Cāturhotra as Inner Sacrifice (Yoga-Yajña) and Nārāyaṇa Recitation
घ्राता भक्षयिता द्रष्टा वक्ता श्रोता च पठचम: । मन्ता बोद्धा च सप्तैते विज्ञेया: कर्तहेतवः
ghrātā bhakṣayitā draṣṭā vaktā śrotā ca pañcamaḥ | mantā boddhā ca saptaite vijñeyāḥ kartṛ-hetavaḥ ||
The Brahmin said: “The one who smells, the one who eats, the one who sees, the one who speaks, and fifth, the one who hears; also the one who reflects and the one who arrives at decisive understanding—these seven are to be recognized as the operative causes that make action possible.”
ब्राह्मण उवाच
Action and moral responsibility are mediated through identifiable faculties—sense functions (smelling, eating, seeing, speaking, hearing) and inner cognition (reflection and decisive understanding). Recognizing these ‘causes of agency’ helps one discipline the senses and mind, aligning conduct with dharma rather than being driven blindly by impulses.
A Brahmin speaker is instructing by enumerating the functional agents within a person that participate in action. The verse serves as a reflective, ethical-psychological teaching within the Ashvamedhika Parva’s discourse setting, redirecting attention from outer deeds to the inner mechanisms that produce them.