by Ma Muktananda | Jun 2, 2025
“One of the most sophisticated ways of thinking is listening, provided that it is not confused with ”obeying.” It is not enough just to lend an ear; it is necessary to resist the temptation to surrender to the voice of another simply because it sounds firm, confident, or, worse still, laden with prestige. Never forget that authority, on its own, is not an argument. Not even when the speaker speaks with the confidence that comes from experience or the charisma that engenders recognition. Quite the contrary: the more compelling the words, the greater the listener’s critical vigilance must be. Accepting a statement simply because it comes from an admired or revered source is a form of silent capitulation, a discreet abdication of one’s own judgment which, far from bringing one closer to knowledge, turns it into an act of imitation. And imitation—as Montaigne well knew—does not enlighten: it diminishes.
Reflection, when genuine, is not transmitted as a recipe or imposed as a doctrine. What is offered here is not a closed, definitive truth, but an open provocation. Listening should not be understood as immediate adherence, but as a willingness to try out what has been heard: to put it to the test, to let it resonate in the specific matter of a concrete life. And it is there, in the very body of existential experience, that any idea reveals its fruitfulness or its fragility. It is not, therefore, a matter of confirming what another has said, nor of adopting their voice as one’s own, but of passing that voice through the sieve of singularity: of turning what has been received into something thought from within oneself.
The musical example is not accidental. The score can be shared, but the interpretation—as any honest performer knows—never is. The same note played on different instruments produces different timbres, unexpected accents, silences with their own depth. So it is with thought: the same idea, when it passes through another biography, another character, another rhythm of life, no longer sounds the same. The authenticity of judgment does not lie in the originality of the content, but in the fidelity to that intimate modulation that only one person can give. I am not speaking, then, from a pulpit, from a throne. I am not trying to guide, teach, preach, or dictate; I am speaking from the partial and contingent place that constitutes me. My words do not claim universality, but sincerity and honesty. It is permeated by what is happening inside me. If anything I say resonates with the reader, it will not be because we share a doctrine, but because there has been, perhaps, a coincidence between differences. But even at that point of intersection, the distance remains: you are not me, nor could I ever speak from your place. That distance is not an obstacle. It is not an imperfection to be corrected or a hindrance that prevents us from approaching the truth. Quite the contrary: it is its most basic premise. Thinking is not seeking fusion between voices, but learning to sustain disagreement without severing the link. Real dialogue does not consist of reaching a sterile consensus, but of accepting that any truth worthy of the name is affirmed in the midst of plurality, and not in spite of it.”
by Ma Muktananda | May 22, 2025
“When the aspiration is to reach a wide audience, it is necessary to recognize that truth, in its entirety, does not lend itself easily to that end. Its structure demands to be stripped down, reduced, reformulated in terms that prioritize immediacy, emotion, or familiarity, to the point of diluting its original density. Where discourse abandons nuance, critical rigor, or reflective complexity, it tends to find a wider audience, albeit at the cost of a substantial loss of fidelity to its content.
Language aimed at the masses does not only demand expressive clarity; it often imposes a partial renunciation of meaning. Not because listeners lack intellectual capacity, but because the functioning of the masses does not replicate that of an individual consciousness.
Martin Heidegger says in “Time and Being, lecture 1962:
”Thinking that questions is solitary thinking. It cannot shout to be heard by everyone.”
The crowd does not ponder: it reacts. It does not examine fundamentals: it reproduces slogans. Against this backdrop, those who wish to please end up replacing thought with formulas that, under the guise of accessibility, conceal the trivialization of the essential. The wider the circle of recipients, the more the conceptual rigor of the message is compromised.
In contrast, those who choose to preserve the truth in its unmediated form—demanding, unstable, uncomfortable—must accept the conditions of selective discourse.
Truth offers no immediate comfort, flatters no inclinations, and does not accommodate pre-established expectations. It requires a disposition that cannot be improvised: time, sustained attention, and asceticism of judgment. For this reason, any discourse that aspires to be faithful to reality is offered only to those who have cultivated the patience and effort necessary to receive it without distortion.
Thomas Aquinas, in his Summa contra Gentiles I, chapter 4, says:
“Pauci sunt qui veritatem inquirunt.”
“Few are those who seek the truth.”
The dilemma is structural. One can choose the path of easy consensus, saying what many want to hear, or one can insist on the demands of thought, even knowing that few will persevere in listening. But if among those few there are those who have arrived without having been flattered or seduced, then there is a possibility that they are truly willing to understand. And that understanding, though rare, has no equivalent in immediate acclaim, because it is based on the authenticity of the message, not on its rhetorical usefulness.”
by Ma Muktananda | May 21, 2025
“This statement is not merely a rhetorical device, but a warning that directly challenges the autonomy of the thinking subject. It raises the question of whether self-awareness manages to assert its sovereignty or whether, through inertia or critical negligence, it delegates its capacity for judgment to external structures. The omission of rational examination of one’s own beliefs opens the door to a form of intellectual servitude in which consciousness operates as a mere echo of pre-established discourses.
Plato illustrated this condition with singular clarity in his allegory of the cave: what is commonly assumed to be reality may be nothing more than a shared illusory construction. The shadows, projected by agents who control visibility, acquire the status of truth for those who fail to emancipate themselves from the mirage. Without the exercise of a deliberate break, the subject remains subject to the realm of appearances.
Immanuel Kant, in his essay Beantwortung der Frage: Was ist Aufklärung?, formulated a fundamental slogan for modern thought: Sapere aude! —dare to think for yourself. To withdraw from this imperative is to abdicate autonomous rationality and allow consciousness to be occupied by the tutelage of another.
Jean-Paul Sartre, with the rigor that characterizes his conception of freedom, argued that “if you do not think for yourself, others will think for you… and they will not do so in your favor.” This statement encapsulates the ontological requirement of assuming freedom as a task and not as a mere attribute.
In the Gospel according to John, it is proclaimed:
καὶ γνώσεσθε τὴν ἀλήθειαν, καὶ ἡ ἀλήθεια ἐλευθερώσει ὑμᾶς.
And you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free
The truth, however, is not inherited or passively transmitted; it requires rigorous searching, systematic confrontation, and a willingness to destabilize the conceptual frameworks that structure ordinary perception.
Spinoza observed with keen lucidity that human beings consider themselves free only because they are unaware of the causes that determine their actions. Where the genealogy of beliefs is ignored, a subtle form of alienation operates, cloaked in false spontaneity.
To accept beliefs without subjecting them to critical examination is to consent to silent alienation. The subject who internalizes foreign ideas without discernment ends up uttering a discourse that does not belong to them, effectively renouncing their intellectual identity. Uncritical acceptance may offer illusory comfort, but its price is the deactivation of judgment and, with it, the loss of the individual’s reflective integrity. Freedom does not consist in mere choice, but in the lucid deliberation that precedes it. Only those who rigorously question their convictions can legitimately claim the authenticity of their beliefs.
Ultimately, a genuine belief does not emerge through mere adherence, but as the result of conscious appropriation. Thinking implies responsibility; that responsibility marks the beginning of all true freedom.”
by Ma Muktananda | May 4, 2025
“Socrates did not evade his sentence, but he never allowed the polis to think for him. Marcus Aurelius, at the height of his power, wrote to remind himself that what is essential does not depend on external domination. Jesus proclaimed that truth sets us free, and he lived without subjecting his message to the interests of the powerful. Throughout history, great masters and sages have agreed on one central assertion: freedom is not conquered outside, but within.
Today, the mechanisms of the system do not require critical thinking, but mechanical repetition. They do not encourage doubt, but conformity. Their effectiveness is sustained by devices as diverse as advertising, algorithms, and empty entertainment, all designed to keep us busy, docile, and compliant. However, living is not the same as obeying. Freedom does not consist in rejecting rules, but in preserving the integrity of conscience in the face of the demands of comfort or utility. Thinking for oneself, even in solitude, is a form of inner resistance. Ultimately, living freely means not reducing existence to an imposed function, but embracing it as the search for a truth that cannot be delegated.”
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