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Presentations

Responsible Leadership and Reasonable Action

    On April 23, 2013 Laszlo Zsolnai gave a faculty presentation on Responsible Leadership and Reasonable Action at the Jepson School of Leadership Studies, University of Richmond, Virginia, USA. In his presentation entitled “Responsible Leadership and Reasonable Action” he argued that business leadership should pass the test of ecology, future generations and society. It means that responsible leadership seeks holistic value creation, i.e. achieving the goals of organizations or communities in ecological, future respecting and pro-social ways… Read More »Responsible Leadership and Reasonable Action

    Ecological Sustainability and Collaborative Business

      Laszlo Zsolnai was lecturing on  Ecological Sustainability and Collaborative Business at the Business Beyond Tomorrow conference organized by the John Molson School of Business, Concordia University in Montreal on Marh 15, 2013.  A related video was produced with him on the importance of changing the self-interest doctrine of our time. Ecological Sustainability and Collaborative Business

      Materialistic versus Non-materialistic Management

        Laszlo Zsolnai gave a presentation on Materialistic versus Non-materialistic Management in the TransAtlantic Business Ethics Conference in October 19-20, 2012 at the Norwegian School of Economics (NHH) in Bergen, Norway. He argued that the materialistic management model cannot produce true well-being for people but actually undermines it. By advocating economic action on the basis of money-making and justifying its success by generating profit the materialistic model encourages irresponsible behavior of economic actors toward others, contributes… Read More »Materialistic versus Non-materialistic Management

        Spirituality and Business – Implications for Sustainability

          Laszlo Zsolnai gave a presentation on “Spirituality and Business – Implications for Sustainability” in the faculty workshop of the Institute of Management, Vienna University of Economics on October 9, 2012. He argued that achieving sustainability actors should consider the whole persons and the whole systems, give priority to intrinsic motivation, orient themselves toward the common good, and measure success in multi-dimensional, holistic way. Zsolnai also empahisized that materialistic value orientation destroys material values, including nature.… Read More »Spirituality and Business – Implications for Sustainability

          The Market Disclosure of Being

            Laszlo Zsolnai gave a key-note lecture entitled “The Market Disclosure of Being – A Heideggerian Approach to Business” in the Spirituality and Sustainability: New Path to Entrepreneurship international conference in September 21-23, 2012 in Visegrad, Hungary. He argued that despite of Heidegger’s warning not modern technology but modern-day business destroys Being and beings. With its exclusive focus on profit-making modern-day business tends to violate the integrity and diversity of natural ecosystems, the autonomy and culture of local… Read More »The Market Disclosure of Being

            Ecological Sustainability and Collaborative Business

              On May 23, 2012 Laszlo Zsolnai gave a lecture on Ecological Sustainability and Collaborative Business at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, University of Oxford. He showed that the competitive mainstream business model is not compatible with ecological sustainability. He argued that the collaborative business model fits better in ecological sustainability. If we want to get closer to a sustainable world we need to generate virtuous circles where good dispositions, good behaviour and good… Read More »Ecological Sustainability and Collaborative Business

              Spirituality and Business

                On May 14, 2012 Laszlo Zsolnai gave a presentation on Spirituality & Business at Lord Ashcroft International Business School in Cambridge. He presented the Palgrave Handbook of Spirituality and Business what he edited with Luk Bouckaert. The main conclusion was that materialistic management models are based on egoistic motivation and measure success in money terms only while  spiritually oriented enterprises are intrinsically motivated to serve the common good and measure success in multi-dimensional terms. Spirituality and Business… Read More »Spirituality and Business

                The Importance of Meta-Economics

                  Laszlo Zsolnai was keynote speaker at conference “Responsibility in Ecopnomics – The Legacy of E.F. Schumacher” in 22-23 September 2011, in Antwerp, Belgium. His presentation was entitled “The Importnce of Meta-economics”. Meta-economics is the basic assumptions about the subject-matter, value-orientation and methodology of economics.  Zsolnai’s paper reconstructs the meta-economic foundation of mainstream economics and that of alternative economics initiated by E.F. Schumacher. It shows how the emerging alternative economics transcends the erroneous meta-economic assumptions of… Read More »The Importance of Meta-Economics

                  The Ethics of Systems Thinking

                    On August 9th, 2011 an international workshop “Responsibility, Deep Ecology and the Self” was held in honor of Professor Knut J. Ims on his 60th anniversary at the Norwegian School of Economics in Bergen, Norway. Laszlo Zsolnai gave his lecture under the title “The Ethics of Systems Thinking”. He argued that the Richness of Being can be preserved if we take the whole system view and use multidimensional decision making methodologies to evaluate the ecological,… Read More »The Ethics of Systems Thinking

                    Collaborative Business

                      Laszlo Zsolnai gave a lecture on Collaborative Business at the Transatlantic Doctoral Academy on Corporate Responsibility (TADA) at the University of St. Gallen in May 3, 2011. Nearly 30 PhD students from Germany, Canada and Switzerland participated in the program. Zsolnai presented the collaboratrive business framework  which fosters virtuous circles between companies and their stakehoders where good dispositions, good behaviour and good expectations reinforce one another. Collaborative Business