- published: 05 Mar 2013
- views: 15296
107:35
Alan Watts - Zen bones and Tales [1hr47]
Zen Bones part1&2: 0:00 - 0:53:13
Zen Tales part1&2: 0:53:13 - end
Audio: Alan Watts / Zen...
published: 05 Mar 2013
Alan Watts - Zen bones and Tales [1hr47]
Zen Bones part1&2: 0:00 - 0:53:13
Zen Tales part1&2: 0:53:13 - end
Audio: Alan Watts / Zen bones & Zen tales from Eastern and Western zen
Picture: http://www.4lifeevents.com/?attachment_id=447
If there is any problem with the content/picture then contact me with a PM.
- published: 05 Mar 2013
- views: 15296
41:43
Alan Watts: This Is IT: Become What You Are
This video was originally edited by youtube.com/Adam1927 I merely spliced them together an...
published: 13 Dec 2011
Alan Watts: This Is IT: Become What You Are
This video was originally edited by youtube.com/Adam1927 I merely spliced them together and re-uploaded it in entirety because I didn't like watching it in parts. This video changed my life, thank you Alan, thank you Adam....
Alan Watts put forward a worldview, drawing on Hinduism, Chinese philosophy, pantheism, and modern science, in which he maintains that the whole universe consists of a cosmic self playing hide-and-seek (Lila), hiding from itself (Maya) by becoming all the living and non-living things in the universe, forgetting what it really is; the upshot being that we are all IT in disguise. In this worldview, Watts asserts that our conception of ourselves as an "ego in a bag of skin" is a myth; the entities we call the separate "things" are merely processes of the whole. You're IT.
- published: 13 Dec 2011
- views: 342346
66:34
Alan Watts - Stop Trying To Change The World.
There is no knowledge of tomorrow
Observation implies no accumulation of knowledge, even t...
published: 10 Dec 2012
Alan Watts - Stop Trying To Change The World.
There is no knowledge of tomorrow
Observation implies no accumulation of knowledge, even though knowledge is obviously necessary at a certain level: knowledge as a doctor, knowledge as a scientist, knowledge of history, of all the things that have been. After all, that is knowledge: information about the things that have been. There is no knowledge of tomorrow, only conjecture as to what might happen tomorrow, based on your knowledge of what has been. A mind that observes with knowledge is incapable of following swiftly the stream of thought. It is only by observing without the screen of knowledge that you begin to see the whole structure of your own thinking. And as you observe, which is not to condemn or accept, but simply to watch, you will find that thought comes to an end. Casually to observe an occasional thought leads nowhere, but if you observe the process of thinking and do not become an observer apart from the observed,if you see the whole movement of thought without accepting or condemning it,then that very observation puts an end immediately to thought, and therefore the mind is compassionate, it is in a state of constant mutation.
Jiddu Krisnamurti
- published: 10 Dec 2012
- views: 172852
110:16
Alan Watts - The Spectrum of Love (complete)
Been looking for the full lecture for ages, it was also called " The Summer Of Love - The ...
published: 12 Sep 2012
Alan Watts - The Spectrum of Love (complete)
Been looking for the full lecture for ages, it was also called " The Summer Of Love - The Psychedelic Experience " and that is the file name it had when I got it,however Alan himself at the beginning calls the lecture "The spectrum of love" so that's why I gave it the title. for those of you that patiently waited here is the full thing - enjoy.
"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
- published: 12 Sep 2012
- views: 56042
9:09
Alan Watts - fear of enlightenment
A must hear vid...originally posted by Indigorevolution who is currently suspended fortuna...
published: 23 May 2009
Alan Watts - fear of enlightenment
A must hear vid...originally posted by Indigorevolution who is currently suspended fortunately the vid is in the LR archive too...phew! wouldn't want to loose a gem like this one... (to preserve your videos...go to http://informationstation.ning.com
Love all
LR
- published: 23 May 2009
- views: 326044
54:05
Alan Watts - The Myopic View Of The World
Thought does not lead to love
The process of thought ever denies love. It is thought that ...
published: 26 May 2012
Alan Watts - The Myopic View Of The World
Thought does not lead to love
The process of thought ever denies love. It is thought that has emotional complications, not love. Thought is the greatest hindrance to love. Thought creates a division between what is and 'what should be', and on this division morality is based; but neither the moral nor the immoral know love. This moral structure, created by the mind to hold social relationships together, is not love, but a hardening process like that of cement. Thought does not lead to love, thought does not cultivate love, for love cannot be cultivated as a plant in the garden. The very desire to cultivate love is the action of thought. If you are at all aware, you will see what an important part thought plays in your life. Thought obviously has its place, but it is in no way related to love. What is related to thought can be understood by thought, but that which is not related to thought cannot be caught by the mind. You will ask, then what is love? Love is a state of being in which thought is not; but the very definition of love is a process of thought, and so it is not love. We have to understand thought itself, and not try to capture love by thought. The denial of thought does not bring about love. There is freedom from thought only when its deep significance is fully understood; and, for this, profound self-knowledge is essential, not vain and superficial assertions. Meditation and not repetition, awareness and not definition, reveal the ways of thought. Without being aware and experiencing the ways of thought, love cannot be. J.K.
- published: 26 May 2012
- views: 25985
50:07
Alan Watts - Am I Free Or Just A Puppet ?
Not the man of tradition
Now, what is a man to do who sees exactly what is taking place in...
published: 07 Jan 2013
Alan Watts - Am I Free Or Just A Puppet ?
Not the man of tradition
Now, what is a man to do who sees exactly what is taking place in the world, and who really wants to find out if God, truth, is an actuality or merely a clever invention of the priest? After all, you and I are the result of the collective, are we not? And there must be individual human beings who have completely broken away from the collective, from society, who are free from conditioning, not in layers or in spots, but totally, for it is only such individuals who can find out what truth or God is -not the man of tradition, not the man who does japa, rings the bell, quotes the Gita, and goes to the temple every day. It is the irreligious people who do that. But the man who really wants to find out what this extraordinary movement of living is must not only understand the process of his own conditioning, but be able to go beyond it. Because, the mind can find out what is true only when it is free from all conditioning, not when it merely repeats certain words or quotes the sacred books. Such a mind is not free.
Jiddu Krishnamurti
- published: 07 Jan 2013
- views: 58239
3:09
What if money was no object?
Ask yourself. What would you do with your life if money was no object? An amazing lecture ...
published: 25 Sep 2012
What if money was no object?
Ask yourself. What would you do with your life if money was no object? An amazing lecture from the late Alan Watts.
Alan Watts audio courtesy of alanwatts.org.
Music Used:
Ludovico Einaudi - Divenire
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=50zewk5WAUM
Footage used:
"New York HD Timelapse"
"Vancouver city"
"Artbeats Clip FH021-34"
"Into the Wild"
"Mexican wave exam"
"Wonders of the Universe"
"Artbeats clip JFT-FH004-12"
"Planet Earth Amazing nature scenery"
"Earth"
All Credit goes to its respective owners.
Facebook Page:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Tragedy-and-Hope/122913764534469
Official website:
http://tragedyandhopeproductions.org/
Transcript:
What do you desire? What makes you itch? What sort of a situaion would you like?
Let's suppose -- I do this often in vocational guidence of students. They come to me and say, "Well, uh, we're getting out of college, and we haven't the faintest idea of what we want to do."
So I always ask the question, "What would you like to do if money were no object? How would you really enjoy spending your life?"
Well, it's so amazing. As a result of our kind of educational system, crowds of students say, "Well, we'd like to be painters, we'd like to be poets, we'd like to be writers. But as everybody knows you can't earn any money that way."
Or another person says, "I'd like to live an out-of-doors life and ride horses."
I said, "Do you want to teach at a riding school? Let's go through with it. What do you want to do?"
When we finally got down to something which the individual says he really wants to do. I will say to him, "you do that, and forget the money. Because if you say that getting the money is the most important thing, you will spend your life completely wasting your time. You will be doing things you don't like doing in order to go on living that is to go on doing things you don't like doing. Which is STUPID! Better to have a short life that is full of what you like doing than a long life spent in a miserable way."
And after all, if you do really like what your'e doing, it doesn't matter what it is, you can eventually become a master of it. It's the only way to become a master of something, to be really with it. And then you'll be able to get a good fee for whatever it is. So don't worry too much. Somebody's interested in everything. And anything you can be interested in, you'll find others who are.
But it's absolutely stupid to spend your time doing things you don't like in order to go on doing things you don't like and to teach your children to follow in the same track. See, what we're doing is we're bringing up children, and educating them to live the same sort of lives we're living in order that they may justify themselves and find satisfaction in life by bringing up their children to bring up their children to do the same thing. It's all wretch and no vomit. It never gets there!
And so therefore it's so important to consider this question. "What do I desire?"
- published: 25 Sep 2012
- views: 1940970
3:39
The Dream Of Life - Alan Watts
An inspiring and profound speech from the late Alan Watts.
Alan Watts audio courtesy of a...
published: 10 Feb 2013
The Dream Of Life - Alan Watts
An inspiring and profound speech from the late Alan Watts.
Alan Watts audio courtesy of alanwatts.org
Music Used:
Goldmund - Threnody
Lecture:
Alan Watts - Out of your mind
Credits:
Earth HD
Home
BBC Planet Earth
National Geographic -The Incredible Human Machine
Washington - Enchantments - Canon 5D Mark II
Its a Wonderful Life
GoPro HERO3- Black Edition
Facebook page:
http://www.facebook.com/TragedyandHopeProductions
Official Website:
http://tragedyandhopeproductions.org/
- published: 10 Feb 2013
- views: 84222
29:54
Alan Watts - Human (The Intellectual Porcupine).
Since at least 1500 B.C. men have, from time to time, held the view that our normal
vision...
published: 15 Oct 2012
Alan Watts - Human (The Intellectual Porcupine).
Since at least 1500 B.C. men have, from time to time, held the view that our normal
vision of the world is a hallucination—a dream, a figment of the mind, or, to use the
Hindu word which means both art and illusion, a maya. The implication is that, if this is
so, life need never be taken seriously. It is a fantasy, a play, a drama to be enjoyed. It
does not really matter, for one day (perhaps in the moment of death) the illusion will
dissolve, and each one of us will awaken to discover that he himself is what there is and
all that there is—the very root and ground of the universe, or the ultimate and eternal
space in which things and events come and go.
This is not simply an idea which someone "thought up," like science fiction or a
philosophical theory. It is the attempt to express an experience in which consciousness
itself, the basic sensation of being "I," undergoes a remarkable change. We do not know
much about these experiences. They are relatively common, and arise in every part of the
world. They occur to both children and adults. They may last for a few seconds and come
once in a lifetime, or they may happen repeatedly and constitute a permanent change of
consciousness. With baffling impartiality they may descend upon those who never heard
of them, as upon those who have spent years trying to cultivate them by some type of
discipline. They have been regarded, equally, as a disease of consciousness with
symptoms everywhere the same, like measles, and as a vision of higher reality such as
comes in moments of scientific or psychological insight. They may turn people into
monsters and megalomaniacs, or transform them into saints and sages. While there is no
sure way of inducing these experiences, a favorable atmosphere may be created by
intense concentration, by fasting, by sensory deprivation, by hyper-oxygenation, by
prolonged emotional stress, by profound relaxation, or by the use of certain drugs.
Experiences of this kind underlie some of the great world religions—Hinduism,
Buddhism and Taoism in particular, and, to a much lesser extent, Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam. As expressed in the doctrines of these religions, they purport to be an account
of "the way things are" and therefore invite comparison with descriptions of the universe
and of man given by physicists and biologists. They contradict common sense so
violently and are accompanied with such a powerful sense of authenticity and reality
(more real than reality is a common description) that men have always wondered whether
they are divine revelations or insidious delusions.
Alan Watts
- published: 15 Oct 2012
- views: 17801
7:51
Alan Watts ☮ The Way of Waking Up
What does it mean, to awaken? A short movie narrated by Alan Watts...
http://alanwatts.c...
published: 18 Aug 2010
Alan Watts ☮ The Way of Waking Up
What does it mean, to awaken? A short movie narrated by Alan Watts...
http://alanwatts.com/
For those who would like to hear Watts speak without any background music, a second version of this video can be found here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tCbHg243-AE
"So then, here's the drama. My metaphysics, let me be perfectly frank with you, are that there is the central Self, you could call it God you could call it anything you like. And its all of us. Its playing all the parts of all beings whatsoever everywhere and anywhere.
And its playing the game of hide and seek with itself. It gets lost, it gets involved in the farthest out adventures but in the end it always wakes up, and comes back to itself. And when you're ready to wake up, you're gonna wake up. And if you're not ready your gonna stay pretending that you're poor little me."
with background music by Kitaro- "Endless Water" and "Tree" from his album "Ki"....
Both songs can be heard at full volume here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MIs9ecuD0Q0
Recommended reading - The Joyous Cosmology, by Alan Watts
http://www.psychedelic-library.org/JCBODY.HTM
Excerpt-
"T0 BEGIN WITH, this world has a different kind of time. It is the time of biological rhythm, not of the clock and all that goes with the clock. There is no hurry. Our sense of time is notoriously subjective and thus dependent upon the quality of our attention, whether of interest or boredom, and upon the alignment of our behavior in terms of routines, goals, and deadlines. Here the present is self-sufficient, but it is not a static present. It is a dancing present—the unfolding of a pattern which has no specific destination in the future but is simply its own point. It leaves and arrives simultaneously, and the seed is as much the goal as the flower. There is therefore time to perceive every detail of the movement with infinitely greater richness of articulation. Normally we do not so much look at things as overlook them. The eye sees types and classes—flower, leaf, rock, bird, fire—mental pictures of things rather than things, rough outlines filled with flat color, always a little dusty and dim.
But here the depth of light and structure in a bursting bud go on forever. There is time to see them, time for the whole intricacy of veins and capillaries to develop in consciousness, time to see down and down into the shape of greenness, which is not green at all, but a whole spectrum generalizing itself as green—purple, gold, the sunlit turquoise of the ocean, the intense luminescence of the emerald. I cannot decide where shape ends and color begins. The bud has opened and the fresh leaves fan out and curve back with a gesture which is unmistakably communicative but does not say anything except, "Thus!" And somehow that is quite satisfactory, even startlingly clear. The meaning is transparent in the same way that the color and the texture are transparent, with light which does not seem to fall upon surfaces from above but to be right inside the structure and color.
Which is of course where it is, for light is an inseparable trinity of sun, object, and eye, and the chemistry of the leaf is its color, its light.
But at the same time color and light are the gift of the eye to the leaf and the sun. Transparency is the property of the eyeball, projected outward as luminous space, interpreting quanta of energy in terms of the gelatinous fibers in the head. I begin to feel that the world is at once inside my head and outside it, and the two, inside and outside, begin to include or "cap" one another like an infinite series of concentric spheres. I am unusually aware that everything I am sensing is also my body—that light, color, shape, sound, and texture are terms and properties of the brain conferred upon the outside world. I am not looking at the world, not confronting it; I am knowing it by a continuous process of transforming it into myself, so that everything around me, the whole globe of space, no longer feels away from me but in the middle.
This is at first confusing. I am not quite sure of the direction from which sounds come. The visual space seems to reverberate with them as if it were a drum. The surrounding hills rumble with the sound of a truck, and the rumble and the color-shape of the hills become one and the same gesture. I use that word deliberately and shall use it again. The hills are moving into their stillness. They mean something because they are being transformed into my brain, and my brain is an organ of meaning. The forests of redwood trees upon them look like green fire, and the copper gold of the sun-dried grass heaves immensely into the sky. Time is so slow as to be a kind of eternity, and the flavor of eternity transfers itself to the hills— burnished mountains which I seem to remember from an immeasurably distant past, at once so unfamiliar as to be exotic and yet as familiar as my own hand."
~Alan Watts
- published: 18 Aug 2010
- views: 323326
3:59
The Real You - Alan Watts
Who are you really? An amazing lecture given by Alan Watts a British philosopher, writer, ...
published: 25 Aug 2012
The Real You - Alan Watts
Who are you really? An amazing lecture given by Alan Watts a British philosopher, writer, and speaker. He wrote more than 25 books and numerous articles on subjects such as personal identity, the true nature of reality, higher consciousness, meaning of life.
Alan Watts audio courtesy of alanwatts.org
Official website:
http://tragedyandhopeproductions.org/
Edited by TragedyandHope
All Credit goes to it's respectful owners.
You may now like us on Facebook! Check it out!
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Tragedy-and-Hope/122913764534469
- published: 25 Aug 2012
- views: 680255
42:47
Alan Watts - Uncarved Block ,Unbleached Silk
All Bodhisattvas have confidence in the Buddhadharma, whether it is the teaching of the Sr...
published: 22 Feb 2012
Alan Watts - Uncarved Block ,Unbleached Silk
All Bodhisattvas have confidence in the Buddhadharma, whether it is the teaching of the Sravaka or the Bodhisattva Vehicles. All sentient beings have the same Dharma nature as the Buddhas and, therefore, may be termed Icchantika with good roots. In short, those who depend on hearing the Teaching to attain Awakening are termed Sravakas. Those who contemplate the twelve nidanas of dependent origination and thus win Awakening are termed Pratyekabuddhas. Most Dharma students are awakened by Dharma teaching but not awakened directly to Mind. Practicing for many kalpas, they still do not attain Original Buddha. Just as a dog is distracted by a clod of earth thrown at him, so we forget Original Mind. However, if one can attain silent and unspoken understanding, one knows that because the mind is Dharma it is, therefore, not necessary to seek Dharma.
Most people's minds are hindered by the mind-realms and only perceive the Buddha principle polluted by and mixed with phenomena. Thus, they are always trying to escape the mind-realms and calm the mind. To attain Pure Mind, they attempt to eradicate phenomena and keep the principle, not realizing that the mind-realms are hindered by Mind and that phenomena are hindered by the principle. Without mind, the realms are empty; when the principle is tranquil, so are phenomena. One should not turn the Mind upside down for some personal use. People do not really want to realize the state of being "Without mind", fearing that if they fail at their attempts at cultivation a one-sided emptiness would result. Foolish people only try to wipe out phenomena but do not wipe out mind. The wise man wipes out the mind and does not bother with phenomena. The mind of the Bodhisattva is void, having abandoned all and grasping neither bliss nor merit.
There are three degrees of renunciation in this practice. The highest degree is the renunciation of body and mind through the perception of everything, inside and out, as void, there being nothing to obtain and nothing to grasp. Depending on the limits of his strength of belief and committment to practice, one makes the great renunciation of negative and positive, existence and non-existence. Following this realization of truth with practice and non-expectation of reward or personal benefit is the middle degree of renunciation. The superior degree of renunciation is compared to holding a torch in front of oneself, being neither deluded nor awakened. The middle renunciation is compared to holding the torch at one's side; it is sometimes light and sometimes dark. The lowest renunciation is similar to holding the torch at one's back, thus being unable to see a pit or trap in front of one. The mind of the Bodhisattva is void, having abandoned all things. Past-mind not grasping is past renunciation; present-mind not grasping is present renunciation; future-mind not grasping is future renunciation.
- published: 22 Feb 2012
- views: 5677
Youtube results:
152:52
Alan watts ~ ReaLity, ARt aNd ILLuSiOn ~
Alan Wilson Watts (January 6, 1915 -- November 16, 1973) was a British philosopher, writer...
published: 10 Feb 2013
Alan watts ~ ReaLity, ARt aNd ILLuSiOn ~
Alan Wilson Watts (January 6, 1915 -- November 16, 1973) was a British philosopher, writer, and speaker, best known as an interpreter and popularizer of Eastern philosophy for a Western audience.
He wrote more than 25 books and numerous articles on subjects such as personal identity, the true nature of reality, higher consciousness, meaning of life, concepts and images of God and the non-material pursuit of happiness. In his books he relates his experience to scientific knowledge and to the teachings of Eastern and Western religion, spirituality and philosophy.
In 1957 when 42, Watts published one of his best known books, The Way of Zen, which focused on philosophical explication and history. Besides drawing on the lifestyle and philosophical background of Zen, in India and China, Watts introduced ideas drawn from general semantics (directly from the writings of Alfred Korzybski and also from Norbert Wiener's early work on cybernetics, which had recently been published). Watts offered analogies from cybernetic principles possibly applicable to the Zen life. The book sold well, eventually becoming a modern classic, and helped widen his lecture circuit.
In his mature work, he presents himself as "Zennist" in spirit as he wrote in his last book, Tao: The Watercourse Way. Child rearing, the arts, cuisine, education, law and freedom, architecture, sexuality, and the uses and abuses of technology were all of great interest to him.
In looking at social issues he was quite concerned with the necessity for international peace, for tolerance and understanding among disparate cultures. He also came to feel acutely conscious of a growing ecological predicament; as one instance, in the early 1960s he wrote: "Can any melting or burning imaginable get rid of these ever-rising mountains of ruin -- especially when the things we make and build are beginning to look more and more like rubbish even before they are thrown away?"
Watts felt that absolute morality had nothing to do with the fundamental realization of one's deep spiritual identity. He advocated social rather than personal ethics. In his writings, Watts was increasingly concerned with ethics applied to relations between humanity and the natural environment and between governments and citizens. He wrote out of an appreciation of a racially and culturally diverse social landscape.
Since the inception of alanwattspodcasts.com by his son Mark Watts, and the success of internet based user-generated videos, many of Alan's audio contents have been made into videos.
As part of his growing popularity, Matt Stone and Trey Parker—creators of the animated series South Park—have also contributed a video tribute by animating some of his lectures. This has spawned a culture of many hundreds of user animated videos all around the net.
In October 1973, Watts returned from an exhausting European lecture tour. He died of heart failure in his sleep at his home on Mt. Tamalpais the following month, at the age of 58 http://www.alanwatts.com/
- published: 10 Feb 2013
- views: 1489
26:35
Alan Watts - The Wrong Side Of A One-Way Mirror
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Life, living and action
Life, living and action, is a very complex pro...
published: 09 Feb 2013
Alan Watts - The Wrong Side Of A One-Way Mirror
« previous | next »
Life, living and action
Life, living and action, is a very complex problem which, if you would understand, must be approached very simply. If you would understand a child, a complex entity, you must not impose upon it your conditioning; you must observe without condemnation. If you see a lovely sunset and you compare it with other sunsets you have seen, then the present sunset has no joy. To understand, there must be a mind that is simple, not an innocent mind, but that which perceives directly, and not translates it according to its conditioning. This is one of our major difficulties in the right approach to the comprehension of life.
Jiddu Krishnamurti
- published: 09 Feb 2013
- views: 11288