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Transcendentalismus

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Radulphus Waldo Emerson iuvenis, ab Eastman Johnson anno 1846 adumbratus. Eius commentarius Nature ('Natura', 1836) fundamenta transcendentalismi usitate putatur.

Transcendentalismus fuit motus religiosus et philosophicus qui per decennia 183 exeunte et 184 in orientali Civitatum Foederatarum regione evolutus est[1] ad recusandum generalem culturae societatisque statum, et praecipue statum intellectualismi in Universitate Harvardiana et doctrinam ecclesiae Unitarianistae in Schola Divinitatis Harvardiana doctam. Inter fides transcendentalistarum maximi momenti fuit innatus hominum naturaeque bonum.

Transcendentalistae crediderunt societatem et eius institutiones, praecipue religionem ordinatam factionesque politicas, puritatem cuiusque hominis ad ultimum corrumpere, homines esse optimos cum confidentes liberique profecto essent, ac solum ex talibus singulis realibus verum commune formari posse.

Transcendentalismus inter Congregationalistas in Nova Anglia ortus est,[2] Christianos qui a Calvinismo orthodoxo duabus dissederunt rationibus[3]: praedestinationem et unitatem (contra trinitatem) Dei reiecerunt.[4] Ei, scepticismum Davidis Hume accipientes, empirica religionis documenta non fieri esse crediderunt.[5] Transcendentalismus ergo se adversus rationalem Ioannis Locke saeculi duodevicensimi philosophiam sensualismi et praedestinationismi Calvinismi Novae Angliae gessit. Fontes varios habuit, sicut Vedi, Upanishad, Bhagavadgita, aliique textus Hinduici,[6] variae religiones aliae, atque idealismus Germanicus sicut idealismus transcendentiae Kantianus.[7]

Editio Radulphi Waldo Emerson commentarii Nature ('Natura', 1836) usitate habetur punctum temporis cum transcendentalismus maior culturae motus factus esset. Emerson praeterea in "The American Scholar" ('Vir litteratus Americanus'), oratione anno 1837 habita, scripsit: "Pedibus nostris ambulabimus; manibus nostris laborabimus; quod in mente habemus effabimur. . . . Civitas hominum in primo exsistet, quia quisque credit se a Divino Spiritu inflatum qui etiam homines inflat omnes."[8] Emerson ad ultimum res novas deposcit in perceptionibus humanis ex nova philosophia idealistica emergere:

Sic mundum novis oculis aspicere incipiamus, qui perpetuam respondebit interrogationem mentis—Quid est veritas? et de animi motibus—Quid est bonum? se passivum Voluntati educatae obsequiendo. . . . Aedifica, ergo, tuum mundum proprium. Simul ac vita notioni purae in animo obtemperat, illa suas partes amplas aperiet. Congruentes mundi res novae spiritum influentem comitabuntur.[9]

Circulus Transcendentalis

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Eodem anno, cum Georgius Putnam (1807–1878, pastor Unitarianus Roxberiae institutus[10]), Radulphus Waldo Emerson, Fridericus Henricus Hedge, aliique imminentes rerum mentis periti Novae Angliae Transcendental Club ('Circulus Transcendentalis') Cantabrigiae Massachusettae die 8 Septembris 1836 conderent, transcendentalismus motus cohaerens factus est. Ex anno 1840, socii gregis commentarios in The Dial eorum periodico et alibi saepe protulerunt. Etiam Henricus David Thoreau, Margarita Fuller, Amos Bronson Alcott et Gualterius Whitman sunt transcendentialistae.

Nexus interni

  1. Finseth, Ian. "American Transcendentalism". Excerpted from "Liquid Fire Within Me": Language, Self and Society in Transcendentalism and Early Evangelicalism, 1820–1860, M.A. thesis, 1995 .
  2. "Transcendentalism," in Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Stanford University Press.
  3. "Transcendentalism," in Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Stanford University Press.
  4. "Transcendentalism," in Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Stanford University Press.
  5. "Transcendentalism," in Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Stanford University Press.
  6. Versluis 2001:3.
  7. "Transcendentalism." The Oxford Companion to American Literature, ed. James D. Hart (Oxoniae: Oxford University Press, 1995).
  8. Anglice: " "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."
  9. Anglice: "So shall we come to look at the world with new eyes. It shall answer the endless inquiry of the intellect—What is truth? and of the affections—What is good? by yielding itself passive to the educated Will. . . . Build, therefore, your own world. As fast as you conform your life to the pure idea in your mind, that will unfold its great proportions. A correspondent revolution in things will attend the influx of the spirit."
  10. "George Putnam", Heralds, Harvard square library .

Bibliographia

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Nexus externi

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