परमार्थ-निर्णयः—श्रेयस्-भेदः, कर्म-ध्यान-सीमा, एकात्मदर्शनम्
तन् मह्यं प्रणताय त्वं यच् छ्रेयः परमं द्विज तद् वदाखिलविज्ञानजलवीच्युदधिर् भवान्
tan mahyaṃ praṇatāya tvaṃ yac chreyaḥ paramaṃ dvija tad vadākhilavijñānajalavīcyudadhir bhavān
আমি প্রণত হয়ে আছি; হে দ্বিজ, আমাকে সেই পরম শ্রেয় বলুন, কারণ আপনি সর্বজ্ঞানের জলতরঙ্গসমুদ্র।
Maitreya (addressing Sage Parāśara)
It signals the text’s central aim: to point beyond ordinary prosperity toward the highest welfare—liberation and God-realization—framed through Vishnu as the supreme reality.
This verse sets the dialogue: Maitreya, in humility, requests the teaching; Parāśara’s ensuing instruction unfolds as authoritative knowledge—cosmic, ethical, and theological—culminating in the highest end.
Although Vishnu is not named in this line, the request for the ‘supreme good’ anticipates Parāśara’s Vishnu-centered exposition, where ultimate welfare is grounded in the Lord’s supremacy and the soul’s right relation to Him.