Book Title: Anekanta the Third Eye
Author(s): Mahapragna Acharya
Publisher: Jain Vishva Bharati

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Page 182
________________ 169 I do not even say that circumstances are not of importance. Everything has its own importance. Both objects and behavioural patterns have their value. The present gross mode or aspect has also its own value. Even thought has its value. To recall and to think are also of value. The present is of value and so are the past and the future. If it is said that these things do not have any value then it would be false. Where meditation has its value, there even farming and bread have its value. If there were no bread or farming, then the importance of meditation itself would be lost. If there is bread, meditation is of value. Bread has its own value and meditation its own. Sometimes man gives bread too much importance and then he eats more than he can manage. Even in food man is becoming more and more independent without giving thought to whether the body benefits or not. He has forgotten the anekantic view. Sometimes he drinks too much milk, at other times he eats too many fruits. Sometimes he eats too many sweets and some other times too much bread. The tongue finds everything tasty. It also worth considering if the food eaten will benefit the body or not. Milk is tasty to the tongue but it affects the Anekanta: The Third Eye Jain Education International For Private & Personal Use Only www.jainelibrary.org

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