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    In the story Walden‚ author Thoreau talks about his tiny living in the seasons that he has lived in his tiny how and what he feels for each season. Thoreau talks about a pond and him starting in solitude‚ from going into the winter‚ then as spring hits‚ to the end of his live at his tiny house and how great the wild was out there by himself with no one else around in the woods near the town he lived by. he talks about transcendentalism. He uses transcendentalism to bring out the live of

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    Henry James Thoreau was a famous writer who viewed civilization as too ordinary. He wanted to experience life outside of his daily routine‚ so he lived in a cabin in the woods for a while. Most people believed that Thoreau was right to disagree with the basics of society. Because of this‚ he was put on a pedestal that shouldn’t have been created for him. Thoreau wrote a story called Walden based on his time spent in the woods‚ away from civilization. I believe that some of the points he makes within

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    Transcendentalism is the belief of the power of an individual and the importance of nature. The famed author Ralph Waldo Emerson believed in both of these parts in near totality. While another author named Jon Krakauer believed in the individual and nature but with a rather practical view of nature. Henry David Thoreau was focused nearly entirely focused on nature rather than individualism. Much like Krakauer Donovan was focuses on individualism rather than nature. This form of philosophy was most

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    Reflection on "The Battle of the Ants"‚ Henry David Thoreau "The Battle of the Ants" is an excerpt from Henry David Thoreau’s "Walden‚" a non-fictional book Thoreau wrote while living on his own in a cabin in the wilderness for 2 years during the 1840’s. Thoreau chose to live this lifestyle in order to find out what really was important in life‚ in his words‚ "I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately‚ to front only the essential facts of life‚ and see if I could not learn what

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    Dharma Leggat Dr. Rowley WRT 102 October 5‚ 2008 Response Essay Number One – Walden Modern society has denoted that in order to succeed‚ one must be technologically literate. Compared to the telegraph and telephone from the past century‚ we now live in the era of the fiber optic wire and the infamous Internet. Computers and the World Wide Web have bridged the gap between both ends of the earth‚ allowing mass amounts of information to reach any who search for it. China has become the new

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    American Renaissance Writers ENG/491 December 19‚ 2011 Peggy Walls American Renaissance Writers The American Renaissance‚ in literary circles occurred during the middle to late 1800s. “One of the most important influences of the period was that of the transcendentalists” (Britannica‚ 2011). Major writers during this perid had a common bond. Their platform was ‘an idealic system of thought based on a belief in the essential unity of all creation‚ the innate goodness of man‚ and the supremacy

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    Henry David Thoreau once said‚ “I believe that there is a subtle magnetism in Nature‚ which‚ if we unconsciously yield to it‚ will direct us aright.” Like all transcendentalists‚ Thoreau believed that all of life’s questions could be answered through nature. Nature consists of many beautiful things – trees‚ flowers‚ butterflies‚ animals‚ sunsets‚ etc. Personally‚ out of all these extraordinary natural elements of the world‚ the beach‚ especially during sunset‚ is my favorite place in nature. Giving

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    A man in his search of the human‘s soul once wrote “Nature is not primarily functional. It is primarily beautiful. Which is to say‚ beauty is in and of itself a great and glorious good‚ something we need in large and daily doses. Nature at the height of its glory shouts‚ Beauty is essential” (Eldredge 34)! The authors of Walden and Thanatopsis regard beauty as a necessary part of nature and life. Walden‚ written by Henry David Thoreau‚ is a story of a man who finds out more about himself while living

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    Transcendentalism: The Rebellion Transcendentalism‚ as defined by Dictionary.com‚ is "any philosophy based upon the doctrine that the principles of reality are to be discovered by the study of the processes of thought‚ or a philosophy emphasizing the intuitive and spiritual above the empirical…" (Transcendentalism). This new philosophy created a rebellion and turn away from the traditional religions in the United States. Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau are two primary authors and

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    Dear Quote Investigator: I attended a graduation ceremony last year and was genuinely impressed by a quotation used in the keynote address: What lies behind us and what lies ahead of us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us. The speaker credited Ralph Waldo Emerson and that sounded plausible to me‚ but when I searched on the internet to find a specific reference I was surprised to discover substantial disagreement. Some websites do attribute the words to Emerson‚ but other websites

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