Intellect


Scholars, drunk on words and obscure meanings,

Weave a tangled web of concordances.

Simple practice never occurs to them.

Give up education, and the world will be better.

There are many who seek Tao through the intellect.

They revel in thousands of concordances, seek similarities in all the world’s religions, conduct learned discourses  for enthralled audiences. But they would reach the truth faster if they tied their  thoughts to experience.

The intellect is inherently dualistic. It makes distinctions and creates new connections between concepts and calls that “meaning.”

This type of analytical thinking is extremely limited in the face of Tao, which is not fully rational, not fully quantitative, not fully describable.

Though most followers of Tao are learned, they also  realize that the intellect is but one aspect in what must be a multifaceted approach  to Tao.

It is said one must give up education, not because we should be dumb, but because we must seek a level of consciousness beyond the intellect.

We must study,  but not to the point that emphasis on experience and meditation is lost. If we can  combine the intellect and direct experience with our meditative mind, then there  will be no barrier to the wordless perception of reality.