Arthālaṅkāras (Ornaments of Meaning): Definitions, Taxonomy, and the Centrality of Upamā
समुच्चयोपमातो ऽन्यधर्मवाहुल्यकीर्तनात् वहोर्धम्मस्य साम्येपि वैलक्ष्ण्यं विवक्षितं
samuccayopamāto 'nyadharmavāhulyakīrtanāt vahordhammasya sāmyepi vailakṣṇyaṃ vivakṣitaṃ
ここでは、共有される二つの性質に類似があっても「差異・特異性」を意図する。なぜなら—「集成譬喩」(samuccayopamā) とは異なり—他の(付加的な)属性が多く豊かに列挙されるからである。
Lord Agni (in discourse to sage Vasiṣṭha, Agni Purāṇa’s standard narration frame)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Alamkara","secondary_vidya":"Samanya","practical_application":"To differentiate a simile that aims at ‘vailakṣaṇya’ (distinctiveness) by piling additional attributes, from samuccayopamā which merely aggregates shared properties.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Commentary","entry_title":"Vailakṣaṇya through Bahu-dharma-kīrtana vs Samuccayopamā","lookup_keywords":["samuccayopamā","bahu-dharma-kīrtana","vailakṣaṇya","upamā-bheda","distinctiveness"],"quick_summary":"Even when two common properties are shared, the poet can intend distinctiveness by stating many additional attributes. This separates the figure from samuccayopamā, which focuses on collective similarity."}
Alamkara Type: Upamā (contrast with Samuccayopamā)
Concept: Communication can preserve difference while acknowledging similarity by adding discriminating attributes.
Application: In praise-poetry or description, avoid flattening two entities into sameness; add differentiators (guṇas, kriyās, viśeṣaṇas) to guide reader-intent.
Khanda Section: Sahitya-shastra (Alankara/Kavya-śāstra: figures of speech and poetics)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A poet describes two similar flowers; around one, many labeled attributes (fragrance, color, season, bees) radiate outward to show ‘other-attribute abundance’ creating distinctiveness beyond shared traits.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, stylized lotus and jasmine with radiating attribute medallions, a poet holding palm-leaf reciting, decorative borders, earthy reds/ochres, flat iconic forms.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore, two floral motifs with gold-highlighted attribute halos, poet-saint figure seated, embossed labels on scroll-like ribbons, rich background and ornate frame.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting, didactic layout: two central objects with neatly drawn callouts listing extra qualities, fine brushwork, soft pastel wash, classroom ambience.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, garden scene with two similar blossoms; marginal notes enumerate extra qualities around one, meticulous botanical detail, refined calligraphy panels."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Raga Bhairavi","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: समुच्चयोपमातः = समुच्चय + उपमातः; तोऽन्य = तः + अन्य; साम्येपि = साम्ये + अपि. IAST ‘vahordhammasya’ interpreted as ‘vayoḥ dharmasya’ (likely पाठभेद/लिप्यन्तर-दोष: वहोः→वयोः, धम्मस्य→धर्मस्य).
Related Themes: Agni Purana 343 (sections on samuccaya and other upamā-bhedas)
This verse teaches a technical point of Kavya-śāstra: how a simile is distinguished from samuccayopamā by the explicit listing of many additional attributes (anya-dharma-vāhulya).
Beyond ritual and dharma topics, the Agni Purāṇa also codifies Sanskrit poetics; this verse functions like a concise sūtra defining fine-grained categories of simile used in classical literature.
While primarily literary, mastering śāstric discrimination (vailakṣaṇya) supports accurate recitation, teaching, and transmission of sacred and classical texts—seen traditionally as a meritorious act of preserving dharma and knowledge.