Janaka’s Quest for Liberation; Pañcaśikha’s Sāṅkhya on Renunciation, Elements, Guṇas, and the Deathless State
वृथा ज्ञानं यदन्यञ्च येनैतन्नोपलभ्यते । ऋमसंवत्सरौ तिष्यः शीतोष्णोऽथ प्रियाप्रिये ॥ ३८ ॥
vṛthā jñānaṃ yadanyañca yenaitannopalabhyate | ṛmasaṃvatsarau tiṣyaḥ śītoṣṇo'tha priyāpriye || 38 ||
जो विद्या-ज्ञान ‘इस’ परम तत्त्व का साक्षात्कार न कराए, वह सब व्यर्थ है; तब मनुष्य ऋतु-सम्वत्सर, तिष्य, शीत-उष्ण और प्रिय-अप्रिय के द्वन्द्व में ही उलझा रहता है।
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vairagya
It declares that learning has value only when it culminates in direct realization of the highest truth; otherwise, one remains bound to cyclical time and the experience of dualities like pleasure/pain and heat/cold.
By implying that information alone is insufficient, it supports the bhakti principle that true knowing is transformative—leading to lived realization of the Lord/Truth, not merely conceptual mastery—so devotion must mature into inner experience beyond likes and dislikes.
It alludes to Jyotiṣa (Vedic astrology) through the mention of Tiṣya (Puṣya) and to Kāla-vicāra (time reckoning) via seasons and the year, while stressing that such technical knowledge is secondary unless it aids liberation.