Business, Life, Spirituality

2 Romans on Personal Leadership, Part 1

Cicero, On Living and Dying Well. In the last decades of the Roman Republic, Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BCE), statesman, lawyer, and esteemed orator, was engaged with a social and political world in crisis. Reflecting on the challenges of living and dying well, he penned On Duties to his son Marcus studying in Athens, for an uncertain future that lay before him. Central to…

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Life, Spirituality

The Hidden Life of Love

Søren Kierkegaard, Works of Love. Søren Aabye Kierkegaard (1813-1855), philosopher, theologian, poet and critic, is known as the father of existentialism. Still widely read today, any well-managed bookstore would be amiss without a copy of Fear and Trembling or The Sickness Unto Death sitting somewhere on a shelf. As is often the case with the output of a prolific and influential author, we may…

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Business, Life, Spirituality

The Economics of Good and Evil

Tomas Sedlacek on Economic Meaning. A bit of an amateur investor, I am fascinated by the amount of energy, intelligence, and the sheer volume of money that operates within the financial markets daily. Our capitalist system truly is a miracle of both ingenuity and discovery, seeing that the principles upon which it is based can be said to have been…

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Life, Others, Spirituality

Zero to Sixty in Nothing Flat

Bruce Springsteen: Born to Run, the autobiography. What might have become arguably one of the great “wisdom” traditions of our time, the music of Bruce Springsteen has been a source of comfort for millions since he stepped into the spotlight in 1973 with his debut release, Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. It was his third record, Born to Run, however,…

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Life, Others, Spirituality

Lessons from the Light

Kenneth Ring and The Near-death Experience. In Lessons from the Light; What We Can Learn from the Near-death Experience, Dr. Kenneth Ring, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of Connecticut, escorts us through the mysterious world of death, or more precisely near-death, to learn the lessons about life such a journey has to teach. Like Virgil in Dante’s Divine Comedy, Dr.…

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Business, Life, Others

Heroic Leadership, Part 2

Order One’s Life, Imagine an Inspiring Future. There is “a strong link” writes Chris Lowney in Heroic Leadership, “between mature self-knowledge and success.” At a time when many are looking for leaders capable of solving problems in a rapidly changing business and political environment, brought about by the unstoppable pace of technological change, “shrewd, pragmatic, politically astute action” requires individuals with…

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Business, Life, Others

Heroic Leadership, Part 1

What Leaders Do, Growing a Personal Leadership Legacy. In Heroic Leadership, Best Practices from a 450-year-old Company that Changed the World, former Jesuit and J.P. Morgan Managing Director, Chris Lowney, gets straight to the heart of what it means to be a leader. Drawing wisdom from the Jesuit spiritual tradition, he says, “If all leadership is first self-leadership that springs from…

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Life, Spirituality

The Ineffable Between Them

Martin Buber, On Judaism. One of the great intellectuals and religious thinkers of the 20th century, Martin Buber, best known for his work, “I and Thou,” said: “When I was a child I read on old Jewish tale I could not understand. It said no more than this: “Outside the gates of Rome there sits a leprous beggar, waiting. He…

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Business, Life

Globalizing Consciousness

David Korten, When Corporations Rule the World. A powerful critique of modern-day capitalism, When Corporations Rule the World is riveting in its attack on the concentration of corporate power and wealth that is undermining the foundations of Western democratic societies and the health of the planet. More than two decades after first being published, it has become a classic international…

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Art, Life

Heaven and Earth and The Ten Thousand Things

D.T. Suzuki on the Zen of Sengai Gibon. Take a moment to look online at some of the calligraphy of Sengai Gibon. Done we are told after formerly retiring at the age of 61 as the one hundred twenty-third abbot of Shōfuku-ji, the first Zen temple established in Japan, Sengai’s legendary wit and humor jumps from his brush. Living well…

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