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 🙏
So well explained sir
Thank you
You are most welcome! Thanks for watching.
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'
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!
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!
Masterly explanation, delivered with utmost clarity and succinctly in under 9 minutes. Wow!
Thanks for that great comment. Glad you enjoyed it!
Really lovely explanation. Thank you for this reminder
You are so welcome!
Very well explained 👏 👌
So nice of you, thanks!
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.
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🤔