“ we take to enjoyment naturally enough after the work of life is done, and the freedom and spontaneity of our pleasures is what is most essential to them. ”
George Santayana, The Sense of Beauty (1896). copy citation
Author | George Santayana |
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Source | The Sense of Beauty |
Topic | enjoyment freedom |
Date | 1896 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/26842/26842-h/26842-h.htm |
Context
“it is rather concerned, in all its deeper and more authoritative maxims, with the prevention of suffering. There is something artificial in the deliberate pursuit of pleasure; there is something absurd in the obligation to enjoy oneself. We feel no duty in that direction; we take to enjoyment naturally enough after the work of life is done, and the freedom and spontaneity of our pleasures is what is most essential to them.
The sad business of life is rather to escape certain dreadful evils to which our nature exposes us, — death, hunger, disease, weariness, isolation, and contempt. 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.”
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