अध्याय १६ — शङ्कर-उमा-वरदानम् तथा तण्डि-स्तुतिः (Śaṅkara–Umā Boon-Granting and Taṇḍi’s Hymn)
प्रधानं महदव्यक्तं विशेषान्तं सवैकृतम् । ब्रह्मादिस्तम्बपर्यन्तं भूतादि सदसच्च यत्
pradhānaṃ mahad avyaktaṃ viśeṣāntaṃ savaikṛtam | brahmādistambaparyantaṃ bhūtādi sadasacca yat ||
Vāyu dit : «Cette réalité qui commence avec Pradhāna (la Nature primordiale) et Mahat (le grand principe), qui inclut l’Inmanifesté, et qui s’étend, par les évoluts, jusqu’aux éléments particularisés — oui, tout l’éventail depuis Brahmā jusqu’à un brin d’herbe ; l’agrégat entier des êtres et les constituants originels ; et tout ce qui est à la fois existant et non-existant (manifesté et inmanifesté) — tout cela est compris (dans le champ décrit).»
वायुदेव उवाच
The verse presents a Sāṅkhya-style totality: from the unmanifest root (pradhāna/avyakta) through cosmic intellect (mahat) and subsequent evolutes down to the smallest visible forms. It emphasizes that reality spans both manifest (sat) and unmanifest (asat) domains, encouraging a comprehensive, non-narrow view of existence.
Vāyu is speaking in a didactic context, enumerating fundamental categories of existence. The statement functions as a philosophical catalog—mapping the hierarchy from the highest creator figure (Brahmā) to the humblest life-form (grass)—to frame the scope of what is being discussed or contemplated.