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OverviewOur current neoliberal capitalist economic system is based on unethical values. The twentieth century economist John Maynard Keynes recognized this and wrote of a time in the future when we could transcend those values. Unfortunately Keynes believed that this would somehow happen automatically, and did not grasp the necessity of the need now to directly challenge the values on which our society is based, instead of simply waiting for them to fade away. The Buddha identified the vital importance of working to uproot the poisons of greed and hatred in the human psyche and in human society, and to replace them with their counterparts of generosity and loving kindness, in order to allow a different society to come into being. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Vaddhaka LinnPublisher: Windhorse Publications Imprint: Windhorse Publications Edition: Print Dimensions: Width: 13.80cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 20.60cm Weight: 0.363kg ISBN: 9781909314443ISBN 10: 1909314447 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 02 March 2015 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"Many Western Buddhists regard Buddhism as primarily a path to personal insight and inner peace, thus as a virtual escape route from the madness of the modern world. Yet deep within the Dharma are the seeds for a new vision of human relatedness, a web of ideas about how our social and economic systems can promote authentic well-being rather than the oppression, violence, and exploitation so widespread today. Vaddhaka Linn here boldly uses the lens of Buddhism to closely examine the dominant structures of corporate capitalism. He lays bare the pernicious consequences of these structures and draws forth from the Teaching suggestions for creating benign alternatives conducive to true human flourishing. This book helps us to better see the Dharma as a comprehensive message that has much to offer to the emergent global community in its broadest dimensions. It should also help Buddhists understand more clearly the potential relevance of Buddhism to the crises of our age. Bhikkhu Bodhi, editor In the Buddha's Words ""Buddhism arose at a time of rising inequalities, partly as an answer as to how to behave in, understand, and remedy such times. The Buddha on Wall Street is an invaluable guide to how this time, faced again with crisis, there are alternatives to believing there is no alternative."" Professor Danny Dorling, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, and author Inequality and the 1%. ""The Buddha on Wall Street is an original, insightful, and provocative evaluation of our economic situation today. If you wonder about the social implications of Buddhist teachings, this is an essential book. "" David R. Loy, author Money, Sex, War, Karma: Notes for a Buddhist Revolution. ""Do ever greater income levels lead to greater human fulfilment? Vaddhaka Linn does an outstanding job exposing the false accounting of social ills that make it into the list of goods, as measured in the GDP statistics. More fundamentally, he questions any definition of wellbeing that does not rest on a firm ethical foundation, developing a refreshing Buddhist critique of the ends of economic activity."" Dominic Houlder, Adjunct Professor in Strategy and Entrepreneurship, London Business School Slavoj Zizek has written that Western Buddhism is the 'perfect ideological supplement' to capitalism. Zizek the provocateur thinks Western Buddhism is complacent about the terrible harms of unbridled neoliberal capitalism. Vaddhaka Linn's essay makes the argument for an activist Buddhism that responds to Zizek's challenge. Professor Owen Flanagan, Department of Philosophy, Duke University, and author The Bodhisattva's Brain: Buddhism Naturalized ""I found the book to be an interesting blend, incorporating reflections on relevant scholarly research, popular and trade media articles and personal experience presented in clearly written prose and with evident clarity and passion. Linn has done a deft job of illustrating the key points of the academic materials from which he draws, using accessible examples and case studies."" Dr. Peter D. Hershock, Director, Asian Studies Development Program, East-West Center, Honolulu, HI" Many Western Buddhists regard Buddhism as primarily a path to personal insight and inner peace, thus as a virtual escape route from the madness of the modern world. Yet deep within the Dharma are the seeds for a new vision of human relatedness, a web of ideas about how our social and economic systems can promote authentic well-being rather than the oppression, violence, and exploitation so widespread today. Vaddhaka Linn here boldly uses the lens of Buddhism to closely examine the dominant structures of corporate capitalism. He lays bare the pernicious consequences of these structures and draws forth from the Teaching suggestions for creating benign alternatives conducive to true human flourishing. This book helps us to better see the Dharma as a comprehensive message that has much to offer to the emergent global community in its broadest dimensions. It should also help Buddhists understand more clearly the potential relevance of Buddhism to the crises of our age. Bhikkhu Bodhi, editor In the Buddha s Words Buddhism arose at a time of rising inequalities, partly as an answer as to how to behave in, understand, and remedy such times. The Buddha on Wall Street is an invaluable guide to how this time, faced again with crisis, there are alternatives to believing there is no alternative. Professor Danny Dorling, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, and author Inequality and the 1%. The Buddha on Wall Street is an original, insightful, and provocative evaluation of our economic situation today. If you wonder about the social implications of Buddhist teachings, this is an essential book. David R. Loy, author Money, Sex, War, Karma: Notes for a Buddhist Revolution. Do ever greater income levels lead to greater human fulfilment? Vaddhaka Linn does an outstanding job exposing the false accounting of social ills that make it into the list of goods, as measured in the GDP statistics. More fundamentally, he questions any definition of wellbeing that does not rest on a firm ethical foundation, developing a refreshing Buddhist critique of the ends of economic activity. Dominic Houlder, Adjunct Professor in Strategy and Entrepreneurship, London Business School Slavoj Zizek has written that Western Buddhism is the 'perfect ideological supplement' to capitalism. Zizek the provocateur thinks Western Buddhism is complacent about the terrible harms of unbridled neoliberal capitalism. Vaddhaka Linn's essay makes the argument for an activist Buddhism that responds to Zizek's challenge. Professor Owen Flanagan, Department of Philosophy, Duke University, and author The Bodhisattva s Brain: Buddhism Naturalized Many Western Buddhists regard Buddhism as primarily a path to personal insight and inner peace, thus as a virtual escape route from the madness of the modern world. Yet deep within the Dharma are the seeds for a new vision of human relatedness, a web of ideas about how our social and economic systems can promote authentic well-being rather than the oppression, violence, and exploitation so widespread today. Vaddhaka Linn here boldly uses the lens of Buddhism to closely examine the dominant structures of corporate capitalism. He lays bare the pernicious consequences of these structures and draws forth from the Teaching suggestions for creating benign alternatives conducive to true human flourishing. This book helps us to better see the Dharma as a comprehensive message that has much to offer to the emergent global community in its broadest dimensions. It should also help Buddhists understand more clearly the potential relevance of Buddhism to the crises of our age. Bhikkhu Bodhi, editor In the Buddha's Words Buddhism arose at a time of rising inequalities, partly as an answer as to how to behave in, understand, and remedy such times. The Buddha on Wall Street is an invaluable guide to how this time, faced again with crisis, there are alternatives to believing there is no alternative. Professor Danny Dorling, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, and author Inequality and the 1%. The Buddha on Wall Street is an original, insightful, and provocative evaluation of our economic situation today. If you wonder about the social implications of Buddhist teachings, this is an essential book. David R. Loy, author Money, Sex, War, Karma: Notes for a Buddhist Revolution. Do ever greater income levels lead to greater human fulfilment? Vaddhaka Linn does an outstanding job exposing the false accounting of social ills that make it into the list of goods, as measured in the GDP statistics. More fundamentally, he questions any definition of wellbeing that does not rest on a firm ethical foundation, developing a refreshing Buddhist critique of the ends of economic activity. Dominic Houlder, Adjunct Professor in Strategy and Entrepreneurship, London Business School Slavoj Zizek has written that Western Buddhism is the 'perfect ideological supplement' to capitalism. Zizek the provocateur thinks Western Buddhism is complacent about the terrible harms of unbridled neoliberal capitalism. Vaddhaka Linn's essay makes the argument for an activist Buddhism that responds to Zizek's challenge. Professor Owen Flanagan, Department of Philosophy, Duke University, and author The Bodhisattva's Brain: Buddhism Naturalized Many Western Buddhists regard Buddhism as primarily a path to personal insight and inner peace, thus as a virtual escape route from the madness of the modern world. Yet deep within the Dharma are the seeds for a new vision of human relatedness, a web of ideas about how our social and economic systems can promote authentic well-being rather than the oppression, violence, and exploitation so widespread today. Vaddhaka Linn here boldly uses the lens of Buddhism to closely examine the dominant structures of corporate capitalism. He lays bare the pernicious consequences of these structures and draws forth from the Teaching suggestions for creating benign alternatives conducive to true human flourishing. This book helps us to better see the Dharma as a comprehensive message that has much to offer to the emergent global community in its broadest dimensions. It should also help Buddhists understand more clearly the potential relevance of Buddhism to the crises of our age. Bhikkhu Bodhi, editor In the Buddha s Words Buddhism arose at a time of rising inequalities, partly as an answer as to how to behave in, understand, and remedy such times. The Buddha on Wall Street is an invaluable guide to how this time, faced again with crisis, there are alternatives to believing there is no alternative. Professor Danny Dorling, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, and author Inequality and the 1%. The Buddha on Wall Street is an original, insightful, and provocative evaluation of our economic situation today. If you wonder about the social implications of Buddhist teachings, this is an essential book. David R. Loy, author Money, Sex, War, Karma: Notes for a Buddhist Revolution. Do ever greater income levels lead to greater human fulfilment? Vaddhaka Linn does an outstanding job exposing the false accounting of social ills that make it into the list of goods, as measured in the GDP statistics. More fundamentally, he questions any definition of wellbeing that does not rest on a firm ethical foundation, developing a refreshing Buddhist critique of the ends of economic activity. Dominic Houlder, Adjunct Professor in Strategy and Entrepreneurship, London Business School Slavoj Zizek has written that Western Buddhism is the 'perfect ideological supplement' to capitalism. Zizek the provocateur thinks Western Buddhism is complacent about the terrible harms of unbridled neoliberal capitalism. Vaddhaka Linn's essay makes the argument for an activist Buddhism that responds to Zizek's challenge. Professor Owen Flanagan, Department of Philosophy, Duke University, and author The Bodhisattva s Brain: Buddhism Naturalized I found the book to be an interesting blend, incorporating reflections on relevant scholarly research, popular and trade media articles and personal experience presented in clearly written prose and with evident clarity and passion. Linn has done a deft job of illustrating the key points of the academic materials from which he draws, using accessible examples and case studies. Dr. Peter D. Hershock, Director, Asian Studies Development Program, East-West Center, Honolulu, HI Author InformationHaving completed a degree in economics, Vaddhaka Linn initially worked in the UK in trade unionism, politics, and adult education, before joining the Triratna Buddhist Community in which he has lived and worked since 1994. He now divides his time between the UK and Estonia, where he teaches and helps to run a Buddhist center. 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