“Buddha misread the origins of suffering. The cause of suffering is God’s desire to appear as this creation.” “This is … More
Tag: Truth
The Lover of Che and Marx
Samudrala Avinash Rahul Vamshi KrishnaWhat a long name. Does not sound at allLike the name of someoneWho belongs to the … More
Recent Sayings
“The more significant question always is “Do you love?” rather than “Do you love me?”. Why? Because love is a … More
Recent Poems
The Questions Again the moon comes up in the nightAgain the starsThey stir up in me some questionsWithout letting me … More
How Many I’s?
“Are there two I’s? Me and the Truth? Can’t be so, right? What gives?”
“Is it perfume from a dress / That makes me so digress?”
No, Eliot, it is not the perfumeFrom a dress or otherwiseThat makes me digress. I digressBecause the mind itself is … More
Hitherto Unblogged Poems from My Latest Book “The Seeking Soul” — www.amazon.in/dp/B0G4KCHV3W
The Corridor of Uncertainty My buddy AV Satish ChandraNow retired as prof of pol sciFrom OU, tired as he already … More
My Latest Writings
“There is only as much distance between God and us as there is between clay and pot.” “There is only … More
“I will go wherever my argument leads me”
“Follow the argument wherever it leads” — drawn from Plato’s Republic — stands as the cornerstone of the Socratic method. It reflects a profound commitment to pursuing truth through rational dialogue, even when conclusions challenge our deepest assumptions. Socrates held that intellectual honesty demands we set aside bias and comfort in favor of objective reasoning. Through dialectic — the art of reasoned questioning — he pushed interlocutors to confront contradictions in their own beliefs. This relentless pursuit of truth over reputation ultimately led to his trial in Athens, yet he never wavered. Philosophy, at its best, asks us to do the same.
The Light That Always Shines
How shall I explain to the people I loveAnd I love a great many peopleFamily, friends, relatives and strangersThat this … More