Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
₹200.00
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. For those who wish to delve into the processes of self-knowing, this would be an invaluable book.
Related products
-
₹350.00Quick View
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…
-
₹595.00Quick View
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…
-
₹295.00Quick View
This Book consists of six discussion that Krishnamurti had with teachers of Rajghat Besant School and Rishi Valley School in 1984. It may be regarded as an introduction to his vision of education for those who, seeing the collapse of educational systems in the modern world, feel therefore the importance of their being teachers of a different kind. Throughout his life Krishnamurti maintained that teachers had a special responsibility in that they had to nurture…
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.