When Chris McCandless ventured out into the wild he would have never thought to look at in a different, scientific way such as this. Almost all of the characters in Into the Wild, by Jon Krakauer, have a sense humility. Some more than other, but nonetheless it’s still present within their very beings.Humility is a property not many human beings as for the reason that humans do not want to be humble. We as a species are much too proud to let any humbleness slip through the cracks of our crooked minds. Roderick Nash presents the idea that wilderness is only a state of mind, Chris McCandless, and Jon Krakauer prove him wrong by living for many months in harsh conditions that the wilderness force them into, thus disproving the idea that it is only a state of mind. Humility is taught by an mysterious force known as the wilderness, however, McCandless, Krakauer, and McCunn …show more content…
Roderick Nash debates that the wilderness is a state of mind, but Chris not only lived in the wilderness but also died from it. Chris had supposedly died from potato seeds, but Nash may argue that he wasn’t strong enough to handle the state of mind of which he had been in a trance. Unlike Chris, Jon Krakauer had survived his trip up the mountain in the wilderness. He almost died but kept his wits and held strong during the harsh cold. “I dug a shallow hole, wrapped myself in the bivvy bag, and sat on my pack in the swirling snow. Drifts piled up around me. My feet became numb. A damp chill crept down my chest from the base of my neck, where spindrift had gotten inside my parka and soaked my shirt.” (p. 151, Krakauer) When Krakauer was up on the mountain, freezing to death, his mind did not rush to extreme instincts, unlike someone with much less of a mind would have. The wilderness state of mind