Quotation:
"The imaginations which people have of one another are the solid facts of society."
More quotes from: Charles Horton Cooley
- "An artist cannot fail; it is a success to be one. "
- "Between richer and poorer classes in a free country a mutually respecting antagonism is much ..."
- "Could anything be more indicative of a slight but general insanity than the aspect of ..."
- "Failure sometimes enlarges the spirit. You have to fall back upon humanity and God. "
- "Institutions - government, churches, industries, and the like - have properly no other function than ..."
- "One should never criticize his own work except in a fresh and hopeful mood. The ..."
- "Our individual lives cannot, generally, be works of art unless the social order is also. "
- "Prudence and compromise are necessary means, but every man should have an impudent end which ..."
- "So far as discipline is concerned, freedom means not its absence but the use of ..."
- "The chief misery of the decline of the faculties, and a main cause of the ..."
- "The general fact is that the most effective way of utilizing human energy is through ..."
- "The human mind is indeed a cave swarming with strange forms of life, most of ..."
- "The mind is not a hermit's cell, but a place of hospitality and intercourse. "
- "The passion of self-aggrandizement is persistent but plastic; it will never disappear from a vigorous ..."
- "There is hardly any one so insignificant that he does not seem imposing to some ..."
- "There is nothing less to our credit than our neglect of the foreigner and his ..."
- "To cease to admire is a proof of deterioration. "
- "To have no heroes is to have no aspiration, to live on the momentum of ..."
- "Unless a capacity for thinking be accompanied by a capacity for action, a superior mind ..."
- "We are ashamed to seem evasive in the presence of a straightforward man, cowardly in ..."
- "We have no higher life that is really apart from other people. It is by ..."


