The term "noble savage" expresses a concept of the universal essential humanity as unencumbered by civilization; the normal essence of an unfettered human. Since the concept embodies the idea that without the bounds of civilization, humans are essentially good, the basis for the idea of the "noble savage" lies in the doctrine of the goodness of humans, expounded in the first decade of the century by Shaftesbury, who urged a would-be author “to search for that simplicity of manners, and innocence of behaviour, which has been often known among mere savages; ere they were corrupted by our commerce” (Advice to an Author, Part III.iii). His counter to the doctrine of original sin, born amid the optimistic atmosphere of Renaissance humanism, was taken up by his contemporary, the essayist Richard Steele, who attributed the corruption of contemporary manners to false education.
The concept of the noble savage has particular associations with Romanticism and with Rousseau's Romantic philosophy in particular. The opening sentence of Rousseau's Emile (1762), which has as its subtitle "de l'Éducation ("or, Concerning Education") is
In the later eighteenth-century, the published voyages of Captain James Cook and Louis Antoine de Bougainville seemed to open a glimpse into an unspoiled Edenic culture that still existed in the unspoiled and un-Christianized South Seas. By 1784 it was so much an accepted element in current discourse that Benjamin Franklin could mock some of its inconsistencies in Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America (1784). Among the classics of the "natural" education, the novel Paul et Virginie appeared in 1787 and Chateaubriand's sentimental romance Atala appeared in 1807.
The concept appears in many further books of the early nineteenth century. Mary Shelley's Frankenstein forms one of the better-known examples: her monster embodies the ideal. German author Karl May employed the idea extensively in his Wild West stories. Aldous Huxley provided a later example in his novel Brave New World (published in 1932).
In the first century CE, all of these features of the eighteenth century Noble Savage had been attributed by Tacitus to Germans in his Germania, in which he contrasted them repeatedly with the softened, romanised, corrupted Gauls— and by inference criticised his own Roman culture in unspoken contrasts.
Stanley Kubrick, whose films make strong comments on human nature, rejects the idea of the noble savage:
Man isn't a noble savage, he's an ignoble savage. He is irrational, brutal, weak, silly, unable to be objective about anything where his own interests are involved — that about sums it up. I'm interested in the brutal and violent nature of man because it's a true picture of him. And any attempt to create social institutions on a false view of the nature of man is probably doomed to failure.
As a supposed form of racism, the ideology of the noble savage has been criticized by anthropologists who claim that it is a false construct based on European notions of what the "Indian" is like. Anthropologist Lawrence H. Keeley has used ethnographic evidence from Highland New Guinea tribesman, Kalahari San peoples, and other existing "primitive" tribes to demonstrate the level of violence present in these societies. Amongst his aims is to demonstrate the falseness of the myth that "civilized humans have fallen from grace, from a simple primeval happiness, a peaceful golden age." . The author laments the role that the "noble savage" paradigm has had in warping much anthropological literature to political ends. Historically, and in the present, the idea of the noble savage has been used by various parties to create impossible double standards and thus deny indigenous groups their legitimate claims.
Twentieth-century popular culture has also expressed its inherited views of the "noble savage" by placing them in fantasy or science fiction settings. Historical fantasy examples include the figures such as "Tarzan" and "Conan the Barbarian." The very meaning of "barbarian" in contemporary popular culture has become sympathetically colored through similar fantasies.
As sensitivity to racist stereotypes has increased, science fiction has often cast space aliens in the role of the noble savage.
Twentieth-century readers recast as "noble savages" some literary creatures like Caliban in Shakespeare's The Tempest or Dr. Frankenstein's creature in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818)
Another noble savage archetype appears in the person of the Siberian Nanai hunter Dersu Uzala, who became the main character of the book Dersu Uzala by the Russian explorer Vladimir Arsenyev. It has inspired two movie pictures, the 1961 Soviet film Dersu Uzala by Agasi Babayan (Агаси Бабаян), as well as the 1975 Soviet-Japanese film Dersu Uzala by Akira Kurosawa (黒澤 明).
In 1964, the Australian writer Mary Durack published a fictionalised account of Yagan, an Indigenous Australian warrior who played a key part in early resistance to British settlement around Perth, Western Australia, in her children's novel The Courteous Savage: Yagan of the Swan River. When re-issued in 1976, it was renamed Yagan of the Bibbulmun because the word "Savage" was considered racist.
The 1980 film The Gods Must Be Crazy by Jamie Uys depicts a group of Bushmen from the Kalahari desert as noble savages.
The schizophrenic Columbian Indian "Chief" Bromden in Ken Kesey's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" was considered by critics to explode the conventions of the noble savage.