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The Lost Language of Plants: The Ecological Importance of Plant Medicines for Life on Earth First Edition
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This could be the most important book you will read this year. Around the office at Chelsea Green it is referred to as the "pharmaceutical Silent Spring." Well-known author, teacher, lecturer, and herbalist Stephen Harrod Buhner has produced a book that is certain to generate controversy. It consists of three parts:
- A critique of technological medicine, and especially the dangers to the environment posed by pharmaceuticals and other synthetic substances that people use in connection with health care and personal body care.
- A new look at Gaia Theory, including an explanation that plants are the original chemistries of Gaia and those phytochemistries are the fundamental communications network for the Earth's ecosystems.
- Extensive documentation of how plants communicate their healing qualities to humans and other animals. Western culture has obliterated most people's capacity to perceive these messages, but this book also contains valuable information on how we can restore our faculties of perception.
The book will affect readers on rational and emotional planes. It is grounded in both a New Age spiritual sensibility and hard science. While some of the author's claims may strike traditional thinkers as outlandish, Buhner presents his arguments with such authority and documentation that the scientific underpinnings, however unconventional, are completely credible.
The overall impact is a powerful, eye-opening expos' of the threat that our allopathic Western medical system, in combination with our unquestioning faith in science and technology, poses to the primary life-support systems of the planet. At a time when we are preoccupied with the terrorist attacks and the possibility of biological warfare, perhaps it is time to listen to the planet. This book is essential reading for anyone concerned about the state of the environment, the state of health care, and our cultural sanity.
- ISBN-101890132888
- ISBN-13978-1890132880
- EditionFirst Edition
- PublisherChelsea Green Publishing
- Publication dateMarch 1, 2002
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions6 x 0.75 x 9 inches
- Print length336 pages
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Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Stephen Harrod Buhner was the award-winning author of 25 books on plant medicines, Earth ecosystem dynamics, emerging diseases, and the states of mind and being necessary for successful habitation of Earth including numerous articles, memoirs, short stories, and poetry on nature, human-plant, and human-Earth relationships. He taught throughout the US, Canada, and the EU for over 35 years. Stephen was an interdisciplinary, independent scholar, polymath, autodidact, Fellow of Schumacher College UK, and had been head researcher for the Foundation for Gaian Studies for the past thirty years (gaianstudies.org). His book, The Lost Language of Plants, received a Nautilus and BBC Environmental Book of the Year Award. In 2022, he received the first annual McKenna Academy Distinguished Natural Philosopher Award in recognition of his work. His book, Earth Grief: The Journey Into and Through Ecological Loss, also won a Nautilus award.
Product details
- Publisher : Chelsea Green Publishing; First Edition (March 1, 2002)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1890132888
- ISBN-13 : 978-1890132880
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.75 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #478,030 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #791 in Pharmacology (Books)
- #852 in Environmental Science (Books)
- #8,391 in Alternative Medicine (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Stephen Harrod Buhner is the author of Herbal Antivirals, Herbal Antibiotics (now in its second edition), and 17 other works including Herbs for Hepatitis C and the Liver, Sacred Plant Medicine, The Lost Language of Plants, The Secret Teachings of Plants, and Ensouling Language. He speaks internationally on herbal medicine, emerging diseases, complex interrelationships in ecosystems, Gaian dynamics, and musical/sound patterns in plant and ecosystem functioning. He is a tireless advocate for the citizen scientist, the amateur naturalist, and community herbalists everywhere. He lives in New Mexico.
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Customers find the book informative and engaging. They describe it as a great, brilliant read with beautiful language. The author's passion and soul shine through in the writing, inspiring readers to expand their spirituality.
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Customers find the book informative and engaging. It opens their eyes to the plant life around them and motivates them to research. The book is relevant, with references to relevant science. Readers appreciate the author's knowledge and understanding of the topic.
"...Then it speaks to your mind, the intellect, about the ways our culture has ruined the planet, touching on medications and pharmaceuticals, chemicals..." Read more
"...Essentially this entire section was full of jaw-dropping moments which relate how plants interact with each other...." Read more
"...This is a book that holds your interest, and I know because I was reading a fictional adventure at the same time, and I have not finished it, in fact..." Read more
"This is a very useful book, I liked it. OK. Other reviewers say things. Great...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and informative. They describe it as a must-read with timely messages. Readers appreciate the author's knowledge and consider it one of the best books on plants they have read.
"This book is amazing on so many levels. First, it touches you emotionally with a story about the loss of connection our culture has with nature...." Read more
"...science for a better view of what the world actually is....Great New..." Read more
"...in Harmony With Earth Mother, Book 1 (Bk.1)]] These are very good basic books, to getting out of the box of Western culture, into the much more..." Read more
"This is one of the best books I have read in a long time. Thoughtful, poignant, well written, it even brought me to tears at some points...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's language. They find it poetic and sensitive, with a great writing style that is thought-provoking and deep. The author's passion and soul shine through as he shows the unaddressed environmental repercussions.
"This book is amazing on so many levels. First, it touches you emotionally with a story about the loss of connection our culture has with nature...." Read more
"...for plant life on earth and reveals the amazing chemistry, the language, that all plants speak to each other and to Homo Sapiens...." Read more
"...I intend to read other books by this author, his style of writing is good, he is interesting and I love learning from him...." Read more
"...what the other reviewers have already said about the beauty and sensitivity of this book...." Read more
Customers find the book humbling and inspiring. It helps them expand their spirituality and learn to respect nature. They describe it as an eye-opener and a labor of love that speaks from every page.
"...and going back to a place where we trusted our instincts and listened to nature...." Read more
"...This book is truly a labor of love that speaks from every page. I had no idea what a page-turner it would turn out to be...." Read more
"...This book, however, is light on the visions that inform other Buhner writings..." Read more
"...I was aware of everything about which he wrote, but it became personal...." Read more
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The Lost Language of Plants
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2012This book is amazing on so many levels. First, it touches you emotionally with a story about the loss of connection our culture has with nature. If you even feel this slightly before reading the book then you are immediately hooked. It delves deeper into the necessity of this connection and the myriad of sicknesses caused by the great lack of nature in our lives.
Then it speaks to your mind, the intellect, about the ways our culture has ruined the planet, touching on medications and pharmaceuticals, chemicals and pollution. I had no idea that even the simplest things like brushing our teeth and washing our hair could really be so harmful to our ecosystem. I have completely switched to all natural products in every aspect of my life because of reading this book. The biggest scare for our world is, I have to say, the medications we constantly, and with no regard to the effect, dump into our planet. I have started to study herbology and natural healing practices because of how harmful the medications we take are to the planet and all living creatures. Can you imagine that our children's drinking water is contaminated with viagra, lipitor, prilosec, acutane, valium, and innumerable other medications. Now if I am appalled at this statistic and the effect it implies for humans, can you imagine the effect it has on the building block of our world, bacteria? Or the effect it has on all other living creatures, including plant species?
Then we go back to plants; this book explains the communication system of plants and how each living plant is connected to all of those around it. I really do believe that plants can save our world if we work hard enough to save the plants. The informations in this section really blew my mind. I could have never imagined the intelligence plant life has and how plants all work to help each other. What if humans acted this way towards each other, without regards to bias or judgement? Just to help each other because we can and know it is best for another person, not even considering our egos? Needless to say, this book is inspiring. I was enthralled while reading it and will continue to modify my behavior and actions based on information and ideas in this book.
This book is a spiritual guide to letting go of our modern culture and going back to a place where we trusted our instincts and listened to nature. If we could reach that place, then we will have been healed and so will our planet.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 2009It all began with a dream that Stephen Buhner had many years ago. As he was studying the the Usnea lichen for its healing properties for the lungs of humans, the lichen came to him in a dream and said that while it was good for healing the lungs of humanity it was primarily a medicine for the lungs of the earth: the trees upon which it grew. This concept was radical at the time, the idea that plants have a life outside of their subservience to humanity. This lead Buhner down a road of exploration and a final realization that humans are just one piece of the global bioweb surrounding us.
The Lost Language of Plants is the way in which Stephen Buhner shares his respect for plant life on earth and reveals the amazing chemistry, the language, that all plants speak to each other and to Homo Sapiens. Unfortunately, this subtle communications system is under a serious threat by the pharmaceutical chemicals that have permeated our ecosystem. From the waste spewed by their manufacture to their entrance into city water systems, we are ingesting unwanted chemicals all around us. When the plants regulating our environment are sensitive to the part per trillion level, a small change can have catastrophic consequences.
Humanity has developed internal and external wounds because we've lost our emotional engagement with nature. For the entire history of man's development, we've lived in small groups eating hundreds of plant species, constantly exposed to the wild nature around us. Now that most of us are fundamentally isolated from this wild world, we are missing a part of ourselves, we can feel it but we can't always identify it. The internal wounds are characterized by depression, anxiety and fear: the common words that describe the psyche of the American citizen. The external wounds are the harm we inflict on the biology around us, exemplified by the gaping holes in the ground because of the economic benefit of mining.
During a visit to New York City, Buhner held a class where three women attested to strange experiences with plants. One woman had a recurring dream where her grandmother told her to, "get her fingers in the dirt" and when she did, she felt whole again. She wondered if she was crazy. The next woman was touring a facility and begun to hear the plants in the trays calling out to her. She wondered if she was crazy. The final woman had a plant which pointed in one way at night and the other way in the morning, telling her which way to go. She wondered if she was crazy. Buhner responded by saying that this was normal. Because we've withdrawn from nature we act shocked when we come into contact with the interior world around us. A world we've know as a species for our entire history. In the past, getting advice from ancestors in a dream, hearing plants or developing a relationship with them was considered a blessing. Now it can remind us that our species is another piece of the earth, no more, no less. That can be unsettling for many.
At the core of this problem is the epistemological conflict of organic existence vs. universe as machine. Despite recent discoveries in science chipping away at the deterministic world view of Newton and Descartes, our society is built on a reductionistic view. In the world of plants that means: find every chemical in a plant, take it out, place them in unhealthy foods and sell them back to people. If we took ourselves apart would be surprised that we lost the ability to play music? Amazingly we've discovered that the universe isn't dog eat dog, the survival of the fittest has long been disproved by people like Lynn Margulis who won a Nobel prize for fleshing out the processes behind bacterial cooperation to build new species. We've lost the love of nature, the biophilia and replace it with television to substitutions for dreaming, with public schooling to substitute for the knowledge of the elders and the world around us, with machines for the living world around us and with simplistic chemistries for the plant medicines ubiquitous around us. In Sonoran Desert native populations, the children of the Yaqui and O'odham tribes claimed that their school made them superior to their parents and grandparents but were unable to identify more than 4 local plant species, whereas grandparents could identify more than 15.
With 1900 Americans killed by pharmaceuticals each week, its time to ask if chemical remedies are a practical solution to our health problems. Chemicals from pharmaceutical waste facilities generate 100 million tons of solid waste a year and 250 million liters of liquid waste per year. The average US citizen produces 1300 pounds of excrement. What's in all this stuff that we release into the world around us? The drugs we take and the drugs we will take: antidepressants, tranquilizers, chemotherapy drugs, fugicides, sythetic hormones, etc... the list gets worse and worse. Our waste streams get processed but no amount of cleaning can remove the vast quantities of chemicals we release each year. German researchers found that the North Sea contains 150,000 pounds of clofibric acid, a drug for lower cholesterol levels. Studies confirmed that this amount accumulated from excrement. What does this mean? For example, Chris Metcalf, a researcher in Canada detected esterone, a type of estrogen in waste-water at levels of 400 parts per trillion (ppt). He then exposed Japanese medaka fish to typical waste water streams for 100 days and at concentrations of 10 ppt of esterone the fish exhibited inter-sexual changes and eventually changed sexes from male to female as exposure increased.
I would summarize the discussion of antibiotics in The Lost Language of Plants here but its simply too chilling to break down. Basically, bacteria adapt to antibiotics quickly and communicate that adaptation to other bacteria rapidly, sometimes in hours and the amount of antibiotics increases in the environment every year. Our failure to understand that all life is important has led us to target the microorganisms instead of targeting the conditions that allow them to grow to unsustainable levels inside us.
Plants are chemists, the most complex and well adapted kind. Each plant contains a minimum of several hundred chemicals, some even containing thousands. Even a small change in the ratios of these chemicals can change everything. Seeds emit combinations of abscisic and gibberellic acids, cytokinins and ethylene which regulate germination at levels of less than 10ppt. Without these ratios, the plants don't germinate. And these ratios change based on soil environmental conditions.
When lima beans are infested by spider mites, they will release a blend of volatile oils that attracts a predatory mite which will feed on the spider mite. The plans detect exactly which type of spider mite is present by analyzing the chemistry of the saliva and then produces a different blend of volatiles depending on what kind of spider mite is feeding on it. The mix will only call the predator that feeds on the specific type of mite. Then the plants tell uninfested lima beans what is happening. And all this is cited with actual studies, it isn't just made up. Essentially this entire section was full of jaw-dropping moments which relate how plants interact with each other. With each example backed up by solid science.
We don't need chemical medicines when we have plants. Plants contain everything we need and more. The more I've thought about it, the more Buhner's crowning statement makes sense, that pharmaceuticals are an issue because of their divergence in meaning. This meaning seemed unimportant to me at first. But the reality is that these drugs are made to profit the few and to alleviate the symptoms of human bodily conditions defined arbitrarily as disease. Plant chemistries are created out of an intricately interwoven biofeedback communication loop between elements of our ecosystem that aim to maintain homeostasis. Plant chemistries are chemical messages, man-made drugs are noise.
Yes, western medicine is highly effective at quick cures, as Doctor House was asked why people take drugs he responded, "...because they work." That is no understatement. Our medicines work, but primarily to maintain the lifestyle we lead in defiance of our true nature. Western medicine saves lives, specifically in surgeries. But we can't extrapolate surgical successes to justify the continued reliance on prescription and over-the-counter chemicals. Challenge yourself to explore a remedy to your ailment that is outside the doctors recommendation. Herbs can be finicky. They only speak to certain people, stinging nettles work wonders for my sinuses, they do nothing for others.
As long as we live in our current world, we will have need for modern medicine. As KMO of the C-Realm podcast recently relayed in a story about a woman stricken with an infection, her problem was only remedied by hospital medicine after trying out indigenous approaches. We need both to survive our current lifestyle. But they can live in harmony.
Now when I hear the stories of co-workers on 10+ prescription medicines I'll cringe and hope for a better understanding of the miraculous nature of plant medicines. Perhaps my intense interest in herbs as a child was just a preparation for my future education. Read Buhner's Lost Language of Plants and your world will change dramatically. If you browse the first 20 pages you'll either throw it out, claiming it is nonsense or you'll be hooked, realizing that he describes the world we've covered up with pavement and strip malls.
Top reviews from other countries
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Zoe FalquetReviewed in Canada on January 13, 20195.0 out of 5 stars Très intéressent
Satisfaite
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Cliente AmazonReviewed in Spain on July 30, 20161.0 out of 5 stars Excelente libro que recomiendo para todas las personas que estén en el camino de la evolución con la madre naturaleza.
Único , una obra que nos demuestra que aún no sabemos nada de la naturaleza y por ende de nosotr@s mism@s.
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NikkiReviewed in Italy on August 6, 20215.0 out of 5 stars magnifico
letto già tre volte. ogni volta si trovano delle nuove sfaccettature. un'ode alla natura, apre gli occhi sul disastro che stiamo facendo. dovrebbero leggerlo tutti.
smart kids momReviewed in Germany on May 6, 20245.0 out of 5 stars arrived quickly and in good shape, thank you.
Great book, new all great
Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 16, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book
I really enjoyed this book loads of stuff spoken about .I’ve read it a few times and enjoyed it every time I read it






