When I was a teenager, I discovered J. Krishnamurti while reading an old copy of Carl Watner’s The Voluntaryist, which itself held a wealth of treasures for a curious young freethinker. Krishnamurti’s ideas ended up having a profound effect on the way I think, particularly on how I think about the relationship between ideological structures, subjective perception, and epistemology. Krishnamurti famously said that the highest form of intelligence is the ability to observe without evaluating:
Seeing What’s There
Seeing What’s There
Seeing What’s There
When I was a teenager, I discovered J. Krishnamurti while reading an old copy of Carl Watner’s The Voluntaryist, which itself held a wealth of treasures for a curious young freethinker. Krishnamurti’s ideas ended up having a profound effect on the way I think, particularly on how I think about the relationship between ideological structures, subjective perception, and epistemology. Krishnamurti famously said that the highest form of intelligence is the ability to observe without evaluating: