"A man always has two reasons for doing anything: a good reason and the real reason."
— J.P. Morgan
A Man Always Has Two Reasons
A man always has two reasons for doing anything: a good reason and the real reason.
About this quote
Attributed to Morgan and reported in Owen Wister's memoir Roosevelt: The Story of a Friendship (1930). Morgan was explaining his intuition about human motivation — that stated reasons are almost always rationalizations, while real reasons are usually self-interested and unstated. Whether or not this formulation originated with Morgan, it circulated widely in business and political commentary in the early twentieth century.
Source
Attributed, quoted in Roosevelt by Owen Wister, 1930