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Showing 25–36 of 92 results

  • 250.00

    Happy is the Man who is Nothing: Between 1948 and the early 1960s, Krishnamurti was easily accessible, and many people came to him. On walks, in personal meetings, through letters, the relationships blossomed. He wrote the following letters to a young friend who came to him wounded in body and mind. The letters, written between June 1948 and March 1960, reveal a rare compassion and clarity: the teaching and healing unfold; separation and distance disappear;…

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  • 150.00

    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…

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  • 195.00

    This book is the outcome of talks and discussions held by J Krishnamurti with the students and teachers of Rishi Valley School in Andhra Pradesh and Rajghat Besant School in Varanasi. Krishnamurti regards education as of prime significance in the communication of that which is central to the transformation of the human mind and the creation of a new culture. As the topics in these stimulating talks and discussions reveal, he questions the very roots…

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  • 225.00

    This book is unique in that it is the only one of Krishnamurti’s publications which records words spoken into a tape-recorder. The reader gets very close to Krishnamurti in these pieces, almost it seems at moments, into his very consciousness.  In a few of them he introduces an imaginary visitor who comes to question him. The gist of his teaching is here, and the descriptions of nature with which he begins most of the pieces may,…

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  • 195.00

    This book can be regarded as a companion to ‘Krishnamurti’s Note books’ and ‘Krishnamurti to Himself’. In September 1973 Krishnamurti suddenly started keeping a journal. He made daily entries into a notebook, first while staying at Brockwood Park in Hampshire, England and then in Rome and California. Nearly every entry starts with a vivid description of some natural scene which serves as a backdrop for his reflections on the human predicament and man’s ancient quest…

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  • 350.00

    “I wrote it (Krishnamurti’s Notebook) as a diary while I was traveling…but I did not write it for publication. I describe what I call the process-my sensation of being outside the ordinary world, of being completely at peace and removed from conflict. This happens only from time to time and clearly it is impossible to describe to anybody who has not experienced it.” “But I have attempted to put into words the actual pain and…

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  • 250.00

    As the title suggests, this book is addressed to young people, and is the first collection of Krishnamurti’s talks to students, teachers and parents. An Introduction by Krishnamurti focuses on his main concerns in education. The book covers a wide range of themes – the danger of competition which, breeding fear, prevents the mind from being fully receptive to experience; the value of solitude’; and the difference between concentration and attention.

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  • 80.00

    Magnitude of the Mind -The whole story of mankind is in you – the vast experiences, the deep-rooted fears, anxieties, sorrow, pleasure, and all the beliefs that man has accumulated throughout millennia. You are that book, and it is an art to read that book. So says Krishnamurti in this series of talks, reiterating his basic insight that what is important for a human being is to read the book of his own life, its…

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  • 450.00

    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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  • 150.00

    This classic collection of brief excerpts from J Krishnmurti’s talk and writings presents the essence of his teaching on meditation – a state of attention, beyond thought, which brings total freedom from all the conflict, fear and sorrow that form the content of human consciousness. This enlarged edition features even more of the great teacher’s sayings than the original version, including some never-before published material.

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  • 250.00

    “We have spent a great deal of energy in attempts to solve our problems – intellectual energy, emotional energy, physical energy – and all this energy… has not in any way resolved our human psychological problems. We are concerned to find out if there is a different kind of energy which will, if we can tap it, resolve our problems.” – says Krishnamurti in this book. The contents of Meeting Life has been taken from…

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