When one relies on the opinion of others, many steer clear of thinking otherwise for fear of offending people and being shunned as an outcaste. Ralph Waldo Emerson describes this catastrophe stating, "envy is ignorance [...] imitation is suicide" (2). Emerson reveals the core damaging effect of trying to become like another, it kills oneself. I agree that one should not exhaust and waste one's life aspiring to be a clone of another, for it suffocates their own identity and causes them to lose their own soul in the process. People should quit the expedition of taking on another's form and risk being …show more content…
Socrates and Emerson believe that this voice should not only be heard and acted upon but should be treated like a god and obey its every call and demand. Emerson says, "god is within". Emerson sees the soul as the deity of all life. I disagree that man is god, that the soul is god. The soul is compromised of the mind, will, and emotions. One would be quite deceived to believe that feelings are stable and should always be acted upon. The mind can be easily corrupted by or distorted by one's life experiences, personal traumas, or by one's environment that could have fogged the soul's ability and mind to think clearly. One's willpower can only go so far. I believe that man has limited knowledge, strength, and wisdom. The soul needs discipline and order, that is why one requires outside