BUSINESS ETHICS: A REVIEW OF IMPORTANT VALUES IN THE BUDDHIST PERSPECTIVE
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24034/icobuss.v3i1.353Abstract
This article approaches the Buddhist moral (sila) to business ethics, with moral values of innate sense of moral dread and shame (hiri-ottappa) as the basis for doing business. Buddhist philosophy originates with the teachings of the Buddha (588 BCE). Every human has free will to think, speak, and act ethically by undoing evil, cultivating goodness, and purifying the mind as the core of the Buddha Dharma. This literature review emphasizes Buddhist virtues with a naturalist focus, the value of compassion for all life; humanist, human values; and altruist, caring values to benefit others. The impact of these values (Tzu Kuang, 2015) is called the ten globally shared, which are build upon the equality and dignity of humanity by mutual co-existence, the honor, riches, joy, serenity, awakening, ownership, achievements; prosperity and success are shared mutual.