Āgneya-Purāṇa-māhātmya
The Greatness and Self-Testimony of the Agni Purāṇa
विद्या सैवार्थशास्त्राख्या देवान्तान्या हरिर्महान् इत्येषा चापरा विद्या परिविद्याक्षरं परं
vidyā saivārthaśāstrākhyā devāntānyā harirmahān ityeṣā cāparā vidyā parividyākṣaraṃ paraṃ
અર્થશાસ્ત્ર નામની વિદ્યા પણ વિદ્યા જ છે; અને દેવાંત સુધી પહોંચતી બીજી વિદ્યા કહે છે—‘હરિ મહાન (પરમ) છે.’ આમ આ અપરા વિદ્યા છે; પરંતુ પરમ અક્ષરને સંપૂર્ણ રીતે જાણવાથી પરા સિદ્ધિ પ્રાપ્ત થાય છે.
Lord Agni (teaching to Sage Vasiṣṭha in the Agni Purāṇa’s instructional frame)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Philosophy","secondary_vidya":"Arthashastra","practical_application":"Distinguish aparā (worldly disciplines including polity and even deity-oriented conceptual knowledge) from para (realization of Akṣara); use this to prioritize liberation while still employing statecraft and other sciences ethically.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Definition","entry_title":"Aparā Vidyā vs Akṣara-jñāna (Para Vidyā)","lookup_keywords":["Arthaśāstra","aparā vidyā","Akṣara","para vidyā","Hari"],"quick_summary":"Even comprehensive worldly knowledge—such as Arthaśāstra and theologies framed within the manifest order—is classified as aparā. Higher fulfillment comes from direct knowing of the supreme Imperishable (Akṣara), which reorients all lower skills."}
Concept: Aparā vidyā encompasses structured knowledge of the world (including polity) and conceptual theism within the manifested frame; para-vidyā is the consummation—full knowing of Akṣara, the imperishable supreme reality.
Application: Practice ‘priority inversion’: employ Arthaśāstra and other skills as instruments of dharma and social stability, but reserve ultimate identity and refuge in Akṣara; cultivate śravaṇa–manana–nididhyāsana to move from conceptual ‘Hari is great’ to realized imperishability.
Khanda Section: Vidya-Viveka (Para–Apara Vidya; Shastra-Sangraha / Encyclopedic Knowledge)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A symbolic hierarchy: on the lower tier, a king’s court with ministers and ledgers (Arthaśāstra) and other worldly studies; above, a vast luminous ‘Akṣara’ field; a subtle Viṣṇu presence indicates the supreme, while the final focus is the imperishable beyond form.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural: two-tier composition—bottom shows royal polity scene with palm-leaf accounts and counsel; top shows a radiant circular mandala labeled ‘Akṣara’ with serene blue-gold aura; minimalistic transcendence above, detailed world below.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore: ornate lower register with king and ministers; upper register dominated by embossed gold radiance representing Akṣara; Viṣṇu’s emblem (śaṅkha-cakra) subtly integrated; strong gold work to signify the ‘imperishable’.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore: didactic vertical diagram—‘Aparā’ box containing Arthaśāstra and other śāstras; arrow upward to ‘Akṣara (Para)’ as luminous space; gentle colors and clear labels.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature: administrative durbar scene transitioning into an open sky of pale wash; a sage points upward from the court to the formless expanse; fine detail below, airy abstraction above."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"slow","voice_tone":"contemplative"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: सैवार्थशास्त्राख्या → सा एव अर्थशास्त्र-आख्याः; देवान्तान्या → देव-अन्ता अन्या; हरिर्महान् → हरिः महान्; इत्येषा → इति एषा; चापरा → च अपरा; परिविद्याक्षरं → परि-विद्या अक्षरम्.
Related Themes: Agni Purana 382.1 (saprapañca/niṣprapañca twofold teaching); Agni Purana 382.2–382.3 (catalog of aparā disciplines)
It distinguishes practical, worldly knowledge such as Arthaśāstra (polity/statecraft) and deity-oriented learning as ‘aparā vidyā’ (preparatory), while pointing to knowledge of the supreme Akṣara (Imperishable Brahman) as the liberating aim.
By placing Arthaśāstra (a technical discipline of governance and economics) alongside theological-philosophical claims about Hari and Akṣara, it shows the Agni Purāṇa’s method of integrating applied sciences with ultimate metaphysics—one hallmark of its encyclopedic scope.
It implies that worldly competencies and even deity-centered learning are spiritually useful but incomplete; karmic fulfillment culminates in direct comprehension of the supreme Imperishable (Akṣara), which is presented as the higher, liberating knowledge.