The discussion of ethics, emotional health and meaningful work has never been so urgent in a fast-moving economic transformation and growing pressures of professional life in modern Vietnam. Drawing on the ancient lineages of Theravāda and Mahāyāna Buddhism, Vietnamese Buddhism provides a rich and ambivalent site by which to engage with these foundational questions through the synthesis of attention-based insight with ethical life. This paper is a deep focus on Vipassanā meditation as one of the main elements of applied Buddhism, within the philosophical-sociological perspectives of professional life and working ethical in Vietnam. Through canonical Buddhist texts, concise reference to modern Buddhist scholarship and established ethical theory the dissertation argues that Vipassanā is central to professional metamorphosis. This is achieved through the cultivation of mindfulness, equanimity, and an understanding of the truths of impermanence, oneself and dependent arising. Those only a few qualities greatly improve the attentional regulation, emotional balance, ethical discernment and relate in a more compassionate way with people around you at your work place. Unlike secular mindfulness variants in which meditation is often instrumentalized purely for the purpose of enhancing productivity, Vipassanā is investigated here as an ethically oriented practice that fundamentally transforms one's aims and understanding of moral responsibility. In framing Vipassanā meditation within the context of Vietnamese Buddhist traditions and the wider discourse concerning engaged and applied Buddhism, this article is a welcome intervention in international Buddhist studies. It provides a culturally situated model that sees professional life as more than just a set of economic transactions; it’s an area where ethical and contemplative practice have great potential. To sum up, this study contends that Vipassanā meditation serves as an effective and relevant Buddhist platform for integrating work, ethics, and liberation into the matrix of modern civilization influencing a holistic construction of professional life.
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LE HONG LINH
NGUYEN THI NHIEN TRANG
Acharya Nagarjuna University
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LINH et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d893406c1944d70ce04401 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.56975/ijvra.v4i4.703514
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