---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <LEnglish5@...> wrote : The logical conclusion is that, by Maharishi's theory, Maharishi wasn't perfectly enlightened.
Was there still question in your mind about this? M: I place the belief in enlightenment on the same level as being saved so I suspect Maharishi harbored this fantasy as do most of his followers. L: I heard him talk about how the consciousness of the world wouldn't support the most refined states of consciousness and automatically assumed that he was giving everyone a subtle message about his own state of consciousness, but apparently many, many people refused to take the implications of MMY's statements seriously and made a mental exception for MMY and Gurudev. M: Well then the consciousness of the world took a big downturn when he got old cuz he was not functioning very well at all. It might be easier to assume that his belief in enlightenment as a theory was contradicted by his own life. L:In fact, I pointed this implication out to a TM teacher and he explicitly said just that. You get the same thing with Christians asserting the divinity of Jesus in spite of him saying "There is none perfect; no, not one." M: I am saying the emperor has no clothes, you are saying that no one covers all their skin as an excuse. All this after the fact explanation requires more unproven beliefs to be heaped on top of the old one. How the hell could anyone know about the "consciousness of the world." It is a meaningless conjecture to cover what is more obvious. Maharishi's programs did not even work on himself. That is why they hid him away in the end. L ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <curtisdeltablues@...> wrote : I was struck by the posted interview between the Aussie and the Maharishi through closed circuit TV where Maharishi was unable to field a question about whether or not he could actually fly by going into "you kids get off of my lawn" mode. What struck me because I have spent quite a bit of time around old people in the last few years and it seemed obvious that Maharishi was clearly suffering from the diminished capacity of age and very likely dementia. He was not well. This observation only matters because at the heart of a lot of the premises in TM is that the state of consciousness in enlightenment transcends the functioning of the brain. This is the premise on which we have claims about witnessing deep sleep for example, and all the conjectural nonsense surrounding what happens after a "conscious" enlightened death. It is stated in different ways as a premise underneath many claims about how a person functions in enlightenment. We saw Maharishi, who in his salad days would have gigglingly swatted away such a direct question calling him on an outrageous claim, completely flummoxed and left with a broom in his hand chasing the local scamps out of his rutabaga patch. How can it be that "consciousness development" can have an effect on the person after their brain stops functioning and rots, when it couldn't even weather the storm of old age for the supposedly most developed person, Maharishi himself? Apparently consciousness development has the same impact as imagination development when it comes to being able to resist the ravages of age. Brain functioning trumps all imagination of it being otherwise. And the difference between Maharishi in old age and my own father can only be seen clearly in the zeros in their bank accounts.