Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
₹195.00
This is one of the series of theme books compiled from the talks, writings, and dialogues of J.Krishnamurti. Some of the other titles in this series are On God, On Relationship, On Freedom, On Love and Loneliness, and On Living and Dying.
“Can a human being totally eradicate fear? Can we do anything, or nothing? The nothing does not mean that we accept fear, rationalize it, and live with it; that’s not the inaction of which we are talking. We have done everything we can with regard to fear. We have analysed it, gone into it, tried to face it, come into contact with it, resist it, done everything possible, and the thing remains. Is it possible to be aware of it totally, not merely intellectually, emotionally, but be completely aware of it, and yet not do something about it.”
Related products
-
₹190.00Quick View
This Study Book features statements on this theme from Krishnamurti’s talks and discussions held between 1933 and 1967. It is a compilation of excerpts from his talks on the subject of Choiceless Awareness, a term he coined to direct our attention to a perception that is not involved with the thought/choosing process. This is a fine study book for those interested in getting to the heart of what Krishnamurti was communicating in terms of observation…
-
₹150.00Quick View
In the problem is the solution consists of the fourteen Question and Answer Meetings that J. Krishnamurti (1895-1986) held in India between 1981 and 1985 in Madras, Bombay, and Varanasi. The Questions themselves are impressive in the range of themes they cover: the outward problems of poverty, corruption, and the decline of values in India; and the individual and collective apathy towards these; the conflicts prevailing in all societies; the general degeneration of man despite his…
-
₹195.00Quick View
Krishnamurti teaches that the war and destruction human beings wreak on each other and the environment are caused by our misplaced attachment to a sense of self and individuality that leads to aggression, competition, greed, and conflict. When we recognize that our consciousness is not individual but common to all human beings, we can work together in a spirit of cooperation and compassion. Krishnamurti shows that taking personal responsibility for our actions and reactions, in…
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.