FEATURE REVIEW From Art of War to Attila the Hun: A Critical Survey of Recent Works on Philosophy/Spirituality and Business Leadership Steven Heine Florida International University Introduction What is the key to decision-making and interpersonal skills that are effective and productive in this global era of cross-cultural business communications and negotia- tions? Is there something distinctive about the social values or worldview of East Asia that has led to the post–World War II economic miracle and prompted the West to study the Eastern style of conducting business? These are the main issues addressed in the recent boom in books on business strategies as well as on professional leader- ship and motivational techniques, which have proved to be a rich area of interest for comparative philosophy. Many different spiritual traditions have been mined for in- spiration and guidance in the planning of strategic maneuvers for the purpose of prevailing in a competitive marketplace and in developing human and material resources in a stressful world characterized by continual contest and conflict. It is not surprising to find religious figures from Jesus (Jones 1996) to the Buddha (Metcalf and Hateley 2001) cited as sources. But it is perhaps more unusual to find that inspiration has been gleaned from figures as diverse as the biblical heroine Queen Esther and the baseball star Yogi Berra (Berra 2003), known as the ‘‘Zennest master of all’’ for his confounding, ko ¯ an-like utterances such as ‘‘When you come to a fork in the road, take it!’’ Like another Silk Road conqueror, Genghis Khan (Weath- erford 2005), Attila the Hun has been recast in recent revisionist studies and reflections from a barbaric annihilator of civilization to a strategist/administrator extraordinaire whose deliberate methods of conquest and diplomacy presaged con- temporary advances in organizational theory. Other sources range from classical phi- losophers and modern folklorists in the West to Eastern hermits and poets, along with warriors and generals, whose approaches can be adapted to professional leadership. Although there are ample representatives of both Eastern and Western thought, perhaps the single main source of practical advice has been the ‘‘Art of War’’ thought of Sun Tzu and extensions of this in various approaches ranging from the ‘‘Thirty-six Stratagems’’ to sword-fighting. It has been said that The Book of Five Rings (Miyamoto 1993), which, like Sun Tzu’s text (Ames 1993), appears in trans- lated renditions and commentaries too numerous to count, has for several decades been required reading at business schools as well as military academies. The Art of War is especially useful in prescribing strategic methods of deception and indirec- tion to achieve victory on the battlefield, and this material is frequently consulted 126 Philosophy East & West Volume 58, Number 1 January 2008 126–143 > 2008 by University of Hawai‘i Press