Hakki Ocal

Add friend
Sign in to Goodreads to learn more about Hakki.


Absalom, Absalom!
Hakki Ocal is currently reading
bookshelves: currently-reading
Rate this book
Clear rating

progress: 
 
  (page 0 of 362)
Dec 13, 2024 04:54AM

 
My Sweet Orange Tree
Rate this book
Clear rating

 
As I Lay Dying
Hakki Ocal is currently reading
bookshelves: currently-reading
Rate this book
Clear rating

 
See all 9 books that Hakki is reading…
Loading...
Ovid
“Perfer et obdura, dolor hic tibi proderit olim. (Be patient and tough; someday this pain will be useful to you.)”
Ovid

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
“As soon as you trust yourself, you will know how to live.”
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Faust, First Part

Yuval Levin
“Burke was not a sentimentalist, however.43 “Leave a man to his passions,” he wrote, “and you leave a wild beast to a savage and capricious nature.”44 Rather, he argued that while politics does answer to reason, human reason does not interact directly with the world but is always mediated by our imagination, which helps us to give order and shape to the data we derive from our senses. One way or another, reason applies through the sentiments and passions, so it is crucial to tend to what he calls our “moral imagination” because left untended, it will direct our reason toward violence and disorder.45 The dark side of our sentiments is mitigated not by pure reason, but by more beneficent sentiments. We cannot be simply argued out of our vices, but we can be deterred from indulging them by the trust and love that develops among neighbors, by deeply established habits of order and peace, and by pride in our community or country. And part of the statesman’s difficult charge is keeping this balance together, acting rationally on this understanding of the limits of reason. “The temper of the people amongst whom he presides ought therefore to be the first study of a statesman,” Burke asserts.46 It is for Burke another reason why politics can never be reduced to a simple application of logical axioms. As Burke’s contemporary William Hazlitt put it: “[Burke] knew that man had affections and passions and powers of imagination, as well as hunger and thirst and the sense of heat and cold. . . . He knew that the rules that form the basis of private morality are not founded in reason, that is, in the abstract properties of those things which are the subjects of them, but in the nature of man, and his capacity of being affected by certain things from habit, from imagination, and sentiment, as well as from reason.”
Yuval Levin, The Great Debate: Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine, and the Birth of Right and Left

year in books
Bulent ...
316 books | 100 friends

Mustafa...
4,275 books | 500 friends

Huseyin...
154 books | 43 friends

Akin Mo...
269 books | 350 friends

Ela Alp...
478 books | 201 friends

Wisecolt
131 books | 34 friends

Jamshid
187 books | 257 friends

Deniz O...
77 books | 294 friends

More friends…



Polls voted on by Hakki

Lists liked by Hakki