--- In [email protected], "curtisdeltablues" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > "> How can it translate into *predictable* changes > > if the course of action, per Krishna in the Gita, > > is unfathomable? > >" > > Perhaps this guy is moving beyond the old way of looking at > higher states experiences. I found this quote and his site > facinating. I am not agreeing with his conclusions or his > self-perception, but the direction of his inquiry matches my > own. It may be time for a whole new understanding of what > the experiences brought about by yoga mean.
Yeah, but my question is whether we're capable of determining what they "should" mean. He appears to be saying he is, at least in that quote, but I'm not so sure. > --- In [email protected], "authfriend" <jstein@> wrote: > > > > --- In [email protected], "Rick Archer" <rick@> wrote: > > > > > > andrewcohen.org <http://www.wie.org/_e/ui/ac/ac-logo.gif> > > > > > > Quote of the Week > > > > > > What Does Enlightenment Look Like? > > <snip> > > > I believe that higher state experiences, if they are to > > > mean anything at all, must translate into significant > > > changes in all the important domains of human life. > > > > How can it translate into *predictable* changes > > if the course of action, per Krishna in the Gita, > > is unfathomable? > > >
