This
year I'm reading the Dover Thrift Editions translated by Stanley
Appelbaum, but most of my quotes are copied and pasted from the Standard Ebook, click here to read it free online.
Talking
Talking was a crucial role in Siddhartha's recovery. He talked and Vasudeva listened. When does Siddhartha listen to Govinda? Instead Siddhartha talks to Govinda. Govinda is seeking, asking, and practically begging Siddhartha for help. Why does Siddhartha listen? Like he learned from Vasudeva and the river. Instead Siddhartha knowingly passes on what he knows will sound like foolishness.
Foolishness
"Wisdom cannot be passed on. Wisdom which a wise man tries to pass on to someone always sounds like foolishness.”
I don't recall this chapter ever sounding so foolish!
I really like the idea that wisdom can't be transferred. I was discussing it in the comments within the last couple days. But really, it's a foolish idea. People learn information that makes them wiser all the time. We don't trial and error everything, luckily. In fact, humans are so successful because we excel at transmitting knowledge and culture.
The unity of opposites is more foolishness. Words are often defined or understood by their opposite meanings. There are factual statements. The Earth orbits the Sun. What's the opposing truth of that? The Sun orbits the Earth? Objects with mass have a force of attraction. What's the opposite there? Second law of thermodynamics or law of conservation. There are three humans in my house. I could keep going. The unity of opposites is a limited philosophical. Things are interconnections. Breaking the world or reality into binary thinking can be useful, but misleading.
All We Need Is Love, Love. Love Is All We Need
"Love, O Govinda, seems to me to be the most important thing of all. To thoroughly understand the world, to explain it, to despise it, may be the thing great thinkers do. But I’m only interested in being able to love the world, not to despise it, not to hate it and me, to be able to look upon it and me and all beings with love and admiration and great respect.”
Love is an idea that almost every religion converges on.
Siddhartha's mindset is worth striving for. Dare I say, a good goal! All else equal, loving and respecting the world and all beings seems to be a very healthy approach. Is it possible? Would humans reproduce, survive, or take over the Earth if we could attain a love for all?
Govinda
Was wisdom transferred to Govinda? How and why did Govinda see all the faces?
Does this prove Siddhartha right or wrong? "Wisdom cannot be passed." But the opposite is just as true. So wisdom can be passed? It appears to pass to Govinda. Readers appear to attain something. Siddhartha is right and wrong, and wrong and right.
Part I
Day 1, 20 Dec- Chapter 1: "The Son of the Brahmin"
Day 2, 21 Dec- Chapter 2: "With the Samanas"
Day 3, 22 Dec- Chapter 3: "Gotama"
Day 4, 23 Dec- Chapter 4: "Awakening"
Part II
Day 5, 24 Dec- Chapter 5: "Kamala"
Day 6, 25 Dec- Chapter 6: "With the Childlike People"
Day 7, 26 Dec- Chapter 7: "Sansara"
Day 8, 27 Dec- Chapter 8: "By the River"
Day 9, 28 Dec- Chapter 9: "The Ferryman"
Day 10, 29 Dec- Chapter 10: "The Son"
Day 11, 30 Dec- Chapter 11: "Om"
Day 12, 31 Dec- Chapter 12: "Govinda"