Emerson's Transcedentalist Beliefs
By: Mikki • Research Paper • 1,960 Words • February 17, 2009 • 1,277 Views
Essay title: Emerson's Transcedentalist Beliefs
Every so often throughout history, great doers and thinkers come along that break the mold and set new standards. People like Caesar, Shakespeare, Napoleon and Jesus have been studied and immortalized in volumes of texts. Then there are others who are not as well known. People like Ralph Waldo Emerson. From his life, writings, associates, beliefs and philosophy, this Concord, Massachusetts man has set his place as a hero in American literature and philosophy (Bloom 13).
The first, most important thing to mention about Ralph Waldo Emerson is that he was not a Transcendentalist philosopher (Bloom 1). Ralph Emerson was a poet, critic, essayist, and a believer of morals (Bloom 2). Many people look at what he wrote in his books and essays, and they took his ideas from his speeches and turned them into a way of life. His ideas and beliefs earned him the role as the chief spokesman for American Transcendentalism (Siepmann 300).
Emerson was a graduate from Harvard University. After his graduation, he became a minister. It was while he was a preacher that he began to think new ideas about life. The breakthrough for his new way of thinking came when he resigned from pasturing at the Second Church of Boston because e could not administer the Lord's Supper (Hart 256).
The sources of Emerson's writings were from the early colonists, and he acknowledged them in his writings (Bloom 34). His writings were secular, and the readers of the era were sometimes scared by the lack of religious references and biblical texts in his writings. His writings were considered daring for his time, but they were moral (Unger 2).
The tone of his work was focused on self-reliance and the problem of how to live. His writings provoked people to ask how instead of what and not we but I (Unger 1). Emerson's essays spoke to people of the 19th century that were ready for individuality and a new optimism that liked God, nature, and man (Masterpieces 258).
His essays tell the importance of a man that goes on through life like he represents not only himself, but also every other person he sees and meets (Masterpieces 258). He used his writings to challenge traditional thought (Siepmann 300).
Most consider his writings to be the not clearly organized and not easy to follow, but they have moments of brilliancy. His essays were ordered by recurring themes and images (Siepmann 300), while his poetry was harsh and meant to teach (Siepmann 301).
His book, Nature, summarized his major ideas (Siepmann 300) and is the original and the best expression of transcendentalist philosophy (Spiller 346). Nature expresses his philosophy for the love of natural scenes where Emerson spent most of his time (Hart 256). The basic idea Emerson expressed in Nature is that nature is God's ideal made clear to man. Emerson expressed that nature reveals truth, disciplines man, and rewards man when used properly and punishes man for abuse (Masterpieces 258).
Through his essays and addresses, Emerson accomplished becoming the leading transcendentalist in America. He also became one of the greatest American philosophers of all time (Masterpieces 258).
Emerson had many friends that helped him with his movement. Most of them were fellow writers, theologians, orators, and artists that were involved with the New England Transcendentalist movement. Emerson felt physically and intellectually closest to Amos Alcott, Margaret Fuller, and Henry David Thoreau (Wood 77). Some of Emerson's other close friends were Ellery Channin and Nathaniel Hawthorne (Snodgrass 515).
Emerson and his friends formed a club called the Symposium. The Symposium later became known as the Transcendentalist Club. The club was made up of intellectual men and women that shared Emerson's beliefs (Wood 77). Emerson did not have great feelings for the club. It was not what he liked or what he had wished for. The club often bored and annoyed him. Emerson preferred the company of friends that had wit and culture (Wood 147).
Emerson was sure of his ideas and beliefs and trusted them fully (Masterpieces 258). He believed in the unity of all living things. He disregarded authority and did not follow traditions. Emerson believed that people should rely only on direct experience (Siepmann 991).
Emerson believed in a God, which he called the Over-Soul. The Over-Soul, "explains the many diverse phenomena of life." (Hart 257). The Over-Soul is the dominant creative force of the universe. It is detectable by the mind and is the perception of the individual (Meyerson 73).
Emerson believed in a moral unity between man and objects. He believed in unity that happened between the active and creating powers of inner divinity. He also felt that intuition gives definition to heredity, geography and history (Unger 7).
All of Emerson's preaching's spoke of what