Character and Opinion in the United States / Edition 1

Character and Opinion in the United States / Edition 1

by George Santayana
ISBN-10:
0887388906
ISBN-13:
9780887388903
Pub. Date:
01/30/1991
Publisher:
Transaction Publishers
ISBN-10:
0887388906
ISBN-13:
9780887388903
Pub. Date:
01/30/1991
Publisher:
Transaction Publishers
Character and Opinion in the United States / Edition 1

Character and Opinion in the United States / Edition 1

by George Santayana

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Overview

George Santayana was one of the most influential twentieth-century philosophers. Because of his broad-ranging interests and lack of any permanent home in one particular country, he has often been stereotyped as a meditative philosopher removed from the world, living in what he himself called the "realm of spirit" among eternal essences. While there is some truth in this characterization, it is also true that Santayana was a penetrating analyst and critic of contemporary societies.'Character and Opinion in the United States' is his comprehensive critique of American thought and civilization and reflects the detached cosmopolitan perspective that lent his criticism its characteristic objectivity and strength. Santayana's subject here is the conflict of materialism and idealism in American life. In his view there exists a dualism in the American mind: One side, dealing with religion, literature, philosophy, and morality, tended to stay with inherited, old doctrines-the genteel tradition-and failed to keep pace with the other, practical side and its new developments in industry, invention, and social organization. Santayana traces the first mentality to Calvinism and its sense of sin, an attitude out of keeping with a new civilization and the dominance of practical interests. As a consequence of separating philosophy from everyday life, its study merely served religious and moral interests cut off from the free search for truth. At the heart of the book is Santayana's examination of the influential thought of William James and Josiah Royce, who typified for him the dilemma of American thought. The subordination of thought to social form and custom underlies Santayana's sharp critique of academic philosophy at Harvard where he early on studied and taught. He was disturbed by the very idea of philosophy as an academic discipline. Philosophy, he felt, should be an individual, original creation, "something dark, perilous, untested, and not ripe to be taught" Santayana's analysis of how social imperatives may impede the pursuit of knowledge remains pertinent to contemporary intellectual debate. This volume ill be of interest to philosophers, intellectual historians, and American studies specialists.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780887388903
Publisher: Transaction Publishers
Publication date: 01/30/1991
Series: History of Ideas Series
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

George Santayana (1863-1952) was a professor of philosophy at Harvard University. Expressing a theme that remained a lifelong characteristic, he explains why he gave up “academic lumber” and went into retirement. The pursuit of pure philosophy became his revolt against intellectual dissolution and anarchy. His writings were substantial, including a five-volume work, The Life of Reason, and a four-volume work,Realms of Being.

Table of Contents

I: The Moral Background; II: The Academic Environment During; III: William James; IV: Josiah Royce; V: Later Speculations; VI: Materialism and Idealism in American Life; VII: English Liberty in America
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