A man's feet must be planted in his country, but his eyes should survey the world.
--George Santayana
A man's hatred of his own condition no more helps to improve it than hatred of other people tends to improve them.
--George Santayana
Almost every wise saying has an opposite one, no less wise, to balance it.
--George Santayana
America is a young country with an old mentality.
--George Santayana
America is the greatest of opportunities and the worst of influences.
--George Santayana
Chaos is a name for any order that produces confusion in our minds.
--George Santayana
Character is the basis of happiness and happiness the sanction of character.
--George Santayana
Facts are all accidents. They might have all been different.
--George Santayana
Fanaticism consists in redoubling your efforts when you have forgotten your aim.
--George Santayana
Fashion is something barbarous, for it produces innovation without reason and imitation without benefit.
--George Santayana
Fun is a good thing but only when it spoils nothing better.
--George Santayana
Habit is stronger than reason.
--George Santayana
Happiness is the only sanction of life; where happiness fails, existence remains a mad and lamentable experiment.
--George Santayana
If you bravely make the best of a crazy world, eternity is full of champions that will defend you.
--George Santayana
In solitude it is possible to love mankind; in the world, for one who knows the world, there can be nothing but secret or open war.
--George Santayana
Intelligence is quickness in seeing things as they are.
--George Santayana
It is easier to make a saint out of a libertine than out of a prig.
--George Santayana
It is not society's fault that most men seem to miss their vocation. Most men have no vocation.
--George Santayana
It would repel me less to be a hangman than a soldier, because the one is obliged to put to death only criminals sentenced by the law, but the other kills honest men who like himself bathe in innocent blood at the bidding of some superior.
--George Santayana
Life is a succession of second bests.
--George Santayana
Life is not a spectacle or a feast; it is a predicament.
--George Santayana
Matters of religion should never be matters of controversy. We neither argue with a lover about his taste, nor condemn him, if we are just, for knowing so human a passion.
--George Santayana
Music is essentially useless, as life is.
--George Santayana
Oaths are the fossils of piety.
--George Santayana
One Englishman- an idiot, two Englishmen- a sporting event, three Englishmen- an empire.
--George Santayana
Parents lend children their experience and a vicarious memory; children endow their parents with a vicarious immortality.
--George Santayana
Perhaps the only true dignity of man is his capacity to despise himself.
--George Santayana
Sanity is a madness put to good uses; waking life is a dream controlled.
--George Santayana
Science is nothing but developed perception, interpreted intent, common sense rounded out and minutely articulated.
--George Santayana
Society is like the air, necessary to breathe but insufficient to live on.
--George Santayana
That life is worth living is the most necessary of assumptions and, were it not assumed, the most impossible of conclusions.
--George Santayana
The family is one of nature's masterpieces.
--George Santayana
The fly that prefers sweetness to a long life may drown in honey; nor is an agony of sweetness forbidden by nature to those incluned to sing or to love.
--George Santayana
The idea that horrors are required to give zest to life and interest to art is the idea of savages, men of no experience worth mentioning, and of merely servile, limited sensibilities. Don't tolerate it.
--George Santayana
The loftiest edifices need the deepest foundations.
--George Santayana
The mass of mankind is divided into two classes- the Sancho Panzas who have a sense for reality, but no ideals; and, the Don Quixotes, with a sense for ideals, but mad.
--George Santayana
The mediocrity of everything in the great world of today is simply appalling. We live in intellectual slums.
--George Santayana
The need of exercise is a modern superstition, invented by people who ate too much and had nothing to think about. Athletics doesn't make anybody either long-lived or useful.
--George Santayana
The people with whom I agree frighten me, and I frighten those with whom I naturally sympathize.
--George Santayana
The workings of great institutions is mainly the result of a vast mass of routine, petty malice, self-interest, carelessness and sheer mistake. Only a residual fraction is thought.
--George Santayana
The young man who has not wept is a savage, and the old man who will not laugh is a fool.
--George Santayana
There are books in which the footnotes, or the comments scrawled by some reader's hand in the margin, are more interesting than the text. The world is one of those books.
--George Santayana
There is no cure for birth and death save to enjoy the interval.
--George Santayana
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
--George Santayana
Those who speak most of progress measure it by quantity and not by quality.
--George Santayana
To call war the soil of courage and virtue is like calling debauchery the soil of love.
--George Santayana
To delight in war is a merit in the soldier, a dangerous quality in the captain, and a positive crime in the statesman.
--George Santayana
To fight is a radical instinct; if men have nothing else to fight over they will fight over words, fancies, or women, or they will fight because they dislike each other's looks, or because they have met walking in opposite directions.
--George Santayana
To knock a thing down, especially if it is cocked at an arrogant angle, is a deep delight to the blood.
--George Santayana
Wealth is dismal and poverty cruel unless both are festive.
--George Santayana
Wealth, religion, military victory have more rhetorical than efficacious worth.
--George Santayana
When men and women agree, it is only in the conclusions; their reasons are always different.
--George Santayana
Why shouldn't things be largely absurd, futile, and transitory? They are so, and we are so, and they and we go very well together.
--George Santayana
Wisdom comes by disillusionment.
--George Santayana
Found 54 occurence(s) in 52,551 quotation(s).