Since the beginning of life, each organism has abided to a set of natural instincts, of which has never been changed or compromised. One of these instincts, which specifically belongs to humanity, is the instinct to pursue truth. This is because the truth can completely alter our opinions, and our social and emotional environments. Creative individuals who have expressed their desire to find the truths in life are amongst a variety of people from many different generations, genders, and environments. A key example of one of these individuals is Emily Dickinson, an introverted and reclusive American Poet who lived in the mid 1800s. Dickinson expressed in many of her thousands of poems that she wished to know the true feelings of her acquaintances, …show more content…
As far as all of the research put into this question can show, the need to identify the truth in any situation is a natural instinct in which every individual inherits through our genes. In his article on "Truth and Practise" (Mind, 1904), Mr. Bradley says, "Reality is the satisfaction of all the wants of our nature, and theoretical truth is those perceptions and ideas which directly satisfy one of those wants." Therefore, thinking appears to be the operation of a specialized instinct that helps us identify the difference between what is real and what is a lie, usually through the means of socializing and deductive reasoning. This could eventually lead to us deciding our own fate. For example, if one of your enemies comes forth and offers you an apple, saying it is healthy while it is actually poisoned, most would realize that the person offering the fruit would not be inclined to do kind things for them. They would then realize that the apple is intended to harm them, using a combination of perusing the truth and the thought process. In his article, "Truth Value" (The Journal of Philosophy, 1908), A. W. Moore states specifically that "truth and error values are the satisfaction and the dissatisfaction of a special and independent part of our nature... truth-value [is] based on a special and independent …show more content…
For Emily Dickinson, these life conditions were quite different from those of common people today. Dickinson lived prominently secluded from the outside world for the second half of her life. She had endured the deaths of so many loved ones, causing her to be untrustworthy of the idea of gaining any new loved ones. For example, when her dog of sixteen years passed away, she never replaced him for fear of having to deal with the loss of another one of her household friends. Also, since women poets were rather scarce during her life, her poetry would not have been prominently accepted amongst those in her community, so when she brought forth the idea of her publishing some of her work, she was let down often by her friends who claimed that her work would be published soon. These constant let downs in her life caused her to be slightly hesitant to trust anyone, so she searched for the truth of things herself. She often expressed some of the lack of trust in her life, like in her poem "I like a look of