George Santayana Quotes

George Santayana Quotes. Below is a collection of famous George Santayana quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by George Santayana. Share these quotations with your friends and family.

Friendship is constant in all other things Save in the office and affairs of love.

By George Santayana
Fun is a good thing but only when it spoils nothing better.

By George Santayana
Friends are generally of the same sex, for when men and women agree, it is only in the conclusions their reasons are always different.

By George Santayana
Friends are generally of the same sex, for when men and women agree, it is only in the conclusions; their reasons are always different.

By George Santayana
Friends need not agree in everything or go always together, or have no comparable other friendships of the same intimacy.

By George Santayana
Friends need not agree in everything or go always together, or have no comparable other friendships of the same intimacy. On the contrary, in friendship union is more about ideal things and in that sense it is more ideal and less subject to trouble than marriage is.

By George Santayana
Friends need not agree in everything or go always together, or have no comparable other friendships of the same intimacy. On the contrary, in friendship union is more about ideal things: and in that sense it is more ideal and less subject to trouble than marriage is.

By George Santayana
For a man who has done his natural duty, death is as natural as sleep.

By George Santayana
For an idea ever to be fashionable is ominous, since it must afterwards be always old-fashioned.

By George Santayana
Fanaticism consists in redoubling your effort when you have forgotten your aim.

By George Santayana
Fanaticism consists of redoubling your effort when you have forgotten your aim.

By George Santayana
Fanaticism consists of redoubling your efforts when you have forgotten your aim

By George Santayana
Experience seems to most of us to lead to conclusions, but empiricism has sworn never to draw them.

By George Santayana
Emotion is primarily about nothing and much of it remains about nothing to the end.

By George Santayana
Each religion, by the help of more or less myth which it takes more or less seriously, proposes some method of fortifying the human soul and enabline it to make its peace with its destiny.

By George Santayana
Each religion, by the help of more or less myth which it takes more or less seriously, proposes some method of fortifying the human soul and enabling it to make its peace with its destiny.

By George Santayana
Each religion, by the help of more or less myth, which it takes more or less seriously, proposes some method of fortifying the human soul and enabling it to make its peace with its destiny.

By George Santayana
Culture is on the horns of this dilemma if profound and noble it must remain rare, if common it must become mean.

By George Santayana
Character is the basis of happiness and happiness the sanction of character.

By George Santayana
By nature's kindly disposition most questions which it is beyond a man's power to answer do not occur to him at all.

By George Santayana
Bid, then, the tender light of faith to shine By which alone the mortal heart is led Unto the thinking of the thought divine.

By George Santayana
Before he sets out, the traveler must possess fixed interests and facilities to be served by travel.

By George Santayana
An artist is a dreamer consenting to dream of the actual world.

By George Santayana
An ideal cannot wait for its realization to prove its validity.

By George Santayana
America is the greatest of opportunities and the worst of influences.

By George Santayana
All living souls welcome whatever they are ready to cope with; all else they ignore, or pronounce to be monstrous and wrong, or deny to be possible.

By George Santayana
All living souls welcome whatsoever they are ready to cope with all else they ignore, or pronounce to be monstrous and wrong, or deny to be possible.

By George Santayana
Advertising is the modern substitute for argument its function is to make the worse appear the better.

By George Santayana
A string of excited, fugitive, miscellaneous pleasures is not happiness happiness resides in imaginative reflection and judgment, when the picture of one's life, or of human life, as it truly has been or is, satisfies the will, and is gladly accepted.

By George Santayana
A string of excited, fugitive, miscellaneous pleasures is not happiness; happiness resides in imaginative reflection and judgment, when the picture of one's life, or of human life, as it truly has been or is, satisfies the will, and is gladly accepted.

By George Santayana