अव्यक्त-प्रबोधः (Awakening to the Unmanifest): The 25th and 26th Principles and Eligibility for Brahma-vidyā
मुखजा ब्राह्मणास्तात बाहुजा: क्षत्रिया: स्मृता: । ऊरुजा धनिनो राजन् पादजा: परिचारका:
mukhajā brāhmaṇās tāta bāhujāḥ kṣatriyāḥ smṛtāḥ | ūrūjā dhanino rājan pādajāḥ paricārakāḥ ||
पाराशर बोले—तात! जो मुख से उत्पन्न हुए, वे ब्राह्मण कहलाए; जो भुजाओं से उत्पन्न हुए, वे क्षत्रिय माने गए। राजन्! जो ऊरुओं (जाँघों) से उत्पन्न हुए, वे धनवान् (वैश्य) कहे गए; और जो चरणों से उत्पन्न हुए, वे परिचारक-सेवक (शूद्र) कहलाए।
पराशर उवाच
The verse conveys a traditional model of four social functions (varṇas) using the body-metaphor—mouth, arms, thighs, feet—to indicate distinct roles: teaching/ritual, protection/governance, production/wealth, and service. It frames social stability as arising from differentiated duties within dharma.
Parāśara is instructing a king, explaining a received (smṛta) classification of social groups and their associated functions. The tone is didactic, typical of Śānti Parva’s discussions on dharma, governance, and social order.