अव्यक्त-प्रबोधः (Awakening to the Unmanifest): The 25th and 26th Principles and Eligibility for Brahma-vidyā
यत्र तत्र कथं जाता: स्वयोनिं मुनयो गता: । शुद्धयोनौ समुत्पन्ना वियोनौ च तथा परे,ऋषि-मुनि जहाँ-तहाँ जन्म ग्रहण करके अर्थात् जो शुद्ध योनिमें और दूसरे जो विपरीत योनिमें उत्पन्न हुए हैं, वे सब ब्राह्मणत्वको कैसे प्राप्त हुए?
yatra tatra kathaṁ jātāḥ svayoniṁ munayo gatāḥ | śuddhayonau samutpannā viyonau ca tathā pare ||
Janaka bertanya: bagaimana para muni, meski lahir di berbagai tempat dan keadaan, dapat diakui berada dalam garis rohani yang semestinya? Mereka yang lahir dari kandungan ‘murni’ dan juga yang lahir dari kandungan yang ‘menyimpang/bertentangan’—dengan cara apa semuanya mencapai derajat kebrahmanaan?
जनक उवाच
The verse frames a dharmic inquiry: if sages can arise from varied births, then Brahminhood cannot be reduced to mere birth; it must be connected to inner purification—truthfulness, self-control, austerity, learning, and realization—through which one ‘attains’ the rightful spiritual status.
King Janaka, in a dialogue on dharma in the Śānti Parva, challenges a simplistic birth-based view of varna by asking how ṛṣis and munis born in both ‘approved’ and ‘irregular’ circumstances nevertheless became acknowledged as Brahmins.