The Art of War—Spirituality for Conflict: Annotated & Explained

Author:   Thomas Huynh ,  Editors at Sonshi.com ,  Marc Benioff ,  Thomas Cleary
Publisher:   Jewish Lights Publishing
ISBN:  

9781683363392


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   17 April 2008
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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The Art of War—Spirituality for Conflict: Annotated & Explained


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Overview

Discover the spiritually incisive strategies for peacefully resolving conflict in this masterpiece of military strategy. Written 2,500 years ago by Chinese general Sun Tzu, The Art of War is a poetic and potent treatise on military strategy still in use in war colleges around the world. Yet its principles transcend warfare and have practical applications to all the conflicts and crises we face in our lives—in our workplaces, our families, even within ourselves. Thomas Huynh guides you through Sun Tzu's masterwork, highlighting principles that encourage a perceptive and spiritual approach to conflict, enabling you to: Prevent conflicts before they arise Peacefully and quickly resolve conflicts when they do arise Act with courage, intelligence and benevolence in adversarial situations Convert potential enemies into friends Control your emotions before they control you Now you can experience the effectiveness of Sun Tzu's teachings even if you have no previous knowledge of The Art of War. Insightful yet unobtrusive facing-page commentary explains the subtleties of the text, allowing you to unlock the power of its teachings and help prevent and resolve the conflicts in your own life.

Full Product Details

Author:   Thomas Huynh ,  Editors at Sonshi.com ,  Marc Benioff ,  Thomas Cleary
Publisher:   Jewish Lights Publishing
Imprint:   SkyLight Paths Publishing,US
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.472kg
ISBN:  

9781683363392


ISBN 10:   1683363396
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   17 April 2008
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Instructs us in patience, flexibility, resolve, discernment, skillful means, compassion powerfully effective [strategies] in all our relationships, business and spiritual life. Heartily recommended to all leaders and to anyone seeking peace, deep understanding and reconciliation. Lama Surya Das, author, Awakening the Buddha Within Practical and pragmatic guidance with brilliant insights into the text. Provides clear evidence, and a robust example, that Sun Tzu's wisdom lineage lives on today. James Gimian, publisher, Shambhala Sun, director, Denma Translation Group, The Art of War: The Denma Translation A masterpiece.... Gives readers practical insight into the highly relevant work of Sun Tzu as it relates to peace, conflict resolution and personal growth. Clear guidance from an ancient philosopher and warrior. Angie Morgan and Courtney Lynch, former captains, U.S. Marine Corps, and authors, Leading from the Front Engaging commentaries and clear explanations.... Captures the essence of Sun Tzu's teachings and demonstrates how [this] ancient wisdom can be applied in the modern world to achieve powerful results. Derek Lin, author, Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained


Instructs us in patience, flexibility, resolve, discernment, skillful means, compassion--powerfully effective [strategies] in all our relationships, business and spiritual life. Heartily recommended to all leaders and to anyone seeking peace, deep understanding and reconciliation. --Lama Surya Das, author, Awakening the Buddha Within Practical and pragmatic guidance with brilliant insights into the text. Provides clear evidence, and a robust example, that Sun Tzu's wisdom lineage lives on today. --James Gimian, publisher, Shambhala Sun, director, Denma Translation Group, The Art of War: The Denma Translation A masterpiece.... Gives readers practical insight into the highly relevant work of Sun Tzu as it relates to peace, conflict resolution and personal growth. Clear guidance from an ancient philosopher and warrior. --Angie Morgan and Courtney Lynch, former captains, U.S. Marine Corps, and authors, Leading from the Front Engaging commentaries and clear explanations.... Captures the essence of Sun Tzu's teachings and demonstrates how [this] ancient wisdom can be applied in the modern world to achieve powerful results. --Derek Lin, author, Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained Instructs us in patience, flexibility, resolve, discernment, skillful means, compassion powerfully effective [strategies] in all our relationships, business and spiritual life. Heartily recommended to all leaders and to anyone seeking peace, deep understanding and reconciliation. Lama Surya Das, author, Awakening the Buddha Within Practical and pragmatic guidance with brilliant insights into the text. Provides clear evidence, and a robust example, that Sun Tzu's wisdom lineage lives on today. James Gimian, publisher, Shambhala Sun, director, Denma Translation Group, The Art of War: The Denma Translation A masterpiece.... Gives readers practical insight into the highly relevant work of Sun Tzu as it relates to peace, conflict resolution and personal growth. Clear guidance from an ancient philosopher and warrior. Angie Morgan and Courtney Lynch, former captains, U.S. Marine Corps, and authors, Leading from the Front Engaging commentaries and clear explanations.... Captures the essence of Sun Tzu's teachings and demonstrates how [this] ancient wisdom can be applied in the modern world to achieve powerful results. Derek Lin, author, Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained A 2,500-year-old text called The Art of War may strike some as an unlikely source of advice for today's business leaders, but Thomas Huynh, EMBA 04, believes that there are valuable lessons to be learned from Sun Tzu s masterpiece. Huynh has recently penned a new translation of the work, titled The Art of War: Spirituality for Conflict, with the hope that it will bring the Chinese general s message to a wider audience. Although the ancient document sounds as though it might glorify war, Huynh says it s actually a treatise on peace, offering practical strategies for circumventing and diffusing conflict, whether on the battlefield, in the boardroom or at home. It is required reading for officers in the United States Marine Corps, as well as students at a number of B-schools, because of its innovative, still-relevant strategy for overcoming conflict. Marc Benioff, Chairman and CEO of Salesforce.com, who wrote the foreword to Huynh s book, uses its classic principles to manage his company in an often hostile, highly competitive technology industry. The text itself is a lesson in economy: 13 short chapters comprise The Art of War, but each is full of important lessons that teach the reader how to avoid conflict and resolve inevitable hostile situations using self-control, intelligence, courage and benevolence. Huynh s annotations alongside the translation offer practical application of Sun Tzu s philosophy. Huynh enjoys a career in finance as Group Controller for Skyline Steel in Georgia, but has been dedicated to the study of Sun Tzu s masterwork since he encountered the text as a teenager. In 1999 he launched Sonshi.com to provide Web space for authors, scholars and readers to gather and share information about Sun Tzu s timeless approach to conflict resolution. Says Huynh, Conflict is part of life, but it is our response to the disagreement that has the greatest effect on our inner peace and personal happiness. --Amy Norton Vanderbuilt Business Magazine (10/01/2008) In the time of a controversial five-year-long war in Iraq, we can gain badly needed wisdom from two of history's greatest warriors. The Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius and the Chinese general Sun Tzu can teach us about virtue, peace and philosophy when it seems many want us on a perpetual war footing. These two military leaders, studied for millennia by both the powerful and the subversive, considered war the worst thing humans could engage in the most cruel, wasteful and mindless. But, when they had to, they did war well. They may have seen war as a last resort, but when they judged it necessary to keep the peace or protect the state, they engaged in it with devastating efficiency. Skylight Illuminations, a creative U.S. spiritual book publisher, is bringing the values of these famous Roman and Chinese warriors to a world that needs to more deeply explore the ethics of conflict. The publisher teamed up with former Malaspina University-College scholar Russell McNeil to produce The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius: Selections Annotated and Explained. The revealing book highlights how the Roman emperor embraced Stoic philosophy (a worldview, by the way, highly valued by Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan.) The related book, The Art of War Spirituality for Conflict: Annotated and Explained, has been put together by U.S. writer Thomas Huynh. The author adapts the advice Sun Tzu offered 2,500 years ago to help today's individuals and leaders resolve conflicts. Even though Skylight Illuminations didn't promote the books as a package, there are surprising parallels particularly the leaders' emphasis on virtues like courage, self-control, rationality and justice. Although their complex philosophies are not necessarily perfect for us today, it's intriguing these respected figures both believed war was a disgrace, that it should never be entered into without a concern for the common good. In his commentary, McNeil, who lives on Vancouver Island, builds on Marcus Aurelius' meditations to question the 21st-century war on terrorism, suggesting if contemporary rulers used divine reason the way the wise emperor did they would recognize injustice often breeds such dangerous rage. For his part, Sun Tzu taught that leaders should never go to war out of greed or revenge, but (like Christians who believe in just-war theory ) should make every diplomatic and strategic effort to avoid armed battle. Huynh, a Vietnamese refugee, turns Sun Tzu's masterwork on winning into advice on advancing global and personal peace. The Art of War has been studied by everyone from Latin American revolutionary Che Guevera to retired U.S. general Colin Powell (who speaks in Vancouver June 12.) Huynh maintains Sun Tzu's pragmatic philosophy can prevent conflicts, quickly resolve them if they do arise, promote benevolence in adversarial situations, convert potential enemies into friends and help individuals control their emotions. The latter leads to one of the most striking philosophical parallels between the two warriors. The Roman emperor, who died in AD 180, and the Chinese general each emphasized detaching from one's emotions. The Art of War, writes Huynh, teaches: Being ruled by your emotions, exaggerating your strengths, denying your weaknesses and wishful thinking can only lead to catastrophe. The Roman ruler, McNeil says, also taught that personal attachments to people or things have little to do with what it means to be human. The Stoics, like Socrates, did not see pain and tragedy as limiting humans' ability to be content. Even though the emperor's Stoicism veers close to emotional coldness, to limiting empathy for loved ones, McNeil defends it. He particularly values the way Aurelius put ultimate value on reason, or divine intelligence, over emotion. McNeil compares Stoicism to the cognitive behavioral therapy founded by psychologist Albert Ellis. Like Ellis, the Roman emperor stressed the importance of overriding emotions to make rational choices. Marcus Aurelius criticized those who waited passively for a supernatural God to take care of things. Even though it's clear Stoicism and Sun Tzu's Art of War can suit tough-minded, ethical generals (and many modern-day athletes), I suspect these two philosophers may be a touch too indifferent to emotions and loving relationships. I also have trouble with their placing ultimate importance on the state, which, combined with their stress on bravery and self-denial, could lead to unnecessary martyrdom. But these are concerns to study more thoroughly, because these warriors' philosophies are nothing if not subtle. All in all, it is impressive that when many leaders talk about peace but frequently revert to expensive and destructive military solutions these ancient generals can still teach us how to resolve the root causes of all kinds of conflict.--Douglas Todd The Vancouver Sun (05/10/2008) Thomas Huynh, a regular reader of this blog and founder of Sonshi.com, has just come out with a new book: The Art of War Spirituality for Conflict. A lot of leaders have found Sun Tzu's Art of War to be instructive in the world of business. Among the principles, written up 2,500 years ago: prevent conflicts before they arise; resolve them when they do; act with courage, intelligence and benevolence in conflict situations; convert potential enemies into friends and control your emotions before they control you. The book contains a foreword by Marc Benioff of salesforce.com, who credits Larry Ellison of Oracle Corp. with introducing him to the Chinese military classic. In Benioff's view, the goal of the text was to teach a disadvantaged person or persons how to shift the balance of power ... how David can topple Goliath. Huynh, who came to the U.S. as a political refugee and now has a site that's the leading resource on Tzu's philosophy, has come up with some insightful commentary to accompany the text. Check it out.--Diane Brady Business Week Blog (03/03/2008) A 2,500-year-old text called The Art of War may strike some as an unlikely source of advice for today's business leaders, but Thomas Huynh, EMBA 04, believes that there are valuable lessons to be learned from Sun Tzu s masterpiece. Huynh has recently penned a new translation of the work, titled The Art of War: Spirituality for Conflict, with the hope that it will bring the Chinese general s message to a wider audience.Although the ancient document sounds as though it might glorify war, Huynh says it s actually a treatise on peace, offering practical strategies for circumventing and diffusing conflict, whether on the battlefield, in the boardroom or at home. It is required reading for officers in the United States Marine Corps, as well as students at a number of B-schools, because of its innovative, still-relevant strategy for overcoming conflict. Marc Benioff, Chairman and CEO of Salesforce.com, who wrote the foreword to Huynh s book, uses its classic principles to manage his company in an often hostile, highly competitive technology industry.The text itself is a lesson in economy: 13 short chapters comprise The Art of War, but each is full of important lessons that teach the reader how to avoid conflict and resolve inevitable hostile situations using self-control, intelligence, courage and benevolence. Huynh s annotations alongside the translation offer practical application of Sun Tzu s philosophy.Huynh enjoys a career in finance as Group Controller for Skyline Steel in Georgia, but has been dedicated to the study of Sun Tzu s masterwork since he encountered the text as a teenager. In 1999 he launched Sonshi.com to provide Web space for authors, scholars and readers to gather and share information about Sun Tzu s timeless approach to conflict resolution.Says Huynh, Conflict is part of life, but it is our response to the disagreement that has the greatest effect on our inner peace and personal happiness. --Amy Norton Vanderbuilt Business Magazine (10/01/2008) Forget Sun Tzu, author of the immensely influential ancient Chinese book on military strategy, The Art of War. Move over Confucius, the scholar-official who remains the most prominent and respected philosopher in Chinese history.The sage in the spotlight of mainland society now is an outsider whose name may not necessarily be familiar despite cinematic exposure. Featured in the 2000 Hollywood blockbuster Gladiator, Marcus Aurelius (AD121-180) was the last of the Five Good Roman Emperors and a leading voice in stoic philosophy, which advocated accepting misfortune with virtus - toughness or character.Aurelius was a reluctant warrior and composed his classic work, Meditations, during campaigns lasting a decade from AD170. It contains a wealth of observations that reflect the stoic perspective and has one prominent admirer: Wen Jiabao. The Premier revealed last year that he had read the masterpiece almost 100 times, spawning a Marcus Aurelius craze that swept the Middle Kingdom and helped propel Meditations to the fifth place in - the admittedly government-backed - China Book International's best-seller list.Greg Sung, founder of the Hong Kong-based booklovers' network aNobii.com, observes that Wen may exert more cultural influence than a Hollywood mega-blockbuster : the portrayal of Marcus Aurelius by Richard Harris in Gladiator had less effect on book sales than the Premier's disclosure, Sung claims.Wen's fascination with the dour, long-dead Roman may stem from a sense of fellowship, according to Russell McNeil, the author of Meditations of Marcus Aurelius: Selections Annotated & Explained. History remembers Aurelius as the proverbial philosopher king. Likewise, Wen, a geologist by training, has a reputation for being a deft administrator who takes a consensual, collegiate tack.McNeil describes stoicism as thoroughly rationalistic, anchored in arguments based on physics and natural law, which means it squares with communist doctrine, which recognises no god. Better yet, stoicism has a social, even socialist, slant. It decrees that morality should be based on doing what is right for the community or the state. Personal satisfaction or happiness in stoicism does not flow from the gratification of personal desires or the avoidance of hard work or pain, McNeil says.When our actions stem from self-interest, we transgress. When we discriminate against others, we also err because, again, just like socialism, stoicism tells us we are all part of the proletariat and should treat everyone equally. The king is no better or worse than a pauper, Aurelius teaches, conjuring images of Wen in his famed plain green jacket, looking like a friendly next-door neighbour.Despite being written on the march, Meditations was multiethnic and multinational, according to McNeil, who says the true stoic rises above nationalism and sees the world as a single political entity.Sung, for his part, credits fashion for the book's success on the mainland. He says the attention may have been amplified by a general renewed interest in the work of old masters such as the cryptic poet philosopher Master Zhuang, or Zhuangzi, who famously dreamed about being a butterfly. Hugely popular television lecture programmes on philosophy, hosted by university professors, are stoking the trend, Sung says.Meditations has, moreover, won the endorsement of Bill Clinton. The former US president features it in his list of his 21 favourite books of all time, among works by the likes of George Orwell and Maya Angelou.Bonnie Girard, president of business consultancy China Channel, is another fan. Like McNeil, Girard attributes the book's popularity partly to the fact that Aurelius ranks as a thinker but not a preacher. In many ways, Girard says, he is the antithesis of a religious or spiritual leader, so in modern Chinese political terms he is safe. Girard says that Wen, the unflappable super-mandarin, as characterised by Time magazine, believes people will benefit from absorbing Aurelius' work now especially, because the mainland is in the throes of a spiritual awakening.Who better to direct the populace than a non-religious philosopher with no implied or actual affiliation to any of the world's great religions, says Girard. She paints Aurelius as a secular lightning rod with the power to help fulfil human hunger for answers to big questions.With the economic boom boosting expectations and widening the wealth gap, Aurelius' robust attitude is an inspiration, Girard adds. The Chinese respect strength, I believe, more than almost any other human characteristic. The imperial superman immortalised by a legion of bronze and marble statues showed mercy to his vanquished enemies, battled corruption and slavery and even, like an early human rights agitator, decreed that gladiators fight with blunted weapons. When his empire was short on funds, instead of raising taxes he sold his plentiful belongings.At home, Aurelius was forced to contend with everything from famine and earthquakes (which have long afflicted China too) to fires and plague. Abroad, he faced threats posed by Germanic tribes to the north and Parthians to the east. In the light of all the aggravation, few other historical figures seem so battle-tested. In case anyone doubts his gravitas, his publishers accord Aurelius the kind of reverence allotted the likes of Shakespeare and Socrates as top-tier literary greats. Penguin parades his book in its Great Ideas series devoted to writers who shook civilisation. Watkins hails it as an inspiration to the best of humanity for almost two millennia. Tarcher calls Aurelius' voice universal and equally recognisable to students of Christ, the Buddha, the Vedas, the Talmud and to anyone who sincerely searches for a way of meaning in contemporary life. Aurelius' cachet transcends boundaries of ideology and geography. How much more grievous are the consequences of anger than the causes, runs a characteristically terse Aurelius maxim.Whatever their outlook, few readers will be disappointed by his writing given its considerable clarity and punch.--Wen Jiabao ASIA SPECIFIC David Wilson South China Morning Post (09/14/2008)


Instructs us in patience, flexibility, resolve, discernment, skillful means, compassion--powerfully effective [strategies] in all our relationships, business and spiritual life. Heartily recommended to all leaders and to anyone seeking peace, deep understanding and reconciliation. --<strong>Lama Surya Das</strong>, author, <em>Awakening the Buddha Within</em></p> Practical and pragmatic guidance with brilliant insights into the text. Provides clear evidence, and a robust example, that Sun Tzu's wisdom lineage lives on today. --<strong>James Gimian</strong>, publisher, Shambhala Sun, director, Denma Translation Group, <em>The Art of War: The Denma Translation</em></p> A masterpiece.... Gives readers practical insight into the highly relevant work of Sun Tzu as it relates to peace, conflict resolution and personal growth. Clear guidance from an ancient philosopher and warrior. --<strong>Angie Morgan and Courtney Lynch</strong>, former captains, U.S. Marine Corps, and authors, <em>Leading from the Front</em></p> Engaging commentaries and clear explanations.... Captures the essence of Sun Tzu's teachings and demonstrates how [this] ancient wisdom can be applied in the modern world to achieve powerful results. --<strong>Derek Lin</strong>, author, <em>Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained</em></p>


Instructs us in patience, flexibility, resolve, discernment, skillful means, compassion--powerfully effective [strategies] in all our relationships, business and spiritual life. Heartily recommended to all leaders and to anyone seeking peace, deep understanding and reconciliation. --Lama Surya Das, author, Awakening the Buddha Within Practical and pragmatic guidance with brilliant insights into the text. Provides clear evidence, and a robust example, that Sun Tzu's wisdom lineage lives on today. --James Gimian, publisher, Shambhala Sun, director, Denma Translation Group, The Art of War: The Denma Translation A masterpiece.... Gives readers practical insight into the highly relevant work of Sun Tzu as it relates to peace, conflict resolution and personal growth. Clear guidance from an ancient philosopher and warrior. --Angie Morgan and Courtney Lynch, former captains, U.S. Marine Corps, and authors, Leading from the Front Engaging commentaries and clear explanations.... Captures the essence of Sun Tzu's teachings and demonstrates how [this] ancient wisdom can be applied in the modern world to achieve powerful results. --Derek Lin, author, Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained


Author Information

Thomas Huynh is founder of www.sonshi.com, the Web's leading and most respected resource on Sun Tzu’s The Art of War. He co-translated The Art of War with the editors at Sonshi.com. He holds an MBA from Vanderbilt University. Marc Benioff is chairman and CEO of Salesforce.com, the worldwide leader in on-demand business services. He has been a practitioner of Sun Tzu's principles for over a decade and is the coauthor of The Business of Changing the World and Compassionate Capitalism. Thomas Cleary holds a PhD in East Asian Languages and Civilizations from Harvard University and a JD from the University of California, Berkeley. He is the translator of over seventy-five volumes of classical works from seven languages.

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