A George Santayana Home Page

THE NATURE OF PHILOSOPHY

From Animal Faith and Spiritual Life

There are three traps that strangle philosophy: the Church, the marriage-bed, and the professor's chair.

Animal Faith '67 at 168 ("Maxims").


From Birth of Reason and Other Essays

I cannot understand what satisfaction a philosopher can find in artifices, or in deceiving himself and others. I therefore like to call myself a materialist; but I leave the study and also the worship of matter to others, and my later writings have been devoted to discovering the natural categories of my spontaneous thought, and restating my opinions in those honest terms. It is essentially a literary labour, a form of art; and I do not attempt to drive other people to think as I do. Let them be their own poets.

Birth of Reason '68 at 134 ("Three American Philosophers").


From Interpretations of Poetry and Religion

Philosophy and religion are nothing if not ultimate; it is their business to deal with general principles and final aims.

Poetry & Religion '00 at 208 ("The Poetry of Barbarism").


From Letters of George Santayana

Philosophy, after all, is not the foundation of things, but a late and rather ineffective activity of reflecting men.

Letters '55 at 18 ("To Henry Ward Abbot, February 5, 1887").


From Letters of George Santayana

[Philosophy is] an attempt to express a half-undiscovered reality, just as art is, and that two different renderings, if they are expressive, far from canceling each other add to each other's value.

Letters '55 at 28 ("To William James, December 18, 1887").


From Letters of George Santayana

[P]hilosophy seems to me to be its own reward, and its justification lies in the delight and dignity of the art itself.

Letters '55 at 28 ("To William James, December 18, 1887").


From Reason in Common Sense

Moral philosophy is not a science.

Common Sense '24 at xii ("Preface to the Second Edition").


From Reason in Science

Philosophers would do a great discourtesy to estimation if they sought to justify it. It is all other acts that need justification by this one. The good greets us initially in every experience and in every object. Remove from anything its share of excellence and you have made it utterly insignificant, irrelevant to human discourse, and unworthy of even theoretical consideration. Value is the principle of perspective in science, no less than of rightness in life. The hierarchy of goods, the architecture of values, is the subject that concerns man most. Wisdom is the first philosophy, both in time and in authority . . . .  The first philosophers were accordingly sages. They were statesmen and poets who knew the world and cast a speculative glance at the heavens, the better to understand the conditions and limits of human happiness.  . . . .  Such was philosophy in the beginning and such is philosophy still.

Science '25 at 216-17 ("Prerational Morality").


From Three Philosophical Poets

Faust is, then, no philosophical poem, after an open or deliberate fashion; and yet it offers a solution to the moral problem of existence as truly as do the poems of Lucretius and Dante.

Poets '10 at 141-42 ("_____").


From Letters of George Santayana

Philosophy is not a science; it might be a life or a means of artistic expression, but it is not likely to be either at an American college.

Letters '55 at 148 ("To B.A.G. Fuller, August 4, 1915").


From Letters of George Santayana

If you mean that [Plotinus'] system of the universe is not a map of it, is not scientifically correct or in scale, of course I agree. But it seems to me a very great system, very "good philosophy" . . . . The doctrines of Plotinus are flights in the same direction as the doctrines of Christianity: they are not hypotheses intended to explain facts, but expressions invented for sentiment and aspiration. The world, he feels, is full of the suggestion of beauty and goodness, but of the suggestion only. In fact, it betrays and obliterates everything it tries to express, like an inscription in invisible ink that should become luminous only for a moment. And his question is What does the world say, what does life mean, what is there beyond . . . that might lend significance and a worthy origin and end to this wonderful apparition and to our passionate love and passionate dissatisfaction in its presence? His system is an elaborate answer to this question. It is not a hypothesis but an intention, and such rightness as it has is merely fidelity and fineness in rendering moral experience. Of course all those things he describes do not exist; of course he is not describing this world, he is describing the other world, that is, deciphering the good, just beyond it or above it, which each actual thing suggests. Even this rendering of moral aspiration is arbitrary, because nature really does not aspire to anything, and each living thing aspires to something different, in diverse ways. But this arbitrary aspiration, which Plotinus reads into the world, sincerely expresses his own aspiration and that of his age. That is why I say he is decidedly a "good philosopher." . . . . It seems to me better than Christian theology in this respect, that it isn't mixed up with history, it isn't half Jewish, half worldly. It is the Greek side of Christian theology isolated and made pure; and that is the side of it which seems to me truly spiritual, truly sacrificial and penitentially joyful. That it is terribly superstitious and turns all physics into magic is an integral part of its poetic and expressive virtue. Every passion, every force, must be a devil or an angel, because it is agreed to begin with we are looking for the spirit in things.

Letters '55 at 177-78 ("To Robert Bridges, September 18, 1919")


From Soliloquies in England

It is not politics that can bring true liberty to the soul; that must be achieved, if at all, by philosophy . . . .

Soliloquies '22 at 184 ("The Irony of Liberalism").


From Soliloquies in England

There has been progress in [the history of philosophy]; if we start with the first birth of intelligence and assume that the end pursued is to understand the world, the progress has been immense.

Soliloquies '22 at 208 ("The Progress of Philosophy").


From Scepticism and Animal Faith

[The systems of psychological philosophers] are the very opposite of philosophy.  . . . .  Far from purging the mind and strengthening it, that it might gain a clearer and more stable vision of the world, these critics have bewildered it . . . .

Scepticism '55 at 304 ("Comparison with Other Criticisms of Knowledge").


From Realms of Being

The business of a philosopher is [ ] to be a good shepherd of his thoughts.

Realms '72 at xv-xvi ("Preface to Realms of Being").


From Realms of Being

By the philosopher [ ] both the homeliest brew and the most meticulous science are only relished as food for the spirit. Even if defeated in the pursuit of truth, the spirit may be victorious in self-expression and self-knowledge; and if a philosopher could be nothing else, he might still be a moralist and a poet.

Realms '72 at xvi ("Preface to Realms of Being").


From Realms of Being

Indeed, my endeavor in putting [my philosophy] into words has been to retreat to the minimum beliefs and radical presuppositions implied in facing a world at all or professing to know anything: beliefs and presuppositions that it is impossible for me to deny honestly, although I may seldom or never have conceived them clearly.

Realms '72 at xxviii ("Introduction").


From Philosophy of George Santayana

Science expresses in human terms our dynamic relation to surrounding reality. Philosophies and religions, where they do not misrepresent these same dynamic relations and do not contradict science, express destiny in moral dimensions, in obviously mythical and poetical images: but how else should these moral truths be expressed at all in a traditional or popular fashion? Religions are the great fairy-tales of the conscience.

Phil. of G.S. '51 at 8 ("A General Confession").


From Philosophy of George Santayana

Consequently there is no opposition in my mind between materialism and a Platonic or even Indian discipline of the spirit. The recognition of the material world and of the conditions of existence in it merely enlightens the spirit concerning the source of its troubles and the means to its happiness or deliverance: and it was happiness or deliverance, the supervening supreme expression of human will and imagination, that alone really concerned me. This alone was genuine philosophy: this alone was the life of reason.

Phil. of G.S. '51 at 13 ("A General Confession").


From Philosophy of George Santayana

The use of philosophy, and in particular of the discrimination of essence, is to distil the wine out of those trodden grapes, in order that in whatever kind of world we may be living, we may live freely in the spirit.

Phil. of G.S. '51 at 532 ("Apologia Pro Mente Sua").


From Realms of Being

[What is spirit naturally fit to do?] This perspective is not psychological or historical, but religious, or rather what the ancients would have called philosophical.

Realms '72 at 645 ("The Realm of Spirit: Intuition").


From Realms of Being

My philosophy neither is nor wishes to be scientific; not even in the sense in which, in temper and method, the Summa of St. Thomas might be called scientific. My philosophy is like that of the ancients a discipline of the mind and heart, a lay religion.

Realms '72 at 827 ("General Review of Realms of Being").


From Realms of Being

Physics, not metaphysics [logical, moral, or psychological figments turned into substances or powers and placed beneath or behind the material world, to create, govern, or explain it], therefore reveals to us, as far as it goes, the foundations of things; and ontology is a subsequent excursus of the mind, as in non-Euclidean geometry, over all that the facts may suggest to the fancy.

Realms '72 at 828 ("General Review of Realms of Being").


From Dominations and Powers

In politics the philosopher is spared many a pitfall that he might walk into in physics and biology; his field is limited to human affairs. He need not trouble himself with truths deeper than conventional truths. He has to consider real events and real forces, which are all physical, even when they have a mental and moral accompaniment. In this sense he is a man of science, with the responsibilities of an inquirer after the truth, and not, in intention, a composer of historical romances. Yet his contact with the facts need not go deeper than the contacts which other people have had with them, or may have on other occasions. In this sense his field coincides with that of the historical novelist or literary psychologist. He is composing a drama as it might have been lived. But there is this difference: that his interest, if he is not a party man, is not chiefly emotional or centred in the episodes of the drama itself, as glorious or pitiful; his interest is philosophical and passes from the picturesque surface of those experiences to the causes and conditions that brought them about.

Dominations '72 at 3 ("The Sphere of Politics").


From Dominations and Powers

[A]nd what is philosophy, as the governance and appreciation of life, except religion liberated from groundless fear or anxiety, that is to say from superstition, and also from rage at honest illusions?

Dominations '72 at 285 ("Militant Religions").


From Physical Order and Moral Liberty

That [ ] systems of philosophy differ from one another is no scandal; they ought to do so, like languages and works of art, provided the facts they report are genuine. The trouble with systems of philosophy is precisely that they pretend to be systems of the universe, not recognising their selective and judicial nature: if they would only abandon that grotesque pretension, and give out that they are works of meditative art and helps to wisdom, they might still show their faces in public; and it would not be hard for an honest historian to discriminate their genius from their errors.

Physical Order '69 at 175-76 ("Substance").


From Physical Order and Moral Liberty

Literature, like sensation, cannot help [being satisfied with those interesting aspects of the event, and ignoring their origin and dynamic context], and thereby creates a second poetic or dramatic world, very thin, but very manageable to the mind. It is only in science and philosophy that we are called upon to study the mechanisms of the substratum.

Physical Order '69 at 274 ("Freedom").