Restored and digitally remastered from the original recording of his talks during the past decades. Continuing the theme of the previous three talks, J. Krishnamurti continues to explore the problem of man?s conflict and whether it is possible to bring about a change in the very structure of the brain. Man has lived for over five or six million years and during all that evolutionary time has still not been able, either inwardly or outwardly, to solve the great problem of conflict - not only within himself but wars and slaughter outside. He goes on to ask why we human beings, who are supposedly educated, evolved, sophisticated, cultured, live in this world killing each other, being divided by religion, by nationalities, and by all the destructive division that thought has created between human beings. He lays much of the responsibility for this state of affairs at the door of any number of ideologies - those of the left, the centre, and the right, including the totalitarian ideologies such as Marxism, Leninism, and Maoism. But, he suggests, our brains and minds are not individual brains and individual minds - it is the mind of humanity