जनक–सुलभा संवादः
Janaka–Sulabhā Dialogue on Mokṣa and Non-attachment
न त्वेव बुध्यतेडव्यक्तं सगुणं तात निर्गुणम् कदाचित् त्वेव खल्वेतदाहुरप्रतिबुद्धकम्
na tveva budhyate 'vyaktaṃ saguṇaṃ tāta nirguṇam kadācit | tveva khalv etad āhur apratibuddhakaṃ, tāta ||
বসিষ্ঠ বললেন—হে তাত! প্রকৃতি সেই পরমকে—অব্যক্ত, সগুণ বা নির্গুণ যেভাবেই বলা হোক—কখনও সত্যভাবে উপলব্ধি করে না। তাই সাংখ্যজ্ঞ পণ্ডিতেরা তাকে ‘অপ্রতিবুদ্ধ’ (চেতনাহীন/অজাগ্রত) বলেন।
वसिष्ठ उवाच
Prakṛti (material nature) is insentient and cannot ‘know’ the Supreme Reality; hence Sāṅkhya thinkers call Prakṛti ‘apratibuddha’—without awakening or consciousness—while true knowing belongs to the conscious principle (Self/Brahman).
In a didactic dialogue, Vasiṣṭha instructs a younger interlocutor, clarifying a Sāṅkhya-style distinction between insentient Prakṛti and the Supreme/Ātman, emphasizing that ultimate reality is not an object grasped by material nature.