FastSaying

Each person is an idiom unto himself, an apparent violation of the syntax of the species.

Gordon W. Allport

Gordon W. Allport

ApparentEachHimselfIdiomPersonSpeciesSyntaxUntoViolation

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Scarcely anyone ever wants to be anybody else. However handicapped or unhappy he feels himself, he would not change places with other more fortunate mortals.
— Gordon W. Allport
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Open-mindedness is considered to be a virtue. But, strictly speaking, it cannot occur. A new experience must be redacted into old categories. We cannot handle each event freshly in its own right. If we did so, of what use would past experience be?
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Mature striving is linked to long-range goals. Thus, the process of becoming is largely a matter of organizing transitory impulses into a pattern of striving and interest in which the element of self-awareness plays a large part.
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A prejudice, unlike a simple misconception, is actively resistant to all evidence that would unseat it.
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Self-love, it is obvious, remains always positive and active in our natures.
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