OBSERVING THE OBSERVER
The philosopher Alan Watts described
his lecture series “Reflecting the Mirror” as follows: "A
discussion of the many aspects of the problem of ‘observing the observer’ and
‘knowing the knower,’ an enterprise that seems always to come to a dead end or
to impenetrable mystery.
But perhaps the very difficulty of the problem provides a clue to its answer. This is, of course, the central problem of self-realization as approached through the spiritual disciplines of Yoga, Zen, and Taoism."
But perhaps the very difficulty of the problem provides a clue to its answer. This is, of course, the central problem of self-realization as approached through the spiritual disciplines of Yoga, Zen, and Taoism."
From the standpoint of Yoga/Vedanta the answer
is simple. There is no observing the observer, no knowing the
knower. Background consciousness, just plain consciousness, the
observing Atman/Brahman consciousness, does not observe
itself. The analogy is that of our eyes. Our eyes do not see
themselves. When we try to see our eyes, we see nothing. Were
pure consciousness to try to see itself, it would see nothing.
There is another aspect to this, however, and it often
appears in the work of Watts. It must be remembered that Watts was a
philosopher, and a philosopher inquires into things by way of his
intellect. The trouble is, Atman/Brahman consciousness, pure
consciousness, is beyond the reach of the intellect.
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