No
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Andreas Müller, Justin Allen
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No
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Books on Demand
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9783769333800
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1
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CHF 4.80
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Philosophie: Allgemeines, Nachschlagewerke
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English
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168
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Wasserzeichen
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PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
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ePUB
"No" is the final, and perhaps most perplexing, chapter in the"No-Point" trilogy. If"No-Point Perspective" was the encyclopedia of nothingness for dummies and"No-Point" the professional's handbook, then"No" is the blank page at the end, the echo of a conversation that has finally run its course. Justin Allen and Andreas Müller, having exhausted all avenues of inquiry, meet face-to-face in Andreas' quaint village. The words dwindle, the silences grow longer, and the"no-point" reveals itself not as a concept to be grasped, but as what's apparently happening - life. With its minimalist title and even more minimalist content,"No" is a book that defies categorization. It's not about non-duality, it's not about spirituality, it's not even about nothing. It's simply"No," the final reduction of the original title of this trilogy. A fitting conclusion to a series of talks that started with a grand exploration and ended with a whisper,"No" invites you to step off the precipice of meaning and into the vast openness of what is.
Andreas Müller was born and grew up in Southern Germany. After having become a spiritual seeker in his teens, he met Tony Parsons in 2009. Since 2011, Andreas has been holding talks and intensives throughout the world.
February 08, 2024
Talk 22
BREAD CRUMB
Justin Allen:
Okay, this is our first talk in person, and it’s the 8th of February. So this is our third time (22nd time) putting together some kind of a talk, but we’re doing it live together face to face. And I’m in your village. And just to describe it, it’s a small village in the south of Germany. And it’s what I would say is an average kind of apartment by German standards. And I came from Berlin, and we will do this for two days. So, this is our first conversation.
Andreas Müller:
Yeah. Lovely. Welcome.
Justin Allen:
Thank you. I guess what occurred to me was that I hadn’t come prepared for this talk. And like the other ones that we had, I also didn’t really prepare stuff, but I had a motivation and I had things that I had wanted to ask for a long time. So I think this discussion might be a little bit unusual only because I don’t have contrived or premeditated provocations.
Andreas Müller:
(laughs) I haven’t noticed that the former ones were provocations, actually, but yes.
Justin Allen:
The other thing is that last night we met and we had dinner. And we talked about things, in a sense, unrelated to this topic, where I got a little bit more of a sense of your life. But from that point until now, and then on the train ride here, I had a couple of