--- In [email protected], "yifuxero" <yifux...@...> wrote:
>
> Cohen describes enlightenment as a form of not-knowing. And 
> yet his guruhood, his entire life, revolves around his belief 
> in—his knowledge of--his own unsurpassed perfection. To borrow 
> a phrase, Cohen is a super-egomanic. His casual contempt for 
> us ordinary, egotistical humans is frightening, as is his 
> belief that, as an enlightened being who has transcended good 
> and evil, he can do no harm. Cohen may not be a monster, as 
> his mother claims, but he has the capacity to become one. If 
> Cohen settled for being human instead of perfect, he'd probably 
> be a better teacher, and a better man.

Bingo.

This just nails the issue.

And all you have to do to reveal what he's 
talking about is react as if the person 
posing as super-human is a mere human,
just like yourself, and then sit back and
watch them demonstrate how merely human 
they are.


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