"The good man is the man who, no matter how morally unworthy he has been, is moving to become better"
About this Quote
That insistence makes sense coming from Dewey, the pragmatist who distrusted fixed essences and preferred consequences, growth, and experiment. In early-20th-century America - an age of industrial churn, urban poverty, Progressive reform, and public-school expansion - moral discourse often slid into either Puritan condemnation or technocratic uplift. Dewey threads a third needle: ethics as education. You do not become "good" by adhering to an abstract code once and for all; you become good the way you learn anything else, through revision, habit, and social feedback.
The subtext is quietly political. If goodness is measured by movement, then societies should be built to make better movement possible: schools that cultivate inquiry, institutions that allow second chances, communities that treat failure as data rather than destiny. It also smuggles in a critique of moral purity culture avant la lettre: dwelling on someones past can be a way of protecting our own status. Dewey flips the gaze from judgment to trajectory, asking not "What were you?" but "What are you doing next?"
Quote Details
| Topic | Ethics & Morality |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Reconstruction in Philosophy (John Dewey, 1920)
Evidence: The bad man is the man who no matter how good he has been is beginning to deteriorate, to grow less good. The good man is the man who no matter how morally unworthy he has been is moving to become better. Such a conception makes one severe in judging himself and humane in judging others. (Chapter VII (“Reconstruction in Moral Conceptions”), print page 177 (Project Gutenberg transcription shows [Pg 177])). This line appears in John Dewey’s own text in *Reconstruction in Philosophy*. The Project Gutenberg HTML transcription reproduces the 1920 Henry Holt & Co. book and places the passage in Chapter VII (“Reconstruction in Moral Conceptions”), with the bracketed print-page marker “[Pg 177]” immediately following the sentence about being humane in judging others. Dewey notes in the book’s prefatory material that the work grew out of lectures delivered at the Imperial University of Japan in Tokyo in February–March 1919; however, the earliest verifiable primary publication for this exact wording (as asked) is the 1920 book edition. Other candidates (1) Understanding John Dewey (James Campbell, 1995) compilation95.0% ... The good man is the man who no matter how morally unworthy he has been is moving to become better " ( MW 12 : 180... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Dewey, John. (2026, February 12). The good man is the man who, no matter how morally unworthy he has been, is moving to become better. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-good-man-is-the-man-who-no-matter-how-morally-89/
Chicago Style
Dewey, John. "The good man is the man who, no matter how morally unworthy he has been, is moving to become better." FixQuotes. February 12, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-good-man-is-the-man-who-no-matter-how-morally-89/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The good man is the man who, no matter how morally unworthy he has been, is moving to become better." FixQuotes, 12 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-good-man-is-the-man-who-no-matter-how-morally-89/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.












