Śukasya Janma-yoga-phalaṁ — Vyāsasya Tapasā Putrārthaḥ (Śānti-parva 310)
श्रोत्रं त्वक् चैव चक्षुश्न जिद्दा प्राणं च पजचमम् । सर्ग तु षष्ठमित्याहुर्बहुचिन्तात्मक॑ स्मृतम्
śrotraṃ tvak caiva cakṣuś ca jihvā prāṇaṃ ca pañcamam | sargaṃ tu ṣaṣṭham ity āhur bahucintātmakam smṛtam ||
قال ياجْنَفَلْكْيَا: «السمعُ واللمسُ والبصرُ والذوقُ (اللسان) والنَّفَسُ الحيويّ (برانا) تُذكر على أنها الخمسة. وأما “سَرْغا” — الخلق/الدافع إلى التكوّن — فيُعلَن أنه السادس. وهذه المجموعة من القوى تُذكَر كمبدأٍ “كثيرِ الأفكار”، مضطربٍ في المداولة.»
याज़्ञवल्क्य उवाच
The verse classifies the human faculties: five primary sense/life functions (hearing, touch, sight, taste, and prāṇa) and adds a sixth called sarga—an inner projecting/creative impulse—highlighting how this complex becomes ‘many-thoughted’ and thus a source of mental restlessness that must be understood for self-mastery.
In Śānti Parva’s didactic setting, the sage Yājñavalkya is explaining a philosophical analysis of the embodied being, enumerating faculties to guide the listener toward discernment (viveka) and ethical self-control.