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Daily Inspiration Quote by Charles Horton Cooley

"Prudence and compromise are necessary means, but every man should have an impudent end which he will not compromise"

About this Quote

Cooley sneaks a moral dare into the polite language of civility. “Prudence and compromise” sound like the adult virtues of committee rooms and family dinners: the daily grease that keeps social machinery from grinding. As a sociologist obsessed with how selves are built through other people’s eyes, he isn’t dismissing that machinery. He’s acknowledging it. Most of life is negotiation, a steady calibration of how much you can bend without breaking your standing in the group.

Then he drops the charged phrase: “an impudent end.” Impudent isn’t just “firm.” It’s cheeky, socially risky, a little insolent toward whatever counts as reasonable. That word choice matters. Cooley’s point isn’t that everyone should have principles in the abstract; it’s that the principles worth having will often read, at first, as bad manners. The “end” is a north star that embarrasses you in mixed company because it refuses the script of being agreeable, pragmatic, and easily managed.

The subtext is a warning about compromise as a lifestyle rather than a tool. When compromise becomes identity, the self dissolves into audience management - a “looking-glass self” trapped in reflection, always adjusting to approval. Cooley argues for a private, stubborn core that sets limits on social conformity. He’s mapping a paradox of modern life: functioning in a crowd requires tact, but becoming fully human requires at least one goal so un-smooth it can’t be traded away for belonging.

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APA Style (7th ed.)
Cooley, Charles Horton. (n.d.). Prudence and compromise are necessary means, but every man should have an impudent end which he will not compromise. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/prudence-and-compromise-are-necessary-means-but-20246/

Chicago Style
Cooley, Charles Horton. "Prudence and compromise are necessary means, but every man should have an impudent end which he will not compromise." FixQuotes. Accessed February 3, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/prudence-and-compromise-are-necessary-means-but-20246/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Prudence and compromise are necessary means, but every man should have an impudent end which he will not compromise." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/prudence-and-compromise-are-necessary-means-but-20246/. Accessed 3 Feb. 2026.

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Prudence, Compromise and an Impudent End - Cooley
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Charles Horton Cooley (August 17, 1864 - 1928) was a Sociologist from USA.

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