Emerson's super spirit is a Concordian citizen of the philosopher, and Emerson recently told me about his observation of a special phenomenon he called an excessive soul. I would rather rather claim to explain the general meaning and nature of this universal sample. Emerson strongly insists that as a reasonable and sentimental existence we are out of the controversy and thanks to our existence, when it exists it knows certainty. He further believes that understanding of the existence of this meat can come from Shakespeare, Plato and other Caucasians, mainly the work of the dead.
On March 20, 1841, Emerson's first paper was published. Through works of independence and The Over-Soul, the series (Essay: 1st series) will begin to define Emerson's philosophy. In The Over-Soul, Emerson expanded his creativity in the magazine Nature. He outlines a common spirit of unifying all beings, a transcendent belief in the adaptation of Concord's popular eastern religious reading. Emerson writes, "We live in departments, departments, parts, and particles." "9
Emerson's first book, "Nature" (1836) may be the best realization of his transcendentalism, believing that everything in our world - even a drop of dew - - is the representative of the universe It is. His super soul concept - the best mind shared by all men and women - allows the transcendentalist to ignore external authority, but allows to rely on direct experience. "Believe in yourself", Emerson's motto has become the code for Margaret Fuller, Bronson Arcott, Henry David Thoreau, and W. E. Channing. From 1842 to 1844, Emerson edited the transcendental journal.
In addition, in Brahma 's poem, Emerson explains the transcendental belief of excessive soul by talking about Hindu faith against reincarnation and universal self. The universal self is Brahma, and Emerson is a super soul. He uses public opinion to prove that all of us are interrelated. Or at least we can find answers to simpler, contradictory but complex and complementary life problems. Finally, the poet and writer Ralph Wald Emerson used many literary techniques to explain the transcendental concept of excessive souls. Rhyming the connection and rhyme of his poetry, and using nicknames, anthropomorphism, and other literary means. But it is one of the most common things: Themes