What is Knowledge : Ch-3. Part-4.
Chapter-3. A Philosophic Outlook of Life
Part-4.
The activities of the senses are so rapid, so insistent, so vehement, so pressing and demanding, that the mind is continuously engaged in attending to these calls of the senses – like a telephone operator is kept continuously busy with unending calls from all sides.
He cannot even think, so busy is he.
The senses act in such rapidity and with such force that this peculiar feature of the mind which is engaged in synthesizing these sense reports keeps it always busy, and there is no time to think anything else.
This is the fate of the busy man of the world.
There is no time to think, except in terms of what reactions are received by the senses in regard to the operations outside in the world of nature and society.
The whole of our life is a kind of reaction to events taking place in nature and in human society.
We seem to be doing very little independently; we are only reacting to what is happening outside insistently, perpetually.
This is the ordinary man's life.
It is a very unhappy state of affairs, indeed, that we have to be always cautious that we do not fall down, and we cannot keep quiet because of the noises made by the senses and the necessity felt at the same time to listen to these noises and react in a proper manner.
Swami Krishnananda
To be continued ...
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