"If I had to Live my Life Over Again, I would Be a Botanist": John Cage’s Mycology Collection

WCWE Note 7

It seems that some professors at UC Santa Cruz did not believe in Chadwick’s methods or philosophical approaches to farming as he did not use pesticides. In Paul Lee’s book he wrote:

I remember having a discussion with Kenneth Thimann, the Provost of Crown college, a world-renowned botanist, over his hesitation to even credit philosophy of science with a place in the curriculum, although he could see a place for the history of science. I had mentioned to him my interest and vitalism and his role in the Sciences, and he responded by saying, “Oh, yes, what's the name of that woman?” He meant, of course, Agnes Arber , an authority on Goethe’s botany and a leading example of what I was getting at. All he could think of was a woman whose name he had forgotten. I could see there was no room within the college to acknowledge Chadwick's work and the tradition he represented. Science turned its back on anyone espousing vitalism; the battle had been won in the early part of the 19th century, when vitalism was presumed to have been refuted and illuminated. Natural science, since Galileo, had worked its reductionist, physical list, positivist trend to complete success. 

Lee, There Is a Garden in the Mind: A Memoir of Alan Chadwick and the Organic Movement in California, 43

Also reference, Alan Chadwick: A Gardener of Souls.

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