Key Concepts

Concept of Nature

This theme examines how natural phenomena were defined, distinguished from artificial processes, and integrated into philosophical explanations of the physical world in classical and medieval thought.

History of Botany and Plant Studies

This topic explores how knowledge about plants was recorded, classified, and interpreted in different traditions, highlighting both descriptive practices and broader conceptual approaches.

Causality and Motion

This theme considers how change, movement, and causation were explained in relation to physical principles and theories of nature.

Life in Pre-Modern Thought

This theme examines how plants, animals, and humans were situated within broader ontological and philosophical frameworks addressing vitality, growth, and living beings.

Observation and Description

This theme focuses on how pre-modern authors turned nature into knowledge through careful description—recording visible features, habitats, seasons, and patterns to make plants comparable and discussable across communities.

Classification and Plant Groups

This topic examines how plants were organized into major groups (such as trees, shrubs, undershrubs, and herbs), and how grouping shaped what counted as similarity, difference, and botanical order.

Naming, Terminology, and Identification

This theme explores how plant names were created, translated, and stabilized—how authors matched words to things in the world, handled synonyms across languages, and reduced confusion in identification.

Knowledge Transmission and Translation

This topic investigates how natural knowledge moved through translation, commentary, compilation, and rewriting—showing how texts change as they travel across languages, regions, and intellectual traditions.

Fieldwork, Travel, and Specimens

This theme considers the role of going “into the field”: observing plants in place, testing inherited names against landscapes, collecting specimens, and building trust through firsthand encounter.

Agriculture and Cultivation Knowledge

This topic explores how growing plants produced knowledge—through soils, seasons, irrigation, grafting, and long-term practice—connecting botany to everyday expertise and environmental conditions.

Systems of Nature and Philosophical Frameworks

This theme looks at how broad frameworks (especially in thinkers like Avicenna) organized natural phenomena into coherent systems, linking botany to physics, metaphysics, and concepts of order.

Natural History as a Method

This topic examines natural history as a way of knowing: collecting reports, comparing cases, organizing entries, and building cumulative reference works that later readers can expand.