On Jan 13, 2006, at 12:03 PM, authfriend wrote:

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Vaj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:




On Jan 13, 2006, at 10:35 AM, authfriend wrote:



I don't believe you addressed my question.



I have.




Distinctions, no matter how fine, cannot be

"transcendental," by definition--unless you're

using a very different definition of the

transcendent than any I've ever seen.



Jnana is transcendental.



Let me say it another way:


Distinctions, no matter how fine, cannot be

"transcendental," by definition--unless you're

using a very different definition of the

transcendent than any I've ever seen.


What is the status of thought in Unity Consciousness? You may want to review the four levels of speech in Maharishi Vedic Science to help you. Or read the Nasadiya sukta of Rig Veda, preferably with a friend who understands Sanskrit. Yuganaddha, two-in-one, is a paradox that's difficult to describe in linear words. There will automatically be a disconnect between written descriptions and the experience itself. It cannot be adequately described by words in written or spoken speech.

The only "distinction" is that linear speech requires a distinction made up of a string of words to describe jnana.


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