David Bowie talks the internet, Buddhism, and space aliens | MTV
On second thought, I shoulda become a monk |
As a teen, he intended to become a Buddhist monk, a lama in a Vajrayana temple in Europe, but his rinpoche saw that he was more interested in music and was better off pursuing his art rather than cloistering himself in a temple, which would have certainly helped him more in life while depriving the world of his songs. But he pursued an interest in Zen until a Zen master in Kyoto told him that [organized] religion is over and that it [the future] lies in the [visual and musical] arts. Are there aliens [other beings such as devas] in space? Bowie's interest is not in the hardware of UFOs, the corporeal reality of such beings, but rather their existence only ever represented spiritual search, more a metaphor for the otherness, isolation, and alienation. "But the idea, 'Is there life on Mars?' I could care less."
- 0:04 David Bowie on music via the internet
- 0:21 Aging and his album sales
- 1:22 The potential of the internet
- 3:17 Spirituality and Buddhism
- 5:25 Bowie on the Dalai Lama
- 6:15 Organized religion and the arts
- 9:04 Bowie's opinion on ETs, space aliens
"Religion is over and it lies in the arts" - David Bowie on life’s purpose
I was once a shy conservative boy |
- David Bowie, 1/10/17; MTV, 1997; Seth Auberon, Shauna Schwartz (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
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