(Redirected from Transcendentalist)
'Transcendentalism' was a group of new ideas in
literature,
religion,
culture, and
philosophy that emerged in
New England in the early to middle 19th century. It is sometimes called 'American Transcendentalism' to distinguish it from other uses of the word ''
transcendental''.
Transcendentalism began as a protest against the general state of culture and
society at the time, and in particular, the state of
intellectualism at
Harvard and the doctrine of the
Unitarian church which was taught at
Harvard Divinity School. Among Transcendentalists' core beliefs was an ideal
spiritual state that 'transcends' the physical and empirical and is only realized through the individual's intuition, rather than through the doctrines of established religions.
Prominent Transcendentalists included
Ralph Waldo Emerson,
Henry David Thoreau,
Margaret Fuller, as well as
Bronson Alcott,
Orestes Brownson,
William Ellery Channing,
Frederick Henry Hedge,
Theodore Parker,
George Putnam, and
Sophia Peabody, the wife of
Nathaniel Hawthorne. For a time, Peabody and Hawthorne lived at the
Brook Farm Transcendentalist
utopian
commune.
History
The publication of Emerson's 1836 essay ''
Nature'' is usually taken to be the watershed moment at which Transcendentalism became a major cultural movement. Emerson wrote in his essay "
The American Scholar": "We will walk on our own feet; we will work with our own hands; we will speak our own minds ... A nation of men will for the first time exist, because each believes himself inspired by the
Divine Soul which also inspires all men." Emerson closed the essay by calling for a revolution in human consciousness to emerge from the new idealist philosophy:
In the same year, Transcendentalism became a coherent movement with the founding of the
Transcendental Club in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, on
September 8,
1836, by prominent New England intellectuals including
George Putnam,
Ralph Waldo Emerson, and
Frederick Henry Hedge. From 1840, the group published frequently in their journal ''
The Dial'', along with other venues.
The practical aims of the Transcendentalists were varied; some among the group linked it with utopian social change (and, in the case of
Brownson, it joined explicitly with early
socialism), while others found it an exclusively individual and idealist project. Emerson believed the latter. In his 1842 lecture "
The Transcendentalist", Emerson suggested that the goal of a purely Transcendental outlook on life was impossible to attain in practice:
Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote a novel, ''
The Blithedale Romance'', satirizing the movement, and based it on his experiences at
Brook Farm, a short-lived utopian community founded on Transcendental principles.
Origins
Transcendentalism was rooted in the
transcendental philosophy of
Immanuel Kant (and of
German Idealism more generally), which the New England intellectuals of the early 19th century embraced as an alternative to the
Lockean "
sensualism" of their fathers and of the
Unitarian church, finding this alternative in
Vedic thought,
German idealism, and English
Romanticism.
The Transcendentalists desired to ground their religion and philosophy in transcendental principles: principles not based on, or falsifiable by, sensuous experience, but deriving from the inner, spiritual or mental essence of the human. Immanuel Kant had called "all knowledge transcendental which is concerned not with objects but with our mode of knowing objects." The Transcendentalists were largely unacquainted with
German philosophy in the original, and relied primarily on the writings of
Thomas Carlyle,
Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
Victor Cousin,
Germaine de Staël, and other English and French commentators for their knowledge of it. In contrast, they were intimately familiar with the English
Romantics, and the Transcendental movement may be partially described as a slightly later, American outgrowth of Romanticism. Another major influence was the mystical spiritualism of
Emanuel Swedenborg.
Thoreau in ''Walden'' spoke of the debt to the Vedic thought directly, as did other members of the movement:
Other meanings of ''transcendentalism''
Transcendental idealism
The term '''transcendentalism''' sometimes serves as shorthand for "
transcendental idealism," which is the philosophy of
Immanuel Kant and later Kantian and German Idealist philosophers.
Transcendental theology
Another alternative meaning for '''transcendentalism''' is the classical philosophy that God transcends the manifest world. As
John Scotus Erigena put it to
Frankish king
Charles the Bald in the year 840 A.D., "We do not know what God is. God himself doesn't know what He is because He is not anything. Literally God is not, because He transcends being."
See also
★
Transcendental Generation
★
Dark romanticism
External links
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The Transcendentalist, by Ralph Waldo Emerson, A Lecture read at the Masonic Temple, Boston, January, 1842.
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The web of American transcendentalism
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The Transcendentalists
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The American Renaissance and Transcendentalism - from a PBS series
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What Is Transcendentalism?
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Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry
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Religious overview and comparisons to other religions (use Google html cache)