Is truth layered or singular? In this voice-led dialogue, Ranjit argues for levels of truth—conventional to ultimate—drawing on Vedanta, Buddhism, and lived context. Sam insists on “naked” nonduality: in the absolute, neither love nor compassion can arise because there is no second. Both concede a paradox: ultimate reality must speak through dual words, bodies, and choices. Meeting people where they are (upaya) becomes the bridge. Sartre’s freedom, Shankara’s clarity, and Christ’s command to love surface as touchstones. Finally, they converge: truth may be one, yet when it moves through the relative world, its authentic signature is love and compassion. Naturally.
Tag: Meaning of life
Shut up, Nietzsche
“Shut up, Nietzsche, I have no more interest left in this world, except maybe to complain about how meaningless and … More
“None in Bondage, None Seeking Liberation and None Liberated”
When my elder sister and I were returning today (July 11, 2025) from a visit to my younger sister’s in-laws … More
The Goals for Stages of Life – 4Ps
PleasurePurposePhilanthropyPhilosophy
A Fool’s Errand
Those were the days my friend I thought they would never end Buying or borrowing a book From a friend … More
The Meaning of Life
“The meaning of life is to find that it has none.”–D. Samarender Reddy
No Ultimate Meaning to Life
“Some people worry that life is pointless. That’s because it is. I don’t say that flippantly or glibly. I mean … More