Emerson's harmony with nature I would like to talk about two things in discussing nature. One thing I discovered now is that it is interesting and the other is to look at the idea of unity and harmony raised through work. When I read it again, I noticed that Emerson mentioned the first time "vision" three times. I know that Emerson is sometimes unnecessary, but for me, he will try to convey the importance of the horizon to us. When he wrote about who owns the property, he said "a property that no one has on the horizon". There is a place to which the earth belongs somewhere in the distance.
Emerson's "nature" is a wonderful philosophical article. Emerson opened minds to everyone, in most cases, forgot the world. The isolation of human beings from the natural world and the loss of connections between people creates an expanding gap between human and human personality. Emerson found a match of divinity, tranquility, and iniquity in personality, and shared it through his articles. In "nature", Emerson shows overwhelming unity, harmony, and the integration of the sacred nature of human identity and nature.
Ralph Waldo Emerson supports a religious world view. There, God, the "eternal thing" is expressed through a special harmony between individual souls and nature. In "American Scholars" (1837) and "Self-Reliance" (1841), Emerson emphasizes the full reliability and appropriateness of individual souls and overcomes the "long-term apprenticeship of other land studies" I advised him to his audience. 10 Emerson believes that the time has come for Americans to announce independence from European intellectuals. Henry David Thoreau has a simple life, communication with nature, and similar passion for self-sufficiency. Thoreau's stubborn individualism is probably the strongest among the transcendentalists, which also produced "resistance to the citizen's government" (1849). Some transcendentalists participate in the experiment of community life.
Transcendentalism usually supports relationships between individuals and spiritual people through a harmonious relationship with nature. The first major publication of this sport was Nature (1836), in which Emerson redesigned the ideas of various lectures. Some of Emerson's public thinking states that the United States should develop a culture of indigenous peoples unrelated to Europe, or that spirituality can be found within itself without being influenced by organized religion It is considered to be shocking as it is. Emerson 's colleagues in sports include Jonesbury, Peabody Sisters, Margaret Fuller, Bronson Arcot (father of Luisa May Artsut) and Nathaniel Hawthorne. He gave a generous advice to ambitious writers like Whitman, allowing Henry David Thoreau to build a cottage on the land of Walden Pond. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, James Russell Lowell, Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes is also publishing a new work in Boston.