“The knowledge of all the facts of all the laws of nature will give man his true place in the system of beings,” said Ralph Waldo Emerson. His lectures on the natural sciences were key to his role as educator in early 19th-century America. “Healthy, useful and delights the mind”, added Emerson of natural history, who found it useful in generating enthusiasm and disciplining the mind. In The Mind on Fire (University of California, £27/$35, ISBN 0 520 08808 5), Robert Richardson, Emerson’s thorough yet modest biographer, explains that transcendentalism, the philosophical movement associated with Emerson, embraces the mainstream of modern science and technology while asserting that greatness lies not in materialism but in those with power to alter the way we think.
More from New Å®ÉúСÊÓÆµ
Explore the latest news, articles and features

Physics
Toy universe shows that time could be a quantum illusion
News

Life
Dramatic photo of ibis being guided to their winter homes wins award
Regulars

Space
The one film to watch before seeing Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day
Culture

Health
Ditching cigarettes for vapes may curb the cancer benefits of quitting
News
Popular articles
Trending New Å®ÉúСÊÓÆµ articles
1
Fully autonomous drones have killed human soldiers for the first time
2
Millions of fossil whale bones found in deep-ocean ‘necropolis’
3
Mysterious ‘cold blob’ in the Atlantic suggests the AMOC is weakening
4
Why we should all take quantum physics extremely personally
5
New Å®ÉúСÊÓÆµ recommends a brilliant take on the evolution of birds
6
Understanding anorexia’s grip on the brain could unlock new therapies
7
A nuclear war between India and Pakistan could destroy the ozone layer
8
Ditching cigarettes for vapes may curb the cancer benefits of quitting
9
A cosmic case of mistaken identity that can only be solved right now
10
Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything