The Secret Teachings of Plants: The Intelligence of the Heart in the Direct Perception of Nature |  | Author: Stephen Harrod Buhner Publisher: Bear & Company Category: Book
List Price: $18.95 Buy New: $10.91 as of 9/6/2010 15:53 CDT details You Save: $8.04 (42%)
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Seller: natarajbooks Rating: 22 reviews Sales Rank: 26680
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Pages: 336 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 0.9
ISBN: 1591430356 Dewey Decimal Number: 615.535 EAN: 9781591430353 ASIN: 1591430356
Publication Date: October 27, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Reveals the use of direct perception in understanding Nature, medicinal plants, and the healing of human disease. Explores the techniques used by indigenous and Western peoples to learn directly from the plants themselves, including those of Henry David Thoreau, Goethe, and Masanobu Fukuoka, author of The One Straw Revolution. Contains leading-edge information on the heart as an organ of perception. All ancient and indigenous peoples insisted their knowledge of plant medicines came from the plants themselves and not through trial-and-error experimentation. Less well known is that many Western peoples made this same assertion. There are, in fact, two modes of cognition available to all human beings--the brain-based linear and the heart-based holistic. The heart-centered mode of perception can be exceptionally accurate and detailed in its information gathering capacities if, as indigenous and ancient peoples asserted, the heart's ability as an organ of perception is developed. Author Stephen Harrod Buhner explores this second mode of perception in great detail through the work of numerous remarkable people, from Luther Burbank, who cultivated the majority of food plants we now take for granted, to the great German poet and scientist Goethe and his studies of the metamorphosis of plants. Buhner explores the commonalities among these individuals in their approach to learning from the plant world and outlines the specific steps involved. Readers will gain the tools necessary to gather information directly from the heart of Nature, to directly learn the medicinal uses of plants, to engage in diagnosis of disease, and to understand the soul-making process that such deep connection with the world engenders.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 22
An Incredibly Profound Earth Poet December 12, 2004 L. Fishler (The Hudson Valley, NY) 39 out of 41 found this review helpful
Stephen Buhner's writing style is captivating, humble and poetic, and mirrors the non-linear beauty of Nature. He invites you to skip around the book and read whatever interests you, and if you love all things in Nature like I do, you will surely end up reading everything twice, just like I did. This is honestly, one of the most incredible books I have read in quite some time. I am a currently enrolled in a Master's program in the Health Arts and I think this book should be required reading.
Though there are so many people in society today that take credit for something that has, in fact, been around for years, this is not the case with Stephen Buhner. His intentions are genuine as he writes for and about Nature. He never claims ownership of any of the ideas presented in his book, rather, he takes the words of the wise people who came long before him, and weaves them eloquently through-out his own, demonstrating how the idea of the heart as an organ of perception is not new. That we all have the capability, it has simply been unintentionally taught out us out.
I am also the Director of a medical research foundation, and often times I am appalled by how close minded so many in the realm of medicine/science can be. Though their intentions may once have been sincere, the unfortunate truth is, somewhere along the way, their motivations changed and they lost the ability to see the big picture.
I highly recommend this book. Society is ready for this book. The environment needs for society to read this book. I found the following quote by G. Leonard, in Mu Soeng's commentary on the Heart Sutra, and I think it is appropriate to insert it here:
At the heart of each of us, whatever our imperfections, there exists a silent pulse of perfect rhythm, a complex of waveforms and resonances, which is absolutely individual and unique, and yet which connects us to everything in the universe. The act of getting in touch with this pulse can transform our personal experience and in some way alter the world around us.
By reading this book, perhaps we can learn to come out of our heads, and back into our hearts. By doing so, I am hopeful we, like Stephen Buhner, will be able to feel once again, hear what Nature has to teach us...and listen.
REMARKABLE! December 5, 2004 Joseph (New Mexico) 19 out of 19 found this review helpful
I hesitated to buy this book at first, the publisher's weekly review was so bad, but I had liked the author's other work, so I bought it and am I glad I did. It is wonderful. I don't know what the reviewer was thinking of, perhaps we did not read the same book. I can only think that he or she so fundamentally disagrees with the concepts of heart cognition and the livingness of the world that this book was just too uncomfortable for them. And it is true, reductionists will hate this book, as the author says many times in the text. However, if you have felt deep feelings upon coming upon magnificient rock formations in a forest, felt knowledge come to you through stirrings of your heart, known that there was more to life than working and retiring, or ever felt drawn to the teachings of medicine people in indigenous cultures, you will be so glad you bought this book. I have never seen these processes of perception and healing explained, nor spoken of with such reverence and love. This is truly a bible for Earth-centered people who wish to learn the power of depth perception and shape their lives through the deep teachings of the sacredness of Earth.
Exquisite...... August 17, 2005 Dianne Foster (USA) 28 out of 30 found this review helpful
A scene takes place in the film Patton, where the General stands on the site of an ancient battlefield and describes his experiences as a combatant in a previous life on that very field. In THE SECRET TEACHING OF PLANTS, Stephen Harrod Buhner describes a similar experience on a battlefield here in Virginia where the narrator "felt" the presence of the dead and dying soldiers. While this episode might seem farfetched, Buhner has woven a story that will lead you to believe this event can and did take place, no matter how rational you think you are.
Buhner's book is about plants, but more than that it is about the human heart and its capacity to understand more than the head. The heart does indeed have its own reasons, and has much to communicate if we would listen. As one who has a deep affinity for living organisms especially, birds, dogs, cats, and trees, and having lived with said creatures all my life and knowing for a fact that they all communicate with me, I do not believe that humans are the "be all end all" they believe themselves to be no matter how much they have recorded their own self importance in ancient texts. In the end, belief is belief, but Buhner suggests there is much one may be missing if she does not listen to her heart. THE SECRET TEACHING OF PLANTS is a delicious wonderful treat, and I have taken weeks to read and reread a man who may indeed be a reincarnation of Thoreau or Goethe.
IF YOU HAVE EVER WONDERED. . . November 22, 2004 reader (baltimore, MD) 17 out of 18 found this review helpful
If you have ever wondered how indigenous peoples learned the uses of plants, if you have ever wondered how people such as Manuel Cordova Rios, the South American healer, could look inside people's bodies in his healing work, if you have ever wondered about the world Kabir described in his poems, if you have ever wondered what Thoreau was really talking about, or how Masanobu Fukuoka's farming did what it did, then this book is for you.
I have read exhaustively in this field and I have never read a book that took me through the process step by step, explained it so well, or showed how innate the ability to read the sacred geography of the world is in each of us. The book takes the reader through the five steps of direct perception, revealing how anyone can do it, that it is the simplest thing, inherent in all of us, in the very beating of our hearts.
The book explores in more detail than any other text I have read how the heart works as an organ of perception and intelligence. But this book explores these things in some of the most poetic and powerful language I have encountered, putting the author in the same category of work as Barry Lopez, Robert Bly, and Alice Walker.
If you have ever wondered about all those subtle feelings you sense each day, about the power of the Earth to move you, and how all our ancestors and predecessors did the things they did, then buy this book. You will not regret it.
Talks to both sides of your brain October 16, 2005 Tanner Griffins (Québec) 17 out of 18 found this review helpful
This is a book to read and reread. As an experienced herbalist and intuitive healer, Stephen Harrod Buhner knows what he is talking about first hand. The author leads workshops in the Green Mountain State (Vermont). That must be a feat to attend.
The first part of this book talks to the left side of your hemisphere as it is based in science, proof and logic. He discusses among other subjects the basis for an energetic field of the body and of the heart.
The second part of the book appeals to the right side of the brain as it is based on experience, visions and intuition. The ressource section is impeccable with plenty of material to chew on and an appendice with explorations to exercise the perception of the heart.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 22
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