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Philosophy
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Channing, William
Ellery
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Channing, William
Ellery (b. April 7, 1780, Newport, R.I.--d. Oct. 2,
1842, Bennington, Vt., U.S.), U.S. author and moralist, Congregationalist and,
later, Unitarian clergyman. Known as the "apostle of Unitarianism,"
Channing was a leading figure in the development of New England
Transcendentalism and of organized attempts in the U.S. to eliminate slavery,
drunkenness, poverty, and war. |
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(William Ellery Channing). 1780. 4. 7 ·Îµå¾ÆÀÏ·£µå ´ºÆ÷Æ®~1842. 10. 2
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He studied theology in Newport and at
Harvard and soon became a successful preacher in various churches in the Boston
area. From June 1, 1803, until his death he was minister of the Federal Street
Church, Boston. Preferring to avoid abstruse points of doctrine, he preached
morality, charity, and Christian responsibilities. He became a popular speaker
on ceremonial occasions and reached an even larger audience by writing for
liberal Boston periodicals, one of which was The Christian Disciple (from 1824 called The Christian Examiner). In 1815 he was attacked by the orthodox
Calvinist periodical The Panoplist,
whose editor, Jedidiah Morse, denounced the Boston clergy as
"Unitarian" rather than Christian. During the next five years Channing
issued several defenses of his position, especially "Unitarian
Christianity," a sermon delivered at an ordination in Baltimore in 1819. |
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Reluctantly accepting the label of
Unitarianism, Channing described his faith as "a rational and amiable
system, against which no man's understanding, or conscience, or charity, or
piety revolts." Although he did not wish to found a denomination, believing
that a Unitarian orthodoxy would be just as oppressive as any other, he formed
(1820) a conference of liberal Congregational ministers, later (May 1825)
reorganized as the American Unitarian Association. |
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À¯´ÏÅ׸®¾ð Çùȸ·Î ÀçÁ¶Á÷µÇ¾ú´Ù. |
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Channing sympathized with the beliefs of
several social and educational reform movements but did not believe that society
could be improved by collective action. He denied that government--the only
legitimate function of which was, in his view, the essentially negative one of
maintaining public order--could advance the moral sensibility of the human race. |
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In his time, Channing's reputation as a
man of letters was based on several long essay-reviews, among the first of their
kind in the U.S. One took John Milton's "Treatise on Christian
Doctrine" as a starting point; another, Sir Walter Scott's biography of
Napoleon I, in whose career Channing saw the great social danger of taking
prominent soldiers for heroes. Since most of his manuscripts were destroyed by
fire, students of Channing have drawn on The
Life of William Ellery Channing, D.D., 3 vol. (1848), by his nephew William
Henry Channing. The Philosophy of William
Ellery Channing (1952), by R.L. Patterson, is an analysis of Channing's
thought. Channing the Reluctant Radical
(1971), by Jack Mendelsohn, is a biography. |
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Á¶Ä« Àª¸®¾ö Ç ä´×ÀÌ ¡´Àª¸®¾ö ¿¤·¯¸® ä´×ÀÇ »ý¾Ö The
Life of William Ellery Channing D.D.¡µ(3±Ç, 1848)¸¦ ½è´Ù. R.L.
ÆÐÅͽ¼ÀÇ ¡´Àª¸®¾ö ¿¤·¯¸® ä´×ÀÇ Ã¶ÇÐ The Philosophy of William
Ellery Channing¡µ(1952)Àº ä´×ÀÇ »ç»óÀ» ºÐ¼®ÇÑ °ÍÀÌ´Ù.
Àü±â·Î´Â Àè ¸à´ú½¼ÀÇ ¡´³»Å°Áö ¾Ê´Â ±ÞÁøÁÖÀÇÀÚ Ã¤´×
Channing the Reluctant Radical¡µ(1971)ÀÌ ÀÖ´Ù. |
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