Mira Tweti recounts the remarkable life of Zen pioneer Alan Watts, the intellectual virtuoso who taught us to forage along the dharma path, “tasting the berries and greeting the blue jays…”
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Mira Tweti recounts the remarkable life of Zen pioneer Alan Watts, the intellectual virtuoso who taught us to forage along the dharma path, “tasting the berries and greeting the blue jays…”
Well, it’s probably better than I could have done. No doubt others could improve on it.
I just sit.
While Tweti’s article may be about Watts’s life, it doesn’t have much life to it. It’s the outcome of restricted research from a linear thinker.
Most of us know Watts through his writing, but where is all that? And how does his work history, which Tweti concentrates on, connect to Watts’ unique ways on congering up similies to connect consciousness to UR?