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Shloka 99

Śuka’s Guṇa-Transcendence and Vyāsa’s Consolation (शुकगति-वर्णनम्)

न चैषां चोदना काचिदस्तीत्येष विनिश्चय: । शब्द, स्पर्श, रूप, रस और गन्ध तथा पाँचों ज्ञानेन्द्रियाँ--ये आत्मासे पृथक्‌ होनेपर भी काष्ठमें सटे हुए लाहके समान आत्माके साथ जुड़े हुए हैं; परंतु इनमें स्वतन्त्र कोई प्रेरणा- शक्ति नहीं है। यही विद्वानोंका निश्चय है ।। ९८ ई ।। एकैकस्येह विज्ञान नास्त्यात्मनि तथा परे

na caiṣāṁ codanā kācid astīty eṣa viniścayaḥ | śabda-sparśa-rūpa-rasa-gandhāś ca pañca jñānendriyāṇi—te ātmataḥ pṛthag bhūtā api kāṣṭhe saṭe lākṣāvat ātmanaḥ saha saṁyuktāḥ; na tu teṣāṁ svatantrā kācid prerā-śaktir asti—iti viduṣāṁ viniścayaḥ | ekaikasyeha vijñānaṁ nāsty ātmani tathā pare ||

Bhīṣma sprach: „In diesen Dingen gibt es keinen eigenständigen Antrieb und keinen Befehl aus sich selbst heraus — dies ist die feststehende Entscheidung. Klang, Berührung, Gestalt, Geschmack und Duft sowie die fünf Erkenntnisorgane sind, obgleich vom Selbst verschieden, doch wie Lack am Holz an das Selbst geheftet. Und dennoch besitzt keines von ihnen eine autonome Kraft, anzutreiben — so bestimmen es die Weisen. In dieser Sache gilt: Kein einzelnes für sich ist wahres Erkennen, weder in Bezug auf das Selbst noch auf das, was nicht das Selbst ist.“

{'codanā''impulsion, injunction, prompting force', 'viniścayaḥ': 'settled conclusion, final determination', 'śabda': 'sound', 'sparśa': 'touch', 'rūpa': 'form, visible appearance', 'rasa': 'taste, flavor', 'gandha': 'smell, fragrance', 'jñānendriyāṇi': 'organs of knowledge (sense faculties)', 'ātman': 'the Self, inner consciousness', 'pṛthak': 'separate, distinct', 'saṁyukta': 'joined, connected, associated', 'kāṣṭha': 'wood', 'lākṣā': 'lac (resin), used as an adhesive/dye
{'codanā':
metaphor for clinging', 'svatantra''independent, autonomous', 'prerā-śakti': 'power to impel, motivating force', 'viduṣām': 'of the wise/learned', 'ekaika': 'each single one, individually', 'vijñāna': 'discriminative knowledge, true cognition', 'para': 'the other
metaphor for clinging', 'svatantra':

भीष्य उवाच

B
Bhishma
Ā
ātman (Self)
Ś
śabda (sound)
S
sparśa (touch)
R
rūpa (form)
R
rasa (taste)
G
gandha (smell)
P
pañca jñānendriyāṇi (five sense faculties)
K
kāṣṭha (wood)
L
lākṣā (lac)

Educational Q&A

Sense-objects and sense-faculties appear closely bound to the Self, but they do not possess independent agency or an autonomous power to impel action; true discernment arises from understanding their dependence and the distinctness of the Self.

In Shanti Parva’s instruction, Bhishma continues his philosophical counsel, explaining to his listener that the senses and their objects cling to the Self like lac to wood, yet they are not self-directing forces; this supports ethical restraint and detachment grounded in self-knowledge.