In four pages Egdon Heath is 'personified' and examined in terms of humanity and spirituality. There is no bibliography included.
Name of Research Paper File: LM1_TLCEgdon.rtf
Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
That Egdon Heath represents all that is wild and unencumbered makes it more of a prime manifestation of human qualities than of mere landscape. For the people who reside
amidst this glorious panorama, Egdon Heath reflects the very spiritual embodiment of what man aspires to achieve during his short time on this earth. Fundamental to this diverse perspective is
how mankinds stringent focus was altered to incorporate a much more spiritual understanding during the Enlightenment, a period during the eighteenth century in which great philosophers looked at the broader
scope of existence that lies within an otherwise black and white world. A time in which all of mankind could break free from the confines of what had heretofore
been accepted as a universal recognition of existence, the Enlightenment symbolized the chance to break free from such long-standing constraints. The Enlightenment was instrumental in questioning -- and ultimately
rejecting -- what had come to be conventional social, religious and political ideas to make way for a new, more modernistic approach. During this period, there was a particular
emphasis placed upon rationalism, a theory asserting how reason, in and of itself, was an entity of knowledge superior to and independent of sense perceptions. Indeed, the Enlightenment served
as the beginning of unique aspirations and an original quest for truth, with Egdon Heath reflecting but one aspect of such spiritual awakening that manifested in personification. The components of
conservation, ecology and environmentalism are inextricably connected with the reasons why Egdon Heath is perceived as more of a person than merely a place. It took a great deal
of time to occur, but mankind finally came to the realization of how staggeringly omnipotent Mother Nature is in her splendor; while this omnipotence is, for the most part, on