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This book features excerpts on the titles theme from Krishnamurtis talks and discussions held between 1933 and 1967. They have proven helpful in dialogues and for use in high school and college classrooms. There are talks on marriage, love, relationship, and sex. Krishnamurti states, sex becomes an extraordinary, difficult, and complex problem so long as you do not understand the mind. Krishnamurti asks the reader to investigate essential questions: How can I live with another without conflict? Why are relationships difficult? What is awareness in relationship? Do I really know what love is?…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book features excerpts on the titles theme from Krishnamurtis talks and discussions held between 1933 and 1967. They have proven helpful in dialogues and for use in high school and college classrooms. There are talks on marriage, love, relationship, and sex. Krishnamurti states, sex becomes an extraordinary, difficult, and complex problem so long as you do not understand the mind. Krishnamurti asks the reader to investigate essential questions: How can I live with another without conflict? Why are relationships difficult? What is awareness in relationship? Do I really know what love is? What does it mean to learn in a relationship? What is the role of thought and memory in relating to another? There is no escape from relationship. In that relationship, which is the mirror in which we can see ourselves, we can discover what we are, our reactions, our prejudices, our fears, depression, anxieties, loneliness, sorrow, pain, grief. We can also discover whether we love or there is no such thing as love. So, we will examine this question of relationship because that is the basis of love. -J. Krishnamurti Madras, India, 1982 Why does the mind think about sex at all? Why? Why has it become a central issue in your life? Sex has become an extraordinary, difficult, and complex problem so long as you do not understand the mind, which thinks about the problem. The act itself can never be a problem but thought about the act creates the problem. -J. Krishnamurti, The First and Last Freedom
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Autorenporträt
Jiddu Krishnamurti (1895-1986) was a philosopher in the original sense of the word, not an academic or intellectual, but a lover of truth who raise essential questions of living. He spent his adult life speaking to people around the world about such eternal questions of life. Krishnamurti challenges us to approach these questions in a way that defies traditional roles of teacher and student. He does not see himself as someone dispensing knowledge of ideas to be collected, and asks the reader to find a relationship in which there is no following of an authority, only discovery. a oeWe are not convincing each other about any subject, we are not trying to persuade each othera ]together we are going to look at the world as it is, and the world that is within us.