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When nearing the end of his
long life, Krishnamurti was
asked for the most vital
point of his teachings.
He replied:
"The observer is
the observed."
This is the non-dual
understanding of
the awakened eye.
 
The Limits of Thought
J Krishnamurti
and David Bohm
 
Thought As A System
David Bohm
 
The Ending of Time
J Krishnamurti
and David Bohm
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scientist meets philosopher
david bohm and jiddhu krishnamurti
My first acquaintance with Krishnamurti's work was in 1959 when I
read his book, 'First and Last Freedom'. What
particularly aroused my interest was his deep insight
into the question of the observer and the observed. This
question has long been close to the centre of my own
work, as a theoretical physicist, who was primarily
interested in the meaning of the quantum theory. In this
theory, for the first time in the development of
physics, the notion that these two cannot be separated
has been put forth as necessary for the understanding of
the fundamental laws of matter in general. Because of
this, as well as because the book contained many other
deep insights, I felt that it was urgent for me to talk
with Krishnamurti directly and personally as soon as
possible.
And when I first met him on one of his visits
to London, I was struck by the great ease of
communication with him, which was made possible by the
intense energy with which he listened and by the freedom
from self-protective reservations and barriers with
which he responded to what I had to say. As a person who
works in science I felt completely at home with this
sort of response, because it was in essence of the same
quality as that which I had met in these contacts with
other scientists with whom there had been a very close
meeting of minds. And here, I think especially of
Einstein who showed a similar intensity and absence of
barrier in a number of discussions that took place
between him and me. After this, I began to meet Krishnamurti regularly and to discuss with him whenever
he came to London.
We began an
association which has since then become closer as I
became interested in the
schools, which were set up
through his initiative. In these discussions, we went
quite deeply into the many questions which concerned me
in my scientific work. We probed into the nature of
space and time, and of the universal, both with regard
to external nature and with regard to the mind. But
then, we went on to consider the general disorder and
confusion that pervades the consciousness of mankind. It
is here that I encountered what I feel to be Krishnamurti's major discovery. What he was seriously
proposing is that all this disorder, which is the root
cause of such widespread sorrow and misery, and which
prevents human beings from properly working together,
has its root in the fact that we are ignorant of the
general nature of our own processes of thought. Or to
put it differently it may be said that we do not see
what is actually happening, when we are engaged in the
activity of thinking. Through close attention to and
observation of this activity of thought, Krishnamurti
feels that he directly perceives that thought is a
material process, which is going on inside of the human
being in the brain and nervous system as a whole.
Ordinarily, we
tend to be aware mainly of the content of this thought
rather than how it actually takes place. One can
illustrate this point by considering what happens when
one is reading a book. Usually, one is attentive almost
entirely to the meaning of what is being read. However,
one can also be aware of the book itself, of its
constitution as made up out of pages that can be turned,
of the printed words and of the ink, of the fabric of
the paper, etc. Similarly, we may be aware of the actual
structure and function of the process of thought, and
not merely its content.
How can such an
awareness come about? Krishnamurti proposes that this
requires what he calls
meditation. Now the word
meditation has been given a wide range of different and
even contradictory meanings, many of them involving
rather superficial kinds of mysticism. Krishnamurti has
in mind a definite and clear notion when he uses this
word. One can obtain a valuable indication of this
meaning by considering the derivation of the word. (The
roots of words, in conjunction with their present
generally accepted meanings often yield surprising
insight into their deeper meanings.) The English word
meditation is base on the Latin root "med" which is, "to
measure." The present meaning of the word is "to
reflect," "to ponder" (i.e. to weigh or measure), and
"to give close attention." Similarly the Sanskrit word
for meditation, which is dhyana, is closely related to "dhyati,"
meaning "to reflect." So, at this rate, to meditate
would be, "to ponder, to reflect, while giving close
attention to what is actually going on as one does so."
This is perhaps
what Krishnamurti means by the beginning of meditation.
That is to say, one gives close attention to all that is
happening in conjunction with the actual activity of
thought, which is the underlying source of the general
disorder. One does this without choice, without
criticism, without acceptance or rejection of what is
going on. And all of this takes place along with
reflections on the meaning of what one is learning about
the activity of thought. (It is perhaps rather like
reading a book in which the pages have been scrambled
up, and being intensely aware of this disorder, rather
than just "trying to make sense" of the confused content
that arises when on just accepts the pages as they
happen to come.)
Krishnamurti
has observed that the very act of meditation will, in
itself, bring order to the activity of thought without
the intervention of will, choice, decision, or any other
action of the "thinker." As such order comes, the noise
and chaos which are the usual background of our
consciousness die out, and the mind becomes generally
silent. (Thought arises only when needed for some
genuinely valid purpose, and then stops, until needed
again.)
In this
silence, Krishnamurti says that something new and
creative happens, something that cannot be conveyed in
words, but that is of extraordinary significance for the
whole of life. So he does not attempt to communicate
this verbally, but rather, he asks those who are
interested that they explore the question of
meditation
directly for themselves, through actual attention to the
nature of thought.
Without attempting to probe into this
deeper meaning of meditation, one can however say that
meditation, in Krishnamurti's sense of the word, can
bring order to our overall mental activity, and this may
be a key factor in bringing about an end to the sorrow,
the misery, the chaos and confusion, that have, over the
ages, been the lot of mankind, and that are still
generally continuing without visible prospect of
fundamental change, for the foreseeable future.
Krishnamurti's work is permeated by
what may be called the essence of this scientific
approach, when this is considered in its very highest
and purest form. Thus, he begins from a fact, this fact
about the nature of our thought processes. This fact is
established through close attention, involving careful
listening to the process of consciousness, and observing
it assiduously. In this, one is constantly learning, and
out of this learning comes insight, into the overall or
general nature of the process of thought. This insight
is then tested. First, one sees whether it holds
together in a rational order. And then one sees whether
it leads to order and coherence, on what flows out of it
in life as a whole.
Krishnamurti constantly emphasizes
that he is in no sense an authority. He has made certain
discoveries, and he is simply doing his best to make
these discoveries accessible to all those who are able
to listen. His work does not contain a body of doctrine,
nor does he offer techniques or methods, for obtaining a
silent mind. He is not aiming to set up any new system
of religious belief. Rather, it is up to each human
being to see if he can discover for himself that to
which Krishnamurti is calling attention, and to go on
from there to make new discoveries on his own.
It is clear then that an introduction,
such as this, can at best show how Krishnamurti's work
has been seen by a particular person, a scientist, such
as myself. To see in full what Krishnamurti means, it is
necessary, of course, to go on and to read what he
actually says, with that quality of attention to the
totality of one's responses, inward and outward, which
we have been discussing here. David Bohm
[NB: my emphasis, relevant to the awakened eye]
Source:
kinfonet website
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creativity without time
education
albert
einstein
j krishnamurti
meditation
nonduality
seeing without shadows
slow art
the art
of learning
the art of seeing
the eyeless eye
the transforming mind
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