Too much agreement kills the chat.
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More quotes from John Jay Chapman
Too much agreement kills the chat.
American author (1862-1933)
I want to find someone on the earth so intelligent that he welcomes opinions which he condemns.
American author (1862-1933)
Everybody in America is soft, and hates conflict. The cure for this, both in politics and social life, is the same – hardihood. Give them raw truth.
American author (1862-1933)
People who love soft methods and hate iniquity forget this; that reform consists in taking a bone from a dog. Philosophy will not do it.
American author (1862-1933)
Benevolence alone will not make a teacher, nor will learning alone do it. The gift of teaching is a peculiar talent, and implies a need and a craving in the teacher himself.
American author (1862-1933)
The world of politics is always twenty years behind the world of thought.
American author (1862-1933)
A magazine or a newspaper is a shop. Each is an experiment and represents a new focus, a new ratio between commerce and intellect.
American author (1862-1933)
Politics is organized hatred, that is unity.
American author (1862-1933)
All progress is experimental.
American author (1862-1933)
The present in New York is so powerful that the past is lost.
American author (1862-1933)
The reason for the slow progress of the world seems to lie in a single fact. Every man is born under the yoke, and grows up beneath the oppressions of his age.
American author (1862-1933)
It is three and a half hours long, four characters wide and a cesspool deep.
American author (1862-1933)
Wherever you see a man who gives someone else’s corruption, someone else’s prejudice as a reason for not taking action himself, you see a cog in The Machine that governs us.
American author (1862-1933)
People get so in the habit of worry that if you save them from drowning and put them on a bank to dry in the sun with hot chocolate and muffins they wonder whether they are catching cold.
American author (1862-1933)
A vision of truth which does not call upon us to get out of our armchair – why, this is the desideratum of mankind.
American author (1862-1933)
Our goodness comes solely from thinking on goodness; our wickedness from thinking on wickedness. We too are the victims of our own contemplation.
American author (1862-1933)
Good government is the outcome of private virtue.
American author (1862-1933)