Adhyāya 302: Guṇa-vicāra, Gati-bheda, and the Imperishable State
Yājñavalkya–Janaka
भूतसर्गमहड्कारात् तृतीयं विद्धि पार्थिव । अहड्कारेषु सर्वेषु चतुर्थ विद्धि वैकृतम्,पृथ्वीनाथ! अहंकारसे जो सूक्ष्म भूतोंकी सृष्टि होती है उसे तीसरा सर्ग समझो। सात्विक, राजस और तामस भेदसे तीन प्रकारके अहंकारोंसे जो चौथी सृष्टि उत्पन्न होती है, उसे वैकृत-सर्ग समझो
bhūtasargamahaṅkārāt tṛtīyaṁ viddhi pārthiva | ahaṅkāreṣu sarveṣu caturthaṁ viddhi vaikṛtam, pṛthvīnatha ||
Vasiṣṭha said: “O king, know that the third stage of creation arises from ahaṅkāra (the principle of ‘I’-ness): from it proceeds the emanation of the subtle elements. And know that the fourth creation is called the ‘vaikṛta’ creation: it is the differentiated production that emerges from all forms of ahaṅkāra—sāttvika, rājasa, and tāmasa.”
वसिष्ठ उवाच
The verse maps creation in Sāṅkhya terms: from ahaṅkāra arises the emanation of subtle elements (a ‘third’ creation), and from the differentiated modes of ahaṅkāra—sāttvika, rājasa, and tāmasa—arises the ‘vaikṛta’ (derivative/modified) creation. The ethical thrust is that understanding the mind’s ego-principle as a cosmic process helps loosen personal identification and supports detachment and liberation.
In Śānti Parva’s didactic setting, Vasiṣṭha instructs a king on metaphysical doctrine. Here he classifies stages of creation, naming the third as the element-emanation from ahaṅkāra and the fourth as the vaikṛta creation produced through the three guṇa-conditioned forms of ahaṅkāra.