« All Another Quotes · John Dewey's Page
Another Quotes by John Dewey
- There is more than a verbal tie between the words common, community, and communication.... Try the experiment of communicating, with fullness and accuracy, some experience…
- To be born, to live and to die is merely to change forms... And what does one form matter any more than another?... Each form…
- Democracy is a way of life controlled by a working faith in the possibilities of human nature. . . . This faith may be enacted…
- We have already noticed the difference in the attitude of a spectator and of an agent or participant. The former is indifferent to what is…
- It science involves an intelligent and persistent endeavor to revise current beliefs so as to weed out what is erroneous, to add to their accuracy,…
- No thought, no idea, can possibly be conveyed as an idea from one person to another. When it is told it is to the one…
- Arriving at one goal is the starting point to another.
- The ultimate aim of production is not production of goods but the production of free human beings associated with one another on terms of equality.
More Another Quotes
- I don't know I really love u or not. But whenever I think about my life without u it kills me. Whenever… — Anurag Prakash Ray
- Were kisses all the joys in bed, One woman would another wed. — William Shakespeare
- If one way be better than another, that you may be sure is nature's way. — Aristotle
- Another belief of mine; that everyone else my age is an adult, whereas I am merely in disguise. — Margaret Atwood
- The Israeli lobby has clout in the U.S., which means that re-arranging the region and controlling its resources one way or another,… — Bashar al-Assad
- It's no accident, I think, that tennis uses the language of life. Advantage, service, fault, break, love, the basic elements of tennis… — Andre Agassi
- It is commonly supposed that the uniformity of a studious life affords no matter for narration: but the truth is, that of… — Samuel Johnson
- If there be no great love in the beginning, yet heaven may decrease it upon better acquaintance, when we are married and… — William Shakespeare