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Daily Inspiration Quote by James F. Cooper

"The affairs of life embrace a multitude of interests, and he who reasons in any one of them, without consulting the rest, is a visionary unsuited to control the business of the world"

About this Quote

Cooper is taking a swing at the kind of brainy single-issue thinker who mistakes a clean argument for a workable society. The sentence is built like a warning label: life is a “multitude of interests,” and anyone who reasons inside one sealed chamber “without consulting the rest” becomes not a principled specialist but a “visionary” - a word that sounds flattering until Cooper snaps it into place as an insult. This is vision as delusion: an imagination untethered from consequences.

The intent is practical and political. Cooper, writing in a young, rapidly expanding United States, saw how decisions about land, commerce, law, religion, and status collided in messy, lived ways. His frontier settings aren’t just scenery; they’re laboratories where abstract ideals (property, progress, “civilization”) meet people who bleed, bargain, and get displaced. So the line quietly challenges the era’s confidence in tidy doctrines - whether they arrive as moral crusades, market certainty, or reformist zeal.

The subtext is a defense of synthesis: governing is not a math problem solved by optimizing one variable. Cooper also smuggles in a classically conservative suspicion of theorists who want to “control the business of the world” from the purity of an idea. The bite is rhetorical: by labeling the one-track reasoner “unsuited” to power, he makes broad-mindedness not just virtuous, but a qualification for authority. It’s an argument for complexity as competence - and a jab at anyone trying to run society on a single, shining principle.

Quote Details

TopicDecision-Making
SourceJames Fenimore Cooper, The American Democrat (1838) — line attributed to Cooper in this work (often cited in quote collections).
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Cooper, James F. (2026, January 15). The affairs of life embrace a multitude of interests, and he who reasons in any one of them, without consulting the rest, is a visionary unsuited to control the business of the world. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-affairs-of-life-embrace-a-multitude-of-154603/

Chicago Style
Cooper, James F. "The affairs of life embrace a multitude of interests, and he who reasons in any one of them, without consulting the rest, is a visionary unsuited to control the business of the world." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-affairs-of-life-embrace-a-multitude-of-154603/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The affairs of life embrace a multitude of interests, and he who reasons in any one of them, without consulting the rest, is a visionary unsuited to control the business of the world." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-affairs-of-life-embrace-a-multitude-of-154603/. Accessed 11 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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James F. Cooper (September 15, 1789 - September 14, 1851) was a Novelist from USA.

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