Buddhism: Amity Business School
Buddhism: Amity Business School
Buddhism: Amity Business School
BUDDHISM
• After six years of study and meditation he finally found 'the middle
path' and was enlightened.
• After enlightenment, the Buddha spent the rest of his life teaching
the principles of Buddhism called the Dhamma, or Truth until his
death at the age of 80.
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INTRODUCTION
• Buddhism is a religion to about 300 million people around the world.
• It has its origins about 2,500 years ago when Siddhartha Gautama,
known as the Buddha, was himself awakened (enlightened) at the
age of 35.
INTRODUCTION (Cont.)
• It is a philosophy 'means love of wisdom' and the Buddhist path can
be summed up as:
(1) to lead a moral life,
(2) to be mindful and aware of thoughts and actions, and
(3) to develop wisdom and understanding.
• A statue of the Buddha with hands rested gently in its lap and a
compassionate smile reminds us to strive to develop peace and love
within ourselves.
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• The Buddha told his followers of the three components that make up
the essence of what he had learned.
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To become enlightened
• The Buddha taught that one must practice meditation. This will give
the calmness to gain understanding of the true nature of existence.
Insight meditation
• One gains the wisdom.
• Meditators describe this wisdom as a great burden being lifted.
• The clamoring ego with its desires and disappointments is silenced.
• When a person gains this wisdom, a deep and lasting sense of
peace and contentment replaces selfish craving and gratification.
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PHILOSOPHY
• Buddhist philosophy deals extensively with problems in
1. Metaphysics,
2. Phenomenology,
3. Ethics, and
4. Epistemology.
• Death, for the Buddha, is merely an incident between one life and
another.
• The legend about the life of the Buddha reports that when he
achieved enlightenment he gained the ability to recall many of his
previous lives.
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UNIVERSAL TRUTHS
First Noble Truth- Life is suffering
• Pain, getting old, disease, and ultimately death.
• Psychological suffering like loneliness frustration, fear, embarrassment,
disappointment and anger.
• The fourth truth is that the Noble 8-fold Path is the path which leads to the
end of suffering.
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UNIVERSAL VALUES OF
BUDDHISM
• Right knowledge - A person should have right knowledge to
perform his karma. Karma is intentional action, physical, verbal or
mental. Good karma brings happiness, bad brings suffering.
• Right speech
• Right resolve
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MANAGEMENT BY VALUES
• The Buddha said, “As a solid rock is indifferent to the wind and rain, so the wise
are indifferent to criticism and praise.”
• The ideal Buddhist leader does not easily sway his or her position in the face of
challenges and social pressure. It is important to maintain one’s true self and
values.
• Leadership style may change, and in most cases should change to fit changing
situations, but the leader’s values remain as constant as a rock.
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• Decentralized leadership
• Democratic governing
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BUILDING TEAMS
• Consider the strategic implication of the organization as
a whole.
• Divide responsibilities with well-defined job descriptions.
• Know the importance of coordination.
• Plan the details with best intentions.
• Execute with full effort and determination.
• Report frequently and timely to inform one's supervisors.
• Take responsibilities and be accountable for them.
• Evaluate performance and follow up.
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In the Jataka, the Buddha had given to rules for Good Government,
known as 'Dasa Raja Dharma'.
• A good ruler should act impartially and should not be biased and
discriminate between one particular group of subjects against
another.
• A good ruler should not harbor any form of hatred against any of his
subjects.
PRE-BUDDHIST POSITION OF
WOMEN
• Women considered greatly inferior to men-both physically and
mentally
According to “Laws of Manu”-
"By a girl, by a young woman, or even by an aged one,
nothing must be done independently, even in her own house.
In childhood a female must be subject to her father, in youth to
her husband, when her lord is dead to her sons; a woman must
never be independent".
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• The only way to keep them out of mischief was to keep them
occupied endlessly with the task of motherhood and domestic
duties.
• The food left over by her husband was often the food for the
woman..
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STATUS OF WOMEN IN
BUDDHISM
• Buddha opened the gates for the full participation of
women in the field of religion by making them eligible
for admission to what was known as the Bhikkuni
Sangha
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• Discipline
• Contemplation
• Wisdom
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