Comparing Emerson And Thoreau Transcendentalism

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“A philosophical and literary movement, centered in concord and Boston , which was prominent in the intellectual and cultural life of New England from 1836 until just before the civil war”(A handbook of literary terms, page 318). “Transcendentalism , an idealist philosophical tendency among writers in and around Boston in the mid 19th century .Growing out of Christian Unitarian in 1830s under the influence of German and British *romanticism, transcendentalism affirmed Kant’s principles of intuitive knowledge not derived from the senses, while rejecting organized religion for an extremely individualistic celebration of the divinity in each human being”(Oxford concise dictionary of literary terms,pg-262).Emerson and Thoreau are writers …show more content…

“We need the tonic of wilderness…..at the same time that we are earnest to explore and learn all things; we require that all things be mysterious and unexplorable, that land and sea be indefinitely wild, unsurveyed and unfathomed by us. We can never have enough of nature” (Thoreau, Walden; or, life in the woods).As, Thoreau is known to be the first environmentalist or ecologist, presented that “he embraces the wilderness of nature for its own sake and argues that man is obliged to conserve nature –total tree hugger” (Thoreau, walden1854).He says that nature is innocent, it is corrupted by money, items and other things that could be hinder our development and also corrupt our …show more content…

As nature it is innocent and has taken her own resolution and no mortal (any individual) can change or is answerable. “What is nature to him? there is never a beginning , there is never an end ,it resembles his own spirit ,whose beginning ,whose ending he can never find ,so entire, so boundless”(Emerson, American scholar,1854).He pointed out that both nature and scholars spirit whose beginning and ending can never be found, as it is boundless and unmeasureable. In a way like depth of the actual knowledge of man and nature is questionable. “Let us demand our works and laws and worship” (Emerson, American scholar).Here Emerson tells how modern generations live life vicariously. He does not conform to modern ways and also to the old stories and traditions but rather believed to be in individualistic. Both Thoreau and Emerson believed in individualism and have same principle, but they differ in perception like Emerson believed that government should not control individual’s people lives nor government should be powerless. Thoreau on the other hand encourages individual to act directly against the government until condition changes and

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