Members of this list are involved in exploring the
Time-Space-Knowledge (TSK) vision, first published
by Tarthang Tulku in 1977 in a book called "Time,
Space, and Knowledge." The vision is nonsectarian
and interdisciplinary, and does not set up any
authorities or dogma. Those interested in the
vision usually practice exercises and study from
one of the five texts that have now been
published.
"A new kind of inquiry would . . . [investigate] experience from the perspective of time itself, space itself, and knowledge itself. . . . New ways of knowing
What is meant when we say "....Space, Time, and Knowledge are available for investigation directly, without our having to measure or observe them with the
Love of Knowledge is first and foremost an inquiry, and it is important to give attention to the way in which this inquiry is conducted. Investigations usually
. . . questions are not intended to arrive at answers that can be formulated and transmitted forward. Instead, the questioning itself can help you sense a
Again from Krishnamurti: <http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JKOnline_DailyQuotes/~3/pkepxZ7_fKQ/20091111 .php> Meditation.is the very inquiry into what is