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Life & Wisdom Quote by Jane Austen

"One man's ways may be as good as another's, but we all like our own best"

About this Quote

Austen lands a pinprick and draws blood: tolerance is easy to praise in the abstract, but preference is where we actually live. The line performs a neat social two-step. First it grants the polite, Enlightenment-friendly premise that different “ways” can be equally valid. Then it swerves to the real engine of behavior: we don’t just think our habits suit us; we prefer them, defend them, and quietly judge from inside them.

The genius is in the phrasing. “May be as good” is a half-compliment, a loophole dressed as fairness. It sounds generous while leaving room to doubt the other person’s judgment. And “we all” is Austen’s sly alibi. She’s not accusing a single character of stubbornness; she’s describing a species-level reflex, turning individual snobbery into a communal tic. That universalizing move lets readers laugh, then realize they’re in the joke.

Contextually, this sits perfectly in Austen’s world of drawing rooms and marriage markets, where “ways” aren’t just quirks. They’re class signals, moral credentials, even bargaining chips. Choosing “our own best” is how families protect rank, how communities police outsiders, how romance gets tangled in reputation. Austen’s intent isn’t to preach relativism; it’s to expose how quickly proclaimed open-mindedness collapses into self-justification.

Under the surface, she’s also diagnosing confirmation bias before the term existed: people don’t evaluate customs neutrally; they evaluate them as extensions of identity. The line flatters the reader’s sophistication, then catches them doing exactly what it describes. That’s Austen’s signature: comedy with teeth, delivered in a sentence that smiles as it indicts.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Austen, Jane. (2026, January 15). One man's ways may be as good as another's, but we all like our own best. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/one-mans-ways-may-be-as-good-as-anothers-but-we-19636/

Chicago Style
Austen, Jane. "One man's ways may be as good as another's, but we all like our own best." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/one-mans-ways-may-be-as-good-as-anothers-but-we-19636/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"One man's ways may be as good as another's, but we all like our own best." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/one-mans-ways-may-be-as-good-as-anothers-but-we-19636/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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One Mans Ways May Be As Good As Anothers, But We All Like Our Own
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About the Author

Jane Austen

Jane Austen (December 16, 1775 - July 28, 1817) was a Writer from United Kingdom.

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