Mind as Charioteer; Kṣetrajña, Tapas, and Dhyāna-Yoga
Adhyātma-Upadeśa
विधिवद् ब्राह्मणै: सिद्धेर्धर्मज्ैस्तत्त्वदर्शिभि:
vāyudeva uvāca | vidhivad brāhmaṇaiḥ siddhair dharmajñais tattvadarśibhiḥ spṛśo guṇā dvādaśa vidhā vāyoḥ vistaraḥ prakīrtitaḥ—rūkṣaḥ śītaḥ uṣṇaḥ snigdhaḥ viśadaḥ kaṭhinaḥ cikanaḥ ślakṣṇaḥ (laghuḥ) picchilaḥ kaṭhoraḥ komalaś ca |
Dijo Vāyu-deva: «De manera debida, los brahmanes consumados —conocedores del dharma y videntes de la verdad— han explicado el alcance completo de las cualidades táctiles propias del Viento. Son doce: seco, frío, caliente, untuoso, claro, duro, liso, fino (ligero), viscoso, rígido y blando.»
वायुदेव उवाच
The verse presents a dharma-grounded, authoritative classification of tactile qualities (sparśa-guṇas) attributed to the element/deity Vāyu, emphasizing that reliable knowledge is transmitted “vidhivat” by siddha, dharma-knowing, truth-seeing Brahmins.
Vāyu-deva is speaking in a didactic mode, citing the learned tradition of accomplished Brahmins to enumerate and validate a systematic list of touch-qualities, as part of a broader philosophical explanation within the Ashvamedhika Parva.