"People who live according to the pure code of honor are not governed by the profit motive; they are governed by the thymotic urge, the quest for recog...

To nurture your career, it makes sense to cultivate your strengths. To nurture your moral core, it is necessary to confront your weaknesses.
~ David Brooks ~












To nurture your career, it makes sense to cultivate your strengths. To nurture your moral core, it i...
Show MoreMore David Brooks quotes
"Students are taught how to do things, but many are not forced to reflect on why they should do them or what we are here for.
"How do you teach a classroom of Sybils who are breaking apart and reforming right in front of you?
"You can't counter a heroic impulse with a mundane and bourgeois response. You can counter it only with a more compelling heroic vision.
"I hope that in victory we are more grateful than proud.
"This cultural, technological, and meritocratic environment hasn't made us a race of depraved barbarians. But it has made us less morally articulate. M...
"What a wise person teaches is the smallest part of what they give. The totality of their life, of the way they go about it in the smallest details, is...
"Online life is so delicious because it is socializing with almost no friction.
"wonderful people are made, not born – that the people I admired had achieved an unfakeable inner virtue, built slowly from specific moral and spiritua...
"The struggle against the weakness in yourself is never a solitary struggle. No person can achieve self-mastery or his or her own.
"you turn into a shrewd tactician, making a series of cautious semicommitments without really surrendering to some larger purpose. You lose the ability...
"Friends usually bring out better versions of each other. People feel unguarded and fluid with their close friends.
"Friendship allows you to see your own life but with a second sympathetic self.
"They possess the self- effacing virtues of people who are inclined to be useful but don’t need to prove anything to the world:
"People who are humble about their own nature are moral realists. Moral realists are aware that we are all built from “crooked timber”— from Immanuel K...