Adhyātma–Adhibhūta–Adhidaivata Correspondences and the Triguṇa Lakṣaṇas (Śānti-parva 301)
ज्ञानं महद् यद्धि महत्सु राजन् वेदेषु सांख्येषु तथैव योगे । यच्चापि दृष्टं विविध॑ पुराणे सांख्यागतं तन्निखिल नरेन्द्र
jñānaṁ mahad yad dhi mahatsu rājan vedeṣu sāṅkhyeṣu tathaiva yoge | yac cāpi dṛṣṭaṁ vividhaṁ purāṇe sāṅkhyāgataṁ tan nikhilaṁ narendra ||
Bhīṣma dijo: «Oh rey, la elevada sabiduría que se halla entre los grandes sabios—expuesta en los Vedas, en las enseñanzas del Sāṅkhya y asimismo en el Yoga—y toda la diversa comprensión que también se ve en los Purāṇas: todo ello, oh gobernante de los hombres, ha surgido del Sāṅkhya.»
भीष्म उवाच
Bhīṣma asserts that the highest, widely attested wisdom—whether expressed in Vedic revelation, Sāṅkhya analysis, Yogic discipline, or Purāṇic narratives—ultimately derives from Sāṅkhya, presenting it as a foundational framework for understanding reality and guiding liberation-oriented ethics.
In Śānti Parva’s instruction to the king after the war, Bhīṣma continues his philosophical counsel, emphasizing the authority and centrality of Sāṅkhya as a root-source behind multiple respected bodies of teaching.