George SantayanaUniversity of Pennsylvania Press, 1938 - 363 páginas |
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Página 43
... yana finally renounced his calling . The root of all rumors and misconceptions was of course Santa- yana's detachment . As Miss Münsterberg says , “ His was the modesty of one who has plenty of humor and few illusions . He was capable ...
... yana finally renounced his calling . The root of all rumors and misconceptions was of course Santa- yana's detachment . As Miss Münsterberg says , “ His was the modesty of one who has plenty of humor and few illusions . He was capable ...
Página 137
... yana was later to point out , restricted the freedom of the individual beyond a certain point by imposing upon him an accepted , authorita- tive moral code . One was free and privileged to be a good Greek or a good Christian . In Spain ...
... yana was later to point out , restricted the freedom of the individual beyond a certain point by imposing upon him an accepted , authorita- tive moral code . One was free and privileged to be a good Greek or a good Christian . In Spain ...
Página 254
... yana admits he is unable , in spite of the researches of his friend Strong , to explain . He merely attributes it to an impulse in the ani- mal organism brought into play by the environment , which the animal must master if it is to ...
... yana admits he is unable , in spite of the researches of his friend Strong , to explain . He merely attributes it to an impulse in the ani- mal organism brought into play by the environment , which the animal must master if it is to ...
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