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The Newsletter Editorial Note
Dear Friends
Letters to the Editor
K: The "feeling" of essence Krishnamurti
Articles Measure in the East and the West
What is God?
The Way We Live
Interpretation Revisited
The emerging quality of the new brain
On Education School in a Box - a visitor's view
K: Mind is infinite
Knowledge and Dialogue in Education
K: Meditation is the passing away of experience
International Network Meeting of the International Committees at Brockwood Park 2007
Events Theme Weekends at The Krishnamurti Centre, Brockwood Park 2008 L’éducation : Méthode ou Art de Vivre? Summer Work Party at Brockwood Park 2008 Annual 'Saanen' Gathering, Switzerland 2008 Oak Grove Teacher's Academy 2007 Krishnamurti Summer Study Program 2007 Annual Gatherings in India, USA, Thailand
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What is God? Krishnamurti
God is not the word, the word is not the thing. To know that which is
immeasurable, which is not of time, the mind must be free of time, which
means the mind must be free from all thought, from all ideas about God.
What do you know about God or truth? You do not really know anything
about that reality. All that you know are words, the experiences of others
or some moments of rather vague experience of your own. Surely that is
not God, that is not reality, that is not beyond the field of time. To know
that which is beyond time, the process of time must be understood, time
being thought, the process of becoming, the accumulation of knowledge.
That is the whole background of the mind; the mind itself is the background,
both the conscious and the unconscious, the collective and the
individual. So the mind must be free of the known, which means the mind
must be completely silent, not made silent. The mind that achieves silence
as a result, as the outcome of determined action, of practice, of discipline,
is not a silent mind. The mind that is forced, controlled, shaped, put into a
frame and kept quiet, is not a still mind. You may succeed for a period of
time in forcing the mind to be superficially silent, but such a mind is not a
still mind. Stillness comes only when you understand the whole process of
thought, because to understand the process is to end it and the ending of
the process of thought is the beginning of silence. The First and Last Freedom, pp. 207-208 |