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George Santayana quotes - page 8
Religions are not true or false, but better or worse.
George Santayana
Oblivious of Democritus, the unwilling materialists of our day have generally been awkwardly intellectual and quite incapable of laughter. If they have felt anything, they have felt melancholy. Their allegiance and affection were still fixed on those mythical sentimental worlds which they saw to be illusory. The mechanical world they believed in could not please them, in spite of its extent and fertility. Giving rhetorical vent to their spleen and prejudice, they exaggerated nature's meagreness and mathematical dryness. When their imagination was chilled they spoke of nature, most unwarrantably, as dead, and when their judgment was heated they took the next step and called it unreal.
George Santayana
It is not politics that can bring true liberty to the soul; that must be achieved, if at all, by philosophy.
George Santayana
Whenever a nation is converted to Christianity, its Christianity, in practice, must be largely converted to paganism.
George Santayana
[Everything] ideal has a natural basis and everything natural an ideal development.
George Santayana
Liberal philosophy, at this point, ceases to be empirical and British in order to become German and transcendental. Moral life, it now believes, is not the pursuit of liberty and happiness of all sorts by all sorts of different creatures; it is the development of a single spirit in all life through a series of necessary phases, each higher than the preceding one. No man, accordingly, can really or ultimately desire anything but what the best people desire. This is the principle of the higher snobbery; and in fact, all earnest liberals are higher snobs.
George Santayana
When Socrates and his two great disciples composed a system of rational ethics they were hardly proposing practical legislation for mankind...They were merely writing an eloquent epitaph for their country.
George Santayana
... I once shook hands with Longfellow at a garden party in 1881; and I often saw Dr. Holmes, who was our neighbor in Beacon Street: but Emerson I never saw.
George Santayana
The degree in which a poet's imagination dominates reality is, in the end, the exact measure of his importance and dignity.
George Santayana
History is a pack of lies about events that never happened told by people who weren't there.
George Santayana
The spirit's foe in man has not been simplicity, but sophistication.
George Santayana
Prosperity, both for individuals and for states, means possessions; and possessions mean burdens and harness and slavery; and slavery for the mind, too, because it is not only the rich man's time that is pre-empted, but his affections, his judgement, and the range of his thoughts.
George Santayana
For an idea ever to be fashionable is ominous, since it must afterwards be always old fashioned.
George Santayana
Repetition is the only form of permanence that Nature can achieve.
George Santayana
People are usually more firmly convinced that their opinions are precious than that they are true.
George Santayana
Wisdom comes by disillusionment.
George Santayana
Music is essentially useless, as life is but both have an ideal extension which lends utility to its conditions.
George Santayana
A country without a memory is a country of madmen.
George Santayana
It takes a wonderful brain and exquisite senses to produce a few stupid ideas.
George Santayana
The loftiest edifices need the deepest foundations.
George Santayana
Work and love -- these are the basics waking life is a dream controlled.
George Santayana
What religion a man shall have is a historical accident, quite as much as what language he shall speak.
George Santayana
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