George Santayana's and William James's Conflicting Views on Transcendence

£109.99

George Santayana's and William James's Conflicting Views on Transcendence

Philosophical traditions and schools of thought Philosophy: metaphysics and ontology

Author: Antonio Rionda

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Language: English

Published by: Palgrave Macmillan

Published on: 25th October 2024

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9783031666018


Introduction

This book studies the philosophical work of George Santayana and the nature of his work's relationship with that of American philosopher William James. James is consistently dismissive of the ‘all is vanity’ state of mind, which arguably represents the opposite of America’s activist, progressive ideals. The Spanish Santayana made the overcoming of vanity, or detachment central to his “vital philosophy”, which he had to gradually “disentangle” from the forces he found at work in America.

Scope and Focus

This book, then, traces Santayana’s intricate response to James, from its earliest expression in Interpretations, to his later Realms. Rather than attempt to arrive at a final interpretation of either one’s philosophy, Antonio Rionda emphasizes what James refers to as the hotspot of each one’s thinking: James’s is best described as positivistic Existentialism, and Santayana’s as phenomenological intuitionism.

Philosophical Approaches

Santayana’s post-Hegelian approach to doing philosophy allows for him to incorporate James’s major insights into his own thinking. The problem of how psychology relates to philosophy led Santayana to posit literary psychology as an alternative to its scientific variety, which once disentangled from James’s psychologism, represents the greatest virtue of James’s thinking.

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