Utkramaṇa-sthāna and Ariṣṭa-lakṣaṇa: Yājñavalkya’s Instruction on Departure Pathways and Mortality Signs
अन्योन्यस्याभिसम्बन्धादन्योन्यगुणसंश्रयात् । रूप॑ निर्वर्तयत्येतदेवं सर्वासु योनिषु
anyonyasyābhisambandhād anyonyaguṇasaṁśrayāt | rūpaṁ nirvartayaty etad evaṁ sarvāsu yoniṣu ||
জনকে ক’লে—পৰস্পৰ সংযোগৰ পৰা আৰু একে-অপৰৰ গুণৰ আশ্ৰয় ল’লে দেহ-ৰূপ উৎপন্ন হয়। এইদৰে সকলো যোনিত সাধাৰণতে দেহধাৰণ পৰস্পৰ-আধীন কাৰণসমূহৰ দ্বাৰাই ঘটে; একক, বিচ্ছিন্ন উৎসৰ পৰা নহয়।
जनक उवाच
Embodiment is not produced by a single independent agent; it arises through interdependent causes—mutual connection and mutual reliance of qualities—across all forms of birth. The ethical implication is humility and non-attachment: seeing the body as a contingent product of conditions weakens ego and possessiveness.
In Śānti Parva’s philosophical instruction, King Janaka speaks as a teacher, explaining how bodily form comes into being through mutual relations and shared qualities, generalizing this principle to all yoni-s (modes of birth).