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Krishnamurti on the Ending of TimeBalder said Jan 23, 2007, 9:58 PM: |
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Here is an excerpt from one of Krishnamurti's inquiries into the 'ending of time': |
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Re: Krishnamurti on the Ending of TimeSiva said Jan 24, 2007, 2:47 AM: |
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If the beginning and end of everything is enmeshed in time then is there anything that exists beyond the tentacles of time? In order to understand time we may have to grow beyond time and watch it from a distance. So long as we are immersed in time and are dissolved in it how can we know in what way it is different from our existence? |
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Re: Krishnamurti on the Ending of TimeBalder said Jan 24, 2007, 7:52 AM: |
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In Krishnamurti's teachings, 'time' is used in a specialized way and refers to the psychological movement of 'becoming' based on memory and projection. He contends that we can move beyond this particular psychological orientation – e.g., identification with images. I believe this is possible. But it appears to be another question altogether, whether we can move beyond time in all its forms – not just as psychological projection, but as that dimension of being that allows for the creative unfolding of events.
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Re: Krishnamurti on the Ending of TimeSiva said Jan 30, 2007, 6:41 AM: |
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The problem of the direction of time arises directly from two contradictory facts. Firstly, the law of nature, i.e., our fundamental physics are time-reversal invariant. In other words the laws of physics are such that anything that can happen moving forward through time is just as possible moving backwards in time. Or, put in another way, through the eyesof physics, there will be no distinction, in terms of possibility, between what happens in a movie if the film is run forward, or if the film is run backwards. |
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