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KRISHNAMURTI : Dialogue on Death - Part 8.

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Uploaded by on Feb 1, 2008

This is part 8 (of 12 parts).
These dialogues took place at Brockwood in the UK, 1979. B/W Video.
"When the Body dies, the desires, the anxieties, the tragedies, attachments and the misery go on. They go on to contributing to the vast common stream of consciousness in which mankind lives. Each of us is a representative of the whole stream ... "

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  • @mp4ever31 How can you? Impossible. I like this guy and all his wisdom but i'm no catholic peado.

  • @seanolaoi1 and dont forget sex... 

  • THANKS.

  • To think for yourself outside of all conditioned knowledge is the way. Especially in the world we live in today more so than any other time. A world of overflowing corporate advertising.

  • I find K's teaching very honest, excellent. And yet, I know that the Buddha as an excellent teacher pointed out an effective way to self-realization by using certain techniques. He emphasized however questioning everything he said and insisted that at a certain point of understanding one must leave behind/ dissolve all conceptual knowledge to come to self-realization/liberation. He himself became a realized being only by his own hard work and effort.

  • This portion is the breakthrough moment of the conversation. From here all else follows. Thank You.

  • The more I listen to Krishnamurti the more I see the simple message he presents - he is not trying to inform anyone of anything, his aim in just about every lecture is to simply *remove the roadblocks*, the psycological slides, the conditioning that we have been presented and, simply put, "figure it out for ourselves".

  • @MrSkinless--I think the other side of the point you're attacking is that recognizing wisdom requires a capacity to have it. As Nietzsche suggested, to speak of great things we must have greatness. Therefore someone who rejects wisdom immediately probably has nothing to do with it. I think listening to wise people has a kind of osmosis at least in spurring the hunger for understanding.

  • that is a fallacy i think you've missed his points. Because you know what buddah is doesn't mean you are buddah. Because you realize someone has realized doesn't mean you have by looking at them; you must discuss... Your difference or sameness in ideas will prove or disprove your level of understanding.

  • Very true. A wise man can awaken one's insight for some reason.

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