George SantayanaUniversity of Pennsylvania Press, 1938 - 363 páginas |
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Página 160
... believe , intended Faust to be saved in the sight of eternity ; but , I also believe , he indicated a transformation or evolution of the Faust nature before such salvation was possible . I am not so sure critics like Kuno Francke ...
... believe , intended Faust to be saved in the sight of eternity ; but , I also believe , he indicated a transformation or evolution of the Faust nature before such salvation was possible . I am not so sure critics like Kuno Francke ...
Página 191
... believe ; he merely believed in the right of believing that you might be right if you believed . " There was in him an instinctive distrust of orthodoxy ; the faiths he investigated in The Varieties of Religious Experience he did not ...
... believe ; he merely believed in the right of believing that you might be right if you believed . " There was in him an instinctive distrust of orthodoxy ; the faiths he investigated in The Varieties of Religious Experience he did not ...
Página 286
... believe the cogency of his calm assurance has led many another philosopher to bring to philosophy something of the same courage and reasonableness . This influence of Santayana has never been better acknowledged than by Professor ...
... believe the cogency of his calm assurance has led many another philosopher to bring to philosophy something of the same courage and reasonableness . This influence of Santayana has never been better acknowledged than by Professor ...
Contenido
Chapter Page | 2 |
THE POET | 40 |
THE MORAL PHILOSOPHER | 87 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
admired aesthetic American Philosophy Animal Faith believe Boston Boston Latin School Catholic character Christian classical consciousness critical realism culture Dante Democritus dialogue Emerson English essay eternal ethics existence experience expression fact Faust feeling felt flux genteel tradition George Santayana Goethe Grantchester Meadows Greek happiness Harvard Monthly heart humanists Ibid ideal imagination impulse intellectual interest Interpretations of Poetry irony Last Puritan Latin literary live Lucifer Lucretius material matter Matthew Arnold metaphysics Michelangelo mind modern moral N. Y. and London never objects passions perfection perhaps Platonic Platonic love poems poet poetic Poetry and Religion prose pure rational reality realm of essence Reason rime romantic romanticism Santa says Santayana seems Sense of Beauty sestet Soliloquies in England Sonnet 22 Sonnet 39 sonnets soul Spinoza spirit sympathy tayana things thought tion true truth universe verse vision Walt Whitman Whitman whole William James writing yana yana's