Words matter. These are the best Charles Horton Cooley Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
An artist cannot fail; it is a success to be one.
To get away from one’s working environment is, in a sense, to get away from one’s self; and this is often the chief advantage of travel and change.
One should never criticize his own work except in a fresh and hopeful mood. The self-criticism of a tired mind is suicide.
The general fact is that the most effective way of utilizing human energy is through an organized rivalry, which by specialization and social control is, at the same time, organized co-operation.
Failure sometimes enlarges the spirit. You have to fall back upon humanity and God.
The need to exert power, when thwarted in the open fields of life, is the more likely to assert itself in trifles.
There is hardly any one so insignificant that he does not seem imposing to some one at some time.
To have no heroes is to have no aspiration, to live on the momentum of the past, to be thrown back upon routine, sensuality, and the narrow self.
So far as discipline is concerned, freedom means not its absence but the use of higher and more rational forms as contrasted with those that are lower or less rational.
The imaginations which people have of one another are the solid facts of society.
We have no higher life that is really apart from other people. It is by imagining them that our personality is built up; to be without the power of imagining them is to be a low-grade idiot.
As social beings we live with our eyes upon our reflection, but have no assurance of the tranquillity of the waters in which we see it.
Between richer and poorer classes in a free country a mutually respecting antagonism is much healthier than pity on the one hand and dependence on the other, as is, perhaps, the next best thing to fraternal feeling.
There is no way to penetrate the surface of life but by attacking it earnestly at a particular point.
The literature of the inner life is very largely a record of struggle with the inordinate passions of the social self.
The mind is not a hermit’s cell, but a place of hospitality and intercourse.
Unless a capacity for thinking be accompanied by a capacity for action, a superior mind exists in torture.
Institutions – government, churches, industries, and the like – have properly no other function than to contribute to human freedom; and in so far as they fail, on the whole, to perform this function, they are wrong and need reconstruction.
We are ashamed to seem evasive in the presence of a straightforward man, cowardly in the presence of a brave one, gross in the eyes of a refined one, and so on. We always imagine, and in imagining share, the judgments of the other mind.
The bashful are always aggressive at heart.
If we divine a discrepancy between a man’s words and his character, the whole impression of him becomes broken and painful; he revolts the imagination by his lack of unity, and even the good in him is hardly accepted.
A talent somewhat above mediocrity, shrewd and not too sensitive, is more likely to rise in the world than genius.