Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The estate of reason

There is one mind common to all individual men. Every man is an inlet to the same and to all of the same. He that is once admitted to the right of reason is made a freeman of the whole estate. What Plato has thought, he may think; what a saint has felt, he may feel.
Emerson
Emerson’s noble vision of a broad, open plain of reason, without walls, fences or borders contrasts sharply with the reason of our era. Today we can traverse only a minute distance in the estate of reason before we come upon one of many insuperable fortified walls erected between disciplines. The historian admits he has not studied physics, not ruing his timidity with a downcast eye, but proclaiming his provincialism with the haughty air of a Pharisee who proudly respects boundaries and follows rules. A free spirit like Emerson who imagines himself a freeman of the whole estate will today find himself contemptuously dismissed as a dilettante. In the estate of reason there are no longer freemen. Each mind is sold to one or another plantation, destined to a lifetime of servitude on its tiny plot.

1 comment:

  1. maybe he is saying that if you have the right of reason you are granted the freedom to explore more - i don't think he is discounting the logic prone to those who subscribe to ultimate specialization and trade. you're essentially calling emerson a sophist. i think he is just stating that when you follow reason, in whatever it is that you decide to do or whatever it is you're applying rationale to, you gain more freedom. his argument that we all have a mind and that we contribute to one another once we have access to 'reason/logic/rational thinking,' we reach higher levels of understanding. he finalizes by stating "what plato has thought, he may think," i think the use of may is important. he didn't say that what plato thought, one will think. plato used logic to aid in discovering the world around him. i think he is referring to the allegory of the cave in finishing.

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