Adhyāya 34: Kṣetrajña-Lakṣaṇa and the Araṇi Metaphor
Mind–Intellect Allegory
ब्राह्मण उवाच अरणीं ब्राह्माणीं विद्धि गुरुरस्पोत्तरारणि: । तपःश्रुतेडभिमथ्नीतो ज्ञानाग्निर्जायते तत:
brāhmaṇa uvāca | araṇīṁ brāhmaṇīṁ viddhi gurur asyottarāraṇiḥ | tapaḥ-śruteḍ abhimathnīto jñānāgnir jāyate tataḥ |
قال البراهمن: «اعلمي أن العقل كعود الإشعال الأسفل، وأن المعلّم هو العود الأعلى. فإذا خُضِب العودان بالمحكّ معًا بالتقشّف، وبسماع الفيدا والڤيدانتا والتأمّل فيهما، وُلدت من ذلك نارُ المعرفة».
ब्राह्मण उवाच
True knowledge arises through the combined ‘friction’ of a competent teacher’s guidance and the student’s inner instrument (intellect), energized by disciplined practice (tapas) and sustained listening and reflection on scripture (śruti).
A Brahmin instructs a woman addressed as ‘brāhmaṇī’, using the Vedic image of kindling fire with two araṇis to explain how spiritual insight is generated: guru and intellect, when ‘churned’ by austerity and scriptural study, produce the illuminating fire of knowledge.