Dharma-Pramāṇa-Vicāra: The Elusiveness of Dharma and the Limits of Rule-Lists
विदित्वा सप्त सूक्ष्माणि षडड़ं च महेश्वरम् । प्रधानविनियोगज्ञ: परं ब्रह्मानुपश्यति
viditvā sapta sūkṣmāṇi ṣaḍ-aṅgaṁ ca maheśvaram | pradhāna-viniyoga-jñaḥ paraṁ brahmānupaśyati ||
Dijo Vyāsa: “Quien comprende de veras los siete principios sutiles, y conoce también a Maheśvara dotado de los seis poderes, y es diestro en discernir cómo el Pradhāna (la Naturaleza primordial) se dispone para manifestarse—reconociendo que el mundo entero no es sino una transformación de la Prakṛti constituida por los tres guṇa—llega a la realización directa del Brahman Supremo, el Sí mismo más alto.”
व्यास उवाच
Liberation arises from discriminative knowledge: understanding the subtle constituents of experience (often counted as the five tanmātras along with mind and intellect), recognizing the world as a transformation of three-guṇa Prakṛti, and knowing the Lord (Maheśvara) as the governing principle; such insight culminates in direct realization of the Supreme Brahman.
In Śānti Parva’s instruction on peace and liberation, Vyāsa continues a philosophical exposition: he describes the kind of knower—versed in subtle tattvas and in the operation of primordial Nature—who transcends mere theory and attains experiential vision of the highest reality, Brahman.