In Mirabai's tradition, love is not sentiment but the deepest knowing—a direct, participatory understanding that transcends intellectual knowledge while including it.
Prema bhakti positions love not as emotion to be transcended but as the highest form of knowledge. This radically inverts the Enlightenment hierarchy that privileged reason over feeling. Mirabai knew Krishna through her love, not despite it—her longing was epistemology, a way of knowing that engaged her whole being rather than just her mind. For Agape across traditions, prema bhakti teaches that unconditional love is not irrational or inferior to intellectual understanding but rather encompasses and surpasses it. We know others—truly know them—through love's vulnerability, attention, and willingness to be changed by encounter. This knowing cannot be achieved through analysis alone; it requires the courage to be unknown to ourselves in the presence of another. The examined heart recognizes moments when understanding has shifted from intellectual assent to embodied knowing: when we suddenly understand another's pain not as concept but as felt reality, when their joy becomes our joy, when love has made us wiser than our ideas. Across wisdom traditions—in Sufi gnosis, Christian mystical theology, Hindu Vedanta—this recognition that love is a way of knowing appears persistently as a truth that transcends cultural boundaries.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.