Scott Nearing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (November 2006) |
Scott Nearing (August 6, 1883 – August 24, 1983) was an American conservationist, peace activist, educator, writer and economist. Nearing is the father of John Scott.
Contents |
[edit] Life
Born in Morris Run, Pennsylvania, Nearing is still viewed as a radical 20 years after his death. In 1954 he co-authored Living the Good Life: How to Live Simply and Sanely in a Troubled World with his wife Helen (see the entry for Helen and Scott Nearing). The book, in which war, famine, and poverty were discussed, described a nineteen-year "back to the land experiment," and also advocated a modern day "homesteading." Eugene V. Debs, the five-time Socialist presidential candidate, called Nearing the "greatest teacher in the United States," and Allen Ginsberg, the famous Beat Generation poet, referred to Nearing as a "grand old man, a real mensch" in his poem America. Nearing's anti-war activities cost him two teaching jobs, and he was even charged under the Espionage Act for opposing the First World War.
Nearing was dismissed from the University of Pennsylvania in 1915 because of his public opposition to child labor. In 1973, however, the University awarded Nearing the title of Honorary Emeritus Professor of Economics.
After leaving Pennsylvania, Nearing lived a largely self-reliant life in the wooded areas of Vermont and Maine. Feeling a sense of dignity in the common man, and wanting to serve, Nearing wrote and self-published many pamphlets on topics such as low income, peace throughout the world, feminism, and different environmental causes. Nearing was notably critical of the U.S Government. On August 6, 1945, the day President Harry S. Truman ordered the dropping of the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, Nearing wrote a damning letter to the president, stating "your government is no longer mine."
As the Vietnam War took center stage in the mid 1960s, and as a large back to the land movement developed in the U.S., a renewed interest in Nearing's work and ideas began. Hundreds of anti-war believers flocked to Nearing's home in Maine to learn homesteading practical-living skills, some also to hear a master radical's anti-war message.
Nearing wrote a political autobiography titled The Making of a Radical, published in 1972.
He appears on film in the movie Reds (1981), starring Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton. In the film, Nearing appears as one of the many "witnesses," telling stories of his friend John Reed (who was portrayed by Beatty in the film) and of the heady days leading up to the Russian Revolution.
Eighteen days after his 100th birthday, the celebrated radical, educator, conservationist and centenarian Scott Nearing died.
[edit] Principles
In his autobiography, The Making of a Radical, Scott Nearing describes himself as a pacifist, a socialist and a vegetarian. In his autobiography he says "I became a vegetarian because I was persuaded that life is as valid for other creatures as it is for humans. I do not need dead animal bodies to keep me alive, strong and healthy. Therefore, I will not kill for food". (chapter 7, page 123) [1]
[edit] Influences
In his autobiography (chapter 1, page 29), he describes his four most influential teachers as Leo Tolstoy, Simon Nelson Patten, his grandfather and mother. Other influences he lists are Socrates, Gautama Buddha, Lao Tzu, Mahatma Gandhi, Jesus, Confucius, Henry David Thoreau, Charles Otis Whitman, Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin, Victor Hugo, Edward Bellamy, Olive Schreiner, Richard Maurice Bucke and Romain Rolland's Jean-Christophe.
[edit] Quotes
- "War is an attempt of one group to impose its will upon another group by armed violence."
- "War drags human beings from their tasks of building and improving, and pushes them en masse into the category of destroyers and killers."
- "Your government is no longer mine."
- "Do the best that you can, wherever you are, and be kind."
[edit] Selected writings
- Anthracite; an instance of natural resource monopoly
- Black America (Sourcebooks in Negro History)
- Bolshevism and the West
- Building and Using Our Sun-Heated Greenhouse: Grow Vegetables All Year-Round
- Civilization and Beyond: Learning from History
- Continuing the Good Life: Half a Century of Homesteading
- Free Born
- Freedom, Promise and Menace
- The Good Life: Helen and Scott Nearing's Sixty Years of Self-Sufficient Living
- The Great Madness
- Living the Good Life: How to Live Sanely and Simply in a Troubled World
- The Making of a Radical: A Political Autobiography
- Man's Search for the Good Life
- The Maple Sugar Book: Pioneering As a Way of Living in the Twentieth Century
- The New Education
- Oil and the Germs of War
- The Trial of Scott Nearing and the American Socialist Society
- Whither China?
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Works by Scott Nearing at Project Gutenberg
- Scott Nearing—Peace Activist and Practical Conservationist Short Biography
- The Good Life Center The nonprofit group responsible for perpetuating the philosophies and lifeways promoted and exemplified by Helen and Scott Nearing.