Paul Brunton Philosophic Foundation homepage > Notebooks of Paul Brunton



It would be a mistake to believe that because he makes no sharp exclusions and practises such all-embracing sympathy toward every possible way of looking at life he ends in confusion and considers right and wrong to be indistinguishable from each other. Instead of falling into mental vacillation, he attains and keeps a mental integrity, a genuine individuality which no narrow sect can overcome. Instead of suffering from moral dissolution, he expands into the moral largeness which sees that no ideal is universal and exclusively right.

-- Notebooks Category 6: Emotions and Ethics > Chapter 5 : Spiritual Refinement > # 61