Saturday, March 31, 2012

Emerson evolution vs. creationism


All I have seen teaches me to trust the creator for all I have not seen.-Ralph Waldo Emerson

           In order to more fully understand this quote, it is important to know some background about Emerson. Ralph Waldo Emerson was one of the founders of the transcendentalist movement; this is a concept that emphasizes the importance of nature instead of society. It also values self reliance and civil disobedience if one does not approve of the government (http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/transcendentalism/).  For more information about transcendentalism see this video: 
           Emerson studied at Harvard and was a minister. He spoke out against slavery, the annexation of Texas, and the large gap between the upper class and lower class in England. He wrote many philosophical papers, and he was a very engaging speaker, even if people sometimes didn’t understand the intricacies of his ideas (http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/transcendentalism/authors/emerson/).  Emerson was a unitarian. Unitarians believe that Jesus and God are one and the same; they do not believe in the Divine Trinity. Unitarians encourage their members to discover on their own the specifics of what they belief. It is a very broad religion (http://www-distance.syr.edu/sammaybelieve.html).
            His quote can be applied to the debate over evolution and creationism. Some of the main questions today are: Should creationism also be taught in schools? and Does one disprove the other?
Whether or not there is a god, the belief gives people hope. When a relative dies, we think they’re in a better place. When we have a bad year, we know things will get better because God won’t let anything too bad happen to us. If we get to the end of our lives and there really is no God, then we haven’t lost anything because we would have lived our lives the best we can.  We won’t be disappointed that there’s no God because we’ll just be unconscious in the ground.
            People justify the unknown based on God’s creations: the flowers, oceans, children, Egyptian pyramids, Great Wall of China, the Grand Canyon, the planets, and the stars. These are all things that could not have been made by man. Rather, they are things that preceded the skill ability of the people of the time. They believe that these things could not have been made without God. Things that they can’t explain: gravity, death, really sick people that are healed, losing a job, finding a lost child, and winning a war against the odds are explained by the grace of God. These things have no other explanations, so logically what makes the flowers and the stars must have healed the sick people because it is bigger than man. It doesn’t hurt for people to believe in God instead of evolution, even though there is no proof of God.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Was Edgar Allan Poe mentally ill?


Was Edgar Allan Poe mentally unstable or under the influence of drugs or alcohol, and if so how did that influence his work?

          Edgar Allan Poe admitted to using opium, but this was a prominent treatment for medical problems at the time. There was no evidence that he was addicted to it (http://edgarallan2002.tripod.com/misc.html).
Poe was, however, a known alcoholic. He lost a couple of jobs because his employers threatened to fire him if he did not stop drinking. Even under this pressure, he still could not give it up (http://edgarallan2002.tripod.com/misc.html). Poe used alcohol to deal with his problems. His wife (also his cousin) popped a blood vessel and was sick with tuberculosis for 5 years before she finally died. After her death, his drinking became even more of a problem (http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/eapoe.htm). For more information on Poe's life, see this video:



          Poe’s sister Rosalie was insane. Since diseases such as schizophrenia are genetic, it is possible that Poe might have also suffered from the same thing. He married his 13 year old cousin. Since that is abnormal, it could be a sign that something was wrong with Poe. Poe also attempted suicide and wrote about some of his suicidal thoughts in letters. Kay Redfield Jamison, an expert on bipolar disorder, has looked at some of Poe’s letters and speculates that he was bipolar. She says that during mania, people with bipolar disorder are likely to be very creative, so this is where he would have done all his writing. The suicidal thoughts and attempts would have come into play during the depression. Someone asked Poe about his madness and he said, “"Men have called me mad; but the question is not yet settled, whether madness is or is not the loftiest intelligence -- whether much that is glorious -- whether all that is profound -- does not spring from disease of thought -- from moods of mind exalted at the expense of the general intellect” (http://curiosity.discovery.com/topic/perception/mad-genius3.htm). Poe means that if he was mentally ill, it would have added to his creativity. If there was something wrong with Poe, he did not seek treatment because treatment in those times for mental disorders was brutal and experimental, such as cutting holes in the skull to let evil spirits out (http://edgarallan2002.tripod.com/misc.html).
         If Edgar Allan Poe was bipolar or schizophrenic, that would explain some of his stories. Schizophrenics hear voices in their heads and think they’re real like how the narrator in the Tell Tale Heart hears the thumping of a dead man’s heart. His depressed moods would explain why his stories and poems are always so sad. Because there was limited knowledge about mental disorders at this time in history, it would be hard for Poe to have seen inside of his characters’ minds unless he too thought the same way. So, while there is no definitive answer there is a high possibility that Poe was indeed mentally unstable. 

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Washington Irving


How do Washington Irving’s writings exemplify Romanticism?

                Romantic writings are not what one initially thinks they are about. They are not about falling in love. Instead, they are about an individual’s journey. One of the first characteristics of Romanticism is a switch from urban to rural settings (http://www.odessa.edu/dept/english/dsmith/rom.lit.char.pdf). This is apparent in Irving’s writings as shown by detailed description of the land such as the Catskill Mountains and the farmland that Katrina lives on.
                Romantic writing is also very supernatural, meaning that some events are magical (http://www.odessa.edu/dept/english/dsmith/rom.lit.char.pdf). For example, Rip Van Winkle sleeps for twenty years, wakes up, and realizes that the colonies are now free from British rule. Ichabod Crane is chased by a headless horseman and never seen again. While these events are not very realistic, they add intrigue to the stories and help further develop the morals.
                The Byronic Hero is also a very prominent character in Romantic writing. The Byronic hero is intellectual, has self respect, is a wanderer or socially isolated because he does not adhere to society’s norms, and can be sensitive and rebellious. This hero is different from the stereotypical hero because the stereotypical hero is prideful, but the Byronic hero is not (http://teachers.sduhsd.k12.ca.us/sfarris/Files/AP%20Lit%20Files/Microsoft%20Word%20-%20Characteristics%20of%20the%20Byronic%20Hero.pdf). Both Rip Van Winkle and Ichabod Crane represent the Byronic hero. Rip Van Winkle at first is not socially isolated, but becomes physically isolated when he falls asleep in the mountains. When he returns, he is socially isolated because his wife has died and he does not recognize any of the townspeople. He is a nice guy and helps out all his neighbors, but is rebellious because he does not do any of the work that his wife wants him to do. Ichabod Crane is a very smart teacher who wanders from one student’s house to the next. He is sensitive and will believe almost anything that people tell him.

                The final characteristic of Romanticism is a focus on the individual rather than the community; other characters are present in the literature but are referenced as to how the main character feels about them through discussion from the third person point of view (http://www.buzzle.com/articles/romanticism-characteristics-of-romanticism.html). Rip Van Winkle is a story about how he slept through the American Revolution, not about how his village dealt with the American Revolution. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow focuses on Ichabod Crane’s incident with the Headless Horseman instead of all of the supposed stories of the townsmen’s encounters with this terror. Washington Irving’s works are true examples of Romantic literature.

 For more information on the Romantic period see this video: 


Thursday, March 8, 2012

Frederick Douglass


How did Frederick Douglass help slaves escape?
                Douglass escaped from slavery by saving up money, disguising himself as a sailor, and boarding a ship to go north with fake papers.  However, he was not satisfied with just gaining his own freedom and wanted to help other people too. He gave a couple of speeches and was recognized by William Lloyd Garrison, an abolitionist, and they traveled from town to town together while Douglass gave speeches about his life as a slave. He gave other slaves hope that they too could escape and have a new life. Douglass was an inspiring figure (http://library.thinkquest.org/J0112391/frederick_douglass.htm).
                After his public speaking earned him fame, Frederick Douglass was invited by President Abraham Lincoln to come to the White House and discuss slavery. While he was there, he encouraged Lincoln to enlist black men for the Union army. He also started his own paper called The North Star which discussed freedom for slaves and circulated among 4,000 people (http://library.thinkquest.org/J0112391/frederick_douglass.htm). He also had a magazine called “Douglass’s Monthly” (http://www.pbs.org/blackpress/news_bios/douglass.html).
                Frederick Douglass was also a conductor on the Underground Railroad in Rochester, New York. He hid slaves in his house as they went north from house to house. At one point in time, he had eleven fugitive slaves hiding in his house that he fed, clothed, and saved up money to get them to free territory in Canada. The penalty for harboring a slave could be imprisonment, fining, or even death. Douglass once wrote about helping slaves, “true as a means of destroying slavery, it was like an attempt to bail out the ocean with a teaspoon, but the thought that there was one less slave, and one more freeman, brought to my heart unspeakable joy” (http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USASunderground.htm).
For more information on the Underground Railroad, see this video:

                His abolitionist duties did not stop there. At first, he supported another abolitionist named John Brown and helped raise money for him. But, when Brown told him that he was planning a raid on Harper’s Ferry, he disapproved and called it a suicide mission.  Douglass stopped helping but eventually had to flee to Canada because people thought he was an instigator of the raid (http://www.winningthevote.org/f-fdouglass.html).

                He also fought for women’s rights, saying that God saw no meaningful difference in race or gender (http://www.pbs.org/blackpress/news_bios/douglass.html). However, the majority of Douglass’s influence was in writing and giving speeches. He is definitely one of the main reasons that slaves received their freedom. Douglass risked a lot by speaking publicly and working the Underground Railroad because he could have been killed for his outspokenness.