Our task is not to
construct but only to interpret ideals, confronting them with one another and
with the conditions which, for the most part, they alike ignore. There is no
need of refuting anything, for the will which is behind all ideals and behind
most dogmas cannot itself be refuted; but it may be enlightened and led to
reconsider its intent, when its satisfaction is seen to be either naturally
impossible or inconsistent with better things. The age of controversy is past;
that of interpretation has succeeded.
George Santayana – The Life of Reason
I’m well over half way through Santayana’s 800 page tome, The
Life of Reason. Normally I wait until I’ve finished a book before waffling
about it in a blog post, but I’d like to share some early impressions and see
if they change by the end of the book. So :-
Cons.
Firstly, I’ll probably have to read it at least twice because although Santayana is easy enough to read, his philosophy is not at all like that of your average philosopher. Two reads is 1600 pages – not an insignificant investment of anyone’s time. That's a personal take of course - I prefer two steady reads to a slower one.
The book is too long. Much could have been trimmed without
any real loss to the sense and the rhythm of it. It is also imprecise in that
Santayana doesn’t believe in philosophical systems because he thinks they
always fall apart. He sees philosophy as more like literature than some kind of
technical discipline.
As a literary work, the book is patchy. Purple prose
followed by long-winded arguments which in my view are too wordy to sit well
with the general tenor and cadences of his other writing.
I find this fosters a degree of inattention, where a fine passage is followed by rather more insipid or obscure
writing. The less cogent material tends to be skimmed over and its importance or
lack of importance is missed while the reader remains under the spell of
earlier inspirations.
I also feel that the scope of Santayana’s book is too wide,
covering everything from religion to art to science and of course - morality.
That’s partly because Santayana appears to feel that a life of reason must be
wide-ranging. However I’m also sure that he never expected many people to
achieve his own range of interests and knowledge, so where does that leave his
book and his philosophy?
Pros.
It’s brilliant. By pursuing his philosophy in a literary
manner, Santayana brings out the evanescent and indescribable aspects of real
life – life as it is actually lived. It won’t be to everyone’s taste by any
means, but yes – so far in spite of the caveats, it is the most captivating philosophy book I’ve ever
read.
2 comments:
We'll wait for the blogpost summary.
James - it won't be easy. May need a few posts.
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