Article ID: CBB113300543

Milton's Plant Eyes: Minimal Cognition, Similitude, and Sexuality in the Garden (2020)

unapi

This essay turns to minimal cognition, a theoretical extension of embodied cognition, to argue for plant sentience in John Milton's Paradise Lost. Milton imagines plants as minimally cognitive beings within an affective ecosystem, where they readily enter into the epic poem's complex circuits of desire with appetites of their own. Specifically, the essay claims that botanical cognition arises at the convergence of two seventeenth-century philosophical systems: the first, Milton's materialist monism, and the second, Paracelsian medicine, which avers a plant's therapeutic effect on a human body part sharing morphological resemblance. The essay concludes that Milton's eroticization of similitude enables a new sensus communis where cognition is subtler and where nonhuman desire engenders alternate forms of ecologic communality.

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Authors & Contributors
Samson, Alexander
Daniele Angelotti
Mirren, Helen
Collins, Sumie Hasegawa
Quealy, Gerit
Harrington, Christopher
Journals
Renaissance Studies
Victorian Literature and Culture
Gastronomica: The Journal of Culinary History
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Publishers
Ashgate
De Luca Editori d'Arte
Harper Design
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Ohio University
University of Virginia Press
Concepts
Science and literature
Botany
Plants
Gardens
Poetry and poetics
Science and art
People
Milton, John
Shakespeare, William
de Medici, Cosimo III, Grand-Duke of Tuscany
Razumovsky, Alexei
Demidov, Prokophy
Van Rensselaer, Schuyler, Mrs.
Time Periods
17th century
19th century
16th century
Renaissance
18th century
Early modern
Places
Great Britain
Russia
England
Americas
Florence (Italy)
Spain
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