Ralph Waldo Emerson - Lifestyle and Beliefs

Lifestyle and Beliefs

Part of a series on individualism
Individualism
Topics and concepts
  • Autonomy
  • Civil liberties
  • Do it yourself
  • Eremitism
  • Free love
  • Free thought
  • Human rights
  • Individual
  • Individual rights
  • Individual reclamation
  • Laissez-faire
  • Libertinism
  • Liberty
  • Methodological individualism
  • Negative liberty
  • Personal property
  • Positive liberty
  • Private property
  • Self-actualization
  • Self-ownership
  • Self reliance
  • Subjectivity
Thinkers
  • Antiphon
  • Émile Armand
  • Aristippus
  • Aristotle
  • Albert Camus
  • Albert Libertad
  • Diogenes of Sinope
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • Epicurus
  • Miguel Giménez Igualada
  • William Godwin
  • Emma Goldman
  • Friedrich von Hayek
  • Thomas Jefferson
  • Laozi
  • John Locke
  • Hipparchia of Maroneia
  • H.L. Mencken
  • John Stuart Mill
  • Ludwig von Mises
  • Michel de Montaigne
  • Friedrich Nietzsche
  • Renzo Novatore
  • Robert Nozick
  • Michel Onfray
  • Georges Palante
  • Ayn Rand
  • Han Ryner
  • Marquis de Sade
  • Jean Paul Sartre
  • Arthur Schopenhauer
  • Adam Smith
  • Herbert Spencer
  • Lysander Spooner
  • Max Stirner
  • Henry David Thoreau
  • Benjamin Tucker
  • Josiah Warren
  • Oscar Wilde
  • Zeno
  • Yang Zhu
Philosophies
  • Anarchism
  • Anarcho-capitalism
  • Classical liberalism
  • Ethical egoism
  • Existentialism
  • Hedonism
  • Humanism
  • Individualist anarchism
  • Left-libertarianism
  • Liberalism
  • Libertarianism
  • Libertarian socialism
  • Minarchism
  • Mutualism
  • Objectivism
  • Right libertarianism
  • Social anarchism
  • Voluntaryism
Concerns
  • Anti-individualism
  • Authoritarianism
  • Collectivism
  • Dogmatism
  • Group rights
  • Herd mentality
  • Mass society
  • Social engineering
  • Statism
  • Totalitarianism

Emerson's religious views were often considered radical at the time. He believed that all things are connected to God and, therefore, all things are divine. Critics believed that Emerson was removing the central God figure; as Henry Ware, Jr. said, Emerson was in danger of taking away "the Father of the Universe" and leaving "but a company of children in an orphan asylum". Emerson was partly influenced by German philosophy and Biblical criticism. His views, the basis of Transcendentalism, suggested that God does not have to reveal the truth but that the truth could be intuitively experienced directly from nature.

Emerson did not become an ardent abolitionist until 1844, though his journals show he was concerned with slavery beginning in his youth, even dreaming about helping to free slaves. In June 1856, shortly after Charles Sumner, a United States Senator, was beaten for his staunch abolitionist views, Emerson lamented that he himself was not as committed to the cause. He wrote, "There are men who as soon as they are born take a bee-line to the axe of the inquisitor... Wonderful the way in which we are saved by this unfailing supply of the moral element". After Sumner's attack, Emerson began to speak out about slavery. "I think we must get rid of slavery, or we must get rid of freedom", he said at a meeting at Concord that summer. Emerson used slavery as an example of a human injustice, especially in his role as a minister. In early 1838, provoked by the murder of an abolitionist publisher from Alton, Illinois named Elijah Parish Lovejoy, Emerson gave his first public antislavery address. As he said, "It is but the other day that the brave Lovejoy gave his breast to the bullets of a mob, for the rights of free speech and opinion, and died when it was better not to live". John Quincy Adams said the mob-murder of Lovejoy "sent a shock as of any earthquake throughout this continent". However, Emerson maintained that reform would be achieved through moral agreement rather than by militant action. By August 1, 1844, at a lecture in Concord, he stated more clearly his support for the abolitionist movement. He stated, "We are indebted mainly to this movement, and to the continuers of it, for the popular discussion of every point of practical ethics".

Emerson may have had erotic thoughts about at least one man. During his early years at Harvard, he found himself attracted to a young freshman named Martin Gay about whom he wrote sexually charged poetry. He also had a number of crushes on various women throughout his life, such as Anna Barker and Caroline Sturgis.

Read more about this topic:  Ralph Waldo Emerson

Famous quotes containing the words lifestyle and/or beliefs:

    The hippie is the scion of surplus value. The dropout can only claim sanctity in a society which offers something to be dropped out of—career, ambition, conspicuous consumption. The effects of hippie sanctimony can only be felt in the context of others who plunder his lifestyle for what they find good or profitable, a process known as rip-off by the hippie, who will not see how savagely he has pillaged intricate and demanding civilizations for his own parodic lifestyle.
    Germaine Greer (b. 1939)

    Both Eliot and Pound condense; their best verse is weighted—Pound’s, with sensual experience primarily, and Eliot’s with beliefs. Where the mind’s life is concerned the senses produce images, and beliefs produce dramatic cries. The condensation is important.
    R.P. Blackmur (1904–1965)