What do you think?
Rate this book
256 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2014
There is no region of the brain that can be the seat of a soul.Saying that the 'self' is an illusion because it cannot be located in a single part of the brain is like saying the operating system is an illusion because it can't be located in a single part of the hard drive. There's a thing which runs on my brain like a piece of software which feels and experiences, that thing is me, possibly not the only conscious agent within my brain and certainly not the only process. I feel therefore I am. You might think that thing is a only a small part of me, this is a language issue nothing more.
However, the empirical difference between the central teachings of Buddhism and Advaita and those of Western Monotheism is difficult to overstate.
We have seen that the sense of self is logically and empirically distinct from many other features of the mind with which it is often conflated.As opposed to things which are empirically distinct but not logically distinct, perfectly clear. He also uses 'myself' as the object in non reflexive sentences. Fail. Sorry, that's just a pet hate of mine.
A woman from Switzerland became 'enlightened' in Poonja-ji's presence... seeing this woman sit beside Poonja-ji on a raised platform expounding upon how blissful it now was in her corner of the universe... Coming from such a nice, guileless person, there was little reason to doubt the profundity of her experience.
Consider the case of Tibetan lama Trungpa, who was an inspired teacher but also an occasionally violent drunk and philanderer... Trungpa asked a group of devotees to find the poets and bring them back to the party... The resulting forced entry led to chaos —wherein Merwin, who was then famous for his pacificism, fought off his attackers with a broken beer bottle, stabbing several in the fact and arms... He ordered his bodyguards to strip them... many of TRungpa's students viewed the assault on Merwin and Naone as a profound spiritual teachingmeant to subdue their egos