Mokṣa–Saṃnyāsa–Tyāga–Guṇa-Vibhāga (Renunciation, Relinquishment, and the Three Guṇas) — Mahābhārata 6, Bhīṣma-parva
यदा भूतपृथग्भावमेकस्थमनुपश्यति । तत एव च विस्तार ब्रह्म सम्पद्यते तदा
arjuna uvāca | yadā bhūta-pṛthag-bhāvam ekastham anupaśyati | tata eva ca vistāraṁ brahma sampadyate tadā ||
যখন মানুষ জীবসমূহের পৃথক পৃথক অবস্থাকে এক পরমাত্মাতেই প্রতিষ্ঠিত দেখে এবং সেই এক থেকেই সকল জীবের বিস্তার দেখে—তখনই সে ব্রহ্মকে লাভ করে।
अजुन उवाच
Seeing multiplicity as grounded in the One reality, and recognizing all beings as an expansion from that One, is liberating knowledge; such vision culminates in attaining Brahman.
Arjuna articulates a philosophical insight about perception and realization: amid the battlefield setting, the focus shifts from fragmented identities to a unifying metaphysical vision that supports righteous, non-egoic action.