Visual from class.
Friday, November 20, 2020
Monday, October 26, 2020
To not be too proud to be strong
Learnings on a Monday morning
"Don't be afraid to be weak" (check, this I've learned years back!)
but
I've always wondered what it means to " not be too proud to be strong".
I think I'm learning!
Return to Innocence by Enigma
LoveDevotion
Emotion
Don't be too proud to be strong
Just look into your heart my friend
That will be the return to yourself
The return to innocence
The return to innocence
And if you want, then start to laugh
If you must, then start to cry
Be yourself don't hide
Just believe in destiny
Don't care what people say
Just follow your own way
Don't give up and use the chance
To return to innocence
That's not the beginning of the end
That's the return to yourself
The return to innocence
That's return to innocence
Writings 2020 and 2017. Much can be built "from the grassroots up"
(2020) Towards a New Bretton Woods Moment
A podcast, in-between business and academia, found a name today - "Castles in the Air"! Refers to International Relations scholar Hedley Bull's thinking that without stable understandings between the major powers on how to conduct their mutual relations, international organizations are like castles in the air (unrealistic dreams). For him, stability is like sand.
Q: Within the trade war tensions of today, could UNDP coordination of global SDG Finance create new "sand of stability"? Could the scaling up of investments into companies that link their businesses with the UN 2030 sustainable development goals create cohesion and further peace? I believe so! In the words of IMF Director Kristalina Georgieva:"We can do better than build back the pre-pandemic world – we can build forward to a world that is more resilient, sustainable, and inclusive. We must seize this new Bretton Woods moment."
important that we treasure togetherness.
be built "from the grassroots up".
individual blossoms. And a grand key to our
flourish, is, simply, connection. The human
connection! The social impact project which
sprang from this blog has arranged thematic
tea tastings, and other community events over
the past seven years. We have documented
events as has been possible.
R&D center for the mother company. We are happy to
say that we have been applying our learnings to our
adventures in the Wild Wild...East.
onwards and upwards! Change.
Friday, August 28, 2020
Study note of the Day
Surprisingly, my political science thesis topic - and the study of Eastern and Western dialectics within it (key theme related to contradiction management, an approach I use to assess China) - takes me back to the theme of dialogue between religions, within which I worked a few years ago in a research assistant role. I have an ongoing dialogue between the taoist roots of Eastern dialectics, virtue and Christ. Thankfully, I can always turn to Dr. Huang for advice :)
"Dialectical logic has its roots in Taoism and is a perspective that embraces paradox and contradiction as the very vehicle through which positive change and growth can occur (Palich et al 2002). Following this logic, change is obtained by the tension between two opposing forces while the absence of this tension results in a lack of evolution. That is why the resolution of contradictions is not consistent with evolution and thus the Chinese spend more time discovering complexities than trying to reduce them"
-Karsaklian, 2016 (343)
Thursday, August 27, 2020
Tuesday, August 18, 2020
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Vierailu Teekauppiaalla
Uutta teesatoa Japanista
Teimme myös ostoksia. Tai ystäväni teki ostoksia ja minä sain lahjan. Huikeaa Taiwanin Da Yu Ling - teetä! Olin sanaton. Lämmin kiitos.
Kiitos myös teekauppias Mikko Nygrenille hyvästä seurasta ja teehetki elämyksestä! Tiedänkin jo, mitä teetä seuraavaksi Kaisaniemen Old Teashopin valikoimasta hankin: "Kultainen Miekka" keltaista teetä. Sitten jotain hyvää Assamia, jonka jälkeen valkoista teetä. Tai Yunnan Green?
Thursday, July 23, 2020
Saturday, June 20, 2020
Monday, May 11, 2020
Very excited about this! Material for thesis
The COVID-19 pandemic has inspired businesses to accelerate their sustainability efforts as they navigate a new world. Businesses that have already begun their sustainability journeys are emerging better prepared and more resilient. Despite the difficulty caused by the pandemic, it has provided an opportunity for corporations, startups, NGOs, government, and civil society to focus on responsibility and sustainability as they prepare for the future
Thursday, May 7, 2020
Monday, March 30, 2020
Sunday, March 29, 2020
Keynes on the reform of capitalism (notes for school)
"As Chick and Dow (2013) have recently maintained, Keynes sees not only love of money, but the criterion of profit itself, as a problematic issue of capitalism...
Keynes saw capitalism as an economically efficient system—or, more precisely, an ‘indispensable’ (JMK/A/2/6; also reported in O’Donnell, 1992, p. 809) economic system that has to be efficient—which is however ‘morally objectionable’ (ibid.). His critique rests on the concept of money fetishism. The problems raised by capitalism, in this vision, have to do with the instincts it tends to promote, that obstruct the way towards the resolution of the economic problem. Capitalism is in fact primarily responsible, in positive, for our coming gradually but incessantly closer to a destiny of abundance and leisure. But it is also profoundly unjust, in Keynes’s vision, and causes bad instincts like the ‘sanctification of saving’ and the tendency to ‘sacrifice the present to the future’ without being sure that the exchange is worthwhile (reported in Skidelsky, 1992, p. 21)...".
A society that is solving the economic problem requires, in Keynes’s view, a new, ‘religious attitude to life’ (to use Skidelsky’s words), one built around new values. Can capitalism survive Keynes’s desired revolution in values? Liberal in character, Keynes’s desired society is inspired to a new form of socialism, as O’Donnell (1992) rightly points out. ‘Keynes’s general position was that socialism should follow the example of liberalism in modifying its ideas and policies to adapt to changed historical conditions’ (ibid., p. 782). A ‘practical’ (CW 20, p. 475), pragmatic socialism, a form of ‘liberal socialism’ (CW 21, p. 500) with new, revolutionary values—knowing that the transition from the old to the new society might be ‘catastrophic’ (‘An Examination of Capitalism’, JMK/A/2/3; also reported in O’Donnell, 1992, p. 808).
Source:
Anna M Carabelli, Mario A Cedrini, Great Expectations and Final Disillusionment: Keynes, ‘‘My Early Beliefs’’ and the Ultimate Values of Capitalism, Cambridge Journal of Economics, Volume 42, Issue 5, September 2018, Pages 1183–1204, https://doi.org/10.1093/cje/bey017
Thursday, March 26, 2020
Think tanking over the years
2014 |
Our Slush Helsinki 2016 Tech & Flourish Side Event, with very special guest Dr. Arto Salonen |
2018 |
2015 |