Skip to Main Content

Henry David Thoreau: About

Henry David Thoreau

Watch

Who was Henry David Thoreau?

Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862) was an American philosopher, poet, and environmental scientist whose major work, Walden, draws upon each of these identities in meditating on the concrete problems of living in the world as a human being. He sought to revive a conception of philosophy as a way of life, not only a mode of reflective thought and discourse. Thoreau’s work was informed by an eclectic variety of sources. He was well-versed in classical Greek and Roman philosophy, ranging from the pre-Socratics through the Hellenistic schools, and was also an avid student of the ancient scriptures and wisdom literature of various Asian traditions. He was familiar with modern philosophy ranging from Descartes, Locke and the Cambridge Platonists through Emerson, Coleridge, and the German Idealists, all of whom are influential on Thoreau’s philosophy. He discussed his own scientific findings with leading naturalists of the day, and read the latest work of Humboldt and Darwin with interest and admiration. His philosophical explorations of self and world led him to develop an epistemology of embodied perception and a non-dualistic account of mental and material life. In addition to his focus on ethics in an existential spirit, Thoreau also makes unique contributions to ontology, the philosophy of science, and radical political thought. Although his political essays have become justly famous, his works on natural science were not even published until the late twentieth century, and they help to give us a more complete picture of him as a thinker. Among the texts he left unfinished was a set of manuscript volumes filled with information on Native American religion and culture. 

Thoreau was born in Concord, Massachusetts in 1817 and died there in 1862, at the age of forty-four. Like that of his near-contemporary Søren Kierkegaard, Thoreau’s intellectual career unfolded in a close and polemical relation to the town in which he spent almost his entire life. After graduating from Harvard in 1837, he struck up a friendship with fellow Concord resident Ralph Waldo Emerson, whose essay “Nature” he had first encountered earlier that year. . Continue reading from Standard Encyclopedia of Philosophy

From our Collection

Link to Now comes good sailing : writers reflect on Henry David Thoreau edited by Andrew Blauner. in the catalog
Link to Collected essays and poems by Henry David Thoreau in the catalog
Link to Thoreau by A. Dan and Maximilien Le Roy in Freading
Link to A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers by Henry David Thoreau.in the catalog
Link to Walden and Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau
American Bloomsbury by Susan Cheever in the catalog
Link to Canoeing in the Wilderness by Henry David Thoreau
Link to Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau
Link to The Annotated Emerson by Ralph Waldo Emerson and David Mikics in catalog

Explore More Revolutionary Biographies