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Krishnamurti in Dialogue with Dr. Allan W. Anderson
J. Krishnamurti was born in South India
and educated in England.
For the past 40 years
he has been speaking in the United States,
Europe, India, Australia, and other parts of the world.
From the outset of his life's work
he repudiated all connections
with organised religions and ideologies
and said that his only concern was
to set man absolutely unconditionally free.
He is the author of many books,
among them The Awakening of Intelligence,
The Urgency of Change,
Freedom From the Known, and The Flight of the Eagle.
This is one of a series of dialogues
between Krishnamurti and Dr. Allan W. Anderson,
who is professor of religious studies
at San Diego State University
where he teaches Indian and Chinese scriptures
and the oracular tradition.
Dr. Anderson, a published poet,
received his degree from Columbia University
and the Union Theological Seminary.
He has been honoured with the distinguished Teaching Award
from the California State University.
A: Mr. Krishnamurti, when we were speaking last time,
it seemed to me,
that we had together reached the point where
you were about to discuss order,
converse about order,
and I thought perhaps we could begin with that today,
if that's agreeable with you.
K: I think we were talking about
freedom, responsibility, and relationship.
And before we go any further, we thought
we'd talk over together this question of order.
What is order in freedom?
As one observes, all over the world,
there is such extraordinary disorder.
A: Oh yes. K: Outwardly and inwardly.
One wonders why there is such disorder.
You go to India and you see
the streets filled with people, bursting with population.
And you see also
so many sects, so many gurus, so many teachers,
so many contradictory lies, such misery.
And you come to Europe: there is a little more order,
but you see, when you penetrate the superficial order,
there is equal disorder.
And you come to this country,
- and you know what it is like, better than I do -
there is complete disorder.
You may drive very carefully, but go behind the facade
of so-called order and you see chaos,
not only in personal relationship, but sexually, morally,
so much corruption.
All governments are corrupt, some more, some less.
But this whole phenomenon of disorder,
how has it come about?
Is it the fault of
the religions that have said:
do this and don't do that?
And now they are revolting against all that?
A: Yes.
K: Is it governments are so corrupt
that nobody has any trust in governments?
Is it there is such corruption in business,
nobody wants to look at it even,
any intelligent man, any man who is really serious.
And you look at family life, there is such disorder.
So taking the whole phenomenon of disorder,
why is there such disorder? What has brought it about?
A: Doesn't it appear that there is a sort of necessary,
almost built-in progression in terms of the way
we have mentioned necessity earlier,
once order so conceived
is superimposed upon an existing situation,
not only does it not effect what is hoped for,
but it creates a new situation
which we think requires a new approach.
And the new approach is still the superimposition.
K: Like the communists are doing in Russia and China.
They have imposed order
- what they call order - on a disordered mind.
And therefore there is a revolt.
So looking at all this, it's very interesting,
looking at all this phenomenon of disorder,
what is order then?
Is order something imposed,
order as in the military, on the soldier, imposed order,
a discipline which is a conformity,
suppression, imitation?
Is order conformity?
A: Not in the sense that it's artificially imposed, yes.
K: In any sense.
If I conform to an order,
I am creating disorder.
A: Yes, yes, I understand what you mean.
In our use of the word 'conform'
we sometimes mean by it
a natural relation between the nature of a thing
and the activities that are proper to it or belong to it.
But then that use of the word 'conform'
is not the use that is usual
and the one that we are concerned with here.
K: No. No. So is order conformity?
Is order imitation?
Is order acceptance, obedience?
Or, because we have conformed, because we have obeyed,
because we have accepted, we have created disorder.
Because discipline
- in the ordinary accepted sense of that word - is to conform.
A: Yes, we say in English, don't we, to someone
who appears to be undisciplined,
or who in fact is undisciplined,
we say, 'straighten up'. K: Straighten up, yes.
A: The images that we use to refer to that correction
are always rigid, aren't they? K: Yes.
A: Yes, yes. K: So that authority,
whether the communist authority of the few,
or the authority of the priest,
or the authority of someone who says
'I know and you don't know',
that is one of the factors that has produced disorder.
And one of the factors of this disorder
is our lack of real culture.
We are very sophisticated,
very so-called civilised, in the sense
we are clean, we have bathrooms,
we have better food and all that,
but inwardly we are not cultured.
We are not healthy whole human beings.
A: The inner fragmentation spills out
into our operations, externally.
K: So unless we understand disorder, the nature of disorder,
the structure of disorder,
we can never find out what is order.
Out of the understanding of disorder comes order.
Not first seek order
and then impose that order on disorder.
I don't know if I make myself clear. A: Yes, I do.
I'm thinking as you are speaking
of the phenomenon in the world of study,
and the world of teaching and learning
as we understand them conventionally.
I've noticed in our conversations that you always
suggest that we study some dysfunction.
We are never invited really to do that;
we are given the notion
that the thing to study is the principle involved.
The argument for that, of course, is that
one refers to health in order to understand disease.
K: Quite, quite. A: But then the reference to health,
when that is said,
is received purely conceptually. K: Quite, quite.
A: So what we are studying is now a concept.
K: Is a concept rather than the actuality,
than the 'what is'.
A: And we slip out of the true task.
There is a difficulty in grasping the suggestion
that we study the disorder
simply because disorder by its own condition
is without an ordering principle.
Therefore it sounds when it comes out
as though I am being asked
to study something that is unstudyable.
But to the contrary.
K: On the contrary. A: Yes. Now I'll stop.
You go ahead. On the contrary.
You were about to say something. K: On the contrary.
There must be an understanding of disorder,
why it has come about.
One of the factors, sir, is basically
that thought is matter
and thought by its very nature is fragmentary.
Thought divides,
the 'me' and the 'not me', we and they,
my country and your country, my ideas and your ideas,
my religion and your religion, and so on.
The very movement of thought is divisive,
because thought is the response of memory,
response of experience, which is the past.
And unless we really go into this question
very, very deeply:
the movement of thought and the movement of disorder...
A: That seems to me to be a key word,
from my understanding in listening to you, 'movement'.
To study the movement of disorder would seem to me
to take it a step deeper
than the phrase 'to study disorder'.
With the word 'movement' we are dealing with act.
K: The movement. A: Exactly.
The career of disorder. K: The movement.
A: Yes, if that is what we are directed upon,
then, I think, the objection
that the study of disorder is to
undertake an impossible pursuit
is not made with any foundation.
That objection loses its force precisely at the point
when one says,
'no, no, it's not disorder as a concept
we are dealing with here,
it's the movement of it,
it's its own career, it's its passage,
it's the whole corruption of the act as such'.
Yes, yes, exactly.
I keep on saying this business about act all the time,
and perhaps it seems
repetitious. K: Oh, that's absolutely right.
A: But you know,
hardly ever is that taken seriously...
K: I know, sir. A: ...by our species.
Of course, the animals are on to that
from the beginning, but we don't.
K: No. You see, we deal with concepts,
not with 'what is', actually what is.
Rather than discuss formulas,
concepts and ideas, 'what is' is disorder.
And that disorder is spreading all over the world,
it's a movement, it's a living disorder.
It isn't a disorder which is dead.
It is a living thing, moving, corrupting, destroying.
A: Yes. Exactly, exactly.
But it takes - as you pointed out so often -
an extreme concentration of attention
to follow movement,
and there is a rebellion in us against following movement,
which perhaps lies in our disaffection
with the intuition that we have
that transition is unintelligible.
K: Of course. Quite, quite. A: And we don't want that.
We can't stand the thought
that there is something that is unintelligible.
And so we just will not make that active attention.
K: It's like sitting on the bank of a river
and watching the waters go by.
You can't alter the water,
you can't change the substance
or the movement of the water.
In the same way this movement of disorder
is part of us and is flowing outside of us.
So, one has to look at it.
A: And there is no confusion in the act at all.
K: Obviously not.
First of all, sir, let's go into it very, very carefully.
What is the factor of disorder?
Disorder means contradiction, right?
A: Yes. And conflict. Yes.
K: Contradiction. This opposed to that.
Or the duality:
this opposed to that.
A: The contention between two things
to be mutually exclusive.
K: Yes. A: Yes.
K: And what brings about
this duality, and the conflict?
Is there a duality at all?
A: Certainly not in act, there is not a duality.
That simply couldn't be.
There certainly could be said,
not even with respect, don't you think, to thought itself
and its operation that there is a dualism.
But the duality, of course,
is present in terms of distinction,
but not in terms of division. K: Division, that's right.
A: Not in terms of division. K: Not in terms.
A: Yes, yes. I follow.
K: After all, there is man, woman,
black and white, and so on,
but is there an opposite to violence?
You've understood? A: Yes, I'm listening very intently.
K: Or only violence?
But we have created the opposite.
Thought has created the opposite as non-violence
and then the conflict between the two.
The non-violence is an abstraction of the 'what is'.
And thought has done that.
A: Exactly. Yesterday I had a difficult time
in class over this.
I made the remark that
vice is not the opposite of virtue,
virtue is not the opposite of vice,
and somehow I just couldn't, it seems, communicate that
because of the insistence on the part of the students
to deal with the problem purely
in terms of a conceptual structure.
K: You see, sir,
I don't know if you want to go into it now,
or if it is the right occasion:
from ancient Greece - you must know -
measurement was necessary to them.
Measurement.
And the whole of the Western civilisation
is based on measurement,
which is thought.
A: This is certainly true in continuous practice.
It is certainly true.
And the irony of it is that an historian,
looking at the works of the great Greek thinkers,
would turn around and say at this point,
'Well, now just wait a minute'.
And we would say some things about Aristotle and Plato,
that would suggest that: no, no, no,
there's a much more organic grasp of things
than simply approaching it in a slide rule way,
but that doesn't come to terms with what you are saying.
I think that's right.
K: Sir, you can see what is happening in the world,
in the Western world: technology, commercialism,
and consumerism is the highest activity
that is going on now. A: Exactly.
K: Which is based on measurement. A: Certainly. Oh yes.
K: Which is thought.
Now, look at it a minute, hold that a minute
and you will see something rather odd taking place.
The East, especially India, India exploded over the East,
in a different sense,
they said measurement is illusion.
To find the immeasurable
the measurement must come to an end.
I'm putting it very crudely and quickly.
A: No. But it seems to me that you are putting it
precisely well with respect to this
concern we have with act.
K: Yes. A: Yes. It's not crude.
K: It's very interesting because I've watched it.
In the West, technology,
commercialism and consumerism;
God, saviour, church - all that's outside.
It is a plaything.
And you just play with it on Saturday and Sunday,
but the rest of the week... A: Yes.
K: And you go to India and you see this.
The word 'ma' is to measure, in Sanskrit,
and they said reality is immeasurable.
Go into it, see the beauty of it. A: Yes, oh yes, I follow.
K: The measurement can never find...
A mind that is measuring,
or a mind that is caught in measurement,
can never find truth.
I'm putting it that way.
They don't put it that way, but I'm putting it.
So they said, to find the real, the immense,
measurement must end.
But they use thought as a means to...
thought must be controlled, they said.
A: Yes, yes.
K: You follow? A: Yes, I do.
K: So, in order to find the immeasurable
you must control thought.
And to control, who is the controller of thought?
Another fragment of thought.
I don't know if you follow.
A: I follow you perfectly, yes, I do.
K: So, they use measurement
to go beyond measurement.
And therefore they could never go beyond it.
They were caught in an illusion of some other kind,
but it is still the product of thought.
I don't know if I'm... A: Yes, yes.
What flashed over my mind as you were speaking
was the incredible irony of their having
right in front of them
- I'm thinking now of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad -
this profound statement:
'That is full',
meaning anything that I think is over there,
that's full.
This - that I've divided off from that - this is full.
'From fullness to fullness issues forth'.
And then the next line
'If fullness is taken away from the full,
fullness indeed still remains'.
Now they are reading that, but if they approach it
in the manner in which you have so well described,
they haven't read it
in the sense of attended to what's being said,
because it's the total rejection of that statement
that would be involved in thought control.
K: Yes, of course, of course.
You see, that's what I've been trying to get at.
You see, thought has divided the world physically:
America, India, Russia, China
- you follow? - divided the world.
Thought has fragmented the activities of man:
the businessman, the artist,
the politician, the beggar, you follow?
Fragmented man. A: Yes.
K: Thought has created a society
based on this fragmentation.
And thought has created the gods, the saviours,
the Jesuses, the Christs, the Krishnas, the Buddhas,
and those are all measurable, in the sense
'you must become like the Christ'
or 'you must be good'.
All sanctioned by a culture, which is based on measurement.
A: Once you start with forecasts, as we have classically,
then we are going to necessarily move to
five, six, seven, 400, 4000, an indefinite division.
And all in the interest, it is claimed, of clarity.
All in the interest of clarity.
K: So, unless we understand the movement of thought,
we cannot possibly understand disorder.
It is thought that has produced disorder!
It sounds contradictory, but it is so,
because thought is fragmentary,
thought is time,
and as long as we are functioning within that field,
there must be disorder.
Which is, each fragment is working for itself,
in opposition to other fragments.
I, a Christian, am in opposition to the Hindu,
though I talk about love,
and goodness, and all the rest of it.
A: I love him so much I want to see him saved,
so I will go out and bring him into the fold.
K: Saved. Come over to my camp! A: Yes, yes.
K: Probably, the basic cause of disorder
is the fragmentation of thought.
I was told the other day
that in a certain culture
thought means the outside.
A: That's very interesting.
K: When they use the word 'outside',
they use the word 'thought'.
A: And we think it's inside.
K: That's the whole... you follow?
A: How marvellous. How marvellous.
K: So thought is always outside.
You can say, I am inwardly thinking.
Thought has divided the outer and the inner.
So to understand this whole contradiction,
measurement, time, the division, the fragmentation,
the chaos, and the disorder,
one must really go into this question of
what is thought, what is thinking.
Can the mind, which has been so conditioned in fragments,
in fragmentation,
can that mind
observe this whole movement of disorder,
not fragmentarily? A: No, but the movement itself.
K: Movement itself. A: Movement itself. Yes.
But that's what's so terrifying
to look at that movement.
It's interesting that
you've asked this question in a way that
keeps boring in
because measure is
- and I'm going to put something now
in a very concise, elliptical way -
is possibility, which is infinitely divisible.
It only comes to an end with an act, with an act.
And as long as I remain divided against act,
I regard myself as a very deep thinker.
I'm sitting back exploring alternatives,
which are completely imaginary, illusory.
And in the business world
men are paid extremely high salaries
to come up with what is called a new concept.
K: Yes, new concept.
A: And it's called by its right name, of course,
but it isn't regarded correctly as to its nature.
It isn't understood
as to what's being said when that happens.
K: That brings up the point, which is
measurement means comparison.
Our society, and our civilisation, is based on comparison.
From childhood, to school, to college and university,
it is comparative.
A: That's right.
K: Comparison between intelligence and dullness,
between the tall and the black,
white and purple, and all the rest of it,
comparison in success.
And look at also our religions.
The priest, the bishop
- you follow? - the hierarchical outlook,
ultimately the Pope or the archbishop.
The whole structure is based on that. Compare, comparison,
which is measurement, which is essentially thought.
A: Yes. The Protestants complain
about the Catholic hierarchy,
and yet their scripture, their Bible
is what some Catholics call their paper pope.
K: Of course. A: Of course. Yes.
With the very rejection of something,
something takes its place,
which becomes even more divisive.
K: So, is it possible
to look without measurement,
that is without comparison?
Is it possible to live a life
- life, living, acting,
laughing, the whole life, living, crying -
without a shadow of comparison coming into it?
Sir - I'm not boasting, I'm just stating a fact -
I have never compared myself with anybody.
A: That's a most remarkable thing. Most remarkable thing.
K: I never thought about it even:
somebody much cleverer than me,
somebody much more brilliant, so intelligent,
somebody greater, spiritual - it didn't enter.
Therefore, I say to myself,
is measurement, comparison, imitation,
are they not the major factors of disorder?
A: I've had a very long thought about
what you said a few conversations ago
about when you were a boy
and you never accepted
the distinctions that were employed
in a dividing way...
K: Oh, of course, of course.
A: ...and within the social order.
And I had to think about my own growing up
and accept the fact that I did accept this distinction
in terms of division,
but I didn't do it with nature.
But that set up conflict in me, because
I couldn't understand
how it could be the case
that I'm natural, as a being in the world,
but I'm not somehow related to things the way things are
in what we call nature.
Then it suddenly occurred to me later
that in thinking that way I was already
dividing myself off from nature
and I'd never get out of that problem.
K: No.
A: And the thing came to me some years ago
with a tremendous flash,
when I was in Bangkok in a temple garden.
And, of an early morning, I was taking a walk,
and my eye was drawn to a globule of dew
resting on a lotus leaf,
and it was perfectly circle.
And I said, where's the base?
How can it be stable?
Why doesn't it roll off?
By the time I got to the end of my 'whys' I was worn out,
so I took a deep breath and I said,
now shut up and just keep quiet and look.
And I saw that each maintained its own nature
in this marvellous harmony without any confusion at all.
And I was just still.
K: Quite. A: Still.
I think that's something of what you mean about the fact...
That was a fact.
K: Just remain with the fact. Look at the fact.
A: That marvellous globule on that leaf is the fact,
is the act, is what is done.
Isn't that what you...
K: That is correct. A: Right. Yes.
K: Sir, from this arises, can one educate a student
to live a life of non-comparison:
bigger car, lesser car - you follow?
Dull, you are clever, I am not clever.
What happens, if I don't compare, at all?
Will I become dull?
A: On the contrary.
K: I'm only dull, I know I'm dull only through comparison.
If I don't compare, I don't know what I am.
Then I begin from there.
A: Yes, yes, yes.
The world becomes infinitely accessible.
K: Oh, then,
the whole thing becomes extraordinarily different!
There is no competition, there is no anxiety,
there is no conflict with each other.
A: This is why you use the word 'total'
often, isn't it? K: Yes.
A: In order to express that there's nothing drawn out
from one condition to the other.
There is no link there, there is no bridge there.
Totally disordered.
Totally order. K: Absolutely.
A: Yes, and you use the word 'absolute' often,
which terrifies many people today.
K: Sir, after all, mathematics is order.
The highest form of mathematical investigation
- you must have a mind that is totally orderly.
A: The marvellous thing about maths too is
whereas it's the study of quantity,
you don't make passage from one integer to another
by two getting larger. Two stops at two.
Two and a half is no more two.
Somehow that's the case. K: Yes.
A: But a child, when he is taught mathematics,
is never introduced to that
that I've ever heard of.
K: You see, sir, our teaching, everything is so absurd.
Is it possible, sir, to observe this movement of disorder
with a mind
that is disorderly itself,
and say, can this mind observe disorder,
this mind, which is already in a state of disorder?
So disorder isn't out there,
but in here.
Now, can the mind observe that disorder
without introducing a factor
of an observer who is orderly?
A: Who will superimpose. K: Yes.
Therefore observe, perceive disorder without the perceiver.
I don't know if I am making sense at all.
A: Yes, you are making sense.
K: That is, sir,
to understand disorder, we think
an orderly mind is necessary.
A: As over against the disorderly mind.
K: But the mind itself has created this disorder,
which is thought, and all the rest of it.
So can the mind
not look at disorder out there,
but at the maker of disorder which is in here?
A: Which is itself the very mind as disorder.
K: Mind itself is disordered. A: Yes.
But as soon as that is stated conceptually...
K: No, no. Concepts are finished.
A: Yes. But we are using words.
K: We are using words to communicate.
A: Exactly. What I'm concerned with, just for a second,
is what are we going to say
when we hear the statement that it is the disordered mind
that keeps proliferating disorder,
but it is that disordered mind that must see, it must see.
K: I'm going to show you,
you will see in a minute what takes place.
Disorder is not outside of me,
disorder is inside of me.
That's a fact.
Because the mind is disorderly,
all its activities must be disorderly.
And the activities of disorder
is proliferating or is moving in the world.
Now, can this mind observe itself
without introducing the factor of an orderly mind,
which is the opposite?
A: Yes it is. Of course, it is the opposite.
K: So can it observe without the observer,
who is the opposite?
A: That's the question.
K: Now, watch it, sir, if you are really interested in it.
A: I am. I am deeply interested in it. K: You will see.
The observer is the observed.
The observer who says, I am orderly
and I must put order in disorder.
That is generally what takes place.
But the observer is the factor of disorder.
Because the observer is the past,
is the factor of division.
Where there is division,
there is not only conflict, but disorder.
You can see, sir, it is happening actually in the world.
I mean all this problem of energy,
all this problem of war, peace, and all the rest,
can be solved absolutely
when there are not separate governments,
sovereign armies,
and say, look, let's solve this problem all together,
for God's sake!
We are human beings.
This earth is meant for us to live on,
not Arabs and Israelis, and America, and Russia,
it is our earth.
A: And it's round.
K: But we will never do that,
because our minds are so conditioned
to live in disorder,
to live in conflict.
A: And vocation is given a religious description
in terms of the task of cleaning up the disorder
with my idea of order.
K: Your idea of order
is the fact that has produced disorder.
A: Exactly.
K: So, it brings up a question, sir,
which is very interesting:
can the mind observe itself without the observer?
Because the observer is the observed.
The observer who says, 'I will bring order in disorder',
that observer itself is a fragment of disorder,
therefore it can never bring about order.
So can the mind be aware of itself
as a movement of disorder, not trying to correct it,
not trying to justify it,
not trying to shape it, just to observe?
I said previously,
to observe, sitting on the banks of a river
and watch the waters go by.
You see, then you see much more.
But if you are in the middle of it swimming,
you will see nothing!
A: I've never forgotten
that it was when I stopped questioning,
when I stood before that droplet of dew on the leaf,
that everything changed totally, totally.
And what you say is true.
Once something like that happens,
there isn't a regression from it.
K: Sir, it is not once, it is... A: ...forever. Yes.
K: It's not an incident that took place.
My life is not an incident, it is a movement.
A: Exactly.
K: And in that movement I observe this movement of disorder.
And therefore the mind itself is disorderly,
and how can that disorderly, chaotic, contradictory,
absurd little mind bring about order?
It can't.
Therefore a new factor is necessary.
And the new factor is to observe,
to perceive, to see without the perceiver.
A: To perceive without the perceiver.
To perceive without the perceiver.
K: Because the perceiver is the perceived.
A: Yes.
K: If you once grasp that,
then you see everything without the perceiver.
You don't bring in your personality,
your ego, your selfishness.
You say, 'Disorder is the factor
which is in me, not out there'.
The politicians are trying to bring about order
when they are themselves so corrupt.
You follow, sir? How can they bring order?
A: It's impossible. It's impossible.
It's one long series of palliatives.
K: That's what's happening in the world.
The politicians are ruling the world,
from Moscow, from New Delhi,
from Washington, wherever it is,
it's the same pattern being repeated.
Living a chaotic, corrupt life,
you try to bring order in the world.
It's childish.
So that's why transformation of the mind
is not your mind or my mind,
it is the mind, the human mind.
A: Or the mind trying to order itself even.
Not even that. K: Now how can it...
It is like a blind man trying to bring about colour.
He says, 'Well, that's grey', it has no meaning!
So can the mind observe this disorder
in itself
without the observer, who has created disorder?
Sir, this brings up a very simple thing.
To look at a tree, at a woman, at a mountain, at a bird,
or a sheet of water with the light on it, the beauty of it,
to look without the seer.
Because the moment the seer comes in,
the observer comes in, he divides.
And division is all right as long as it's descriptive.
But when you are living - living -
that division is destructive.
I don't know if you...
A: Yes, what was running through my mind was this
continuous propaganda that we hear
about the techniques that are available to still the mind.
But that requires a stiller to do the stilling.
K: No, I wouldn't...
A: And so that is absolutely...
I'm using your words... K: Childish, childish.
A: ...absolutely and totally
out of any possibility of attaining.
K: But yet, you see, that's what the gurus are doing.
A: Yes, yes, I do understand.
K: The imported gurus and the native gurus are doing this.
They are really destroying people. You follow, sir?
We'll talk about it when the occasion arises.
What we are now concerned is:
measurement,
which is the whole movement of commercialism,
consumerism, technology,
is now the pattern of the world.
Begun in the West,
and made more and more perfect in the West,
and that is spreading all over the world.
Go to the smallest little town in India or anywhere,
the same pattern being repeated.
And the village you go, they are so miserable, unhappy,
one-meal-a-day stuff.
But it is still within that pattern.
And the governments are trying to solve
these problems separately, you follow?
France by itself, Russia by itself.
It's a human problem,
therefore it has to be approached not with...
with a Washington mind, or a London mind, or a Moscow mind,
with a mind that is human,
that says, 'Look, this is our problem,
and, for God's sake, lets get together and solve it'.
Which means care,
which means accepting responsibility for every human being.
So we come back: as we said,
order comes only with the understanding of disorder.
In that there is no superimposition,
in that there is no conflict,
in that there is no suppression.
When you suppress, you react. You know all that business.
So it is totally a different kind of movement, order.
And that order is real virtue.
Because without virtue
there is no order.
There's gangsterism. A: Oh, yes.
K: Politically or any other way, religiously.
But without virtue, virtue being conduct,
the flowering in goodness everyday.
It is not a theory, sir, it actually takes place
when you live that way.
A: You know,
the hexagram in the I Ching called 'conduct'
is also translated 'treading'.
K: Treading. A: Treading.
Meaning a movement. K: Of course.
A: A movement.
And that's a vastly different understanding
of the usual notion of conduct.
But I understand from what you have said
that your use of the word 'conduct'
as virtue, as order,
is precisely oriented to act, movement. K: Yes, sir.
A: Yes.
K: You see, a man who acts out of disorder
is creating more disorder.
The politician, look at his life, sir,
ambitious, greedy,
seeking power, position.
A: Running for election. K: Election, all the rest of it.
And he is the man who is going to create
order in the world.
The tragedy of it, and we accept it! You follow?
A: Yes, we believe it's inevitable. We do.
K: And therefore we are irresponsible.
A: Because he did it and I didn't. Yes.
K: Because we accept disorder in our life.
I don't accept disorder in my life.
I want to live an orderly life,
which means I must understand disorder,
and where there is order, the brain functions much better.
A: There is a miracle here, isn't there?
K: Absolutely, that's the miracle.
A: There is a miracle here.
As soon as I grasp the movement of disorder...
K: The mind grasps it. Yes. A: Yes.
...behold, there's order.
That's truly miraculous.
Perhaps it's the one and only miracle.
K: There are other miracles but...
A: I mean, in the deepest sense of the word,
all of them would have to be related to that,
or we wouldn't have any of them,
is what I meant, the real heart, the real core.
K: That's why, sir,
relationship, communication,
responsibility, freedom,
and this freedom from disorder,
has a great sense of beauty in it.
A life that is beautiful,
a life that's really flowering in goodness.
Unless we create, bring about such human beings,
the world will go to pot.
A: Yes. K: This is what is happening.
And I feel it's my responsibility!
To me, I am passionate about it, it's my responsibility
to see that when I talk to you,
you understand it, you live it,
you function, move in that way.
A: I come back to this attention thing,
the enormous emphasis that you've made on
staying totally attentive to this.
I think I begin to understand something of the phenomenon
of what happens, when a person begins to think
that they are taking seriously what you are saying.
- I didn't say, begins to take it seriously -
they think they are beginning to.
As a matter of fact, they begin to watch themselves
lean in to it.
And of course, nothing started yet.
But something very strange happens in the mind,
when this notion that I am leaning in.
I start to get terribly afraid.
I become terribly fearful of something.
Next time could we discuss fear?