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Shloka 38

Śuka’s Guṇa-Transcendence and Vyāsa’s Consolation (शुकगति-वर्णनम्)

मोक्षे हि त्रिविधा निष्ठा दृष्टान्यैमो क्षवित्तमै: । ज्ञानं लोकोत्तरं यच्च सर्वत्यागश्न॒ कर्मणाम्‌

janaka uvāca | mokṣe hi trividhā niṣṭhā dṛṣṭā nyaiḥ mokṣavittamaiḥ | jñānaṁ lokottaraṁ yac ca sarvatyāgaś ca karmaṇām ||

Janaka dit : «Les plus éminents connaisseurs de la délivrance ont reconnu que la fermeté qui mène au moksha est de trois sortes : la connaissance transcendante ; le renoncement total aux actes ; et l’accomplissement de l’action sans attachement, sans désir de fruit (nishkama karma). Telles sont les disciplines admises qui conduisent au-delà du monde ordinaire vers la liberté.»

{'mokṣe''in liberation
{'mokṣe':
with regard to moksha', 'hi''indeed, certainly', 'trividhā': 'threefold', 'niṣṭhā': 'steadfast commitment
with regard to moksha', 'hi':
firm path', 'dṛṣṭā''seen, recognized, ascertained', 'nyaiḥ': 'by others
firm path', 'dṛṣṭā':
by the wise (instrumental plural)', 'mokṣavittamaiḥ''by the best knowers of moksha (mokṣa-vit-tama)', 'jñānam': 'knowledge
by the wise (instrumental plural)', 'mokṣavittamaiḥ':
liberating insight', 'lokottaram''beyond the world
liberating insight', 'lokottaram':
transcendent, supra-mundane', 'yat ca''and which', 'sarvatyāgaḥ': 'complete abandonment
transcendent, supra-mundane', 'yat ca':
total renunciation', 'karmaṇām''of actions
total renunciation', 'karmaṇām':

जनक उवाच

J
Janaka

Educational Q&A

Liberation is approached through three recognized disciplines: (1) lokottara-jñāna—transcendent knowledge that uproots ignorance; (2) sarva-tyāga—complete renunciation of actions (as a life-orientation of withdrawal); and (3) the complementary ideal often paired with this teaching—acting without attachment (niṣkāma-karma), where deeds are performed without egoistic claim or craving for results.

In the Shanti Parva’s reflective instruction, King Janaka speaks as a paradigmatic philosopher-king. He summarizes what authoritative knowers of moksha have concluded: that seekers may be firmly established in different but valid modes of practice—knowledge, renunciation, and disciplined action free from attachment—each oriented toward the same goal of liberation.