Chapter 378: Brahma-jñāna
Knowledge of Brahman
ज्ञानात् प्राप्नोति कैवल्यं पञ्चैता गतयःस्मृताः प्रीतितापविषादादेर्विनिवृत्तिर्विरक्तता
jñānāt prāpnoti kaivalyaṃ pañcaitā gatayaḥsmṛtāḥ prītitāpaviṣādādervinivṛttirviraktatā
Melalui pengetahuan seseorang mencapai kaivalya (pembebasan mutlak). Lima jalan (gati) ini diingat dalam smṛti; dan vairāgya adalah berhentinya keadaan seperti kegembiraan, kepedihan, kesedihan, dan lainnya.
Lord Agni (in dialogue tradition, instructing the sage Vasiṣṭha)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Philosophy","secondary_vidya":"Yoga","practical_application":"Cultivate virakti by observing and releasing affective swings (pleasure, heat/torment, dejection, etc.); stabilize mind for jñāna leading to kaivalya.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Definition","entry_title":"Kaivalya through Jñāna; Viraktatā as cessation of affective states","lookup_keywords":["jñāna kaivalya","pañca-gati","viraktatā","prīti-tāpa-viṣāda","citta-vṛtti-nirodha"],"quick_summary":"States that liberation (kaivalya) is attained through knowledge, and defines dispassion as the withdrawal from emotional oscillations like delight, torment, and dejection. Practically, it is a diagnostic for measuring vairāgya by reduced reactivity."}
Concept: Jñāna is the direct means to kaivalya; virakti is operationally the ending of affective disturbances (prīti, tāpa, viṣāda, etc.).
Application: Daily practice: notice emotional rise/fall, label it, and return to the witnessing awareness until even ‘witness’ is transcended into non-dual abidance; use reduced reactivity as a marker of progress.
Khanda Section: Moksha-shastra / Jnana-yoga (Liberation through knowledge; states of mind and dispassion)
Primary Rasa: Shanta
Secondary Rasa: Karuna
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A mind-lotus buffeted by waves labeled prīti, tāpa, viṣāda; the yogin’s steady gaze calms the waters, revealing a clear sky labeled jñāna/kaivalya.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, stylized ocean of emotions with Sanskrit labels, yogin seated on lotus, waves subsiding into a calm blue field; strong contours, symbolic clarity.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore, central yogin with gold halo; surrounding medallions showing prīti/tāpa/viṣāda as personified figures fading; rich gold embossing for ‘kaivalya’.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting, didactic composition: left side emotional agitation, right side equanimity; arrows and labels for viraktatā; soft palette and precise linework.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, courtly scenes of pleasure and sorrow in small vignettes around a central ascetic; fine detail, balanced composition showing withdrawal from extremes."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Shuddha Sarang","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: पञ्चैता = पञ्च + एताः; गतयःस्मृताः = गतयः + स्मृताः; प्रीतितापविषादादेर्विनिवृत्तिः = प्रीतितापविषादादेः + विनिवृत्तिः; विनिवृत्तिर्विरक्तता = विनिवृत्तिः + विरक्तता.
Related Themes: Agni Purana 378 (Brahma-jñāna discourse); Agni Purana 377 (Samādhi as mokṣa-prada)
It imparts mokṣa-vidyā: the technical definition that jñāna (liberating knowledge) yields kaivalya, and that viraktatā (detachment) is operationally recognized as the cessation of affective swings like pleasure, pain, and dejection.
Alongside rituals and applied sciences, the Agni Purana also systematizes soteriology—defining liberation (kaivalya), enumerating recognized ‘courses’ (gatayaḥ), and giving a practical psychological marker for detachment—showing its coverage from outer rites to inner discipline.
It frames liberation as knowledge-based and presents detachment as a measurable inner purification: reducing reactivity to pleasure and suffering, which weakens bondage-producing saṃskāras and supports karmic exhaustion and release.