What is Knowledge : Ch-2. Part-3.





Chapter-2. The Necessity to Understand What Real Knowledge Is :


Part-3.


This is what we mostly do; we take the world at its face value.

If it rains, we say it rains; if it is hot, we say it is hot; if it is cold, we say it is cold.

This is just a statement which is superficially in agreement with a phenomenon that is taking place, a phenomenon which agrees with the receptivity of our sense organs like the eyes, ears, and so on.



Our senses are our friends.

Not merely friends, they are inseparable from us.

They are the only instruments we have with which we can know anything.

If we see something, we think it is the way we see it.

“It should be like this, because I am seeing it.”

If we hear something, again we say, “It should be like this, because I have heard it” – and so on.

So, a thing should be exactly as it is seen with the eyes, heard with the ears or sensed in any other manner.



Swami Krishnananda

To be continued   ....




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