We feel like a separate 'I' inside our heads, but ancient philosophy suggests otherwise. Discover how to see through this illusion and find clarity.

You aren't a drop in the ocean; you are the ocean in a drop. Your innermost, private sense of being is the exact same being that underlies the entire universe.
Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco

Lena: Miles, have you ever stopped to wonder who is actually listening to this right now? I mean, we all have this rock-solid feeling of being a separate "I" sitting inside our heads, looking out at a world of other things. But what if that boundary is actually a fiction?
Miles: It’s the ultimate counterintuitive question, isn't it? Indian philosophy calls this "Advaita," which literally translates to "not-two." It suggests that our basic sense of being a separate person is wrong at the root. If there is no second thing present, what does that do to the observer we think we are?
Lena: Right, it’s unsettling. If we aren't this bounded, persistent individual, then what are we? We’re going to challenge that "common sense" feeling today and look for the thinker of our thoughts in real-time. Let's explore how this ancient insight actually works.