MILES TO READ B4 I SLEEP
Sunday, 14 June 2026
MA
Before long you'll be no one, and nowhere. Like all the things you see now. All the people living.
Marcus Aurelius
That line captures a core Stoic theme Marcus Aurelius returns to again and again: impermanence.
He’s essentially compressing a whole worldview into a blunt reminder—everything you’re experiencing right now (status, other people, even your own identity as it feels moment-to-moment) is transient. Not just “will end someday,” but already in the process of fading. The phrase “before long” is doing a lot of work: it shrinks the timeline of life down to something almost negligible from a cosmic perspective.
The point isn’t meant to be depressing, though it can sound that way out of context. In Stoicism, this kind of reflection is supposed to strip away the illusion that things are permanently stable or owed to us. Once you stop treating people, possessions, and even your own life as fixed and guaranteed, you’re supposed to become more grounded in what is actually under your control: your judgments, actions, and responses.
There’s also a kind of leveling effect in it. “Like all the things you see now. All the people living.” It collapses distinctions we tend to inflate—important vs. unimportant people, lasting vs. temporary moments. From that angle, everything shares the same fate, so clinging or inflating status starts to look irrational.
But there’s a tension here worth noticing. If you take only the “everything disappears” part, it can feel nihilistic. Marcus is closer to saying: because everything disappears, your attention and conduct in the present matter more, not less. The value is in how you show up while anything is still here to be experienced.
If you want, I can break down how this connects to other Stoic ideas like memento mori or compare it with modern existentialism—they overlap in interesting ways but land differently.
JK V UGK
A
Here’s a structured “DDx-style” comparison of U.G. Krishnamurti vs Jiddu Krishnamurti.
DDX: U.G. Krishnamurti vs Jiddu Krishnamurti
| Dimension | U.G. Krishnamurti | Jiddu Krishnamurti |
|---|---|---|
| Core claim | No mind, no self, no enlightenment; nothing to attain or transform | Psychological freedom is possible through insight into thought and conditioning |
| View of “self” | Purely fictional byproduct of memory/biology; not real in any meaningful sense | A constructed psychological center created by thought; can be observed and dissolved |
| Problem definition | There is no problem to solve; the “problem” itself is a false construct | Human suffering arises from thought, conditioning, and fragmentation |
| Solution stance | No solution exists; attempts to solve create distortion | Insight into thought can end psychological conflict |
| Role of practice (meditation, techniques) | Useless or harmful; reinforces artificial striving | Rejects technique-based meditation, but emphasizes choiceless awareness |
| Freedom concept | Freedom is meaningless; organism simply functions when conditioning drops away spontaneously | Freedom is freedom from psychological conditioning through insight |
| Mind | Not real as an entity; just a label for biological/knowledge processes | Real as movement of thought; can be observed and understood |
| Knowledge | Pure conditioning; always second-hand, mechanical, limiting | Useful technically but psychologically corrupting when used for identity |
| Change/transformation | Impossible notion—nothing to transform | Psychological transformation is possible through perception |
| Authority stance | Rejects all teachers, including himself; sees teaching as irrelevant | Rejects authority of teachers and traditions completely |
| Teaching style | Shock language, biological reductionism, anti-spiritual provocation | Analytical, dialogical, investigative inquiry |
| View of enlightenment | Denies it entirely as myth | Denies traditional enlightenment models but emphasizes “seeing what is” |
| World/politics | Often pessimistic: systems inevitably self-destructive | Focus less fatalistic; emphasizes psychological roots of conflict |
| Method | Deconstruction of all concepts until only “bare functioning” remains | Inquiry into thought and perception to reveal conditioning |
| Final position | No metaphysical or psychological resolution possible | No system; only insight and awareness of conditioning |
One-line diagnostic summary
U.G. Krishnamurti: “There is no patient, no disease, no cure—only biological functioning misread as spiritual problem.”
Jiddu Krishnamurti: “There is a misperception (conditioning), and seeing it clearly ends it.”
If you want, I can also map:
where they sound identical but diverge subtly (this is where most confusion happens), or
how each would respond to meditation, trauma, or neurobiology in modern terms.
Here’s a clear historical timeline comparing Jiddu Krishnamurti and U.G. Krishnamurti, including where their lives intersected and diverged.
📜 Timeline: J. Krishnamurti vs U.G. Krishnamurti
🧭 1890s–1910s: Birth & Early Formation
| Year | Jiddu Krishnamurti | U.G. Krishnamurti |
|---|---|---|
| 1895 | Born in Madanapalle, India | — |
| 1910 | Discovered by Theosophical Society leaders (Leadbeater, Annie Besant) | — |
| 1910s | Groomed as “World Teacher” within Theosophy | — |
🧭 1920s–1930s: Global Teaching Era Begins (J. Krishnamurti)
| Year | Jiddu Krishnamurti | U.G. Krishnamurti |
|---|---|---|
| 1929 | Dissolves Order of the Star → rejects messiah role | — |
| 1930s | Begins independent philosophical teaching worldwide | — |
👉 During this time:
Jiddu becomes a global philosophical speaker.
U.G. is still in India, largely outside global philosophical circles.
🧭 1930s–1950s: Parallel Lives Begin to Overlap Indirectly
| Year | Jiddu Krishnamurti | U.G. Krishnamurti |
|---|---|---|
| 1930s–40s | Teaches in Europe, India, USA | Studies philosophy in India; immersed in Vedanta & psychology |
| 1947–1953 | Active global talks | U.G. begins deep questioning of mind, psychology, and spiritual claims |
| 1953 | Well-established teacher | U.G. meets Jiddu Krishnamurti; intense discussions occur |
👉 Key intersection:
U.G. directly engages Jiddu in discussions.
He later rejects Jiddu as part of the “same spiritual machinery.”
🧭 1950s–1960s: Divergence Becomes Clear
| Year | Jiddu Krishnamurti | U.G. Krishnamurti |
|---|---|---|
| 1950s–60s | Continues talks on awareness, conditioning, psychological freedom | Intensifies rejection of all spiritual frameworks |
| 1960s | Expands educational projects (schools in India/USA) | Continues personal “anti-teaching” stance informally |
🧭 1967–1969: “Calamity” Event (U.G. Krishnamurti)
| Year | Jiddu Krishnamurti | U.G. Krishnamurti |
|---|---|---|
| 1967–69 | Teaching continues unchanged | U.G. describes a radical physiological/psychological “mutation” (“calamity”) |
| Claims end of psychological continuity, self-structure collapses |
👉 This is the defining break for U.G.:
No method
No transformation
No enlightenment
Only “biological functioning”
🧭 1970s–1980s: Public Identity Formation
| Year | Jiddu Krishnamurti | U.G. Krishnamurti |
|---|---|---|
| 1970s | Mature philosophical authority figure globally | Begins informal dialogues with visitors, no teaching structure |
| 1980s | Continues talks until death | Gains notoriety as “anti-guru” rejecting all spirituality |
🧭 1980s–1990s: End of Jiddu / Rise of U.G. notoriety
| Year | Jiddu Krishnamurti | U.G. Krishnamurti |
|---|---|---|
| 1986 | Dies (age 90) | Continues speaking informally |
| 1990s | Posthumous influence grows | U.G. becomes cult figure among spiritual skeptics |
🧭 2000–2007: End of U.G. Krishnamurti
| Year | Jiddu Krishnamurti | U.G. Krishnamurti |
|---|---|---|
| — | — | Continues dialogues, rejects all systems |
| 2007 | — | Dies (age 89) |
🧠 Relationship Summary
Jiddu Krishnamurti → “Psychological freedom through awareness of conditioning.”
U.G. Krishnamurti → “There is no psychological problem, no freedom, no awareness to cultivate.”
They:
Met indirectly through shared Theosophical background
Met directly in discussion
Ended up philosophically opposite in interpretation of human experience
If you want, I can also draw a philosophical “family tree” of Indian 20th-century anti-guru thought, showing where both sit relative to Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism, and modern neuroscience-style materialism.
U G KRISHNAMURTI
A
The “self” is not an entity, but a continuity effect
He denies a stable self, but not in a mystical way.
Instead:
- thought is momentary
- but memory links moments together
- that linking produces the illusion of continuity
- continuity = “me”
So the self is:
a narrative stitching function, not a thing
This is close to some cognitive science views, but he radicalizes it by saying there is no observer outside the stitching process.
A
“There are no really independent thoughts”
He repeatedly undermines ownership of thinking:
- you don’t generate thoughts
- thoughts arise when stimulated
- knowledge “responds automatically”
So agency is reframed as:
stimulus → response loop, not free cognition
This is where his view becomes very close to strict determinism.
A
SWVVKA
A
Key Points from the Page (Simplified)
1. Religion and Human Understanding
Humans try to understand the world and existence through religion.
Religion helps explain life, morality, suffering, and purpose.
2. Different Thinkers on Religion
David Hume: Religion comes from fear and uncertainty.
Karl Marx: Religion can comfort suffering people but may distract from real social problems.
Sigmund Freud: Religion may come from psychological needs and fears.
Émile Durkheim: Religion strengthens social unity and shared values.
3. Eastern vs Western Views
Western religions often emphasize belief in one God and moral rules.
Eastern traditions (like Hinduism and Buddhism) focus more on spiritual practice, meditation, and inner realization.
4. Hinduism and Diversity
Hinduism includes many beliefs and practices.
It accepts different paths to spiritual truth.
Practices may include devotion, meditation, yoga, and philosophy.
5. Buddhism
Focuses on reducing suffering.
Emphasizes self-discipline, meditation, and wisdom rather than worship of a creator god.
6. Modern Religious Understanding
Many people now see religion as both:
a personal spiritual experience, and
a social/cultural system.
7. Main Theme
Religion is complex: it shapes beliefs, behavior, identity, ethics, and community life in different ways across cultures.
YOGA
A
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Here is a simplified tabulated version of the yoga forms from the image:
| Yoga Type | Simple Meaning |
|---|---|
| Ashtanga Yoga | The 8-step path of yoga; foundation of classical yoga |
| Hatha Yoga | Physical yoga: postures, breathing, relaxation |
| Raja Yoga | Meditation and mental focus |
| Karma Yoga | Selfless action without attachment to results |
| Bhakti Yoga | Devotion through prayer, chanting, love |
| Jnana Yoga | Wisdom and self-inquiry through philosophy |
| Tantra Yoga | Holistic path combining body, mind, and energy |
| Mantra Yoga | Use of sounds/mantras for focus and awareness |
| Kundalini Yoga | Awakening spiritual energy within |
| Laya Yoga | Transforming lower energies into higher awareness |
| Svara Yoga | Study of breath and energy flow |
Easy Memory Trick
Body → Hatha
Mind/Meditation → Raja
Action → Karma
Devotion → Bhakti
Knowledge → Jnana
Energy → Kundalini / Laya / Svara
Sound → Mantra
Whole System → Ashtanga / Tantra
QNTM P
A
Quantum mechanics is the same math in all cases, but the interpretations change the “story you tell yourself about what reality is doing underneath it.” That’s where the philosophical tone shifts a lot.
Here’s how the main ones feel, compared in a clean way.
1) Copenhagen Interpretation — “Reality is not definite until observed”
Philosophy vibe: pragmatic + slightly mysterious + anti-metaphysical
Core idea:
The wavefunction is a tool for predicting outcomes
Before measurement, particles don’t have definite properties (only probabilities)
“Measurement” causes a collapse into a definite outcome
How it feels philosophically:
Reality is not fully “there” until interaction
Physics refuses to talk about underlying reality
Knowledge has a built-in limit
Emotional tone:
“Stop asking what’s really happening. Ask what you will observe.”
Why people link it to Nasadiya Suktam:
Both avoid giving a final ontological picture
Both emphasize limits of knowledge
Weakness philosophically:
It leaves “measurement” vague
It feels like reality depends on an undefined boundary between quantum and classical
2) Many Worlds Interpretation — “Everything that can happen does happen”
(associated with Hugh Everett; part of modern scientific_concept: Quantum Mechanics interpretations)
Philosophy vibe: deterministic underneath, but infinite branching realities
Core idea:
No collapse happens
The wavefunction always evolves smoothly
Every possible outcome occurs, but in separate “branches” of the universe
How it feels philosophically:
Reality is massively parallel
You are just one branch of a huge cosmic tree
Probability = “which branch you find yourself in”
Emotional tone:
“Nothing is uncertain globally—everything happens. You just experience one path.”
Strength:
Removes the mysterious “collapse”
Fully deterministic at the universal level
Weirdness cost:
Infinite unseen universes
You can’t interact with other branches
Philosophical punch:
You are not choosing outcomes; you are splitting into versions of yourself
This is the interpretation that feels most like “cosmic structure is unimaginably vast rather than uncertain.”
3) Bohmian Mechanics (Pilot-Wave Theory) — “Everything is real, hidden order guides it”
Associated with de Broglie–Bohm theory.
Philosophy vibe: classical realism with hidden machinery
Core idea:
Particles always have definite positions
A “pilot wave” guides their motion
The wavefunction is real, not just information
How it feels philosophically:
The universe is deterministic like classical physics
But there is hidden, nonlocal guidance behind everything
Emotional tone:
“Reality is orderly and precise—but deeper than what you can directly see.”
Strength:
Restores realism (things exist with definite properties)
No collapse, no branching universes
Cost:
Requires nonlocality (instant connections across distance)
Hidden variables are fundamentally unobservable
Philosophical punch:
The universe is like a perfectly choreographed system you can’t fully see the choreography of
4) Quick comparison of “philosophical atmosphere”
| Interpretation | Core feeling | Reality status | Role of observer |
|---|---|---|---|
| Copenhagen | uncertain, measurement-dependent | not definite until measured | fundamental |
| Many Worlds | vast, branching determinism | all outcomes exist | no special role |
| Bohmian | hidden deterministic order | fully real and definite | passive |
5) The real philosophical divide (important)
All of these disagree on one thing:
What is the wavefunction?
Copenhagen: a tool for prediction
Many Worlds: the actual universe (all branches)
Bohm: a real guiding field + hidden particle positions
So the disagreement is not about experiments—it’s about ontology (what exists).
6) How this connects (lightly) to Nasadiya Suktam
The Nasadiya Suktam doesn’t propose a mechanism. It questions whether ultimate origin is knowable at all.
Quantum interpretations echo that in different ways:
Copenhagen: limits knowledge
Many Worlds: overwhelms intuition with excess reality
Bohm: hides order beneath appearances
So the “shared theme” is not similarity of ideas, but:
reality resists a single intuitive story.
If you want, I can map these interpretations onto classical philosophical schools (like realism, idealism, Advaita Vedanta, etc.) in a precise way—but without the usual vague “quantum mysticism” shortcuts.