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Ralph Waldo Emerson

a cura di B. Soressi bensore@lycos.it

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B. Soressi Ralph Waldo Emerson

Ralph Waldo Emerson Ralph Waldo Emerson (Boston 1803 - Concord 1882), was the fourth son of a Unitarian pastor. After losing his father in 1811, he studied at the Boston Public Latin School and received his degree from Harvard College in 1821. Then he taught in the schools for young ladies, where he remained until his entrance in the Harvard Divinity School, from which he received his MA in 1827. Two years later he became junior pastor and married Ellen Tucker, who died of tuberculosis only two years later. This coincides with Emersons first important crisis, which ends with his resignations as pastor and with his long trip to Europe, beginning from Malta and Sicily up to England. Develops a friendship with Carlyle and meets Wordsworth and Coleridge. Once came back to the Usa, in 1834 he begins a long career as lecturer. In the following year he moves to a country house in Concord. He marries Lydia Jackson (1802-92), who bears him five children. In 1838 he reads in public an appeal of the Cherokees, who have been removed from Georgia, and pleads the same case also through a severe letter to the Usa president Van Buren. In 1840 comes out the first issue of The Dial, the transcendentalist review, which Emerson will direct in 1842. In this year H.D. Thoreau begins to live in Emersons house as a general handyman and a paternal figure during his friends long conference tours. E. looks with a detached sympathy at the many experiments of communitarian life of his time, such as the neo-Pythagorean community of his friend A.B. Alcott. He declines the invitation to participate to Brook Farm, another famous commune. In 1843 he speaks in public his anti-slavery position, which leads him to risk his safety during a discourse of 1861. In 1866 he receives a honoris causa doctorate at the Harvard College, where he lectures the following year. In 1873 he is in Europe again. The Sermons In 1826 E. pronounces the first of his 171 Sermons, works in which, among many ingenuities, one can notice an impressive open-mindedness on theological issues and penetrating anticipations of his future thinking. The last sermon is The Lords Supper (1832): here he presents his resignations as pastor, after offering a symbolistic interpretation of the dogma of transubstantiation and after arguing against the traditional
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B. Soressi Ralph Waldo Emerson

conception (assimilated by the Unitarians) of the consecrated bread and wine as Christs body. Jesus is essentially seen as the supreme model of the educator, and he is spoiled of any exclusive divine clothing. There emerges an idea of Christian spirituality as freedom and as an invitation to live in love, opening oneself to the possible rituals and forms of life, and without stiffing in specific forms or rigid institutions. Nature (1836) In these years E., who already in Paris is fascinated by the Jardin des plantes and the Muse des sciences, enthusiastically reads the theorist of sciences and astronomer Herschel, and writes natural history essays, essays on English literature, and biographies. In 1836 comes out, anonymous, Nature, a little systematic treatise which is central in the landscape of American Transcendentalism, that is a philosophical current which in E,s and Thoreaus versions one can see as a sort of existentialism which has pragmatist as much as idealistic and prophetic ramifications. Nature begins with an explicit critique of post-hegelian historicism and of every retrospective attitude; a critique that he will further develop in the following essays and which one can find almost without consistent variations, in Nietzsches second Untimely Meditation. The other critique, directed against forms of paltry empiricism (in E.s words), such as the Humean ones, underlies the will to realize a form of thinking which can inspire the future thinkers and which can invite the, to an experimental and a thinking-poietic attitude toward life. This is also a sort of transfiguration of the famous bet of Pascal (whose Thoughts E. read already when 9 years old). If one follows this thread, and the persistent reference of life to writing and vice versa, one would reach and without any consistent gap to the poetical pragmatism of Nietzsche and Heidegger. In fact, these are all distinctive traits of E.s following works. The main idea is that of preparing the textual and spiritual soil for the coming of a future Thinker-Poet (elsewhere called Reformer, Individual, and, as in the following paragraph, American Scholar). The American Scholar (1837) and Divinity School Address (1838) These two essays are the fruit of years of fervid studies in education, in the philosophy of culture and in philosophical anthropology (concentrated into a consistent number of essays which perhaps would be worthwhile to reconsider). The essay of 1837 is the elaboration of an homonymous conference held at Harvard and defined by O.W.

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B. Soressi Ralph Waldo Emerson

Holmes as our intellectual Declaration of Independence. Readers and scholars of any sort are invited to build from the foundations a new authentically American culture, and to free themselves from the eagerness to imitate at any cost the European models. Moreover, it is suggested Gramscian ideal of a total, organic intellectual, one who can unite both thinking and acting. The scholar must be rather than a reader of books an observer of reality, of even the most ordinary and humble everydayness. The essay of 1838 draws a certainly not new image, but one which is still, in its extreme simplicity, scandalous for theologians and conservatives: that of a Jesus as teacher-democratizer of the divine status, one who teaches to each and all how to become those divine beings that they potentially are. What is denied is the idea that the regal privileges of the divine status would belong only to Jesus Christ or any other divinized being. This claim for an exclusive divine status is seen as the base of the universal decay and now almost death of faith in society. Essays, I series (1841) The Essays represent one of the richest and most mature works of E. Self-Reliance is the center of E.s thinking and not wrongly his most famous essay: it is the modern version of the ancient Socratic and Stoic credo in the individual, in the resources of the soul, and in a mind, or soul, which is at once individual and universal. This implies the need to express, or at least to carefully follow, our latent conviction, our rejected thoughts, even those that we would consider as most stupid or insignificant. Hence it follows the option for the wandering writing style of Montaigne, the one philosopher that E. feels as most next to him. It is an intermediate form between aphorism and treatise, that is the Essay. So E. abandons Natures residual systematical purposes, and relies more and more on his Journals, that may be considered as the foundation of his philosophical work, as they contain many cardinal intuitions which will appear first in the lectures, and finally in the published works. In the Journals one can find personal intuitions and observations beside quotations and translations that go from Goethe to Novalis, from Milton to Coleridge, from Plato to Plutarch and Plotinus, to Swedenborg, from Vedic and Classical Indian thought to Confucian thought, to Persian poets, to Trascendentalists such as Sampson Reed or that aunt of him, Mary Moody E., who has also been a fundamental parental figure for E.

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B. Soressi Ralph Waldo Emerson

In Self-Reliance and Circles it is evident a particular mode of thinking, which Stanley Cavell calls aversive thinking, and which is a thinking and a theory of individuation through a self-education to abandonment. This implies a perfectionist ethics and the acceptation of forms of external inconsistency below which, however, there is the consistent rout of a character, of a personality. These two essays express what is perhaps the most radical thesis of intellectual non-conformism ever expressed before Nietzsche. But in E. the somehow Nietzschean harshness is inscribed into a clearly democratic attitude, which is therefore distinct from that of the German philosopher both because less resented and less obsessed by its polemical targets, and because E. never worries too much about setting hierarchies, and never makes distinctions between classes of men unreachably superior and other classes of incurably degenerate subjects. Each one is different because each one participates in his own way of the common-wealth of humanity. But all are potentially equal because they can participate of this patrimony, of this common-wealth. Even us, as Dewey did, can so discover in E. a sort of American Nietzsche who is a stimulating educator in a democratic society. In History E. invokes the need to join together individual life and universal history. He invites us to read history while identifying ourselves with the men of the past and empathically, with our imagination, re-living their lives to the point of overcoming space and time. History is, first of all, the product of single human lives and of what is universal in them. For this reason it has to be a mean of discovery of what the universal that unites us, and therefore a mean of discovery not only of what has been, but also of what we all are and can be in the future. What results is an amor fati that had been expressed through a sentence which is also Nietzsches quotation-homage to E. (title page of The Gay Science): To the poet, to the philosopher, to the saint, all things are friendly and sacred, all events profitable, all days holy, all men divine. Intellect sheds light on two pre-Heideggerian aspects of Emersons philosophy: an emotional theory of knowing and a conception of thinking as a pious reception (something already present in Self-Reliance and The Over-Soul). Compensation and Spiritual Laws illustrate part of E.s vision of ethics and justice, which is founded on a supposed omni-present and inviolable order of nature. Here is evident a compensatory

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B. Soressi Ralph Waldo Emerson

anthropological theory: man is seen as a being who acquires new arts, and loses old instincts. Essays, II series (1844) The Poet presents a prophetology marked by a democratic attitude which seems to imply already the work of Whitman (who attended the homonymous lecture), and suggests a theory of social transformation through poetry. In a re-reading of Platos Myth of the Cave, Emersons Poet is seen as a liberating god and the one who can realize the ideal of philosophical, scientific, and poetic revolution that is promoted in Circles. The sense of the possibility of a scientific-cultural revolution is even stronger in the reader of Experience, which is considered as the height of the Emersonian skepticism. E. presents here an epistemological theory which levels the aspirations of the previous epistemologies and opposes the previous conceptions of empiricism, which tend to flatten on a poor form of experience such as the merely sensorial one (v. Nature, 1836). The image of human experience becomes more complicated; to the point that we become spectators of a proliferation of the criteria of knowledge, which are no longer limited to Aristoteles or Kant categories. As with Heidegger, the moods and other aspects of reality (such as surprise) come into play. These constitute criteria of knowledge of the world, a way through which a world can reveal itself to us. Representative Men (1850) This collection of essays shows in a first instance, what could be the scope and goal of our knowing the works and the life of the great men: they are worth not so much in that they are exemplars we have to servilely imitate, but as they are stimulating figures because representative of the potential inside each human being: Plato will speak to the Plato that is in us, and analogously Shakespeare, and so on. One needs to put himself in dialogue with these voices, but he also needs to use them well, avoiding being subjected by their authoritative influence.

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B. Soressi Ralph Waldo Emerson

The Conduct of Life (1860) After the Essays, I and II series, this is the collection of essays that deals most directly with anthropologic-philosophical themes, and, according to some studies, it is one of the works that mostly inspired Nietzsche. In it there is an emphasized pragmatic and ethical instance, a more realistic approach which also implies a more open confrontation with the civilization of E.s own time. Emerson is here ever more oriented toward the foundation of a philosophy of the conduct of life centred on a culture of nonconformity and very high ethical ideals (for example, the essay Worship, which insists on the absolute priority of the ethico-moral quality of existence, at intervals seems to be a modern re-writing of Platos Gorgias). In Fate E. attempts to find the points of convergence between human freedom and determinism, and, in a more or less direct way, deals with the problem of slavery as a historical fact. In Power he underlines the importance of vital energy and of the sentiment of power as a criterion of validity, and in Wealth he extends these themes to that of economic power. Society and Solitude (1870) and Natural History of the Intellect The first volume contains the homonymous essay, one of the best essays of the later E., which portrays an individual who is divided between an indispensable but fatal society and a liberating but impracticable solitude. In Domestic Life he sketches a philosophy of the house and a thinking of hospitality. In 1870 E. held lectures at Harvard (beside teachers of the caliber of C.S. Peirce who declared himself somehow indebted to, though critic of - Transcendntalism). These are known as Natural History of the Intellect. Here E. originally intended to propose the transcendentalist study of mind on philosophically and scientifically rigorous bases (a kind of study which could already be found in Kant and in German Idealists such as Schelling and Hegel, an author whom E. read through J.B. Stallos interpretation). E., with this project, which never completely satisfied him, aimed at rendering himself more respectable in an academic environment while remaining accessible also to the non-specialists. The result is a refined poetic-psycholoic exercise of analysis of different possible metaphors of mind, beginning from the idea of the tree, and passing through that of electricity, up to the psychoanalytic image of the sea, and to images which clearly anticipate William

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B. Soressi Ralph Waldo Emerson

James stream of consciousness (James had been much more indebted to E. than he recognized). The Last Published Essays In 1875 Letters and Social Aims comes out, collecting essays written in different periods, such as Poetry and Imagination (where he intends to follow the Provencal conception of poetry as the gai science), Quotation and Originality (where clearly emerges both the idea of the social genesis of culture and the tireless attempt to free oneself from the mere repetition of the others discourse, something Heidegger will call gossip). In Immortality E. investigates the possibility of conceiving new forms of intra-worldly immortality. Miscellanies comes out in 1878: it consists of many essays, including a part of the impressive number of historical, civil and literary addresses held by Emerson.

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B. Soressi Ralph Waldo Emerson

Essential Bibliography on Emerson Cavell, S., Emerson Transcendental Etudes. Stanford: Stanford UP, 2003. This is a collection of all the essays written on Emerson by his most profound philosophical scholar. Kateb, G., Emerson and Self-Reliance. Thousand Oaks: Sage Press, 1995. Emersons democratic individualism. Richardson, R., Emerson: The Mind on Fire. Berkeley: U of California Press, 1995. The most up to date biography. And the author is extraordinarily careful about the textual origin of Emersons thinking. Stack, G.J., Nietzsche and Emerson: An Elective Affinity. Athens: Ohio UP, 1992. Soressi, B., Ralph Waldo Emerson. Il pensiero e la solitudine. Roma: Armando, 2004. An introduction to Emersons philosophy through Cavells interpretations and from a European perspective. Urbinati, N., Individualismo democratico. Emerson, Dewey e la cultura politica americana. Roma: Donzelli, 1997. Whicher, S., Freedom and Fate. An Inner Life of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1950. A classical text on Emersons life and works. Worley, S., Emerson, Thoreau, and the Role of the Cultural Critic. Albany: SUNY Press, 2001. Book reviewed in SWIF.

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