• EXPLORATION: What Does It Mean to Live the Teaching?, Part 2 | David Moody, Mary Kelley, John Duncan, Francisco Mazza
    Dec 17 2025

    Welcome back to The Immeasurable Podcast. In this follow-up episode, we share the Q&A session that took place immediately after David Moody’s talk, “What Does It Mean to Live the Teachings?”

    David is joined by three fellow panelists —Mary Kelley, John Duncan, & Francisco Mazza — for a wide-ranging conversation shaped by both the live audience in the room and viewers watching online during the 2025 KFA Annual May Gathering.

    Together, they explore questions that naturally arise when Krishnamurti’s teaching is taken seriously: what it means to begin without a method, how “not knowing” relates to insight, whether the “impossible” is actually the only thing worth doing, and how to approach inquiry without turning the teachings into a new belief system.

    The discussion also touches on education, the role and danger of “interpreters,” psychological time, and what it really means to discover truth for oneself — moment by moment.

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    42 mins
  • EXPLORATION: What Does It Mean to Live the Teaching? | David Moody
    Dec 3 2025

    Welcome back to The Immeasurable Podcast. This episode features a talk from the 2025 KFA Annual May Gathering.

    It’s titled “What Does It Mean to Live the Teaching?” and is presented by David Moody.

    In his last recorded statement, just days before his death, Krishnamurti spoke of the “immense energy and intelligence” that had flowed through him for seventy years — and said that others might experience it too, if they live the teachings. But, he added, no one had done so.

    In this talk, David explores what it means to live the teachings, drawing from Krishnamurti’s words over many years, and reflecting on how we might approach this question ourselves.

    A Q&A session with the audience followed this presentation. We’ll share that conversation in the next episode.

    And now, here’s David Moody.

    • David reflects on the significance of “40 years” since Krishnamurti’s last talk in Ojai (2:48)
    • K’s final days (4:19)
    • "...when Krishnamurti dies, what really happens to that extraordinary focus of understanding and energy that is K?" (7:04)
    • Distinction between “the body” and “the immense energy” (10:39)
    • What are the teachings? (16:51)
    • Psychological conflict (27:22)
    • What living the teachings is not (33:58)
    • A seemingly impossible task (40:00)
    • Choiceless awareness and its difficulties (47:50)
    • Living the teachings as a radical undertaking (53:00)


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    56 mins
  • TEACHINGS: Death | J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars | Discussion 5
    Jul 31 2025

    The Immeasurable Podcast highlights the fourth discussion of a five-part series titled Can Humanity Change? This series was recorded in 1978 at Brockwood Park, where J. Krishnamurti spoke with Buddhist scholars.

    J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars - Brockwood Park 1978 - Discussion 5: Death

    Series: Can Humanity Change?

    Q: Is there life after death?

    When the body dies the desires, the anxieties, the tragedies and the misery go on. They go on contributing to the vast common stream in which mankind lives. Each of us is representative of the whole of that stream.

    By inquiring into the whole nature of suffering can one end it and be out of the stream? The free inquiry into suffering is insight. As long as I accept any authority, Buddhist or otherwise, can there be insight?

    For the man who is no longer a manifestation of the stream, intelligence, love and compassion are operating.

    Q: How do you discriminate between mindfulness, awareness and attention?


    For more information about J. Krishnamurti and the Krishnamurti foundations:

    International Site - http://www.jkrishnamurti.org/

    Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/krishnamurtifoundationamerica

    Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/jk.krishnamurti

    Krishnamurti Foundation Trust, UK - http://www.kfoundation.org/

    Krishnamurti Foundation of America - http://www.kfa.org/

    Krishnamurti Foundation of India - http://www.kfionline.org/

    Fundación Krishnamurti Latinoamericana - http://www.fkla.org/

    © 1980 Krishnamurti Foundation Trust

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    1 hr and 47 mins
  • TEACHINGS: Truth | J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars | Discussion 4
    May 21 2025

    The Immeasurable Podcast highlights the fourth discussion of a five-part series titled Can Humanity Change? This series was recorded in 1978 at Brockwood Park, where J. Krishnamurti spoke with Buddhist scholars.

    J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars - Brockwood Park 1978 - Discussion 4: Truth

    Series: Can Humanity Change?

    Q: Is there a difference between reality and truth?

    All the things that thought has put together -- literature, poetry, painting, illusions, gods and symbols -- that is reality for us. But nature is not created by thought.

    Can the mind, the network of all the senses apprehend, see and observe truth?

    Psychological time is the invention of thought, which we use as a means of achieving enlightenment. Is such time an illusion? Is truth measurable by words? Truth is timeless, thought is of time, and the two cannot run together.

    Without love, without compassion, truth cannot be. I cannot go to truth, I cannot see truth. Truth can only exist when the self is not.


    For more information about J. Krishnamurti and the Krishnamurti foundations:

    International Site - http://www.jkrishnamurti.org/

    Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/krishnamurtifoundationamerica

    Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/jk.krishnamurti

    Krishnamurti Foundation Trust, UK - http://www.kfoundation.org/

    Krishnamurti Foundation of America - http://www.kfa.org/

    Krishnamurti Foundation of India - http://www.kfionline.org/

    Fundación Krishnamurti Latinoamericana - http://www.fkla.org/

    © 1980 Krishnamurti Foundation Trust

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    1 hr and 34 mins
  • TEACHINGS: Does Free Will Exist? | J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars | Discussion 3
    Apr 16 2025

    The Immeasurable Podcast highlights the third discussion of a five-part series titled Can Humanity Change? This series was recorded in 1978 at Brockwood Park, where J. Krishnamurti spoke with Buddhist scholars.

    J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars - Brockwood Park 1978-79 - Buddhist Scholars Discussion 3 - Does Free Will Exist?

    Series: Can Humanity Change?

    We say free will exists because we can choose between this and that. Apart from material things, why is there choice?

    Is there an action in which there is no effort of will at all and therefore no choice?

    Why does thought identify with sensations? Is there duality in identification?

    How did thought begin in me? Was it handed down by parents, education, environment, the past?

    Does the word create the thought or thought creates words?

    Why does thought enter into action? Is there an action which is complete, total, whole, not partial?

    Can you see someone as a whole being? Then there is love.


    For more information about J. Krishnamurti and the Krishnamurti foundations:

    International Site - http://www.jkrishnamurti.org/

    Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/krishnamurtifoundationamerica

    Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/jk.krishnamurti

    Krishnamurti Foundation Trust, UK - http://www.kfoundation.org/

    Krishnamurti Foundation of America - http://www.kfa.org/

    Krishnamurti Foundation of India - http://www.kfionline.org/

    Fundación Krishnamurti Latinoamericana - http://www.fkla.org/

    © 1980 Krishnamurti Foundation Trust

    Support the show

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    1 hr and 53 mins
  • TEACHINGS: Can We Live Without Identifying? | J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars | Discussion 2
    Mar 12 2025

    The Immeasurable Podcast highlights the second discussion of a five-part series titled Can Humanity Change? This series was recorded in 1978 at Brockwood Park, where J. Krishnamurti spoke with Buddhist scholars.

    J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars - Brockwood Park 1978 - Discussion 2: Can We Live Without Identifying?

    Series: Can Humanity Change?

    Q: What is the state of the mind that is in the process of dying?

    What is death? Is there life after death, is there a continuity? If not, what is the point of living at all?

    Why is there the whole process of identification, my possessions, what I will be, success, power, prestige? The identification process is the essence of the self.

    Is it possible to live in daily life without this identification process which brings about the structure and the nature of the self which is the result of thought?

    Is it possible to be free of the "me", which produces all this chaos, this constant effort? Can thought end? Is it possible to live a daily life with death, which is the ending of the self?


    For more information about J. Krishnamurti and the Krishnamurti foundations:

    International Site - http://www.jkrishnamurti.org/
    Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/krishnamurtifoundationamerica
    Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/jk.krishnamurti
    Krishnamurti Foundation Trust, UK - http://www.kfoundation.org/
    Krishnamurti Foundation of America - http://www.kfa.org/
    Krishnamurti Foundation of India - http://www.kfionline.org/
    Fundación Krishnamurti Latinoamericana - http://www.fkla.org/

    © 1980 Krishnamurti Foundation Trust

    Support the show

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    1 hr and 32 mins
  • TEACHINGS: Are You Not Saying What the Buddha Said? | J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars | Discussion 1
    Nov 19 2024

    The Immeasurable Podcast highlights the first part of a five-part series titled Can Humanity Change? This series was recorded in 1978 at Brockwood Park, where J. Krishnamurti spoke with Buddhist scholars.

    J. Krishnamurti with Buddhist Scholars - Brockwood Park 1978 - Discussion 1: Are You Not Saying What the Buddha Said?

    Series: Can Humanity Change?

    Q: Does knowledge condition human beings?

    Knowledge means accumulation of information, experience, facts, theories and principles, the past and the present. This bundle we call knowledge.

    Can a mind that is burdened with knowledge see truth?

    Will we get more knowledge by reading what the Buddha or Christ said? We are full of this accumulative instinct that we think will help us to jump into heaven.

    Can I look at the fact without the word with all its intimations, content and tradition?

    Can I look at something without the association of words and past remembrances? Then only I see the fact.

    For more information about J. Krishnamurti and the Krishnamurti foundations:

    International Site - http://www.jkrishnamurti.org/
    Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/krishnamurtifoundationamerica
    Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/jk.krishnamurti
    Krishnamurti Foundation Trust, UK - http://www.kfoundation.org/
    Krishnamurti Foundation of America - http://www.kfa.org/
    Krishnamurti Foundation of India - http://www.kfionline.org/
    Fundación Krishnamurti Latinoamericana - http://www.fkla.org/

    © 1980 Krishnamurti Foundation Trust

    Support the show

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    1 hr and 38 mins
  • EXPLORATION: War & Peace | Mark Habeeb
    Aug 2 2024

    Welcome back to The Immeasurable Podcast. This episode comes from a talk titled “War and Peace” at the 2022 KFA May Gathering. Despite the persistent aspiration of every generation to achieve world peace and end war, violence, and terror, these conflicts continue unabated. Most people envision a peaceful world for their children, yet the cycle of violence and ethnic hatred persists.

    In this talk, Mark Habeeb raises the question of whether we should abandon this seemingly unattainable goal or go deeper into understanding why we perpetuate the very actions we wish to cease. We may be challenged to have the courage to look within ourselves and recognize that the roots of war and violence lie in our own interactions and relationships.

    Mark Habeeb is a Professor of Global Politics and Security at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service in Washington, DC, where his specialty is international negotiation, conflict management, and the role of identity processes in group violence. He is a Fellow of the Middle East Studies Association, a member of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, and a member of the Board of Virginia Humanities. From 1988 to 1991 he was Chairman of the Forum for US-Soviet Dialogue. He has published widely in his field and in 2021 published his first novel. Mark received his PhD from Johns Hopkins University and also studied at the University of Sussex and the Washington Psychoanalytic Institute. He has studied the teachings of Krishnamurti for over 30 years.

    Follow The Immeasurable on Instagram (@krishnamurtifoundationamerica)

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    54 mins