Mirabai's emphasis on bhakti as intuitive heart-knowledge rather than intellectual understanding, showing how embodied feeling transcends doctrinal boundaries.
Mirabai knew Krishna not through scripture or ritual but through the heart's direct, visceral knowing. Bhakti philosophy distinguishes between intellectual knowledge (jnana) and heart-knowledge (bhakti-jnana)—the latter is immediate, participatory, and transformative. Mirabai's devotional poetry bypasses theology; it speaks of longing, presence, and union that any heartfelt tradition recognizes. This concept applies to agape because unconditional love is fundamentally a heart-knowing, not a cognitive belief. When we encounter suffering, beauty, or another person, agape awakens as direct felt-knowledge before the mind narrates conditions or judgments. Mirabai's insistence on the heart's authority over social law and priestly interpretation suggests that true love requires trusting our deepest inner knowing. In our pluralistic world, this heart-knowledge becomes a universal language—across Christian, Hindu, Muslim, and secular contexts, the heart recognizes love when it meets it.
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