Information about John "walking" Stewart

John "Walking" Stewart (19 February 174720 February 1822) was an English traveller and philosopher.

Known as 'Walking' Stewart to his contemporaries for having travelled on foot from Madras, India (where he worked as a clerk to the East India Company) back to Europe between 1765 and the mid 1790s. Stewart is thought to have walked alone across Persia, Abyssinia, Arabia and Africa before wandering into every European country as far east as Russia.

During his journeys, he developed a unique brand of materialist philosophy which combines elements of Spinozistic pantheism with yogic notions of a single indissoluble consciousness. Stewart began publicly to promote his ideas in 1790 with the publication of his treatise Travels over the most interesting parts of the Globe (London, 1790).

Over the next three decades Stewart wrote prolifically, publishing nearly thirty philosophical works, including The Opus Maximum (London, 1803) and the long verse-poem The Revelation of Nature (New York, 1795).

Stewart's works are characterised by a naive arrogance, frequently asserting that their author is the 'only child of nature' to have ever lived. In 1796, George Washington's portrait painter, James Sharples, executed a pastel likeness of Stewart for a series of portraits which included such sitters as William Godwin, Joseph Priestley, and Humphry Davy, suggesting the intellectual esteem in which Stewart was once held.

After retiring from travelling, Stewart eventually settled in London where he held philosophical soirées and earned a reputation as one of the city's celebrated eccentrics. He was often seen in public ways wearing a thread-bare Armenian military uniform -- a souvenir, one assumes, from his many adventures.

On 20 February 1822, the morning after his seventy-fifth birthday, 'Walking' Stewart's body was found in a rented room in Northumberland Place, near present-day Trafalgar Square, London. An empty bottle of laudanum was lying beside him.

Literary Influence

After Walking Stewart's travels came to an end around the turn of the nineteenth century, he became close friends with the English essayist and fellow Londoner Thomas De Quincey, the radical pamphleteer Thomas Paine, and the Platonist Thomas Taylor.

In 1792, while residing in Paris in the weeks following the September Massacres, he made the acquaintance of the young Romantic poet William Wordsworth, who later concurred with De Quincey that Stewart was the most eloquent man on the subject of Nature that either had ever met. Recent scholarship has suggested that Stewart's persona and philosophical writings were a major influence on Wordsworth's poetry.

References

  • Bertrand Harris Bronson, "Walking Stewart", Essays & Studies, xiv (University of California Press, 1943), pp. 123-55.
  • Thomas De Quincey, The Works of Thomas De Quincey, ed. Grevel Lindop (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2000-), vol. xi, p. 247.
  • Kelly Grovier, 'Dream Walker: A Wordsworth Mystery Solved', Times Literary Supplement, 16 February 2007
  • Kelly Grovier, '"Shades of the Prison House": "Walking" Stewart and the making of Wordsworth's "two consciousnesses", Studies in Romanticism, Fall 2005 (Boston University), pp. 341-66.
  • Barry Symonds, ‘Stewart, John (1747–1822)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/26494
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Honourable East India Company (HEIC), often colloquially referred to as "John Company", and "Company Bahadur" in India, was an early joint-stock company (the Dutch East India Company was the first to issue public stock).
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Ethiopia (IPA: /i.θi.oʊ.pi.ə/) ( ʾĪtyōṗṗyā), officially the
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materialism is that form of physicalism which holds that the only thing that can truly be said to exist is matter; that fundamentally, all things are composed of material and all phenomena are the result of material interactions; that matter is the only substance.
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God

General approaches
Agnosticism Atheism
Deism Dystheism
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Monism Monotheism
Natural theology Nontheism
Pandeism Panentheism
Pantheism Polytheism
Theism Theology
Transtheism

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Yoga (Sanskrit: योग Yoga, IPA: [joːgə]) is a group of ancient spiritual practices originating in India.
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George Washington (February 22, 1732 – December 14, 1799)[1][2] was a central, critical figure in the founding of the United States of America, as well as the nation's first president (1789–1797).
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James Sharples (1751 or 1752 - 26 February 1811) was an English portrait painter and husband of Ellen Sharples, born in Lancashire, who moved to the United States in 1793.

His subjects included George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Priestley.
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William Godwin (3 March 1756 – 7 April 1836) was an English journalist, political philosopher and novelist. He is considered one of the first exponents of utilitarianism, and one of the first modern proponents of minarchist philosophy.
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Joseph Priestley (March 26,1733 – February 8, 1804) was an eighteenth-century British natural philosopher, Dissenting clergyman, political theorist, theologian, and educator.
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Sir Humphry Davy

Sir Humphry Davy
Born November 17 1778(1778--)
Penzance, Cornwall, United Kingdom
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Trafalgar Square is a square in London, the capital city of the United Kingdom, that commemorates the Battle of Trafalgar (1805), a British naval victory of the Napoleonic Wars.
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Laudanum is an opium tincture, sometimes sweetened with sugar and also called wine of opium.

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In the 16th century, Paracelsus experimented with the medical value of opium.
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Thomas de Quincey (August 15, 1785 – December 8, 1859) was an English author and intellectual, best known for his book Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1822).

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He was born in Manchester, England.
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Thomas Paine (Thetford, England, 29 January 1737 – 8 June 1809, New York City, USA) was a pamphleteer, revolutionary, radical, liberal and intellectual. Born in Great Britain, he lived in America, having migrated to the American colonies just in time to take part in the
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Platonism

Platonic idealism
Platonic realism
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Neoplatonism

Platonic epistemology
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Platonic doctrine of recollection
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Plato
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Thomas Taylor (15 May 1758 - 1 November 1835) was an English translator and Neoplatonist, the first to translate into English the complete works of Aristotle and of Plato, as well as the Orphic fragments.
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The September Massacres were a wave of mob violence which overtook Paris in late summer 1792, during the French Revolution. By the time it had subsided, half the prison population of Paris had been executed: some 1200 trapped prisoners, including many women and young boys.
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Romanticism is an artistic, literary, and intellectual movement that originated around the middle of the 18th century in Western Europe, during the Industrial Revolution. It was partly a revolt against aristocratic, social, and political norms of the Enlightenment period and a
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William Wordsworth

Born: March 7 1770(1770--)
Cockermouth, England
Died: March 23 1850 (aged 80)
Ambleside, England
Occupation: Poet
Literary movement: Romanticism
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Nature, in the broadest sense, is equivalent to the natural world, physical universe, material world or material universe. "Nature" refers to the phenomena of the physical world, and also to life in general.
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Influence is a term that refers to the ability to indirectly control or affect the actions of other people or things. The meaning of influence therefore depends on who or what is being affected, and to what end.
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Boston University (BU) is a private research university located in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. Although chartered by the Massachusetts Legislature in 1869, Boston University traces its roots to the establishment of the Newbury Biblical Institute in Newbury,
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