Jose Ortega y Gasset has a biting habit of sneaking up on you. This is of course due to his own philosophical method, but as a casual reader, it's easy while reading to meet confusion with the various subjects he brings up sequentially. By the end though, it should all make a lot of sense in hindsight. Historical Reason is the compilation of two series of lectures Gasset gave in 1940 and 1944. Described most simply, he uses his historical method and philosophical insights to examine the past of man's situation and his resulting philosophy, and then give some commentary and corrections as he sees fit. The grand scheme of this book is to follow the footsteps of Rene Descartes and face the "darkness" we modern men find ourselves in. Gasset's vitalism ties to his historicity, and thus he prophecies that the death of *Reason* in Descartes' - and all of the west's since the Greeks - sense, must be radically replaced with historical reason, and it is only with this framework that we can tackle the overpowering problems of Becoming that vex us and leaves us - for the moment - aimless.