Ethics for the new millennium

Hardcover, 237 pages

English language

Published Dec. 23, 1999 by Riverhead Books.

ISBN:
978-1-57322-025-5
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OCLC Number:
41231203

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(5 reviews)

In a difficult, uncertain time, it takes a person of great courage, such as the Dalai Lama, to give us hope. Regardless of the violence and cynicism we see on television and read about in the news, there is an argument to be made for basic human goodness. The number of people who spend their lives engaged in violence and dishonesty is tiny compared to the vast majority who would wish others only well. According to the Dalai Lama, our survival has depended and will continue to depend on our basic goodness. Ethics for the New Millennium presents a moral system based on universal rather than religious principles. Its ultimate goal is happiness for every individual, irrespective of religious beliefs. Though the Dalai Lama is himself a practicing Buddhist, his apporach to life and the moral compass that guides him can lead each and every one of us — Muslim, …

15 editions

Review of 'Ethics for the new millennium' on 'Goodreads'

I would recommend the newer [b:Beyond Religion Ethics for a Whole World|11346463|Beyond Religion Ethics for a Whole World|Dalai Lama XIV|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1317187293s/11346463.jpg|16275751] instead, as a more methodical, precise, and practical guide to ethics. I found [b:Ethics for the New Millennium|200137|Ethics for the New Millennium|Dalai Lama XIV|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1279383100s/200137.jpg|1135779] to be comparatively gauzy, vague, and platitudinous.

Still, there was some meat on the bone worth chewing on.

The key to [b:Ethics for the New Millennium|200137|Ethics for the New Millennium|Dalai Lama XIV|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1279383100s/200137.jpg|1135779] is the Dalai Lama’s assertion that the way to be happy and content is to develop and expand one’s own compassion. The purest and most universally-directed altruism is simultaneously the most enlightened self-interest. Similarly, the key to solving the variety of the world’s problems is for the people directly involved in the problems and their solutions to develop and nurture compassion in themselves — if they do this, the solutions will come of themselves; …

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Subjects

  • Ethics
  • Buddhist ethics