Charles Horton Cooley Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Charles Horton Cooley. Here they are! All 11 of them:

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I am not what I think I am, and I am not what you think I am. I am what I think you think I am.
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Charles Horton Cooley
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In 1902, the sociologist Charles Horton Cooley wrote: β€œI am not what I think I am, and I am not what you think I am. I am what I think you think I am.
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Jay Shetty (Think Like a Monk: Train Your Mind for Peace and Purpose Everyday)
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An artist cannot fail; it is a success to be one.
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Charles Horton Cooley
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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.
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Charles Horton Cooley (Social organization; a study of the larger mind (1909))
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Every lover of books has authors whom he reads over and over again, whom he cares for as persons and not as sources of information, who are more to him, possibly, than any person he sees. He continually returns to the cherished companion and feeds eagerly upon his thought. It is because there is something in the book which he needs, which awakens and directs trains of thought that lead him where he likes to be led.
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Charles Horton Cooley (Human Nature and the Social Order)
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In 1902, a sociologist named Charles Horton Cooley devised a concept called the looking-glass self, which posits that s person's sense of identity is shaped by interaction with social groups and the ways in which the individual thinks he or she is perceived by others. Cooley believed this process involved three steps: β€’You imagine how you appear to other people. β€’You imagine the judgment of other people. β€’You base your feelings about yourself on how you think [you] appear to other people.
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Steven Hyden (Your Favorite Band is Killing Me)
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To many people it would seem mystical to say the persons, as we know them, are not separable and mutually exclusive, like physical bodies, so that what is part of one cannot be part of another, but that they interpenetrate one another, the same element pertaining to different persons at different times, or even at the same time: yet this is a verifiable and not very abstruse fact.
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Charles Horton Cooley (Human Nature and the Social Order)
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Yo sΓ©, lo que lo creo que soy. Yo sΓ© lo que tΓΊ crees que yo soy. Y yo soy lo que yo creo que tΓΊ crees que yo soy.
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Charles Horton Cooley (Looking Glass Self)
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The phrase β€œlooking-glass self” was first coined by the sociologist Charles Horton Cooley in 1902 and describes this phenomenon, in which we actually define ourselves by our interactions with others. That mirror is magnified a thousand times in our modern world as there are so many points of comparison between ourselves and others. It can lead us off track. As the pioneering cyberpsychologist Mary Aiken, author of The Cyber Effect, puts it, β€œWe spend all of our time investing in trying to understand our β€˜self’ from the feedback from others rather than actually knowing who we truly are.
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Joanna Coles (Love Rules: How to Find a Real Relationship in a Digital World)
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Sympathy is a requisite to social power. Only in so far as a man understands other people and thus enters into the life around him has he any effective existence; the less he has of this the more he is a mere animal, not truly in contact with human life. And if he is not in contact with it he can of course have no power over it.
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Charles Horton Cooley (Human Nature and the Social Order)
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1902, the sociologist Charles Horton Cooley wrote: β€œI am not what I think I am, and I am not what you think I am. I am what I think you think I am.
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Jay Shetty (Think Like a Monk: Train Your Mind for Peace and Purpose Every Day)