A Transcendentalist Nature Religion

Scholars of religion have often pointed to the Transcendentalists as progenitors of a distinct tradition of nature religion in the United States. Nevertheless, this work has not fully dealt with the problematic qualities of “nature” in light of growing concerns about the ethical and socio-political...

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Main Author: Nicholas Aaron Friesner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-07-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/8/8/130
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spelling doaj-af3ef7978f79485785f082fe4a4ab6a82020-11-24T23:19:45ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442017-07-018813010.3390/rel8080130rel8080130A Transcendentalist Nature ReligionNicholas Aaron Friesner0Department of Religious Studies, Brown University, 59 George Street, Providence, RI 02912, USAScholars of religion have often pointed to the Transcendentalists as progenitors of a distinct tradition of nature religion in the United States. Nevertheless, this work has not fully dealt with the problematic qualities of “nature” in light of growing concerns about the ethical and socio-political implications of human powers in the Anthropocene. This paper presents a brief overview of “nature religion” while focusing on the often uneasy way that Ralph Waldo Emerson is treated in this work. By looking at how Emerson is viewed as a stepping stone to Henry David Thoreau, I argue that it is precisely what the tradition of nature religion finds problematic in Emerson—his strains of recurrent idealism—that allows him to have a more expansive notion of nature as the environments in which we live, while preserving the importance of human moral agency. What follows, then, is a more nuanced position in environmental ethics that is informed by an Emersonian sense of the irreducible tension between being created and being a creator.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/8/8/130transcendentalismnature religionRalph Waldo Emersonenvironmental ethicsenvironmental justice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicholas Aaron Friesner
spellingShingle Nicholas Aaron Friesner
A Transcendentalist Nature Religion
Religions
transcendentalism
nature religion
Ralph Waldo Emerson
environmental ethics
environmental justice
author_facet Nicholas Aaron Friesner
author_sort Nicholas Aaron Friesner
title A Transcendentalist Nature Religion
title_short A Transcendentalist Nature Religion
title_full A Transcendentalist Nature Religion
title_fullStr A Transcendentalist Nature Religion
title_full_unstemmed A Transcendentalist Nature Religion
title_sort transcendentalist nature religion
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Scholars of religion have often pointed to the Transcendentalists as progenitors of a distinct tradition of nature religion in the United States. Nevertheless, this work has not fully dealt with the problematic qualities of “nature” in light of growing concerns about the ethical and socio-political implications of human powers in the Anthropocene. This paper presents a brief overview of “nature religion” while focusing on the often uneasy way that Ralph Waldo Emerson is treated in this work. By looking at how Emerson is viewed as a stepping stone to Henry David Thoreau, I argue that it is precisely what the tradition of nature religion finds problematic in Emerson—his strains of recurrent idealism—that allows him to have a more expansive notion of nature as the environments in which we live, while preserving the importance of human moral agency. What follows, then, is a more nuanced position in environmental ethics that is informed by an Emersonian sense of the irreducible tension between being created and being a creator.
topic transcendentalism
nature religion
Ralph Waldo Emerson
environmental ethics
environmental justice
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/8/8/130
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