Don't make a problem of anything
Publication details: 2010 Krishnamurti Foundation India ChennaiDescription: xiii, 286 pISBN:- 8187326654
- 128.8 K7D6
Item type | Current library | Item location | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | Vikram Sarabhai Library | Rack 4-B / Slot 132 (0 Floor, West Wing) | Non-fiction | General Stacks | 128.8 K7D6 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 181981 |
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128.5 J2C6 The courage to exist: a philosophy of life and death in the age of coronavirus | 128.5 S2D3 Death: an inside story | 128.6 R2H8 Human being, bodily being: phenomenology from classical India | 128.8 K7D6 Don't make a problem of anything | 130.1 B8M4 Mind map book: how to use radiant thinking to maximize your brain's untapped potential | 130.1 S9M4 Mind mapping & memory | 131 B9G7 The greatest secret |
In these discussions, Krishnamurti goes deeply into the question of human problems, drawing, in the process, a most interesting distinction between the ‘professional’ and the ‘human being’. He asks whether we do not regard ourselves as professionals first and as human beings afterwards.
Our education generally makes us professionals in the sense that right from childhood we are trained to solve physical problems. The brain thus gets conditioned to solving problems, and it carries over the same mentality to the psychological realm and so comes to look upon any situation, any emotion as a terrible problem to be solved.
The very nature of the problem-solving mind is its inability to see itself as the problem-creating mind, and so it never comes to the end of problems. In different contexts, through various examples, Krishnamurti returns again and again to his great insight: Don’t make a problem of anything in life.
Though Krishnamurti is addressing mostly teachers of the schools he founded, there is something here for everyone - for those interested in a new kind of education, for parents, for the pundits in Vedanta or Buddhism, for psychologists, for those in the ordinary workaday world, for religious seekers…
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