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Pipeline to the Future: Seeking Wisdom in Indigenous, Eastern, and Western Traditions

In: Handbook of Faith and Spirituality in the Workplace

Author

Listed:
  • Edwina Pio

    (Business & Law School of AUT University)

  • Sandra Waddock

    (Boston College, Carroll School of Management)

  • Mzamo Mangaliso

    (Isenberg School of Management, University of Massachusetts)

  • Malcolm McIntosh

    (Griffith Business School, Griffith University)

  • Chellie Spiller

    (University of Auckland Business School)

  • Hiroshi Takeda

    (Graduate School of Business Administration, The University of Kitakyushu)

  • Joe Gladstone

    (New Mexico State University, College of Health and Social Services)

  • Marcus Ho

    (Business & Law School of AUT University)

  • Jawad Syed

    (Kent Business School, University of Kent)

Abstract

In this chapter, we explore the ways in which the dominant wisdom, economic, and social traditions of the West can potentially integrate with some of the wisdom, economic, and social traditions of indigenous and Eastern cultures in the interest of creating a more complete understanding of links between wisdom, economics, and organizing. Western thinking tends to be based not only on a modality of constant growth but also on a worldview that is based on linear thinking and atomization and fragmentation of wholes into parts as paths that lead to understanding. These ways of thinking have resulted in the West’s putting economics, materialism, consumerism, and markets ahead of other types of values and issues. In contrast, many indigenous and Eastern traditions offer a more holistic, relationally based set of perspectives that might provide better balance in approaching issues of work, economics, and organization. Indigenous wisdom traditions, illustrated through African, Chinese, Indian, Islamic, Japanese, Māori, and Native American worldviews, offer insights into a worldview of relatedness where foundational values inform members of society on how to lead a wise life through serving others, including the environment. We believe that by integrating the perspective of wisdom traditions that offer these more holistic, interconnected, and nature-based views of the world, Western traditions could be more appreciative of the intrinsic worth and ontological differences of people and environment and that such perspectives can be very useful in our globally connected, interdependent, and, in many ways, currently unsustainable world. We offer this synthesis as a beginning of that conversation.

Suggested Citation

  • Edwina Pio & Sandra Waddock & Mzamo Mangaliso & Malcolm McIntosh & Chellie Spiller & Hiroshi Takeda & Joe Gladstone & Marcus Ho & Jawad Syed, 2013. "Pipeline to the Future: Seeking Wisdom in Indigenous, Eastern, and Western Traditions," Springer Books, in: Judi Neal (ed.), Handbook of Faith and Spirituality in the Workplace, edition 127, chapter 0, pages 195-219, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-1-4614-5233-1_13
    DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4614-5233-1_13
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    Cited by:

    1. Thushini S. Jayawardena-Willis & Edwina Pio & Peter McGhee, 2021. "The Divine States (brahmaviharas) in Managerial Ethical Decision-Making in Organisations in Sri Lanka: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis," Journal of Business Ethics, Springer, vol. 168(1), pages 151-171, January.

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