Perception of Self: In Search of the Miraculous P. D. Ouspensky & Gurdjieff

preview_player
Показать описание
In Search of the Miraculous P. D. Ouspensky
My blog page on wordpress, Broadening Your Horizons is kept up to date almost daily to check it out encase you miss any nougats.

Chapter 6
"Sensation and emotion do not reason, do not compare, they simply define a given impression by its aspect, by its being pleasant or unpleasant in one sense or another, by its color, taste, or smell. Moreover, sensations can be indifferent—neither warm nor cold, neither pleasant nor unpleasant: 'white paper,' 'red pencil.' In the sensation of white or red there is nothing either pleasant or unpleasant. At any rate there need not necessarily be anything pleasant or unpleasant connected with this or that color. These sensations, the so-called 'five senses,' and others, like the feeling of warmth, cold, and so on, are instinctive. Feeling functions or emotions are always pleasant or unpleasant; indifferent emotions do not exist."
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Hi..hanks for the effort..nice reading..

avi
welcome to shbcf.ru