Young Goodman Brown2
What is blind Faith? Faith is accepting what you are taught or told without trying to prove or disprove it, rather than discovering it through experience. Atheism suggests that those who believe in God have blind faith-and they do. It has not been proven that God exists; similarly, it has not been proven that humans are kind, honest, and good by nature. Young Goodman Brown is a character in "Young Goodman Brown," who leaves his known world in Salem village and travels an unknown road in a dark forest in the middle of the night, a common motif in literature better known as the Hero's journey, and is faced withobstacles. He must decide if he will carry his journey out till the end, or turn back and not learn the truth about himself and other humans. The story "Young Goodman Brown," by Nathaniel Hawthorne traces Young Goodman Brown's experiences, physical and psychological, paralleling the Hero's Journey and showing how he discovers that humans are truly evil by nature; therefore, altering his views of other humans and life itself. In the beginning of the story, Goodman Brown is faced with a decision to stay home with his wife another night or to take off on his journey. This parallels his
Goodman Brown has been enlightened and now understands that human nature is evil. Throughout the rest of his life, Goodman Brown does not see the people he once thought he knew the true nature of the same as he used to. Faith, his wife, is urging him to stay with her instead of leaving that night. He is only gone one night and nothing substantial changes in Salem village while he is gone, but since he is so dramatically changed emotionally during his excursion, he remains sad and distrustful for the rest of his life, due to knowing the truth about human nature. Young Goodman Brown returns to his home the next morning as a new man. Come, devil, for thee is this world given" (pg. The call, from the Hero's journey, is when Goodman Brown decides to go out alone to discover himself. The cloud of voices sweeps away and Goodman Brown is left in solitude. Goodman Brown tries to explain why he wishes to turn back by saying, "My father never went into the woods on such an errand, nor his father before him. Seeing them on the same path was more assuring, but at the same time made him begin to doubt mankind.
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