Guest guest Posted April 11, 2001 Report Share Posted April 11, 2001 Dear Cathy, Being a great thinker probably means something different to whoever hears the phrase. Here is a quote from my website, 'as Omkara sees it': " There are seeming levels to communication, but it is not so. Two winos discussing where to get their next drink is the same as two math professors discussing the integral calculus. Communion is happening in both cases, and in both cases the words are extra, just an excuse for the communion to be, a carrier or transmitter of the communion. " What it meant to Nisargadatta (if anything), and whether it was a compliment or not, undoubtedly will remain forever unknown. Perhaps he just felt it appropriate to make a comment at the time, so as to acknowledge Krishnamurti for the 'benefit' of those present. Love, Tim Nisargadatta, cathywb@p... wrote: > Dear Elizabeth and Tim, > I was definitely making a judgement, now and at the time. I was > comparing J. Krishnamurti and Maharaj. As for Maharaj, I do not > think he was making a judgement. He was just stating > fact, " Krishnamurti is a great thinker. " But what does being a > great thinker mean and is that a compliment as everyone else > present assumed? > Cathy > > > Nisargadatta, elizabethwells2001 wrote: > > Nisargadatta, " Omkara " <coresite@h...> wrote: > > > > > > Could it be that Maharaj was just stating a fact? Why does a > > comment > > > have to be tainted with dualistic opposites like 'good' and > > 'bad'? > > > > ------ > > Tim: > > > > Point well taken. > > > > But I don't know Maharaj didn't use this > > good-bad approach as a teaching tool > > with some people who came to him. > > I wasn't there. > > > > However I did not find him using it > > in the books. Had he, I would not have > > been attracted to him. > > > > Also be careful. > > > > You mistook me using " sick puppies " as > > a good-bad judgment, and it wasn't. > > It was simply a fact based on my growing > > up in a similar situation as UG. > > > > A lot of folks take UG as judgemental. > > I don't. > > > > > > Maybe Cathy is making judgments. > > Maybe she isn't and it is just symantics. > > > > In any case, asking WHY JUDGMENTS OF GOOD > > AND BAD ARE MADE, is a question as to which > > you already know the answer. > > > > El > > > > > > . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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