Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
₹350.00
These 18 dialogues of Krishnamurti with Prof. Allan W Anderson of San Diego State University took place in 1974. Each dialogue covers one aspect or a problem of human existence. Krishnamurti indicates that pinning our hopes on organized religion, science, political ideology or the market economy not only fails to address the basic human problems but actually creates them. The way out of our difficulties, Krishnamurti states, can start only in the mind of each one of us, in an awareness of the way we actually perceive life, ourselves and others.
Related products
-
₹450.00Quick View
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,…
-
₹250.00Quick View
Many have considered Buddhism to be the religion closest in sprit to J.Krishnamurti’s spiritual teaching– even though the great teacher was famous for urging students to seek truth outside organized religion. This record of an historic encounter between Krishnamurti and a group of Buddhist scholars provides a unique opportunity to see what the great teacher had to say himself about Buddhist teachings. The conversations, which took place at Brockwood Park in England in the late…
-
₹200.00Quick View
This book consists of fourteen out of the several dialogues that Krishnamurti held in the 1970s with his close associates, scholars, religious seekers, and others interested in inquiring into existential issues. These dialogues are not questions or answers or even an exchange of viewpoints. They form a new genre of communication typical of Krishnamurti—a tentative beginning, deep listening, a refusal to arrive at quick solutions, and an exploration that leads to newer and deeper perceptions.…
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.