“ It cannot but feel that a life abandoned to amusement and to changing impulses must run unawares into fatal dangers. ”
George Santayana, The Sense of Beauty (1896). copy citation
Author | George Santayana |
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Source | The Sense of Beauty |
Topic | danger amusement |
Date | 1896 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/26842/26842-h/26842-h.htm |
Context
“By the awful authority of these things, which stand like spectres behind every moral injunction, conscience in reality speaks, and a mind which they have duly impressed cannot but feel, by contrast, the hopeless triviality of the search for pleasure. It cannot but feel that a life abandoned to amusement and to changing impulses must run unawares into fatal dangers. The moment, however, that society emerges from the early pressure of the environment and is tolerably secure against primary evils, morality grows lax. The forms that life will farther assume are not to be imposed by moral authority, but are determined by the genius of the race, the opportunities of the moment, and the tastes and resources of individual minds.”
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