Self-Reliance

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Imagine the world taken over by young children who yield to no one or thing. In a world where everyone does as he or she wanted, much chaos would be present. In Emerson's "Self-Reliance", he shares his version of an ideal society where nobody conforms to one another. Even though his ideas maintain influential in modern society, his impractical world contradicts with human nature and ceases to encourage any nation to establish such a society. I have recently read Ralph Waldo Emerson’s, Self –Reliance, and have many different thoughts about the essay. I personally think he is a weird man. He has many different thoughts that I agree with to a point and some that I just do not agree in at all. In this paper I will argue all of the main thoughts that come along with his story, Self-Reliance.

Some thoughts of Emerson and some other 19th-century
 New Englanders were based on a search for reality through spiritual intuition, or knowledge about 
things without conscious reasoning. Emerson was a doctrinaire in these thoughts. He 
targets his messages toward the younger age groups to try to get them to think as he does, so to pretty much brain wash them into doing and thinking as he says. He thought that every individual is basically 
good, can make rational decisions, and is worthy of respect. I understand he says is basically good, but I disagree with this thought simply because you may think someone is good but to another that person could be awful. Depending on what the other individual has done to you it should be your decision on if you want to give the person any respect and in some cases people need to earn your respect rather than you just handing it over. He believes that if these three steps
 were followed the world would be a ...

... middle of paper ...

...life. Emerson has world a way to find there meaning in life, but to him it
 seems like no ones trying.

Even though Emerson's idea is unreal, "Self-Reliance" continues to be studied and searched for more meanings by people around the world. During Emerson's time, an idea that influenced many thoughts was that to achieve direct connection with the mind, one must acquire self-reliance and yield to no one else’s thoughts or actions. In a world where everyone does as he or she pleases, chaos would dominate. In Emerson's "Self-Reliance", he proposes his version of an ideal society where no one conforms to one another. Again I say that I do both agree and disagree with many of his main thoughts that stuck out to me in the essay. There is no doubt that this essay was effective because after 160 years the essay is still talked about and taught in different classrooms.

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