Krishnamurti: Reflections on the Self

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Krishnamurti: Reflections on the Self

Krishnamurti: Reflections on the Self


Krishnamurti: Reflections on the Self


Download PDF Krishnamurti: Reflections on the Self

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Krishnamurti: Reflections on the Self

Described by the Dalai Lama as "one of the greatest thinkers of the age", Jiddu Krishnamurti has influenced millions throughout the 20th century, including Aldous Huxley, Bertrand Russell, Henry Miller and Joseph Campbell.

Born of middle-class Brahmin parents in 1895, Krishnamurti was recognized at age fourteen by theosophists Annie Besant and C W Leadbetter as an anticipated world teacher and proclaimed to be the vehicle for the reincarnation of Christ in the West and of Buddha in the East. In 1929 he repudiated these claims and travelled the world, sharing his philosophical insights and establishing schools and foundations.

Because Krishnamurti had no interest in presenting theories, his thought is far removed from academic philosophy in the analytic tradition, yet his insights remain extremely relevant to contemporary philosophical theories and to those interested in understanding themselves and the world. Rather than a theorist, Krishnamurti is regarded as a seer and a teacher. He perceived inherent distorting psychological structures that bring about a division in the individual's consciousness between "the observer" and "the observed". He believed this division was a potent source of conflict, both within the individual and externally for society as a whole, and offered a way to transcend these harmful structures through a radical transformation in human consciousness.

This is a collection of Krishnamurti's writings and lectures about the individual in relation to society. He examines the importance of inquiry, the role of the emotions, the relation between experience and the self, the observer/observed distinction, the nature of freedom, and other philosophical ideas.

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Audible Audiobook

Listening Length: 9 hours and 30 minutes

Program Type: Audiobook

Version: Unabridged

Publisher: University Press Audiobooks

Audible.com Release Date: March 17, 2014

Language: English, English

ASIN: B00J2JIOWG

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

This is a great starting point for a Krishnamurti adventure! Could not recommend highly enough.

Best book ever!My copy has been retaped along the spine twice, I cannot express how wonderful it is to become completely absorbed within the words of Jiddu Krishnamurti.Absolutely fantastic book. I recommend to anyone over the age of 14. I especially recommend to those in high school, put this book into the hands of a youngster in your life!

LOVE THIS MAN AND HIS WRITINGS!!!!

Krishnamurti dares to go beyond all kinds of limitations caused by our education, be it religion, culture, tradition.Maybe it seems hard in the beginning to drop some values which seemed to be very important before, but it is the only way if somebody is searching the absolute !

This is one of the finest books written on mysticism/philosophy that I have ever read. This mysticism/philosophy is very similar to that of Paul Brunton and that of the great Yogi Ramana Maharashi. Krishnamurti was a mystic, philosopher, author and public speaker who was gifted spiritually and who was seen as the next "World Teacher" by Charles W Leadbeater who was a prominent occultist and head of the Theophist Movement. However, notwithstanding the foregoing, Krishnamurti denounced all organized belief, the notion of gurus and the whole notion of the teacher/follower relationship. He advocated that true "Self Realization" arises through our relationship with others and the realization that there is no difference between the observed and observer. I would highly recommend this book.

To rate Krishnamurti as the greatest thinker, philosopher would almost felt like an insult to this sage/seer. Thinking, to him, is the source of all evil, a waste of energy. Even the mundane, materialistic measurement, analysis and planning ( what intellects do) create conflicts, challenges, competitions and ultimately violence and the brutal 20th century. We, even after reading all his teachings,could only grasp the fringe of what he is conveying, the enormous Beauty, Liveliness and Truth. The closest I could think of is a messiah, not as Theosophists' idea of savior, but a (not the) messenger, a messenger of Truth. His books are actually minimal compare with his ceaselessly, lovingly and 6 decades long ( but then there is no time/space to this sage) messages. I used to think he was the re-incarnation of Buddha, but then it would insult them with one treated the subject with noble silence and the other literally said it was futile and rubbish to talk about reincarnation as "a" soul. Love, only LOVE, can describe my feelings towards them. They are the strong currents to carry humanity upstream. Spirituality in human forms, only NOW.

While I believe Krishnamurti is a great rhetorician, I found his insistence on "facts" gleaned from his personal experience to be trying. One of his primary objectives or perhaps his primary objective was to eliminate violence through a complete and thorough understanding of desire, thought, and reification of thought. While the following is a bald summary, his nuanced descriptions and muddled reflections are too extensive to summarize here.My main point is that while claiming it is "possible" to rid oneself of violent behavior and thoughts, he also posits facts to do so. This in itself leads to violence because he is not suggesting an approach or method to flourish in the world, Krishnamurti is availing himself to the Truth. If questioned his response seems to be we are essentially alone and cannot be helped to find the Truth by others but must understand that the observer is the observed. Once this neat trick is mastered than one can somehow embody a non aggressive thinking mind. If objected to, his response seems to be "I don't care about you because you must find your own way by default so I must focus only on myself." If this is not solipsistic it is at least making confusing and contrary claims. A fact is something that truly exists or happens not one person's omniscient proclamation of a fact.If you want to spend a lot of time untangling intellectual knots like his policy of subjective non conflict while he explains how we have been conditioned are have internal conflicts because of society, standards, norms, values, etc, while at the same time one must understand that believing one has an ego and not cleansing the unconscious will inevitably lead to existential pain, his whole message is laced with conflict. I think it is to easy to state as Krishnamurti does that observation leads to intelligence and intelligence necessary leads to cessation of the opposite reactions and thus inner peace. I reject most of his "facts".

I managed to get through all but 2 hours of this audiobook, but the narrator really took away from the content for me. I couldn't stand listening to his odd, robotic style of speaking, and it killed the value of the text. I found myself fascinated with what he was saying, and completely being turned off by how he said it. I wish there was another version of this audiobook with a different narrator.

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Krishnamurti: Reflections on the Self


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