ध्यानयोगवर्णनम्
Description of the Path of Meditation
भरद्वाज उवाच यद्यग्निमारुतौ भूमि: खमापश्च शरीरिषु । जीव: किंलक्षणस्तत्रेत्येतदाचक्ष्व मेडनघ
bharadvāja uvāca | yady agni-mārutau bhūmiḥ khaṃ āpaś ca śarīriṣu | jīvaḥ kiṃ-lakṣaṇas tatrā ity etad ācakṣva medhānagha ||
قال بهاردفاجا: «يا من هو منزَّه عن الإثم، طاهرُ العقل! إن كان في أجساد الكائنات المتجسدة لا يوجد إلا العناصر—النار والهواء والأرض والفضاء والماء—فما العلامة الفارقة للـجيفا (الذات الحيّة) الساكنة هناك؟ بيّن لي ذلك».
भरद्वाज उवाच
The verse frames a classical inquiry of Indian philosophy: if the body is merely a compound of the five great elements, then the jīva must be known by a distinct sign or function beyond material constituents. It sets up the need to distinguish consciousness/self from elemental matter.
In the Shānti Parva’s instructional dialogue, the sage Bharadvāja questions a revered, ‘sinless’ interlocutor about the nature and identifying mark of the indwelling self (jīva) within embodied beings, given that the body appears to be only elemental.