David Bohm Quote

We probed into the nature of space and time, and of the universal, both with regard to external nature and with regard to mind. But then, we went on to consider the general disorder and confusion that pervades the consciousness of mankind. It is here that I encountered what I feel to be Krishnamurti's major discovery. What he was seriously proposing is that all this disorder, which is the root cause of such widespread sorrow and misery, and which prevents human beings from properly working together, has its root in the fact that we are ignorant of the general nature of our own processes of thought. Or to put it differently it may be said that we do not see what is actually happening, when we are engaged in the activity of thinking.


"A Brief Introduction to the Work of Krishnamurti"


We probed into the nature of space and time, and of the universal, both with regard to external nature and with regard to mind. But then, we went on...

We probed into the nature of space and time, and of the universal, both with regard to external nature and with regard to mind. But then, we went on...

We probed into the nature of space and time, and of the universal, both with regard to external nature and with regard to mind. But then, we went on...

We probed into the nature of space and time, and of the universal, both with regard to external nature and with regard to mind. But then, we went on...