Krishnamurti Time | Jiddu
He suggested that as long as we look at life through the lens of the past, we are never truly seeing. We are merely recognizing. To see a tree, a person, or a problem clearly, the mind must be free from the "known." The Ending of Time
One of Krishnamurti’s most famous dialogues was with the theoretical physicist Dr. David Bohm, titled The Ending of Time . In these conversations, they explored the possibility of a state of consciousness that is not beholden to psychological time. jiddu krishnamurti time
He asked: Can you look at your violence, your sorrow, your fear without any movement toward its opposite? Can you observe it without the interference of time—without saying, "I must get rid of it," or "It will disappear tomorrow"? He suggested that as long as we look
Jiddu Krishnamurti (1895–1986) viewed as a primary cause of human suffering and a psychological illusion that prevents people from experiencing reality or "the timeless" . He distinguished between chronological time (the clock) and psychological time (the mind's movement toward becoming something else) . The Nature of Time David Bohm, titled The Ending of Time
This is the "inner" time created by the mind. It is the movement of thought from "what is" to "what should be." It manifests as memory, hope, regret, and the constant pursuit of becoming something better in the future.