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" It seems to me that a totally different kind of
morality and conduct, and an action that springs from the understanding of
the whole process of living, have become an urgent necessity, in our world
of mounting crises and problems. We try to deal with these issues through
political and organizational methods, through economic readjustment and
various reforms; but none of these things will ever resolve the complex
difficulties of human existence, though they may offer temporary relief.
All reforms, however extensive and seemingly lasting, are in themselves
merely productive of further confusion and further need of reformation.
Without understanding the whole complex being of man, mere reformation
will bring about only the confusing demand for further reforms. There is
no end to reform; and there is no fundamental solution along these lines.
Political, economic or social revolutions are not the answer either,
for they have produced appalling tyrannies, or the mere transfer of power
and authority into the hands of a different group. Such revolutions are
not at any time the way out of our confusion and conflict.
But there is a revolution which is entirely different and which must
take place if we are to emerge from the endless series of anxieties,
conflicts and frustrations in which we are caught. The revolution has to
begin, not with theory and ideation, which eventually prove worthless, but
with a radical transformation in the mind itself. Such a transformation can
be brought about only through right education and the total development of
the human being. It is a revolution that must take place in the whole of
the mind and not merely in thought. Thought, after all, is only a result
and not the source. There must be radical transformation in the source and
not mere modification of the result. At present we are tinkering with
results, with symptoms. We are not bringing about a vital change,
uprooting the old ways of thought, freeing the mind from traditions and
habits. It is with this vital change we are concerned and only right
education can bring it into being.
To inquire and to learn is the function of the mind. By learning I do
not mean the mere cultivation of memory or the accumulation of knowledge,
but the capacity to think clearly and sanely without illusion, to start
from facts and not from beliefs and ideals. There is no learning if
thought originates from conclusions. Merely to acquire information or
knowledge, is not to learn. Learning implies the love of understanding and
the love of doing a thing for itself. Learning is possible only when there
is no coercion of any kind. And coercion takes many forms, does it not?
There is coercion through influence, through attachment or threat, through
persuasive encouragement or subtle forms of reward.
Most people think that learning is encouraged through comparison,
whereas the contrary is the fact. Comparison brings about frustration and
merely encourages envy, which is called competition. Like other forms of
persuasion, comparison prevents learning and breeds fear. Ambition also
breeds fear. Ambition, whether personal or identified with the collective,
is always antisocial. So-called noble ambition in relationship is
fundamentally destructive.
It is necessary to encourage the development of a good mind - a mind
which is capable of dealing with the many issues of life as a whole, and
which does not try to escape from them and so become self-contradictory,
frustrated, bitter or cynical. And it is essential for the mind to be
aware of its own conditioning, its own motives and pursuits.
Since the development of a good mind is one of our chief concerns,
how one teaches becomes very important. There must be a cultivation of the
totality of the mind, and not merely the giving of information. In the
process of imparting knowledge, the educator has to invite discussion and
encourage the students to inquire and to think independently.
Authority, as `the one who knows,' has no place in learning. The
educator and the student are both learning through their special
relationship with each other; but this does not mean that the educator
disregards the orderliness of thought. Orderliness of thought is not
brought about by discipline in the form of assertive statements of
knowledge; but it comes into being naturally when the educator understands
that in cultivating intelligence there must be a sense of freedom. This
does not mean freedom to do whatever one likes, or to think in the spirit
of mere contradiction. It is the freedom in which the student is being
helped to be aware of his own urges and motives, which are revealed to him
through his daily thought and action.
A disciplined mind is never a free mind,
nor can a mind that has
suppressed desire ever be free. It is only through understanding the whole
process of desire that the mind can be free. Discipline always limits the
mind to a movement within the framework of a particular system of thought
or belief, does it not? And such a mind is never free to be intelligent.
Discipline brings about submission to authority. It gives the capacity to
function within the pattern of a society which demands functional ability,
but it does not awaken the intelligence which has its own capacity. The
mind that has cultivated nothing but capacity through memory is like the
modem electronic computer which, though it functions with astonishing
ability and accuracy, is still only a machine. Authority can persuade the
mind to think in a particular direction. But being guided to think along
certain lines, or in terms of a foregone conclusion is not to think at
all; it is merely to function like a human machine, which breeds
thoughtless discontent, bringing with it frustration and other miseries".
(The start of the Introduction to
Krishnamurti's book "Life Ahead")
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