Śuka’s Guṇa-Transcendence and Vyāsa’s Consolation (शुकगति-वर्णनम्)
गुणस्त्वेवापरस्तत्र संघात इव षोडश: । राजन्! उस अहंकारमें वासना नामक एक गुण और माना गया है
guṇas tvevāparastatra saṅghāta iva ṣoḍaśaḥ | rājan! asau ahaṅkāre vāsanā nāmaka eka guṇaś ca mānyate, yaḥ pañcadaśaḥ | tatra pṛthak-pṛthak-kalā-samūhasya yā samagratā, sā anya guṇaḥ | sa saṅghāta-vad iha ṣoḍaśaḥ kathyate ||
Bhīṣma dit : « Ô Roi, dans cet exposé il existe encore un autre facteur : au sein même du principe d’egoïté (ahaṅkāra), on reconnaît une qualité nommée vāsanā — la tendance latente, l’empreinte résiduelle — qui fait la quinzième. De plus, la totalité issue du rassemblement de parties ou de facultés distinctes est comptée comme un autre facteur ; tel un agrégat composite (saṅghāta), on l’appelle ici la seizième. »
भीष्य उवाच
The passage refines a philosophical enumeration by adding two subtle points: (1) vāsanā—latent impressions that shape behavior—operates within egoity and must be counted; and (2) beyond separate parts, their integrated total (saṅghāta) is also a real explanatory category. Ethical self-mastery therefore requires attention not only to visible faculties but also to hidden habits and the way they combine into a unified personality.
In Śānti Parva, Bhīṣma instructs King Yudhiṣṭhira on dharma and liberation-oriented philosophy. Here he is explaining a technical framework of constituents (guṇas/tattvas), clarifying that vāsanā is counted as the fifteenth and the aggregate-whole (saṅghāta-like totality) as the sixteenth.