I proclaim this world is lovely to the point that I can barely trust it exists." The magnificence of nature can have a significant impact upon our faculties, those passages from the external world to the inward, regardless of whether it brings about incredulity in its very presence as Emerson notes, or sentiments, for example, stunningness, marvel, or awe. In any case, what is it about nature and the elements that make it up that cause us, in many cases reluctantly, to feel or pronounce that they are excellent?
One answer that Emerson offers is that "the straightforward view of characteristic structures is a pleasure." When we consider excellence in nature, we may most quickly consider things that astonish the faculties – the noticeable quality of a mountain, the field of the ocean, the unfurling of the life of a blossom. Regularly it is simply the view of these things itself which gives us delight, and this passionate or full of feeling reaction on our part is by all accounts critical to our experience of excellence
the noticeable quality of a mountain, the field of the ocean, the unfurling of the life of a blossom. Regularly it is simply the view of these things itself which gives us delight,