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Winds Of Doctrine Studies in Contemporary Opinion

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This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

168 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1913

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About the author

George Santayana

431 books339 followers
Philosopher, poet, literary and cultural critic, George Santayana is a principal figure in Classical American Philosophy. His naturalism and emphasis on creative imagination were harbingers of important intellectual turns on both sides of the Atlantic. He was a naturalist before naturalism grew popular; he appreciated multiple perfections before multiculturalism became an issue; he thought of philosophy as literature before it became a theme in American and European scholarly circles; and he managed to naturalize Platonism, update Aristotle, fight off idealisms, and provide a striking and sensitive account of the spiritual life without being a religious believer. His Hispanic heritage, shaded by his sense of being an outsider in America, captures many qualities of American life missed by insiders, and presents views equal to Tocqueville in quality and importance. Beyond philosophy, only Emerson may match his literary production. As a public figure, he appeared on the front cover of Time (3 February 1936), and his autobiography (Persons and Places, 1944) and only novel (The Last Puritan, 1936) were the best-selling books in the United States as Book-of-the-Month Club selections. The novel was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, and Edmund Wilson ranked Persons and Places among the few first-rate autobiographies, comparing it favorably to Yeats's memoirs, The Education of Henry Adams, and Proust's Remembrance of Things Past. Remarkably, Santayana achieved this stature in American thought without being an American citizen. He proudly retained his Spanish citizenship throughout his life. Yet, as he readily admitted, it is as an American that his philosophical and literary corpuses are to be judged. Using contemporary classifications, Santayana is the first and foremost Hispanic-American philosopher.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Illiterate.
2,805 reviews56 followers
December 30, 2019
Studies of thinkers, movements. Solid philosophical criticism. Little historical explanation. No attempt to draw them together.
Profile Image for Andrew Noselli.
705 reviews81 followers
October 17, 2022
I love those philosophers who, like Dewey and Santayana, sketch out their thought in a leisurely, discursive rhapsody that enable one to experience the pleasure of a text unencumbered by the weight of knowledge that nuclear warheads are at any time poised to be launched at a word of command by the Masters of War.
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