Dr Annie Besant - A Diamond Soul
Tea at 4 pm
Lecture at 4:30 pm 'Dr Annie Besant - A Diamond Soul'
All are welcome
Blavatsky Avenue
Adyar, Chennai 600020
Tamil Nadu
India
Tea at 4 pm
Lecture at 4:30 pm 'Dr Annie Besant - A Diamond Soul'
All are welcome
Tea at 4 pm
Lecture at 4:30 pm "Few theosophical Questions & Answers - Study and discussion"
All are welcome
"The Meditating Brain, a Challenge of the Digital Revolution" is a seminar about our nervous system, how our brain processes information and creates our reality. Using a reductionist approach we will study the neurons; the sense organs; the brain, it's structures and the different areas of the cortex; consciousness and self - awareness; memory; meta cognition; the development of the nervous system of animals and the Homo Sapiens brain. How our brain processes the information in digital and analog modes.
Recommended for theosophists to have practical tools for application in one's life and for the work in Lodges and Sections.
The first 5 days the accent will be on the texts that have been recommended below. Based on the third book and on my own experience, we will practise meditation daily and after the 10th December we can shift the accent from the intellectual to the experiential.
Daily there will be plenty of time for Dharma discussion as well.
We will look at the Objects and Aims of the Society, the Path as outlined in the Maha-Chohan’s Letter, and again in The Key to Theosophy. We will look at the topic as presented by the Mahatmas in their Letters, as well as by HPB in her correspondence. We will discuss the topic as presented by Annie Besant, C. Jinarajadasa and N. Sri Ram.
Students are encouraged to find their own answers through study and contemplation.
Recommended reading:
The Key to Theosophy by H.P. Blavatsky
The Mahatma Letters
Sahaj Marg of Meditation
by Dr. Balasubramanian, Deputy Director, Kuppusamy Institute of Sanskrit Studies, Sanskrit College, Mylapore.
Tea at 4pm
The very essence of Theosophy (Divine Wisdom or Brahmavidya), in so far as it is possible to be expressed by words, can be found in the Upanishads. For example, identity of the nature of the universal Self and the particular Self, a central concept in Theosophy, is beautifully expressed in the Upanishadic Mahavakya (Great Saying) ‘Tat Twam Asi, That thou art’.
The transforming power of yoga and meditation and their application in life is going to be explored with the help of Vedic texts, exposure to different meditative practices, and the latest medical imaging. This study will provide objective evidence for the neural and biological basis for meditation. It will establish meditation as the ground of creativity, happiness, and health, while the understanding of hypnosis will remove any bias against it.