David Brooks: Should you live for your résumé ... or your eulogy?
David Brooks: David Brooks: Özgeçmişiniz için mi, kişiliğiniz için mi yaşamalısınız?
Writer and thinker David Brooks has covered business, crime and politics over a long career in journalism. Full bio
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the eulogy virtues.
ones you put on your résumé,
bahsettiğiniz değerlerdir ve
you bring to the marketplace.
in your depth,
olup olmadığınızı anlatır.
me, would say
more important of the virtues.
are they the ones that
And the answer is no.
helped me think about it
Lonely Man Of Faith" in 1965.
and Adam II.
create companies,
side of our nature.
to do good but to be good,
a calling and obey the world.
consistency and strength.
aldığının karşılığını verme"dir.
that these two sides
iki yönünün
at war with each other.
iddia eder.
I'd say, about these
an economic logic:
risk leads to reward.
manevi bir mantığa sahiptir
often an inverse logic.
to something outside yourself
desire to get what you want.
you have to forget yourself.
kendinizi unutmak zorundasınız.
you have to lose yourself.
kendinizi kaybetmelisiniz.
that favors Adam I,
ve genellikle Adem 2'nin ihmal edildiği
you into a shrewd animal
Bu durum bizleri hayatı bir oyun olarak gören
calculating creature
self and your actual self.
depth of conviction.
commitment to tasks
response through history
derin bir karakter
have gone back
time in their life,
gravitates in the past
some act of selfishness,
a lack of courage.
building on your strengths.
your weaknesses.
you find the sin
and again through your life,
ne olduğunu bulursunuz.
sürekli yaptığınız bir yanlıştır.
adeta onunla savaşırsınız.
that suffering,
taught to recognize
and how to combat it.
with an Adam I mentality
about Adam II.
can be achieved in our lifetime;
be saved by hope.
beautiful or good makes
can be accomplished alone;
tek başına başarılmış değildir;
be saved by love.
or foe as from our own standpoint.
by that final form of love,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
David Brooks - Op-ed columnistWriter and thinker David Brooks has covered business, crime and politics over a long career in journalism.
Why you should listen
David Brooks became an Op-Ed columnist for The New York Times in September 2003. He is currently a commentator on "The PBS Newshour," NPR’s "All Things Considered" and NBC's "Meet the Press."
He is the author of Bobos in Paradise and The Social Animal. In April 2015, he released with his fourth book, The Road to Character, which was a #1 New York Times bestseller.
Brooks also teaches at Yale University, and is a member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences.
Born on August 11, 1961 in Toronto, Canada, Brooks graduated a bachelor of history from the University of Chicago in 1983. He became a police reporter for the City News Bureau, a wire service owned jointly by the Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times.
He worked at The Washington Times and then The Wall Street Journal for nine years. His last post at the Journal was as Op-ed Editor. Prior to that, he was posted in Brussels, covering Russia, the Middle East, South Africa and European affairs. His first post at the Journal was as editor of the book review section, and he filled in as the Journal's movie critic.
He also served as a senior editor at The Weekly Standard for 9 years, as well as contributing editor for The Atlantic and Newsweek.
David Brooks | Speaker | TED.com