“Emerson’s Nonlinear Nature
is a powerful, worthwhile study that breaks new
ground in Emerson studies.”—James R. Guthrie, author of Above Time: Emerson’s
and Thoreau’s Temporal Revolutions
In this provocative
study, Christopher Windolph analyzes Emersonian naturalism from the
standpoint of nonlinearity, offering new ways of reading and thinking
about Emerson’s stance toward naturalism and the influence of science on
his thought. Drawing on ideas in perspective theory, architecture, and
nonlinear dynamics to argue that Emerson’s natural philosophy follows
from his analysis of the development of organic forms, Windolph breaks
new ground in Emerson studies by exploring how considerations of shape
and the act of seeing underpin all of Emerson’s theories about nature.
Bringing to
his study a focused attention to the history of Western science and
philosophy, Windolph reexamines Emerson’s understanding of how the act
of seeing occurs and of the eye’s ability to see through appearances to
organizing principles, showing how Emerson’s naturalism extends beyond
the narrow confines of traditional linear science. Through extensive
readings of Emerson’s journals, essays, and lectures, Windolph shows
that Emerson was an empirical idealist who integrated a scientific
approach to nature with an exploration of nonlinear principles,
revealing him to be more prescient in his writings about certain recent
developments in scientific thought than has been realized.
This work
makes a major contribution to the ongoing study of Emerson and science,
expanding Emerson’s role as a major American philosopher while rebutting
those who see him primarily as a rhetorician or poetic propagandist.
Emerson’s Nonlinear Nature opens new ways of thinking about
Emerson’s work in its nineteenth-century contexts, reassesses his
reception in twentieth-century criticism, and makes a strong case for
his continuing relevance in the century ahead.
About the Author
Christopher J. Windolph earned his Ph.D. from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He lives in Seattle, Washington.