YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Sustaining Development and Buddhist Economics
Essays 61 - 90
In five pages this paper examines liberal economics and the differences in East Asian economies regarding the role of the state. ...
In six pages this paper discusses twenty first century globalization and why Keynesian economics is needed more now than ever befo...
in the context of economic growth" (Afonso, 2001). One of Smiths (1991) greatest concerns is the variance in national wealth from...
less fortunate. However, economists like Keynes realize that government policy can encourage growth in business or discourage it. ...
Dalai Lama, Thubten Gyatso" (His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet, 2005). Upon recognition, " Lhama Dhondrub was renamed Jet...
suffering: Why doesnt he participate, and why does he leave his faithful servants to suffer?5 These questions are fundamental to...
To understand paticca-samutpada, annata, and anicca one must consider them within Buddhism as a whole. The first important point ...
apply to all of them. First, in the Buddhist tradition, there is no charge for any part of the program. Hosts not only do not ch...
tolerance, and forgiveness. Indeed, many religions have a history of instilling peace in not-so-peaceful times. Buddhism...
In six pages Jainism's history and belief systems are considered in an overview that also makes comparisons with the Buddhist spir...
In four pages this paper examines On the Road from a Buddhist perspective of a symbolic journey toward nirvana through knowledge. ...
In eight pages this report contrasts and compares these various types of Buddhist meditation practices. Seven sources are cited i...
from around A.D. 300, which is one of six classical systems of Indian philosophy. The literature on Yoga stems from the set of sut...
In eleven pages the Buddhist and Bahai religions are contrasted and compared with the commonality represented by Christianity also...
This paper contrasts and compares the Mencius and Buddhist concepts of war, violence, and use of military force. Four sources are...
In five pages the beliefs of an afterlife as espoused by Buddhist and Jewish religions are discussed. There are ten bibliographic...
In six pages differences and similarities among the cultures of Native Americans and Buddhists are examined. Seven sources are ci...
In one page this research paper defines the Zen Buddhist concept satori as heightened enlightenment comprehension. One source is ...
In an analytic essay consisting of five pages the Tripitaka character in Monkey is examined in terms of his representation of man ...
In one page this paper examines how daily life can be transcended through meditation with the Buddhist example of Prince Siddharth...
In seven pages the Taoist, Buddhist, and Confucian concepts of 'nothingness' are examined in terms of how these ideas represent a ...
Buddha identified Four Noble Truths. They may be briefly stated as follows: Human life is an existence of suffering. Human sufferi...
to a greater spiritual reality (Fowler 252). Buddha taught that human life involved suffering, and that this suffering could only ...
In four pages applied ethics are examined within the context of euthanasia in a consideration of the essays 'The Survival Lottery'...
In two pages this paper examines the connection between the Buddhist 4 Noble Truths and the Doctrine of Dependent Origin. Two sou...
In two pages the five aggregates are interpreted and applied to the Buddhist daily life, with this representing the 3rd in a four ...
In nine pages a comparative analysis of Native American and Buddhist beliefs considers their similarities and differences. Six so...
This 11 page paper uses the Bhagavad Gita, The Dybbuk and The Monkey as sources to examine concepts of rebirth, the soul and the a...
principles such as Sabi and Wabi, are contained in the Bashos last Haiku. By the title one immediately understands that something ...
In five pages Shinto shrines and Buddhist gardens are contrasted and compared. Four sources are cited in the bibliography....