In its chase after idols this age has not wholly forgotten the gods, and reason and faith in reason are not left without advocates. Some years ago, at Trinity College, Cambridge, Mr. G.E. Moore began to produce a very deep impression amongst the younger spirits by his powerful and luminous dialectic. Like Socrates, he used all the sharp arts of a disputant in the interests of common sense and of an almost archaic dogmatism. Those who heard him felt how superior his position was, both in rigour and in force, to the prevailing inversions and idealisms. The abuse of psychology, rampant for two hundred years, seemed at last to be detected and challenged; and the impressionistic rhetoric that philosophy was saturated with began to be squeezed out by clear questions, and by a disconcerting demand for literal sincerity. German idealism, when we study it as a product of its own age and country, is a most engaging phenomenon; it is full of afflatus, sweep, and deep searchings of heart; but it is essentially romantic and egotistical, and all in it that is not soliloquy is mere system-making and sophistry...
Persons and Places: The Background of My Life
George Santayana
bookThree Philosophical Poets: Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe
George Santayana
bookSoliloquies in England, and Later Soliloquies
George Santayana
bookLucifer -- A Theological Tragedy
George Santayana
bookUna antología del espíritu
George Santayana
bookPoems
George Santayana
bookPersons and Places: The Background of My Life
George Santayana
bookThe Sense of Beauty: Being the Outlines of Aesthetic Theory
George Santayana
bookThree Philosophical Poets: Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe
George Santayana
bookSome Turns of Thought in Modern Philosophy
George Santayana
bookCharacter and Opinion in the United States
George Santayana
bookThe Sense of Beauty
George Santayana
book