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Daily Inspiration Quote by John Dewey

"One lives with so many bad deeds on one's conscience and some good intentions in one's heart"

About this Quote

Guilt is doing the heavy lifting here, not morality. Dewey’s line refuses the tidy ledger-book fantasy that we can balance a life by counting virtues on one side and sins on the other. It’s not confessional so much as diagnostic: the modern self is crowded with regret, while its best motives remain stubbornly hypothetical. “Bad deeds” are concrete, sticky, and memorable; “good intentions” are airy, private, and easily self-forgiving. The sentence tilts that imbalance on purpose, nudging us to notice how conscience becomes a museum of what we actually did, while the heart is allowed to stockpile what we meant to do.

Coming from Dewey, this isn’t a piece of spiritual despair; it’s a pragmatic warning. He spent his career arguing that ethics isn’t a set of eternal rules but a lived, social practice shaped by habits, institutions, and consequences. In that context, the quote reads like a critique of moral sentimentalism: intentions don’t redeem outcomes, and private purity doesn’t absolve public harm. Dewey’s America was industrializing, professionalizing, reorganizing everyday life into systems where individual “good people” could still participate in exploitation, exclusion, and indifference. The line catches that uncomfortable truth: you can feel well-meaning and still be implicated.

Subtextually, Dewey is also puncturing the ego’s favorite alibi. Conscience remembers the harms because they happened; the heart clings to intentions because they preserve self-image. The tension he sketches is a call to move ethics out of the heart and into action: not “I meant well,” but “What did my choices produce, and what will I do next?”

Quote Details

TopicEthics & Morality
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Balancing Deeds and Intentions: A Reflection by John Dewey
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John Dewey (October 20, 1859 - June 1, 1952) was a Philosopher from USA.

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