विषप्रयोगः कृत्योत्पादनं च (प्रह्लादस्य अवध्यता, कृत्याविनाशः, पुरोहितानां रक्षणम्)
तत्तत्त्ववेदिनो भूत्वा ज्ञानध्यानसमाधिभिः अवापुर् मुक्तिम् अपरे पुरुषा ध्वस्तबन्धनाः
tattattvavedino bhūtvā jñānadhyānasamādhibhiḥ avāpur muktim apare puruṣā dhvastabandhanāḥ
Als Erkenner der Wirklichkeit, wie sie wahrhaft ist, erlangten manche Menschen—durch Erkenntnis, Meditation und die Stille des Samādhi—die Befreiung, nachdem ihre Fesseln völlig zerbrochen waren.
Sage Parāśara (teaching Maitreya)
Concept: By true knowledge of reality, supported by meditation and samādhi, the bonds of saṃsāra are destroyed and liberation is attained.
Vedantic Theme: Moksha
Application: Combine study (tattva-vicāra) with daily meditation; reduce distractions and cultivate steady contemplation to loosen compulsive identifications.
Vishishtadvaita: Liberation is bondage-destruction (dhvasta-bandhana) culminating in the soul’s freedom for God-oriented existence; knowledge and meditation are efficacious when aligned with the Supreme Person as the ultimate reality.
Vishnu Form: Para-Brahman
Bhakti Type: shanta
This verse presents them as a coordinated path: right knowledge matures through meditation and culminates in samādhi, by which bondage is destroyed and liberation is attained.
Parāśara frames moksha as the end of bondage (bandhana-nāśa) achieved by becoming a knower of true Reality and stabilizing that realization through yogic absorption.
Even when the verse speaks in yogic terms, the Vishnu Purana’s moksha-teaching ultimately points to realizing the Supreme Reality—identified throughout the text with Vishnu—as the ground of true knowledge and freedom.