ब्रह्मघोष-प्रवर्तनम्, अनध्याय-नियमः, वायु-मार्ग-वर्णनम्
Restoring Vedic Recitation, the Anadhyaya Rule, and the Taxonomy of Winds
कर्तृत्वाच्चापि बीजानां बीजधर्मा तथोच्यते । गुणानां प्रसवत्वाच्च प्रलयत्वात् तथैव च
kartṛtvāc cāpi bījānāṃ bījadharmā tathocyate | guṇānāṃ prasavatvāc ca pralayatvāt tathaiva ca ||
Dijo Yājñavalkya: «Porque es el agente que hace surgir las semillas (los principios causales de los seres), se le llama “Bīja-dharma” (la naturaleza de semilla). Y porque es también la causa de la manifestación de los guṇa y, del mismo modo, de su disolución, se le llama asimismo “Guṇa-dharma” (la naturaleza de los guṇa)».
याज़्वल्क्य उवाच
A single causal principle is described as both the ‘seed’ of beings and the regulator of the guṇas: it manifests the qualities that constitute experience and also withdraws them in dissolution. Ethically, this supports vairāgya and viveka—do not cling to guṇa-made states (pleasure, power, identity), but seek the stable ground beyond their arising and passing.
In Śānti Parva’s instruction on liberation-oriented knowledge, the sage Yājñavalkya explains technical terms for the ultimate/causal principle by pointing to its functions: it serves as the source (bīja) for entities and as the cause of both the emergence and the dissolution (pralaya) of the guṇas.