Śuka’s Guṇa-Transcendence and Vyāsa’s Consolation (शुकगति-वर्णनम्)
गुणस्त्वेवापरस्तत्र संघात इव षोडश: । राजन्! उस अहंकारमें वासना नामक एक गुण और माना गया है
guṇas tvevāparastatra saṅghāta iva ṣoḍaśaḥ | rājan! asau ahaṅkāre vāsanā nāmaka eka guṇaś ca mānyate, yaḥ pañcadaśaḥ | tatra pṛthak-pṛthak-kalā-samūhasya yā samagratā, sā anya guṇaḥ | sa saṅghāta-vad iha ṣoḍaśaḥ kathyate ||
Bhīṣma said: “O King, in that scheme there is yet another factor: within the principle of egoity (ahaṅkāra) a single quality called vāsanā—the latent tendency, the residual impression—is also acknowledged, making it the fifteenth. Further, the wholeness that results from the collection of distinct parts or faculties taken together is counted as another factor; like a composite aggregate (saṅghāta), it is here called the sixteenth.”
भीष्य उवाच
The passage refines a philosophical enumeration by adding two subtle points: (1) vāsanā—latent impressions that shape behavior—operates within egoity and must be counted; and (2) beyond separate parts, their integrated total (saṅghāta) is also a real explanatory category. Ethical self-mastery therefore requires attention not only to visible faculties but also to hidden habits and the way they combine into a unified personality.
In Śānti Parva, Bhīṣma instructs King Yudhiṣṭhira on dharma and liberation-oriented philosophy. Here he is explaining a technical framework of constituents (guṇas/tattvas), clarifying that vāsanā is counted as the fifteenth and the aggregate-whole (saṅghāta-like totality) as the sixteenth.