The Structure of Jambudvipa: Nine Varshas, Navadvipa Bharata, Mountains, Rivers, and Peoples
न तेष्वस्ति युगावस्था जरामृत्युभयं न च तेषां स्वाभाविकी सिद्धिः सुखप्राया ह्यत्नतः विपर्ययो न तेष्वस्ति नोत्तमाधममध्यमाः
na teṣvasti yugāvasthā jarāmṛtyubhayaṃ na ca teṣāṃ svābhāvikī siddhiḥ sukhaprāyā hyatnataḥ viparyayo na teṣvasti nottamādhamamadhyamāḥ
In those varṣas there is no succession of yugas, nor any fear of old age and death. Their attainments (siddhis) arise naturally and spontaneously, and happiness predominates without strenuous effort. There is no reversal or decline there, nor are people divided into best, worst, or middling.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The text frames Bhārata (by contrast) as a realm where effort, moral choice, and the struggle with decline and mortality make dharma meaningful. Where everything is effortless and uniformly pleasant, ethical striving and transformative practice are less foregrounded.
Sarga (cosmological order) with a dharma-anthropology overlay describing the lived conditions of beings across cosmic geographies.
Absence of yugas, aging, death, and social gradation symbolizes a ‘static’ felicity; Bhārata’s implied opposite—change, limitation, and inequality—becomes the crucible in which dharma, tapas, and mokṣa-oriented maturity arise.