The Life of Reason by George Santayana
page 43 of 1069 (04%)
page 43 of 1069 (04%)
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like a magnet draws all the faculties around it, in so uniting them,
suffuses them with an unwonted spiritual light. [Sidenote: Better and worse the fundamental categories.] Here, on a small scale and on a precarious foundation, we may see clearly illustrated and foreshadowed that Life of Reason which is simply the unity given to all existence by a mind _in love with the good_. In the higher reaches of human nature, as much as in the lower, rationality depends on distinguishing the excellent; and that distinction can be made, in the last analysis, only by an irrational impulse. As life is a better form given to force, by which the universal flux is subdued to create and serve a somewhat permanent interest, so reason is a better form given to interest itself, by which it is fortified and propagated, and ultimately, perhaps, assured of satisfaction. The substance to which this form is given remains irrational; so that rationality, like all excellence, is something secondary and relative, requiring a natural being to possess or to impute it. When definite interests are recognised and the values of things are estimated by that standard, action at the same time veering in harmony with that estimation, then reason has been born and a moral world has arisen. CHAPTER II--FIRST STEPS AND FIRST FLUCTUATIONS [Sidenote: Dreams before thoughts.] |
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