TLDR: In this 1974 dialogue at San Diego State University, Krishnamurti investigates how modern religion and society have become mechanical, operating through pretense and inherited belief systems rather than direct perception and genuine inquiry. He argues that authentic religion is not a structure of dogma but a quality of attention that regenerates the mind, and that psychological freedom requires examining our conditioning—particularly the claims to knowledge made by authorities who themselves know nothing beyond what they have learned and repeated.
How Did Religion Become Mechanical?
Krishnamurti begins with an observation about contemporary life: humans have replaced curiosity, inquiry, and direct perception with mechanical functioning. This substitution extends deeply into religion and spirituality. Rather than approaching religious questions with openness and investigation, people inherit frameworks—doctrines, creeds, institutional hierarchies—and operate within them as if these structures were transparent windows onto truth. The mind becomes a processor of received information rather than an instrument of discovery.
This mechanization has a specific cost. When religion becomes a set of procedures and beliefs to be maintained, the human being ceases to investigate what love actually is, what death means, or how one should genuinely relate to others. These profound human questions become subordinate to the maintenance of religious form. The institutional apparatus survives; the living inquiry dies.
What Is the Problem with Claiming Authority and Knowledge?
Krishnamurti presents a sharp challenge to religious authority. When a person says "Jesus is savior" or "The Buddha showed the way," they are making a claim that obscures a deeper problem: what do they actually know? The statement "I know and you don't know" is a pretension. It rests on the speaker having achieved some direct knowledge, yet in most cases, the authority figure is simply repeating what they learned from another source. This is knowledge at second or third hand, passed down and accepted as truth because of institutional weight or charisma.
This chain of repetition creates the illusion of knowledge while producing actual ignorance. A person who claims to know is, in Krishnamurti's view, pretending. The honest position—the only position that honors both the questioner and the question—is to acknowledge: we don't know. This is not defeatism but clarity. It opens the possibility of genuine inquiry rather than the absorption of inherited frameworks.
Can We Experience Nature and Beauty Directly?
Krishnamurti identifies another symptom of mechanical functioning: humanity's impulse to translate nature and beauty into art rather than to experience them directly. A sunset is encountered not in its immediate presence but through the lens of aesthetic categorization, memory, and the desire to possess it or make it beautiful. Similarly, music, landscape, and human relationship are filtered through conceptual mediation.
This mediation is not innocent. It removes the perceiver from presence. The mind is occupied with translating experience into acceptable forms—recording it, judging it, comparing it to remembered beauty—rather than meeting what is actually present. Direct perception is displaced by the mind's constant activity of representation. The world is always one step removed, processed through a layer of conditioning and interpretation.
Breaking this pattern requires a radical shift in attention. It is not about abandoning art or beauty but about moments of perception that are unmediated—where the observer and the observed are not separated by the machinery of thought and evaluation.
What Does Religion Actually Mean Without Structure?
Krishnamurti proposes a redefinition. Religion, stripped of its institutional apparatus, is a quality of attention. It is a way the mind can function that regenerates itself and enables authentic inner transformation. This quality is not accessible through doctrine or obedience to authority but through the investigation of one's own psychological structure—how conditioning shapes perception, how inherited beliefs operate, how fear and desire perpetuate patterns.
This transformation is not the adoption of a new belief system. It is the dissolution of the mechanisms by which belief systems operate in the first place. The mind becomes capable of meeting reality without the distortion of preconception. Religion in this sense is inseparable from freedom: the mind must be free from psychological conditioning, from the authority of inherited frameworks, and from the need to belong to a group defined by shared doctrine.
When conduct, relationship, death, and love are reintegrated into this quality of attention, religion becomes whole. It is no longer compartmentalized—an hour on Sunday, a set of rules about behavior—but pervasive. The person lives from a state of inquiry rather than conformity.
How Does Psychological Conditioning Obscure Truth?
Krishnamurti emphasizes that conditioning is not something imposed from outside only; it is internalized. A person raised within a religious tradition does not simply obey external authority; they have absorbed the tradition into their own cognitive structure. The beliefs become "me," and questioning them feels like self-destruction. This is the insidious power of conditioning: it makes inherited frameworks feel like one's own deepest convictions.
Freeing oneself requires recognizing the mechanism. It means observing how one's ideas about identity, truth, and reality are not original discoveries but received patterns. This observation is not accomplished through another ideology or technique but through direct seeing—watching how the mind operates when faced with a question that challenges the framework.
The person conditioned within a tradition may experience the world as confirming that tradition because the lens of interpretation is already in place. A miracle becomes proof of doctrine; suffering becomes a sign of karmic justice; beauty becomes evidence of divine creation. Each experience is sorted into categories that the inherited framework has provided. The possibility of perception outside this system seems impossible, even mad.
What Causes the Degeneracy of Modern Society and Religion?
Krishnamurti identifies a deeper cause beneath the symptoms of mechanical living and institutional decay. When human beings stop inquiring and start merely functioning—when they prioritize efficiency, conformity, and the repetition of received knowledge over curiosity—the entire social organism degenerates. Religion becomes a repository of rules rather than a regenerative practice. Art becomes decoration. Ethics become compliance with external codes.
This degeneracy is not accidental or external. It flows from the human being's abdication of responsibility for understanding. It is easier to obey than to investigate, easier to believe than to face uncertainty. Institutions arise to offer this comfort and to enforce it. The person who asks hard questions becomes dangerous to the system; the person who accepts is safe and rewarded.
Moral and cultural decay follows inevitably when this pattern dominates. A society of people who do not inquire, who are not in direct relationship with reality, who have divorced conduct from genuine understanding—such a society cannot regenerate itself. It can only decline into more sophisticated forms of the same mechanical living.
Where to Go From Here
Krishnamurti does not offer a program or a set of practices to adopt. His inquiry points toward individual responsibility. Each person must examine their own conditioning—not to replace it with a new ideology but to become free from the necessity of any inherited framework. This examination requires honesty: facing the moments when we claim knowledge we do not possess, recognizing how we experience the world through filters we did not choose, observing our attraction to authority and our fear of genuine uncertainty.
From this clarity, a different kind of religion becomes possible. Not a belief system but a way of attending to life that is awake, curious, and undivided. Not a structure one obeys but a quality of consciousness one embodies. This is not a goal to achieve in the future but a capacity available now, whenever the mind is willing to set aside its pretenses and truly perceive.



