1. To look without a concept is to be aware of the observer and the thing observed - 20 May 1967 Duration: 88 minutes • Violence and sorrow are not limited to the West or the East; it is part of the human structure, psychologically. • Is it possible to bring about a change radically, a total revolution in the psyche itself, not through time? • The first and last freedom is when the mind is totally free from concepts and the mechanical process of building a formula. • It is an art to look, which is much more important than any art in the world, any painting, music or book; because when we can look so totally and completely, being directly in contact, there is an ending. • Q: If one has cancer, how can one be free from death? 2. Where there is pleasure there is the shadow of pain - 21 May 1967 Duration: 83 minutes • The whole movement of living, which is relationship, is a movement in action. • What is consciousness? When do you say, 'I am conscious, I am aware, I am attentive'? • Is there actually a division between the conscious and the unconscious, or it is a total movement, operating all the time? • The mind that pursues pleasure must inevitably invite its opposite, which is pain. The two go together; they are not separate. • You cannot see totally when you are making effort. • Q: If you love your own child, your attention to your child is fairly complete, but if you are a teacher you cannot give attention to all the students. 3. Is it possible to renew the mind? - 24 May 1967 Duration: 81 minutes • When the mind is living through imagination and thought, it is incapable of living in the complete fullness of the present. • Thought has created time, not chronological time but psychological time. That is, 'I will be,' 'I should be.' • Is it possible for the brain to be quiet, to give an interval between the old and the new? This interval is the timeless nature in which thought cannot possibly enter. • That which has continuity is repetitive, which is time. It's only when time comes to an end there is something new taking place. • To die every day to every problem, every pleasure, and not carry over any problem at all; so the mind remains tremendously attentive, active, clear. • Since love is not desire or pleasure, how does one come upon it? • Q: Is the feeling of responsibility a part of the order and discipline you were talking about? • Q: Why don't people get angry with what you are saying? 4. Can thought stop? - 28 May 1967 Duration: 72 minutes • When there is a process of recognition it is the projection of the past. The mind is always functioning within the field of time, which is of memory. Can the mind go beyond that? • What is pleasure and what is desire? • How is it possible, without control, subjugation or denying, for thought not to allow itself to interfere? • When all authority of every kind is put aside, denied, then you can find out for yourself. • When you are completely attentive, you see. It is only love that sees - not thought, the mind or the intellect. One has to learn how to look, how to hear. • Q: Could you distinguish between what you mean by the word 'recognizing' and 'being aware'? • Q: How is one to break off a concept that one has carefully built? 5. It is only a very silent mind that can actually see - 30 May 1967 Duration: 82 minutes • Conflict exists only when there are two opposing things: fear and non-fear, violence and non-violence. • A mind that is in a state of inquiry is entirely different from a mind that is seeking. Seeking implies effort, conformity, authority and therefore conflict. • Without space in which there is no boundary, the mind is incapable of coming upon immeasurable reality. • It is only a silent mind that can perceive, actually see, not a chattering mind, a controlled mind, a mind that is tortured, suppressed, yielding or indulging.
One sees or understands only when the mind is quiet. : Eight Public Meetings - Amsterdam The Netherlands 1967
Aloita tämä kirja jo tänään, hintaan 0€
- Kokeilujakson aikana käytössäsi on kaikki sovelluksen kirjat
- Ei sitoumusta, voit perua milloin vain
Kirjailija:
Lukija:
Kieli:
englanti
Muoto:

Nietzsche's The Birth of Tragedy
Friedrich Nietzsche
audiobook
The Art of Controversy : The Art of Being Right
Arthur Schopenhauer
audiobook
Bright Not Broken
Rebecca S. Banks, Temple Grandin, Diane M. Kennedy
audiobook
Classic Philosophical Works (Thus Spoke Zarathustra, The Apology of Socrates, Tao Te Ching...)
Plato, Friedrich Nietzsche, Herman Hesse, Leo Tolstoy, Immanuel Kant, Sun Tzu
audiobook
Beyond Good and Evil
Friedrich Nietzsche
audiobookbookThe Ultimate Introduction to NLP: How to build a successful life
Richard Bandler, Alessio Roberti, Owen Fitzpatrick
audiobook
How to Be a Patriot : Why love of country can end our very British culture war
audiobook
What the Greeks Did for Us
Tony Spawforth
audiobook
Tory Nation : The Dark Legacy of the World's Most Successful Political Party
Samuel Earle
audiobookbook
The Global in the Local
Xin Zhang
audiobook
Rome
James Lacey
audiobook
Völsungasagan
Katarina Harrison Lindbergh
audiobookbook

Elämän kauneus : Päiväkirjat 1973-1981
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobook
Ajattelun tuolle puolen
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobook
Havaintoja : Päiväkirjamerkintöjä
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobook
Can thought become quiet? : Nine Public Meetings Amsterdam 1968
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobook
Self-knowledge is the beginning of wisdom : Fourteen Public Meetings, Ojai, USA, 1949
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobook
The mind in the universe : Brockwood Park 1980 - Dialogue 14
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobook
Learning is action : Claremont 1968 - Students Discussion 2
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobook
A los Pies del Maestro
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobookbook
Pourquoi avons-nous peur ?
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobook
The Awakening of Intelligence
Jiddu Krishnamurti
audiobook
Qué es la meditación
Jiddu Krishnamurti
book
La revolución interior : Transformar el mundo
Jiddu Krishnamurti
book
