'Giving' and its psychological and social effects on Thai communities

The act of 'giving', a positive-universal act, linguistically involves three main participants: a donor, a theme, and a recipient. In Thailand, Buddhists view the act of 'giving' as the fundamental religious practice, before keeping the five precepts and cultivating one's mi...

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Main Author: Rungpat Roengpitya
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Article
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/19906
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spelling th-mahidol.199062018-07-12T09:53:29Z 'Giving' and its psychological and social effects on Thai communities Rungpat Roengpitya Mahidol University University of California, Berkeley Social Sciences The act of 'giving', a positive-universal act, linguistically involves three main participants: a donor, a theme, and a recipient. In Thailand, Buddhists view the act of 'giving' as the fundamental religious practice, before keeping the five precepts and cultivating one's mind. Moreover, Buddhists as donors believe in gaining the so-called 'bun' or merit back after conducting the act of giving, while, as recipients, they are taught to feel gratitude and to find ways to return to donors. Thus, the act of 'giving' is a reciprocal act, which yields benefits to all those who are involved in this act, and their communities. This paper examines the psychological effects of various 'giving' acts and forms on Buddhist donors' and recipients' beliefs and their states of mind; the reciprocal relationship between donors and recipients; and the social and economic impact of their act of 'giving' on involved institutions such as temples and communities. The results from questionnaires and interviews of this paper show the advantages of this 'giving' act that it greatly strengthens physical-mental health of donors and recipients and binds the mutual relationship amongst members in their communities. If this giving act is conducted by people across the globe, this 'giving' act will function as a bridge toward the world peace. © Common Ground, Rungpat Roengpitya. 2018-07-12T02:53:29Z 2018-07-12T02:53:29Z 2008-12-01 Article International Journal of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences. Vol.3, No.7 (2008), 59-69 18331882 2-s2.0-79961244062 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/19906 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=79961244062&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Social Sciences
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Rungpat Roengpitya
'Giving' and its psychological and social effects on Thai communities
description The act of 'giving', a positive-universal act, linguistically involves three main participants: a donor, a theme, and a recipient. In Thailand, Buddhists view the act of 'giving' as the fundamental religious practice, before keeping the five precepts and cultivating one's mind. Moreover, Buddhists as donors believe in gaining the so-called 'bun' or merit back after conducting the act of giving, while, as recipients, they are taught to feel gratitude and to find ways to return to donors. Thus, the act of 'giving' is a reciprocal act, which yields benefits to all those who are involved in this act, and their communities. This paper examines the psychological effects of various 'giving' acts and forms on Buddhist donors' and recipients' beliefs and their states of mind; the reciprocal relationship between donors and recipients; and the social and economic impact of their act of 'giving' on involved institutions such as temples and communities. The results from questionnaires and interviews of this paper show the advantages of this 'giving' act that it greatly strengthens physical-mental health of donors and recipients and binds the mutual relationship amongst members in their communities. If this giving act is conducted by people across the globe, this 'giving' act will function as a bridge toward the world peace. © Common Ground, Rungpat Roengpitya.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
Rungpat Roengpitya
format Article
author Rungpat Roengpitya
author_sort Rungpat Roengpitya
title 'Giving' and its psychological and social effects on Thai communities
title_short 'Giving' and its psychological and social effects on Thai communities
title_full 'Giving' and its psychological and social effects on Thai communities
title_fullStr 'Giving' and its psychological and social effects on Thai communities
title_full_unstemmed 'Giving' and its psychological and social effects on Thai communities
title_sort 'giving' and its psychological and social effects on thai communities
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/19906
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