Francisco, 

I think my first email addressed all your speculation -- but let me add
a further observation:

Are you the CEO of a corporation?  In charge of morale and a company?
Sitting on the school board?  Commisioned to investigate options by US
congress?  If not, they you are likely just sitting around dreaming.
That time is better spent, IMHO, acting on the options available and
apparent to you right now.

Rod


Rod Scholl 



-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Francisco Garcia Scherer
Sent: Tuesday, April 26, 2005 2:06 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Zen] Re: Buddhist Practice in the West



> >     In my opinion, we should study the creation of new
corporations  
> > that would allow us to integrate work and the zen teachings into
our 
> > daily life. 
> 
> What a wonderful idea! 

   Thank you :)
 
> 
> I was thinking in terms of integrating these teachings into our 
> schools, & making them a part of the experience children have while 
> growing up.  While I'm not sure that having meditation practice in 
> school would fly in our current society;  I do see a value in certain 
> classes giving children a chance to experience the human 
> concerns/possibilities in a directly integrative way.

   I really dont think that meditation practice would be well accepted
by more tradional/conventional teachers and families. And I dont think
that most youngsters would understand it, either. However, I believe you
could teach "meditation" through professional education and vocational
training. So, instead of spending 10 to 20 minutes in zazen, a
12-year-old boy could learn how use tools and perform tasks with full
attention.
    Moreover, in my opinion, youngster nowadays, at least in Brazil,
spend too much time in conventional classrooms, and they devote too much
time to the study of conventional subjects like mathematics, physics,
history, and so forth. It is a very individual model of intellectual
development, in the sense that you dont learn how to work and interact
with other people in productive manner, you only learn how to analyze
information and solve logical problems. Perhaps a more practical,
vocational-oriented system of education should also focus on the
development of interpersonal skills, conflict resolution and team
management. In other words, this new system should also focus on the
concept of interdependence, not as something abstract, but as a
day-to-day practice.


> How to we 'sell' the community on the value of adding these type of 
> teachings into our curriculum?

 
     This is a good question. Maybe it will be necessary to create new
schools, with a new curricullum and a new generation of teachers. 

> 
> >     Right now, the main goal of private enterprises is to
generate a 
> > profit for its shareholders. I think it is a legitimate goal, but
I 
> > also believe that corporations could become very active agents of 
> > change (in a positive way) in our society.
> 
> How do we present this to a corporation as being of benefit to them?

      I dont think that conventional corporations will ever accept this
new approach. As a matter of fact, I believe that it will be necessary
to create new corporations, with a new leadership. Perhaps, the right
question is: Can these new corporations be competitive and survive in
the contemporary market?

 
> I don't want to knock free-enterprise (quick to say this least i be 
> branded some sort of demon) - but, it is clear that profit motive 
> alone will not make the best determination for the needs of a society 
> (taking environmental disasters as just one example).

      I agree with you. Traditional socialists used to think that, in
order to create a better society, it would be necessary to, first, cease
complete control of the means of production, and, then, start top-down
reforms in order to built an egalitarian and more human society. The
soviet experience, however, has demonstrated that the socialist
Super-State can become a self-serving and inneficient bureaucratic
system. 
      Perhaps, the key for a better society is the creation of new
professional corporations, which will focus not only in economic profit,
but also in the wellfare of its members. It may look short- sighted, in
the sense that, as buddhists, we should worry about the welfare of all
beings, not only our workmates. But it may be a small step in right
direction. A new professional environment, combined with a new
educational system, could produce individuals who are more prone to
dialog, who are personally identified with their work and who are more
prone to live balance, normal lifes. In other words, these new
corporations, based on the Zen concepts of interdependence, serenity and
full dedication to your work, could have a very positive impact in the
contemporary western society.







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