Reason would say that, if you take the high road, you'll find the true meaning.
 

---In [email protected], <mjackson74@...> wrote :

 So in other words, one can interpret ANYTHING one reads according to what one 
wants it to say. 
 

 From: "jr_esq@... [FairfieldLife]" <[email protected]>
 To: [email protected] 
 Sent: Friday, May 1, 2015 1:27 AM
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Multiverse Revealed in Bhagavad Gita
 
 
   One has to read the Gita and other wisdom books in various levels of 
understanding.  From a literal sense, the translation of this verse appears 
mythical and impractical.  But in a figurative sense, the translation reveals 
the infinite properties of the multiverse which are represented by the infinite 
faces of the Supreme Deity or the laws of nature present in these worlds.
 

 From this point of view, one can see the deep wisdom that is being conveyed in 
this chapter of the Gita.
 


 

---In [email protected], <emptybill@...> wrote :

 Don't you have any better translations of the Bhagavatam to work with than 
Bhaktivedanta? You will never view unbiased translations from his works ... or 
from any Gaudiya Vaishnava-s for that matter. 

There are much more accurate translations available. Why quote contaminated 
scriptures full of ideologically corrupted interpretations?

″sarvavedanta saram yadbramhatmaikatva lakshanam vastwadwitiyam tannishtham 
kaivalaikaprayojanam″( BP 12.13.12) 

″You already know that the essence of all vedanta is the non-duality of atman 
and brahman. Only this is the given subject of Bhagavata Purana. The aim of 
this (Bhagavata Purana) is kaivalya moksha only.″


  





 


 











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