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These discussions between a great religious teacher and a leading physicist ask the question: “Has humanity taken a wrong turn which has brought about endless division, conflict and destruction?” Krishnamurti suggests that the wrong turn lies in our inability to face what we actually are and our need to impose instead an illusory goal of what we must become.
The heart of the discussions therefore rests in our ideas about ourselves, about the ‘me’. Krishnamurti sees the nature of man’s thought as self-centred, confused and ultimately destructive, and maintains that the only way to free ourselves is through insight that goes beyond normal perceptions. This insight is achieved only be a mind that is silent, empty of thought and capable of moment-by-moment awareness.
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You raised a question: What is sacred? Without finding that, without coming upon it—not you finding it—without that coming into being, you cannot have a new culture, you cannot have a new human quality. This remarkable statement dispels the widespread but erroneous notion that Krishnamurti was not a religious teacher but only a rational thinker or a modern intellectual. Over the years, in different contexts and in different words, he kept pointing out that man,…
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