<!doctype html public «-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en»> http-equiv=content-type> Although Goethe’s Morphology drew little notice from natural scientists, his way of conceptualizing the innumerable forms that occur in nature as organic variations of a few basic archetypes was received with immediate interest by scholars in the humanities. This volume compiles studies on Droysen, Dilthey, Simmel, and Wittgenstein, who relied on Goethe’s Morphology trying to master a modern age experienced as increasingly confusing.