Brahma-vidyā through Yoga: Restraint, Pranava Japa, and Samādhi leading to Mokṣa
शब्दादयो गुणाः पञ्च सत्त्वाद्याश्च गुणास्त्रयः / पुर्यष्टकस्य पद्मस्य पत्राण्यष्टौ च तानि हि
śabdādayo guṇāḥ pañca sattvādyāśca guṇāstrayaḥ / puryaṣṭakasya padmasya patrāṇyaṣṭau ca tāni hi
Suara dan lainnya adalah lima kualitas indria (tanmātra), dan sattva dan lainnya adalah tiga guṇa. Inilah delapan kelopak teratai yang disebut ‘puryāṣṭaka’ (tubuh halus).
Lord Vishnu
Concept: The psycho-physical subtle complex (‘city-of-eight’) is constituted by five tanmātras (sound etc.) plus the three guṇas, symbolized as eight lotus petals.
Vedantic Theme: Viveka between the knower and the known; analysis of prakṛti’s evolutes as not-Self (anātman) to prepare for liberation.
Application: Use the eightfold lotus model in meditation: observe sense-qualities and guṇas as objects arising in awareness; cultivate dis-identification from them.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.235.20-22 (prakṛti as karnikā; liberation by transcending pury-aṣṭaka; yoga-sādhana)
This verse identifies puryaṣṭaka as a subtle-body ‘lotus’ structure whose components include the five sense-qualities and the three guṇas—key factors that accompany and condition the jīva’s experience beyond death.
By describing the subtle body as constituted by sense-qualities and guṇas, the verse implies that the soul’s post-death experiences are shaped by these subtle constituents rather than by the gross physical body.
Cultivating sattva (clarity and restraint) and reducing rajas/tamas through ethical living, discipline, and devotion refines the inner constitution that, according to this teaching, influences one’s subtle experience.