrigue as it’s written for a more general audience.] The gist is examples and analogies from gardening applied to elucidating philosophical concepts. In a few cases, these examples feel a bit forced. In most cases, they work just fine. But in a few other cases, the gardening analogies offer a powerful and unique insight that one would be unlikely to take away from a single-axis philosophy guide. For example, I found the relating of utilitarianism to the gardener’s dilemma of whether to start with a wildly overgrown bed or a relatively clean one offered a fresh perspective on the topic.

The book’s twenty chapters are divided into four parts. The parts are labeled “Soil,” “Growth,” “Harvest,” and “Cycles;” which I took to apply to fundamentals, change, outcomes, and the cycle of life and death. Part I, “Soil,” investigates topics in metaphysics, governance, and taxonomy. The second part, “Growth,” explores evolutionary adaptation, altruism / cooperation, the blank slate (and its critique,) and Zeno’s paradoxes. The penultimate section, “Harvest,” delves into topics such as forms, aesthetics, the reliability of senses, epistemology, and economic philosophy. Finally, “Cycles” discusses identity, logic and linguistic limitations, ethics, and pragmatism.

The book uses retro illustrations that look like the plates one might see in a book from the 19th century. There’s a brief bibliography, primarily of philosophical classics.

I’m always on the lookout for books that consider the perspective that humans exist within nature and our ways can’t be understood divorced from our place in the natural world. In that sense, I believe the book has much to offer.

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DAILY PHOTO: Botanic Closeups

Taken at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Peradeniya, Sri Lanka

DAILY PHOTO: Chinese Gates in the Chinese Garden, Rizal Park

Taken in December of 2017 in Manila

DAILY PHOTO: Kapok Trees

Taken in Lalbagh Botanical Gardens in September of 2021

Yellow Cosmos [Haiku]

butterflies land,
but don't loiter, upon
buttery petals

DAILY PHOTO: Kazakh Wildflowers, Medeu

Taken at Medeu, Kazakhstan in August of 2019

DAILY PHOTO: Garden Monkeys and Posing Roosters, Ayutthaya

Taken at Wat Thummikarat in October of 2012

DAILY PHOTO: Morpho Menelaus & a Pale Owl-Butterfly

Morpho Menelaus; Taken at Callaway Gardens in November of 2012
Pale Owl-Butterfly; Callaway Gardens, November 2012

DAILY PHOTO: Candelabra Bush, Arikamedu

Taken at Arikamedu, India in 2019