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    People normally try to find ways to become spiritual and connect with the natural life around them. Transcendentalism is the belief that humans have individual power. To have power can mean that you have power with the nature around you, and most people try to practice spiritual lives. The power of nature can be a strong individual power. According to, Google’s definition system, Transcendentalism means “an idealistic philosophical and social movement that developed in New England around 1836 in…

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    Transcendentalism time period was in the early nineteenth century. The traits I see that are stressed in the transcendentalism movement are individualism, spiritual, and philosophy. I saw individualism through the quote “all men are created equal” in the text. Individualism is thought of as having ones own thoughts and ideas and not the thoughts or values of others. I feel that individualism was a major part of this movement that was stressed. However I feel that individualism in our society…

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    How do you view your evidence of life? Are you all about the natural side of things, or are you a strict believer in science? Transcendentalism was a philosophy started in the early 19th century that promotes intuitive, spiritual thinking instead of scientific thinking based on material things. In other words, the transcendentalist movement supported living life through all natural truth. This movement was put into play by several people, but more specifically speaking with the head of this…

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    In the Excerpt “Spring” from Thoreau's essay titled Walden, Thoreau explains how spring is a symbol of change and continuity. In order to satisfy his purpose, Thoreau uses powerful diction, prominent metaphors and personification of nature. Thoreau uses Powerful diction in the piece such as, “lifting” “glee's” “dissolves” “fresh” to convey how the spring can uplift one’s mind, and words such as “perpetual” “perennial” “eternity” to form an intellectual voice. Thoreau utilizes prominent…

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    Transcendentalist Lives Clash Why are they clashing? Don’t all the transcendentalists like each other? They do, but most have different ideas. Is this where sanity goes to just plain old crazy? Or is it just your heart telling you what to do? This is where Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau differ. While Emerson established the “transcendentalist ideas” (Transcendentalism An American Philosophy), Thoreau lived them word by word. Henry David Thoreau lived a very different life from…

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    They believed that nature is changing and people must know the reason why it is changing because nature changes accordingly to the society. According to Emerson's (1834) observation " human do not entirely understand natures beauty and all the things that nature has to offer us. He further state that people are uncertain by the humankind around them and human must take themselves away from societies flaw and diversion in order to experience the unity with nature for which they are naturally…

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    Self-Reliance Rhetorical Analysis Transcendentalism was a philosophical movement that developed in the late 1820s in the Eastern region of the United States as a protest against the general state of intellectualism and spirituality. Most of the Transcendentalists became involved as well in social reform movements, especially anti-slavery and women's rights. Finding its root in the word “transcend,” Transcendentalists believed individuals could transcend to a higher plane of existence in nature.…

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    Ralph Waldo Emerson started his ministry as a Unitarian but soon broke away from the Unitarianism and becoming very influential with the rise of Transcendentalism. Emerson talks a lot about nature in religion and the importance of the world around. In the first selection Nature is about how nature relates to God and how people should see God though nature. In the last section Self-Reliance Emerson has some parallels to Benjamin Franklin view of religion and nature interconnected. In Nature…

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    What is walking? Is it an aimless way to waste time with no real destination? Do we as humans walk with a purpose or with somewhere to be? In Henry David Thoreau’s piece, Walking, he discusses the beauty of nature and how we as humans are “an inhabitant of nature, rather than a member of society. (Pg. 49)” Thoreau discloses how we as a society never are able to just get out and walk anymore. We spend so much of our lives with places to be and things to do that we never have time to walk around…

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    Transcendentalism was a religious and philosophical movement that developed during 1820’s in the western region of the United States. This is a very simple idea. All people have knowledge about themselves and the entire world around them that “transcends” or goes beyond what they can see. People can trust themselves to be their own authority on what is right. The people who were closely associated with this new way of thinking and looking at the world were known as the Transcendental Club. The…

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