When the mind follows whichever sense among the roaming senses it obeys, that sense carries away wisdom just as the wind carries a ship upon the waters.
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The Bhagavad Gita, translated and commentated by S. Radhakrishnan, is one of the most scholarly and accessible English renderings of Hinduism's most beloved scripture — the dialogue between Arjuna and Lord Krishna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra. Radhakrishnan, philosopher and statesman, brings both rigorous intellectual insight and genuine spiritual depth to his translation and notes. This edition is treasured for its ability to illuminate the Gita's universal spiritual teaching across cultural and philosophical boundaries.
- Author
- Krishna
- Tradition
- Hindu
- Source text
- Bhagavad Gita
- Chapter
- Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 2
- Verse / page
- BG.2.67
- Topics
- MindSelf-ControlWisdom
Same theme, different voices
Everything depends upon the mind. The pure mind acquires a new attitude.
The mind does not become tranquil until it is connected to the ever-peaceful Supreme Being.
Conquer your mind and you shall conquer the whole world.
Sin confines us in hell. Sin is also an eternity of hell because eternity exists in our will, and if it weren't for our will, it wouldn't be in our consciousness.
Thought is a bird of space that can spread its wings in a cage of words, but cannot fly.