Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Nisargadatta , " toombaru2006 " <lastrain wrote: > > Nisargadatta , OConnor Patricia <gdtige@> wrote: > > > > > > --- dan330033 <dan330033@> a écrit : > > > > > Nisargadatta , " pliantheart " > > > <pliantheart@> > > > wrote: > > > > > > > > What Neo-Advaita gives in fact boils down to the > > > seductive formula > > > > that " there is nothing you can do or need to do, > > > all you have to > > > > know is that there is no one there. " ... > > > > > > > > - Alan Adam Jacobs > > > > > > The error in this formula is that it artificially > > > divides knowing from > > > doing. > > > > > > Knowing, as spoken of here, is a doing. > > > > > > If you are knowing something, you are retaining it, > > > which is a doing. > > > > > > If you speak spontaneously in a context as it > > > presents, you will say > > > what is adequate to the moment. You won't assume > > > some formula (e.g., > > > " there is no one here " ) is the adequate truth > > > statement covering all > > > moments. > > > > > > There isn't such a truth statement, never has been. > > > > > > The truth is what is, not what can be retained about > > > it through a > > > cognitive formula (including a formula like " the > > > truth is what is. " ) > > > > > > -- Dan > > > > so knowing is of time, > > and truth isn`t of time. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Truth is relevant only within time and the subject-object dicotomy. > > > > > > toombaru > It exists only within the conceptual overlay. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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