TLDR: This talk explores meditation not as a technique to master or a tool to achieve specific states, but as a direct investigation into the nature of consciousness itself. Rather than treating meditation as a means to an end—relaxation, enlightenment, or spiritual attainment—the inquiry here centers on what actually happens when awareness observes itself. The discussion draws on deep philosophical questioning about the observer, the observed, and the fundamental nature of freedom in contemplative practice.
What is Meditation Beyond Technique?
The conventional approach to meditation often treats it as a method: sit in this posture, focus on this object, follow this breath pattern, and you'll eventually achieve peace or clarity. This framing assumes meditation is instrumental—a means to reach a desired mental state. But there's a more fundamental inquiry possible, one that questions the very structure of meditation itself.
When we sit to meditate, what are we actually doing? Are we practicing a technique to alter our consciousness, or are we creating conditions for consciousness to examine itself? This distinction matters because it shifts the entire orientation of practice. In the first case, there's an implied doer, a self that will benefit from the technique. In the second, we're asking what happens when awareness becomes aware of awareness—when the observer observes the act of observing.
This inquiry doesn't dismiss meditation techniques as useless. Rather, it asks whether the techniques themselves can become transparent—whether they can fade into the background so that something more fundamental can be perceived. Techniques may serve as entry points, but they can also become obstacles if we cling to them as the practice itself.
How Does the Observer Relate to What is Observed?
A central philosophical problem emerges in meditation: the relationship between the observer and the observed. When we observe our thoughts during meditation, we assume there's a "me" doing the observing and a "thought" being observed. But is this division real, or is it something the mind creates?
If we look closely at the actual experience of observation, we might notice something peculiar. The observer itself changes when observed. There isn't a static, unchanging "I" that watches a parade of thoughts go by like someone sitting on a bench watching traffic. The very act of attention alters what is being attended to. The thought that is observed is not the same as the thought that arises unobserved.
This raises a profound question: Is there truly a separate observer, or is the sense of separation itself a function of thought? When thought claims to observe itself, isn't it creating a false division—splitting itself into observer and observed to maintain the illusion of a continuous self? This isn't merely an intellectual puzzle; it's something that can be directly investigated in meditation. The investigation itself becomes the practice.
What Role Does Freedom Play in Understanding Meditation?
The title "Freedom from the Known" points to something essential about meditation and consciousness. We live almost entirely within the known—the accumulated patterns, beliefs, and habits that constitute our psychological conditioning. Meditation is often presented as a way to access the unknown, to transcend the ego, or to reach states beyond ordinary awareness.
But there's a paradox here. If meditation is a technique, then it's known—we can learn it, practice it, measure our progress with it. How can the known lead to freedom from the known? How can a method rooted in our existing knowledge structure help us escape that structure?
True freedom might require something different: an ending of the constant attempt to become something other than what we are, to fix ourselves through practice, to achieve enlightenment. Freedom might begin with seeing clearly how we're trapped—not as a problem to solve through meditation, but as a fact to understand directly. The investigation itself, without a predetermined outcome, might be where freedom actually begins.
This suggests that meditation isn't about accumulating spiritual experiences or progress. It's about directly perceiving the mechanisms of consciousness—how we create the illusion of continuity, how thought maintains the sense of a separate self, how freedom is already present but obscured by our attempts to achieve it.
Can Meditation Techniques Block Deeper Inquiry?
Many meditation traditions offer specific techniques: focus on the breath, repeat a mantra, visualize light, cultivate loving-kindness, observe sensation. These practices can produce calming effects and even profound experiences. But there's a risk: the technique itself can become a comfortable substitute for genuine inquiry.
When we practice a technique, we know what to expect. We know how to do it, and we can measure whether we're "doing it right." This provides a sense of control and progress. But the deepest questions about consciousness can't be answered through techniques. They require a willingness to not know, to observe without trying to produce a particular result, to remain in genuine uncertainty.
The philosophical inquiry into meditation suggests that at some point, techniques must be released. Not abandoned in frustration, but genuinely set aside as one might put down a ladder once they've reached the roof. The ladder served its purpose, but continuing to climb it gets you nowhere. Similarly, meditation practices might serve as initial aids to settling the mind, but they can become impediments to the kind of naked, unmediated awareness that understanding consciousness requires.
What Happens When We Stop Trying to Achieve States?
Much of our psychological suffering comes from the constant attempt to arrange our experience according to our preferences. We meditate to feel peaceful, we practice mindfulness to feel present, we study philosophy to feel wise. There's an implicit rejection of "what is" in favor of "what should be."
When meditation is undertaken with a goal—even an apparently spiritual goal like enlightenment or inner peace—there's a psychological structure operating: the self that is dissatisfied, seeking change through a practice it believes in. This entire structure prevents the kind of freedom that might be possible.
What shifts if we approach meditation without a goal? Not as a passive resignation—just sitting doing nothing—but as an active, alert investigation into consciousness without trying to produce any particular result? In this approach, we might notice how thought constantly comments on experience, how the ego continuously reinforces its own sense of separation, how freedom is blocked not by external circumstances but by our own subtle rejection of what is.
This doesn't mean the mind becomes blank or empty. It means the constant effort to improve ourselves, to achieve states, to become enlightened—that effort itself is relaxed. What remains is attention, curiosity, and a direct seeing of how consciousness works. In that seeing, something shifts that no technique could have produced.
Where to Go From Here
If this inquiry resonates with you, consider approaching your next meditation session with a different orientation. Rather than trying to achieve a particular state, sit with the question: What is actually observing right now? Notice the subtle ways the mind divides itself into observer and observed. Observe how that division works. Don't try to make it stop—just look at it closely.
You might also examine whether you're meditating because you believe it will improve you, and if so, what that says about your relationship to yourself as you are now. Genuine meditation isn't about becoming better or more spiritual. It's about ending the division between the observer and the observed, between who we are and who we think we should be.
Explore the full episode "Freedom from the Known" with Krishnamurti for a deeper dive into these questions. The philosophy presented there offers tools not to fix yourself, but to understand directly how consciousness actually operates—and in that understanding, freedom emerges naturally.




