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Leadership & the Tao: A new look at the timeless question "What is Leadership?"

Leadership & the Tao: A new look at the timeless question "What is Leadership?"

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What if the most profound leadership manual ever written was composed not in a modern business school but on the back of a water buffalo, by a keeper of ancient archives, sometime around 3,500 years ago? What if that slender volume - the Tao Te Ching - contained, encoded within its spare, elliptical verses, a complete philosophy of influence, self-mastery, and visionary leadership that makes most contemporary management texts look shallow by comparison?

That is the bold and carefully argued proposition at the heart of Leadership & the Tao, by Dr David Tuffley - scholar, translator of the Tao Te Ching, and a PhD researcher who spent years probing the deepest questions of leadership through the combined lens of ancient Eastern wisdom and modern Western psychology.

The book begins with a deceptively simple observation: despite centuries of scholarship, there is still no agreed definition of what leadership actually is. Tuffley suggests the reason is that we have been looking in the wrong places - at behaviors rather than at the underlying human qualities from which those behaviors flow. Leadership, he argues, cannot be directly observed. It can only be inferred from what it produces in the world. To understand it, we must go beneath the surface of personality and competency frameworks and locate the timeless human traits that generate it.

That search leads inexorably to the Tao. Lao Tzu's masterwork, Tuffley reveals, is not a spiritual text in the conventional sense - it is a manual for those who would help create a better world. Its teachings on non-interference, subtle influence, humility, strategic non-action, and alignment with the patterns of Nature map, with astonishing precision, onto the findings of modern leadership research. The Tao Te Ching was, it turns out, always a leadership book; it simply took a few millennia for the rest of us to catch up.

Tuffley takes the reader on a journey through four distinct dimensions of the Tao's application to leadership: becoming more conscious, cultivating oneself, leading others, and influencing group dynamics. Along the way, he explores the power of gravitas without ego, the wisdom of governing like someone cooking a small fish - gently, without over-stirring - and the paradox that the most effective leaders are often those who appear to do the least.

But this is no mere philosophical exercise. The book also surveys the modern leadership literature with scholarly rigour, mapping concepts such as transformational versus transactional leadership, distributed leadership models, and the unique challenges of leading knowledge workers and virtual teams. The Sloan School of Management's distributed leadership model - with its four capacities of sense-making, relating, visioning, and inventing - finds its ancient counterpart in Lao Tzu's prescriptions.

Then comes perhaps the book's most original contribution: the connection between leadership and Abraham Maslow's concept of self-actualisation. Tuffley argues that what we recognise as leadership in others is, at its core, the visible expression of a person moving towards their highest potential - someone living with full awareness, radical honesty, genuine purpose, and the courage to remain independent of the crowd. Leadership, in this reading, is not a role you are given; it is a quality of being you earn, slowly, through the work of becoming more fully yourself.

Evolutionary psychology provides the final key. Our Pleistocene instincts - the ego's compulsive need to dominate, to hoard, to compete - were once survival mechanisms. In the modern world, they are leadership liabilities. The path to effective leadership runs directly through the conscious transcendence of our ancient programming.


Author: David Tuffley
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Published: 11/02/2010
Pages: 100
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.28lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.50w x 0.21d
ISBN: 9781456302412

About the Author
David Tuffley PhD brings the wisdom of the ages to bear on the timeless question "What is Leadership?". He examines Leadership as understood by Lao Tzu in his ancient text, the Tao Te Ching, the oldest book still in print; a book which gains its longevity from the simple but profound truths revealed in it. In this book, David translates these ideas into plain English that is readily understood by people today. David also brings perspectives from Social and Evolutionary Psychology to make this a truly unique and worthwhile new look at the timeless question of "What is Leadership?"

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