We do not want to become great philosophers but rather to understand the philosophy in our own books: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
[[Category:We Do Not Want (Disciples of SP)]] | [[Category:We Do Not Want (Disciples of SP)]] | ||
[[Category:Wanting to Become]] | [[Category:Wanting to Become]] | ||
[[ | [[Category:Becoming a Philosopher]] | ||
[[Category:Understand Philosophy]] | [[Category:Understand Philosophy]] | ||
[[Category:Our Own (Disciples of SP)]] | [[Category:Our Own (Disciples of SP)]] |
Latest revision as of 20:02, 3 June 2025
Correspondence
1976 Correspondence
We do not want to become great philosophers but rather to understand the philosophy in our own books. If we remain strong in our own literature, we can meet anyone else without any fear.
Letter to Damodara Pandita -- New York 17 July, 1976: Concerning making a comparative study and critique of philosophy, unless one is very expert it is difficult for him. First of all, let people understand Krishna. We are doing that. Maybe one or two are interested in philosophy and for so few persons we can't spare so much valuable time. Better to induce everyone to chant Hare Krishna and take prasadam. That will be a mass benevolent activity. In the western countries many Ph.D.'s are out of employment because they did not get any service. We do not want to become great philosophers but rather to understand the philosophy in our own books. If we remain strong in our own literature, we can meet anyone else without any fear.