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Transcendentalism

The New England Renaissance brought out two distinct, yet influential movements known as transcendentalism and anti-transcendentalism. The two concentrated on intuition and human nature and formed a revolt against previously accepted ideas such as Calvinist orthodoxy, strict Puritan attitudes, ritualism, and the dogmatic theology of religious institutions. Transcendentalism is a term rooted back to Plato, a Greek philosopher who first affirmed the existence of absolute goodness, which he characterized as beyond something of description and as knowable only through intuition. He laid the tracks down for others to build off of. The Scholastic philosophers were the first to add to Plato's theory during the middle ages. They came up with the transcendental concepts, which show the capabilities of all types of things. Essence, unity, goodness, truth, thing, and something were the six that they recognized. Still the term transcendentalist needed refining. Immanuel Kant, Johann Gottieb Fichte, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling, and Edmund Husserl formed a distinction between the terms transcendent, entities that are unknown and cannot be defined, and transcendental, signifying a priori forms of thought, innate principles w


Another quote that shows the idea of transcendentalism, which looks at its possibilities for the human spirit and what it can achieve is, "The power which resides in him (referring to all humans) is new in nature, and non but he knows what that is which he can do, nor does he know until he has tried. Hooper running into nature's darkness is symbolic of this Anti-Transcendental idea. A major accomplishment of his life was the publishing of his two series of Essays, which the world-renowned Self-Reliance essay was published in 1841. For the Earth, too, had on her Black Veil. IN 1829, he was ordained as a Unitarian minister, and left three years later because of his differences with the religion. " Nature, as believed by the Anti-Transcendentalists, was a symbol of everything unexplainable, and since nobody in the village knew (or wanted to admit) what the black veil symbolized, Mr. Like, the transcendental movement, there were two main writers that showed the beliefs, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Herman Melville. His work can be summed up in one famous quote, "Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity, I say, let your affairs be as two or three, and not a hundred or a thousand; instead of a million, count half a dozen, and keep your accounts on your thumbnail", from Walden. He symbolized the Anti-Transcendental ideas of life's truths beings disturbing. He was born in New York City and published his primary anti-transcendentalist piece of art, Moby Dick. Ralph Waldo Emerson was an American essayist, philosopher, and poet. He graduated from Harvard in 1821 and was the youngest member of his freshmen class there at the age of 14. ith which the mind gives form to its perceptions, and classified their views as transcendental. His experiment at Walden took place from 1845 to 1847, but the collection of essays wasn't published until 1854, 5 years after he published Civil Disobedience. It shows the evil inside of people.

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