Despite their many differences of temperament and of literary perspective, Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, and Whitman shared certain beliefs. Common to all these writers is their humanistic perspective. Its basic premises are that humans are the spiritual center of the universe and that in them alone is the clue to nature, history, and ultimately the cosmos. Without denying outright the existence of a deity, this perspective explains humans and the world in terms of humanity.
This common perspective is almost always universalized. It emphasizes the human as universal, freed from the accidents of time, space, birth, and talent. Thus, for Emerson, the “American Scholar” turns out to be simply “Man Thinking,” while, for Whitman, the “Song of Myself” merges imperceptibly into a song of all the “children of Adam,” where “every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.”
Also common to all five writers is the belief that self-realization depends on the harmonious reconciliation of two universal psychological tendencies: first, the self-asserting impulse of the individual to be responsible only to himself or herself, and second, the self-transcending impulse of the individual to know and become one with that world. These conflicting impulses can be seen in the democratic ethic. Democracy advocates individualism, the preservation of the individual's freedom and self-expression. But the democratic self is torn between the duty to self, which is implied by the concept of liberty, and the duty to society, which is implied by the concepts of equality and fraternity.
A third assumption common to the five writers is that intuition and imagination offer a surer road to truth than does abstract logic or scientific method. It is illustrated by their emphasis upon introspection—their belief that the clue to external nature is to be found in the inner world of individual psychology—and by their interpretation of experience as, in essence, symbolic. Both these stresses presume an organic relationship between the self and the cosmos of which only intuition and imagination can properly take account. These writers’ faith in the imagination and in themselves led them to conceive of the writer as a seer.
The passage is most relevant to which of the following areas of study?
Aesthetics and logic
History and literature
Theology and sociology
Anthropology and political science
Linguistics and art
此讲解的内容由AI生成,还未经人工审阅,仅供参考。
正确答案是 B,历史和文学。阅读材料中提到了五位作家(Emerson Thoreau Hawthorne Melville 和 Whitman)之间的相似之处。这篇文章更多地涉及到他们的人文主义视角,以及自我实现如何取决于个人的两种趋势,最后强调作家作为先知的角色。所有这些特征都属于历史和文学领域的研究,因此 B 是正确选项。
我选的C 呢!!!
我认为这是讲哲学!!!Theology感觉沾边。(虽然我以为Theology是理论派,搜了一下就是神学。这神神叨叨地讨论内心、世界、存在,难道不是一个意思吗?)我都在犹豫A的logic,不过感觉跟逻辑的条理论证没关,跟美学的分类差太远所以才没选。
结果告诉我是历史、文学。
历史是事件的阐述,文学不应该是带有一定的文章载体吗?这篇通篇写这些人的世界观、人生观,居然跟我说是文学??!难道就凭他们是writer吗?
气到心肌梗塞!!!作为考生没有任何话语权、人权、出卷大佬说啥是啥!!!
我:%*&()*¥&%**%
哈哈哈哈哈哈笑死
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