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26 pages 52 minutes read

Divinity School Address

Nonfiction | Essay / Speech | Adult | Published in 1838

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Background

Philosophical Context: Transcendentalism

Ralph Waldo Emerson is the best known adherent and writer on Transcendentalism. In fact, the clearest enunciation of Transcendentalism is from Emerson’s essay Nature (1836), published roughly two years before his speech. This philosophical system emphasizes an appreciation for nature that informs a correct understanding of man’s soul. It argues that society has slowly stripped away the “wholeness” of man and that solitude within in nature is the means to restore it. This developed from the artistic and intellectual movement of Romanticism, which revolved around appreciation of nature and the elevation of individual subjectivity. Emerson interchanges the idea of God with a Universal Being, which man may find by looking into the spirit of nature and one’s own spirit.

The inseparability of man and nature is a core tenant of Nature. The universe and what’s in it act as one entity. Therefore, when we look into our soul and rely on our intuitions, we are effectively looking into the reality of nature, as well. Man and his soul, along with all created things, are all aspects of the single entity that Emerson calls the Universal Being.

These ideas can be seen as a precursor to the arguments made in “Divinity School Address.

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