Adhyaya 40 — The Yogin’s Impediments (Upasargas), Subtle Concentrations, and the Eight Siddhis
यत्रकामावसायित्वं गुणानेतांस्तथैश्वरान् ।
प्राप्नोत्यक्ष्टौ नरव्याघ्र परं निर्वाणसूचकान् ॥
yatrakāmāvasāyitvaṃ guṇān etāṃs tatheśvarān /
prāpnoty aṣṭau naravyāghra paraṃ nirvāṇasūcakān
Ô tigre parmi les hommes, on obtient ces huit pouvoirs et qualités seigneuriales—jusqu’à la faculté de déterminer les issues selon son gré—mais ils ne sont que des signes indiquant le nirvāṇa suprême.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhakti", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Extraordinary powers can accompany progress but do not equal liberation. The practitioner should treat them as ‘signposts’ and continue toward nirvāṇa without pride or dependence.
Didactic soteriology; not a direct Pancalakṣaṇa element.
Calling siddhis ‘nirvāṇa-sūcaka’ reframes them as diagnostic markers of deep concentration and elemental mastery. Esoterically, it warns against mistaking control over phenomena for transcendence of the phenomenological field.