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What Ancient Greece and India Can Teach CEOs About Leading in an Age of AI and Uncertainty

  • Writer: Leo Bottary
    Leo Bottary
  • 3 days ago
  • 1 min read

Modern CEOs are navigating one of the most disruptive periods in business history. Artificial intelligence is transforming workflows, industries are evolving overnight, employees are rethinking the meaning of work, and organizations are struggling to maintain trust, alignment, and adaptability amid constant change.

At the same time, leaders are facing a quieter yet equally important challenge: information is expanding faster than wisdom.


That is one reason Between Olympus and the Ganges: How Greece and India Shaped the Modern Mind by Prof. Dr. Amarendra Bhushan Dhiraj feels so timely. The book explores how two great civilizations approached understanding the world and humanity’s place in it. While Greece emphasized logic, rational inquiry, and observation of the external world, India often looked inward, exploring consciousness, self-awareness, interconnectedness, harmony, and the deeper dimensions of existence.


Although separated by geography and culture, both traditions sought the same goal: a deeper understanding of truth.

Today’s CEOs need both perspectives more than ever. For the full story, click here:


 
 
 

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