Abstract
This paper investigates the enduring philosophical challenge of how a living organism may be understood, through the epistemological perspectives of Immanuel Kant, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and Rudolf Steiner. Kant's analysis of the necessity of judging organisms as purposive and self-generating wholes is presented as foundational to any systematic account, insofar as it addresses the very conditions under which an organism can become an object of cognition. However, due to Kant's strict separation of sensory intuition from conceptual understanding, he regarded purposive self-generation as merely heuristic, lacking causal legitimacy within empirical nature. In contrast, Goethe's participatory and intuitive method, articulated in The Metamorphosis of Plants, integrates empirical observation with imaginative reproduction to achieve an intuitive grasp of an organism's life and transformation. Conceived as a dynamic bridge between perception and concept, Goethe's approach was subsequently interpreted and philosophically developed by Steiner. Steiner argued that an organism's essential nature can be apprehended through a productive, intuitive mode of cognition that mentally reconstructs the organism's formative principles and self-generative force. His position, which bears affinities to Fichte's notion of intellectual intuition, both elucidates and extends Goethe's method by asserting that the organism's formative force is accessible through active, intuitive cognition. Thus, Steiner demonstrated how Goethe's approach transcends Kant's limitation on the knowability of organic life, enabling the empirical observation of spiritual efficacy in material nature. This paper ultimately contends that the Goethe-Steiner method offers an empirical yet intuitive framework and method for understanding the life and formation of living organisms.