Instead of perfect it would be good to see Purnam as complete. I think, this prayer helps remove the feeling of incompleteness - constantly lacking something, due to human conditioning, that causes frustration in modern humans.
Beautiful, simple , clear yet profound explanation. Thanks for enlightening me. I changed this every morning without really knowing the essence of this prayer 🙏
Instead of perfect it would be good to see Purnam as complete. I think, this prayer helps remove the feeling of incompleteness - constantly lacking something, due to human conditioning, that causes frustration in modern humans.
Hi Avnish, Thanks for your comment. We asked Warwick to reply and he says: "Agreed. 'Complete' or perhaps even 'infinite' are better interpretations."
@@Philosophycourse The etymology of perfect includes 'complete, full, finished, lacking in no way'
So well explained sir
Thank you
You are most welcome! Thanks for watching.
I'm glad I took 9 mins out of being busy to watch. I recommend it!
Thanks for that nice comment. Maybe our 'busy' society is symptomatic of the incompleteness... Thanks for watching!
Masterly explanation, delivered with utmost clarity and succinctly in under 9 minutes. Wow!
Thanks for that great comment. Glad you enjoyed it!
Beautiful, simple , clear yet profound explanation. Thanks for enlightening me. I changed this every morning without really knowing the essence of this prayer 🙏
Thanks for this great comment - we're really glad the video was helpful. Lots more coming, so do subscribe to stay informed!
Really lovely explanation. Thank you for this reminder
You are so welcome!
One would perhaps like to hear several different talks on this subject.
That's a great suggestion, thanks. We've passed that on to Warwick.
Very well explained 👏 👌
So nice of you, thanks!
Completeness/Complete is better translation purnam.
Thanks for your comment. We asked Warwick to reply and he says: "Agreed. 'Complete' or perhaps even 'infinite' are better interpretations."
👉🦌 vs God sing🤔