Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
₹295.00
This book consists of the talks Krishnamurti gave in New Delhi, Madras, Bangalore, and Bombay between December 1970 and February 1971. The title is a summing up of many of his statements that form the common theme of these series of talks.
“The First step is the last step. The first step is to perceive – perceive what you are thinking, perceive your ambition, perceive your anxiety, your loneliness, your despair, this extraordinary sense of sorrow. Perceive it without any condemnation,justification, without wishing it to be different, just perceive it as it is. When you perceive it as it is, then there is a totally different kind of action taking place, and that action is the final action. That is when you perceive something as being false or as being true, that perception is the final action, which is the final step.” – J. Krishnamurti
For those who have gone seriously into Krishnamurti’s teachings, this book offers strikingly new perspectives on man’s ancient quest for self-knowledge.
Related products
-
₹195.00Quick View
If ever we are to understand ourselves, says Krishnamurti, we must look at the state of the world, with all its violence and conflict. To turn away from world events is for him not to be alive to what life has to teach us. Facing a World in Crisis presents a selection of talks thatKrishnamurti gave on how to live and respond to troubling and uncertain times. His message of personal responsibility and the importance of…
-
₹195.00Quick View
Authentic reports of 12 talks and discussions held in 1969 in London, Amsterdam, Paris, and Saanen in Switzerland. “The solution of a problem lies in the understanding of the problem; the answer is not outside the problem, it is in the problem. One cannot look at the problem very clearly if one is concerned with the answer, with the solution. Most of us are so eager to resolve the problem without looking into it,” says…
-
₹250.00Quick View
The Revolution from Within is the second in the series titled `Selections from the Decades’ and consists of twenty-three public talks that Krishnamurti gave between 1952 and 1959. Whereas in the 1940s, Krishnamurti had to address a variety of contemporary social and political issues, here his focus is primarily, if not solely, on a radical change in the mind and heart of every human being. What brings about such a change is not knowledge or…
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.