Guṇa-vibhāga: The Three Modes and the Path Beyond Them
सर्वे गुणमया भावा: पुरुषाव्यक्तधिष्ठिता: । दृष्टं श्रुतमनुध्यातं बुद्ध्या वा पुरुषर्षभ ॥ ३१ ॥
sarve guṇa-mayā bhāvāḥ puruṣāvyakta-dhiṣṭhitāḥ dṛṣṭaṁ śrutam anudhyātaṁ buddhyā vā puruṣarṣabha
Ô meilleur des hommes, tous les états de l’être matériel sont liés à l’interaction entre l’âme jouissante (puruṣa) et la nature non manifestée (avyakta). Qu’ils soient vus, entendus ou seulement conçus par l’intelligence, tous sont faits des guṇa.
This verse states that all conditions and experiences—seen, heard, contemplated, or conceived—are constituted of the guṇas and occur within material nature, resting upon the Puruṣa and the unmanifest prakṛti.
In the Uddhava-gītā, Kṛṣṇa teaches Uddhava discrimination between spirit and matter, showing that all mental and sensory objects belong to the guṇa-field so one can seek transcendence through devotion.
Recognize that thoughts, opinions, and sensory impressions are guṇa-driven; then cultivate sāttvika habits and anchor the mind in bhakti (hearing, chanting, remembrance) to gradually rise beyond material conditioning.