Empathy Is Actually a Choice; What Would Buddha Say?: 1,501 Right-Speech Teachings for Communicating Mindfully; How Would Buddha Act?: 801 Right-Action Teachings for Living with Awareness and Intention – Bamboo Innovator Daily: 11 Jul (Sat)
July 11, 2015 Leave a comment
Life
- Empathy Is Actually a Choice: NYT
- Why Sherlock Holmes endures; Holmes put it best: “Education never ends, Watson.”: WaPo
- The importance of diversity of thought for solving wicked problems: Forbes
- The Great Gift of Reading Aloud; To curl up with children and a good book has long been one of the great civilizing practices of domestic life, an almost magical entry point to the larger world of literature. WSJ
- Thoughts on corporate governance: Forbes
- Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh believes rave culture holds a key to business strategy: qz
- Career advice for millennials (and really, anyone) from Margaret Heffernan; In her career, Margaret Heffernan has been the CEO of five businesses. What advice does she have for people just starting their careers? TED
- Warren Buffett revealed this ‘great philosophy of life’ in a letter to a hedge fund manager: “I follow the dictum praise by name, criticize by category.”: BI
- With over 37 million YouTube subscribers and a reported $7.4 million earned last year, Felix “PewDiePie” Kjellberg is among the top YouTubers in the world : BI
- The CEO of A&E Networks shares the 3 types of people you need on every team: “You’re either a thinker, a doer, or a feeler.” : BI, NYT
- The world’s most popular TED speaker explains why schools should be more like farms, not factories: BI
Books
- What Would Buddha Say?: 1,501 Right-Speech Teachings for Communicating Mindfully: Amazon
- How Would Buddha Act?: 801 Right-Action Teachings for Living with Awareness and Intention: Amazon
- Taking Smart Risks: How Sharp Leaders Win When Stakes are High: Amazon
- The Great Detective: The Amazing Rise and Immortal Life of Sherlock Holmes : Amazon
- Straight to Hell: True Tales of Deviance, Debauchery, and Billion-Dollar Deals, Amazon, BI