
To Know as One: Monism’s Mystical Journey Through Epistemology 

“When the mirror dissolves, only the light remains — and in that light, all knowing is One…”
Introduction: Where Thought Becomes Unity
We often imagine knowledge as a bridge —
between mind and matter, between knower and known.
But what if there is no bridge… because there is no gap?
Monism whispers a deeper truth:
There is no “I” to know and no “thing” to be known.
There is only One unbroken reality, endlessly aware of itself.
And this is not philosophy — it is awakening.
What Is Monism
At its heart, Monism is the view that all existence is one indivisible essence.
Mind and body, thought and object, are not two — they are expressions of the same cosmic pulse.
| Idealist Monism | Everything is mind — matter is illusion |
| Materialist Monism | All is matter — even thoughts are physical |
| Neutral Monism | Both arise from a deeper, neutral source |
In each, knowledge is not acquired — it is uncovered from within the whole.
How Monism Sees Knowledge: Union, Not Observation
There is no external object; the subject dissolves into the thing known.
You do not learn reality. You remember you already are it.
Wisdom is felt, not dissected — like recognizing your own reflection in the sea.
This aligns deeply with Eastern thought:
Vedanta's jnana is not logic, but luminous remembrance.
Buddhism’s insight (prajñā) is not learned, but realized.
Table of Comparison: Monism vs Dualism in Knowing
| Knower vs Known | Separate entities | One and the same |
| Knowledge Path | Logical, empirical | Intuitive, experiential |
| Source of Truth | External observation | Inner unity and realization |
| Goal of Knowing | Accumulate facts | Dissolve illusions |
Conclusion: Can We Know Without Separation
❝ If all is One —
then the question is not “How do I know?”
but…
“What part of myself have I not yet remembered?” ❞
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