{PDF} Nature and Other Essays 1St Edition Ebook Free Download

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

{PDF} Nature and Other Essays 1St Edition Ebook Free Download NATURE AND OTHER ESSAYS 1ST EDITION PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Ralph Waldo Emerson | 9780486469478 | | | | | Nature and Other Essays 1st edition PDF Book Returns Accepted. Romance Collectible Real Photo Postcards. The first edition of the novel was published in , and was written by Ralph Waldo Emerson. Author see all. Free In-store Pickup. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. Got one to sell? Romance Collectible Real Photo Postcards. Knight, and F. Books Charles Dickens Publication Year. Not Specified. For if individuals were as interchangeable as ants, why should anyone worry about maximizing the opportunity for every person to develop his mind and his faculties and his personality to the fullest extent possible? Printing Year see all. Sponsored Listings. The book represents the author's theorizing on topics impacting human liberty. Delivery Options see all. Language see all. The next four essays take concepts that are propounded by various brands of Leftists and analyze their merits and demerits. DMCA and Copyright : The book is not hosted on our servers, to remove the file please contact the source url. For until Rothbard's work is carefully studied by every advocate of liberty, the value of his contributions to the libertarian system cannot be fully appreciated and, moreover, the unity and true historical context of libertarianism will not even be fully grasped. Childs, Jr. Given the unfortunate existence of States, how can their nonintervention abroad as well as at home best be secured? Guaranteed Delivery see all. Rothbard looks beyond conventional left- right thinking and hence contributes to the groundwork for the current intellectual challenge against centralized social and economic management. Culture, Beauty, Etc. Original Filter Applied. Emerson's Essays 5X7 no DJ. It's always fun to read Ralph Waldo Emerson books. View: Gallery View. We do not guarantee that these techniques will work for you. Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Buying Format see all. Limited Edition. Please provide a valid price range. Topic see all. More refinements More refinements Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard. Collector's Edition. Returns Accepted. Sold Items. Among economists, such a question is a sad reflection of the hyperspecialization among intellectuals of the present age. The title essay locates the prime horror of socialism as the egalitarian attempt to stamp out diversity among individuals and groups. No Preference. Nature and Other Essays 1st edition Writer Guaranteed 3 day delivery. Original Filter Applied. All Auction Buy It Now. Sports Collectible Real Photo Postcards. I think it manifestly true that very few of even the most dedicated economic technicians began their interest in economics because they were fascinated by cost curves, indifference classes, and the rest of the paraphernalia of modern economic theory. I will definitely recommend this book to philosophy, classics lovers. Softcover, Wraps. Classified Ads. Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard. Best Offer. View: Gallery View. More refinements More refinements Please note that the tricks or techniques listed in this pdf are either fictional or claimed to work by its creator. Sort: Best Match. Sponsored Listings. Buying Format see all. Authorized Seller. Limited Edition. The implications of this point are worked out on topics such as market economics, child rights, environmentalism, feminism, foreign policy, redistribution and others. Completed Items. Publisher see all. Namespaces Article Talk. American US. Emerson's Essays 5X7 no DJ. Unfortunately, what usually happens to these people is that as they learn the often imposing structure and apparatus of economic theory, they become so fascinated by the minutiae of technique that they lose sight of the political and social problems that sparked their interest in the first place. Binding see all. Views Read Edit View history. Transportation Collectible Real Photo Postcards. Original Filter Applied. Shop by Category. A fundamental reason and grounding for liberty are the ineluctable facts of human biology; in particular, the fact that each individual is a unique person, in many ways different from all others. Please provide a valid price range. Hayek, came early to the conclusion that mastery of pure economic theory was not enough, and that it was vital to explore related and fundamental problems of philosophy, political theory, and history. Item Location see all. The title essay was delivered at a conference on human differentiation held by the Institute for Humane Studies at Gstaad, Switzerland, in the summer of Culture, Beauty, Etc. The main characters of this philosophy, classics story are ,. Your Comment:. Special Attributes see all. DMCA and Copyright : The book is not hosted on our servers, to remove the file please contact the source url. Language see all. The book represents the author's theorizing on topics impacting human liberty. Some of the techniques listed in Nature and Selected Essays may require a sound knowledge of Hypnosis, users are advised to either leave those sections or must have a basic understanding of the subject before practicing them. Nature and Other Essays 1st edition Reviews List View. Western Journey With Mr. Skip to main content. It's always fun to read Ralph Waldo Emerson books. A fundamental reason and grounding for liberty are the ineluctable facts of human biology; in particular, the fact that each individual is a unique person, in many ways different from all others. Best Offer. Delivery Options see all. Can a free market and free society work in this area, or is comprehensive State planning needed to solve these broad interpersonal problems? Please provide a valid price range. Condition see all. Given the unfortunate existence of States, how can their nonintervention abroad as well as at home best be secured? Ralph Waldo Emerson Filter Applied. The first edition of the novel was published in , and was written by Ralph Waldo Emerson. Publisher see all. Among economists, such a question is a sad reflection of the hyperspecialization among intellectuals of the present age. Libertarianism is a new and emerging discipline which touches closely on many other areas of the study of human action: economics, philosophy, political theory, history, even—and not least—biology. All Listings. Original Filter Applied. Binding see all. Guaranteed Delivery see all. If you see a Google Drive link instead of source url, means that the file witch you will get after approval is just a summary of original book or the file has been already removed. Subject see all. In particular, they realized that it was possible and crucially important to construct a broader systematic theory encompassing human action as a whole, in which economics could take its place as a consistent but subsidiary part. Item Location see all. Transportation Collectible Real Photo Postcards. Dust Jacket. All Auction Buy It Now. Nature and Other Essays 1st edition Read Online Ralph Waldo Emerson Books. Delivery Options see all. March by Geraldine Brooks. Hayek, came early to the conclusion that mastery of pure economic theory was not enough, and that it was vital to explore related and fundamental problems of philosophy, political theory, and history. For until Rothbard's work is carefully studied by every advocate of liberty, the value of his contributions to the libertarian system cannot be fully appreciated and, moreover, the unity and true historical context of libertarianism will not even be fully grasped. This article about a book on political philosophy or theory is a stub. Best Offer. Region see all. Topic see all. Sponsored Listings. Returns Accepted. Filter 2. Hidden categories: All stub articles. Please note that the tricks or techniques listed in this pdf are either fictional or claimed to work by its creator. Ralph Waldo Emerson Filter Applied. Sold Items. Guaranteed 3 day delivery. Item Location see all. Guaranteed Delivery see all. Got one to sell? In my own particular case, the major focus of my interest and my writings over the last three decades has been a part of this broader approach— libertarianism—the discipline of liberty. It's always fun to read Ralph Waldo Emerson books. https://files8.webydo.com/9582738/UploadedFiles/A4FF5E01-CC6B-5EEE-9140-818D0A20F5B1.pdf https://files8.webydo.com/9583663/UploadedFiles/79993D67-ABBA-0FEB-F73E-DD99AFB1FC09.pdf https://cdn.starwebserver.se/shops/inezaxelssonix/files/eve-was-framed-women-and-british-justice-513.pdf https://files8.webydo.com/9582915/UploadedFiles/3D172429-24C7-9C80-0726-5779E341A3A5.pdf https://files8.webydo.com/9583180/UploadedFiles/5716A72D-A4DD-A670-429D-3796D1151641.pdf.
Recommended publications
  • Sovereignty of the Living Individual: Emerson and James on Politics and Religion
    religions Article Sovereignty of the Living Individual: Emerson and James on Politics and Religion Stephen S. Bush Department of Religious Studies, Brown University, 59 George Street, Providence, RI 02912, USA; [email protected] Received: 20 July 2017; Accepted: 20 August 2017; Published: 25 August 2017 Abstract: William James and Ralph Waldo Emerson are both committed individualists. However, in what do their individualisms consist and to what degree do they resemble each other? This essay demonstrates that James’s individualism is strikingly similar to Emerson’s. By taking James’s own understanding of Emerson’s philosophy as a touchstone, I argue that both see individualism to consist principally in self-reliance, receptivity, and vocation. Putting these two figures’ understandings of individualism in comparison illuminates under-appreciated aspects of each figure, for example, the political implications of their individualism, the way that their religious individuality is politically engaged, and the importance of exemplarity to the politics and ethics of both of them. Keywords: Ralph Waldo Emerson; William James; transcendentalism; individualism; religious experience 1. Emersonian Individuality, According to James William James had Ralph Waldo Emerson in his bones.1 He consumed the words of the Concord sage, practically from birth. Emerson was a family friend who visited the infant James to bless him. James’s father read Emerson’s essays out loud to him and the rest of the family, and James himself worked carefully through Emerson’s corpus in the 1870’s and then again around 1903, when he gave a speech on Emerson (Carpenter 1939, p. 41; James 1982, p. 241).
    [Show full text]
  • JACQUES ROUSSEAU's EMILE By
    TOWARD AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE NOVELISTIC DIMENSION OF JEAN- JACQUES ROUSSEAU’S EMILE by Stephanie Miranda Murphy A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Political Science University of Toronto © Copyright by Stephanie Miranda Murphy 2020 Toward an Understanding of the Novelistic Dimension of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Emile Stephanie Miranda Murphy Doctor of Philosophy Department of Political Science ABSTRACT The multi-genre combination of philosophic and literary expression in Rousseau’s Emile provides an opportunity to explore the relationship between the novelistic structure of this work and the substance of its philosophical teachings. This dissertation explores this matter through a textual analysis of the role of the novelistic dimension of the Emile. Despite the vast literature on Rousseau’s manner of writing, critical aspects of the novelistic form of the Emile remain either misunderstood or overlooked. This study challenges the prevailing image in the existing scholarship by arguing that Rousseau’s Emile is a prime example of how form and content can fortify each other. The novelistic structure of the Emile is inseparable from Rousseau’s conception and communication of his philosophy. That is, the novelistic form of the Emile is not simply harmonious with the substance of its philosophical content, but its form and content also merge to reinforce Rousseau’s capacity to express his teachings. This dissertation thus proposes to demonstrate how and why the novelistic
    [Show full text]
  • The Abolition of Emerson: the Secularization of America’S Poet-Priest and the New Social Tyranny It Signals
    THE ABOLITION OF EMERSON: THE SECULARIZATION OF AMERICA’S POET-PRIEST AND THE NEW SOCIAL TYRANNY IT SIGNALS A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Georgetown University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Government By Justin James Pinkerman, M.A. Washington, DC February 1, 2019 Copyright 2019 by Justin James Pinkerman All Rights Reserved ii THE ABOLITION OF EMERSON: THE SECULARIZATION OF AMERICA’S POET-PRIEST AND THE NEW SOCIAL TYRANNY IT SIGNALS Justin James Pinkerman, M.A. Thesis Advisor: Dr. Richard Boyd, Ph.D. ABSTRACT Motivated by the present climate of polarization in US public life, this project examines factional discord as a threat to the health of a democratic-republic. Specifically, it addresses the problem of social tyranny, whereby prevailing cultural-political groups seek to establish their opinions/sentiments as sacrosanct and to immunize them from criticism by inflicting non-legal penalties on dissenters. Having theorized the complexion of factionalism in American democracy, I then recommend the political thought of Ralph Waldo Emerson as containing intellectual and moral insights beneficial to the counteraction of social tyranny. In doing so, I directly challenge two leading interpretations of Emerson, by Richard Rorty and George Kateb, both of which filter his thought through Friedrich Nietzsche and Walt Whitman and assimilate him to a secular-progressive outlook. I argue that Rorty and Kateb’s political theories undercut Emerson’s theory of self-reliance by rejecting his ethic of humility and betraying his classically liberal disposition, thereby squandering a valuable resource to equip individuals both to refrain from and resist social tyranny.
    [Show full text]
  • Lesson Plan Template
    Museum of Contemporary Photography Curriculum Development Project Funded by the Terra Foundation Lesson Plan Template Name: Mr. Ozni Torres School: Ogden International High School LESSON TITLE Imaging Democracy through Action GRADE LEVELS 11/12th Grade Civics; Political Science NUMBER OF INSTRUCTIONAL MINUTES 200 minutes; 4 50-minute class periods OVERARCHING THEME Identify a topic or recurring idea that drives the focus of the lesson. The nature of democracy; Citizenship as an active duty. CONTENT FOCUS This unit can serve as a summative project for students studying the nature of American democracy and/or history. Students will engage in close reading exercises of both works of visual art and written material. The goal is to get students to think about how images and words convey ideas, and specifically, how selected images and texts support the thesis that a vibrant democracy requires the active participation of its citizens. Students are then tasked with creating a photograph that captures democracy through the actions of citizens working to better their community. This unit will support Common Core Reading and Writing Standards as listed below, providing opportunities to engage meaningfully with complex texts in varied formats and to work toward an alternative form of assessment that is accessible to students at different levels of achievement. Museum of Contemporary Photography Curriculum Development Project Funded by the Terra Foundation ART ANALYSIS List the names of artist(s) and titles of their artwork that students will do close reading exercises on. Artist Work of Art John Trumbull 12’ X 18’ 1818 Rotunda; U.S. Capitol D eclaration of Independence Paul Shambroom 2’9” X 5’6” 1999 Museum of Contemporary Photography Markl e, IN (pop.
    [Show full text]
  • ED331751.Pdf
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 331 751 SO 020 969 AUTHOR Brooks, B. David TITLE Success through Accepting Responsibility. Principal's Handbook: Creating a School Climate of Responsibility. Revised Edition. INSTITUTION Thomas Jefferson Research Center, Pasadena, Calif. PUB DATE 89 NOTE 130p. AVAILABLE FROM Thomas Jefferson Research Center, 202 South Lake Avenue, Suite 240, Pasadena, CA 91101. PUB TYPE Guides - Non-Classroom Use (055) EDRS PRICE MF01 Plus Postage. PC Not Available from EDRS. DESCRIPTORS Administrator Guides; *Administrator Role; Citizenship Education; *Educational Environment; Educational Planning; Elementary Secondary Education; Ethics; *pri4cipals; School Activities; Self Esteem; Skill Development; Social Responsibility; Social Studies; *Student Educational Objectives; *Student Responsibility; *Success; Values; Vocabulary Development ABSTRACT Success Through Accepting Responsibility (STAR)is primarily a language program, although the valueshave a relationship to social studies topics. Through language developmentthe words, concepts, and skills of personal responsibilitymay be taught. This principal's handbook outlines a school-wide systematicapproach for building a positive school climate around self-esteemand personal responsibility. Following an introduction, the handbookis organized into eight sections: planning and implementation;kick-off activities; year-long activities; sustainingevents and activities; end-of-year activities; parent and communityinvolvement; evaluations and reports; and principal's memos. (DB) ** ***** ****************************************************************
    [Show full text]
  • God Within": the Experience and Manifestation of Emerson's Evolving Philosophy of Intuition
    Brigham Young University BYU ScholarsArchive Theses and Dissertations 2014-05-21 Discovering the "God Within": The Experience and Manifestation of Emerson's Evolving Philosophy of Intuition Anne Tiffany Turner Brigham Young University - Provo Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd Part of the English Language and Literature Commons BYU ScholarsArchive Citation Turner, Anne Tiffany, "Discovering the "God Within": The Experience and Manifestation of Emerson's Evolving Philosophy of Intuition" (2014). Theses and Dissertations. 4099. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/4099 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Discovering the “God Within”: The Experience and Manifestation of Emerson’s Evolving Philosophy of Intuition Anne Turner A thesis submitted to the faculty of Brigham Young University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Edward Cutler, Chair Jesse Crisler Emron Esplin Department of English Brigham Young University April 2014 Copyright © 2014 Anne Turner All Rights Reserved ABSTRACT Discovering the “God Within”: The Experience and Manifestation of Emerson’s Evolving Philosophy of Intuition Anne Turner Department of English, BYU Master of Art Investigating individual subjectivity, Ralph Waldo Emerson traveled to Europe following the death of his first wife, Ellen Tucker Emerson, and his resignation from the Unitarian ministry. His experience before and during the voyage contributed to the evolution of a self-intuitive philosophy, termed selbstgefühl by the German Romantics and altered his careful style of composition and delivery to promote the integrity of individual subjectivity as the highest authority in the deduction of truth.
    [Show full text]
  • Graduate Seminar in American Political Thought University of Washington Autumn 2020 5 Credits Wednesday, 1:30-4:20 P.M
    DEMOCRACY AS A WAY OF LIFE Political Science 516: Graduate Seminar in American Political Thought University of Washington Autumn 2020 5 Credits Wednesday, 1:30-4:20 p.m. Remote Learning Version Course Website: https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1401667 Jack Turner 133 Gowen [email protected] Office Hours: By appointment DESCRIPTION Democracy is often conceived of as a mode of government or form of rule, but both advocates and critics of democracy have just as frequently emphasized its significance as a social and cultural way of life, a manner of being in the world. Plato called democracy “the most attractive of the regimes . like a coat of many colors”; he also worried how democracy toppled the most basic relations of authority. Children defy their parents in a democracy, and students their teachers. Horses and donkeys wander “the streets with total freedom, noses in the air, barging into any passer-by who fails to get out of the way.” This seminar analyzes democracy as a distinctive way of life as it arose after the American, French, and Haitian Revolutions. It begins with the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century transatlantic debates about the meaning of democratic revolution (Edmund Burke and Thomas Paine), segues to the flowering of democratic culture in the United States and its relationship to white supremacy (David Walker, Alexis de Tocqueville, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau), examines the nature of democratic education, popular sovereignty, and racial violence in mass, industrializing society (John Dewey and Ida B. Wells), and probes the connections between democracy, race, and empire in the twentieth century (W.E.B.
    [Show full text]
  • Reflections on Student Being and Becoming in the Contemporary
    applyparastyle “fig//caption/p[1]” parastyle “FigCapt” 2020 00 03 1 Introduction: Reflections on 9 Student Being and Becoming © 2020 in the Contemporary University 2020 AMANDA J. FULFORD Edge Hill University What is it to be a student in the contemporary university? How does one become a student, and is being a student simply the result of registering with a particular institution? What does (or should) a student do? Does she sim- ply study, or how else is the “being” of a student expressed? Of course, these questions may seem simple to answer, at least on one level. They are questions that go to the heart of the motivations and practices of the academic’s work in lecturing and supporting students in higher education. They are also ques- tions that, in some ways at least, are the concern of those with responsibility for managing, leading, funding and regulating higher education. But this edition seeks to move beyond such apparently obvious answers, and to con- sider again what might be at stake in the idea of student being and becoming. This special edition, on the theme of “Student Being and Becoming” came about following the annual conference of the Philosophy and Theory of Higher Education Society (PaTHES) on the same theme. This was held at Middlesex University, London, in 2018. The theme was selected at the previous year’s conference in Denmark, partly, at least, because there is much potential in bringing philosophy and theory to bear on matters relating to the student—and being and becoming a student—in the contemporary university.
    [Show full text]
  • The Cases of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Edgar Allan Poe Dissertation P
    THE MIDDLE EAST IN ANTEBELLUM AMERICA: THE CASES OF RALPH WALDO EMERSON, NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE, AND EDGAR ALLAN POE DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Ahmed Nidal Almansour ***** The Ohio State University 2005 Dissertation Committee: Approved by Professor Steven S. Fink, Adviser Professor Jared Gardner _______________________ Professor Elizabeth Hewitt Adviser English Copyright by Ahmed Nidal Almansour 2005 ABSTRACT The presence of the Middle East in the works of American artists between the Revolution and the Civil War is pervasive and considerable. What makes this outlandish element of critical significance is that its proliferation coincided with the emerging American literary identity. The wide spectrum of meanings that was related to it adds even more significance to its critical value. In its theoretical approach, this work uses Raymond Schwab’s The Oriental Renaissance as a ground for all its arguments. It considers the rise of the Oriental movement in America to be a continuation of what had already started of Oriental researches in Europe. Like their counterparts in Europe, the American writers who are selected for this study were genuinely interested in identifying with the Oriental thought. The European mediation, however, should not be allowed to hold any significance other than pointing to the fact that French, German, and English Orientalist organizations were more technically equipped. The sentiment of identification with the East resonated equally on both sides of the Atlantic. This work investigates three cases from antebellum America: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Edgar Allan Poe.
    [Show full text]
  • JS Mill's Political Thought
    P1: JZZ 0521860202pre CUFX079B/Urbinati 0 521 86020 2 cupusbw December 26, 2006 7:38 This page intentionally left blank ii P1: JZZ 0521860202pre CUFX079B/Urbinati 0 521 86020 2 cupusbw December 26, 2006 7:38 J. S. MILL’S POLITICAL THOUGHT The year 2006 marked the two hundredth anniversary of John Stuart Mill’s birth. Although his philosophical reputation has varied greatly in the interven- ing years, it is now clear that Mill ranks among the most influential modern political thinkers. Yet despite his enduring influence, and perhaps also because of it, the breadth and complexity of Mill’s political thought is often under- appreciated. Although his writings remain a touchstone for debates over liberty and liberalism, many other important dimensions of his political philosophy have until recently been mostly ignored or neglected. This volume aims, first, to correct such neglect by illustrating the breadth and depth of Mill’s political writings. It does so by drawing togetheracollection of essays whose authors explore underappreciated elements of Mill’s political philosophy, including his democratic theory, his writings on international relations and military inter- ventions, and his treatments of socialism and despotism. Second, the volume shows how Mill’s thinking remains pertinent to our own political life in three broad areas – democratic institutions and culture, liberalism, and international politics – and offers a critical reassessment of Mill’s political philosophy in light of recent political developments and transformations. Nadia Urbinati
    [Show full text]
  • Emersonian Identity and the Oneness of Educational Relations
    224 Emersonian Identity and the Oneness of Educational Relations Emersonian Identity and the Oneness of Educational Relations Bradley Rowe Monmouth College Samuel D. Rocha University of British Columbia “Relation and connection are not somewhere and sometimes, but everywhere and always.”1 Ralph Waldo Emerson “ ... all our education aims to sink what is individual or personal in us.”2 Ralph Waldo Emerson INTRODUCTION In his 2012 PES Presidential Address, “No Education without Hesi- tation: Exploring the Limits of Educational Relations,” Gert Biesta questions the risk of an overdetermined account of educational relations. He writes: “to say that there is and can be no education without relation is not entirely without risk.”3 Biesta does not overtly oppose the claim “No Education with- out Relation” (a claim made by Charles Bingham and Alexander Sidorkin in a book that includes a chapter by Biesta), but he does caution the reader in the following words: ... the risk is that, by focusing too much on the relation- al dimensions of education, we lose sight of the gaps, the fissures, and the disjunctions, the disconnections, and the strangeness that are part of educational processes and prac- tices as well; and, more importantly, we run the risk of losing PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION 2019 | Kurt Stemhagen, editor © P2020 H I Philosophy L O S O P Hof YEducation O F E DSociety U C A |T Urbana,I O N 2 Illinois 0 1 9 Bradley Rowe & Samuel D. Rocha 225 sight of the educational significance of these dimensions. While Biesta would go on to extol risk in The Beautiful Risk of Education two years later, his sense of caution about an overly relational account of educa- tion is made more interesting when considering his call a year earlier, “to make some room for the idea of ‘transcendence’ within the conversation of philos- ophy of education.”4 In the present essay, we would like to join Biesta in questioning the relational account of education, albeit from a different angle.
    [Show full text]
  • Poetry in America: Representing Equality Through Accounts of Poetry in Alexis De Tocqueville, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and John Stuart Mill
    Poetry in America: Representing Equality Through Accounts of Poetry in Alexis de Tocqueville, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and John Stuart Mill by Joshua M. Shipper A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Political Science) in the University of Michigan 2018 Doctoral Committee: Professor Elizabeth R. Wingrove, Chair Associate Professor Mika T. LaVaque-Manty Associate Professor Robert W. Mickey Professor Yopie H. Prins Joshua M. Shipper [email protected] ORCID iD: 0000-0002-5700-119X © Joshua M. Shipper 2018 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I owe my dissertation committee the deepest of thanks for their support and attention over the course of this project. Thank you first to Mika LaVaque-Manty, for helping me to define the project’s initial parameters and for insisting that any inquiry into the emergence of the designation “ordinary” in nineteenth-century America had also to account for a crisis in the collective practices of the extraordinary and excellent — a move which opened my project to the genre of poetry. I also owe deep appreciation to Rob Mickey for serving as my first instructor of literature and politics in the American context — and for asserting the right and capacity of political scientists to make literature a terrain for inquiry. Rob’s mentorship from my first year on has defined how I understand political theory’s relationship to political contest. Thank you also to Yopie Prins for helping me to see the project to its completion as well as for serving as a scholar whose interventions into the field of the history and theory of poetry shaped my approach long before I had the chance to work with her.
    [Show full text]