सप्तहोतृ-विधानम् एवं इन्द्रिय–मनःसंवादः
The Seven Hotṛs and the Debate of Senses and Mind
घ्राणश्नक्षुश्न जिह्ना च त्वक् श्रोत्रं चैव पञजचमम् | मनो बुद्धिश्व सप्तैते होतार: पृथगाश्रिता:
ghrāṇaṃ cakṣuś ca jihvā ca tvak śrotraṃ caiva pañcamam | mano buddhiś ca saptaite hotāraḥ pṛthag-āśritāḥ ||
ブラーフマナは言った。「鼻、眼、舌、皮膚、そして第五として耳—さらに心(マナス)と知性(ブッディ)—これら七つが、別々に住するホートリ(祭官たる働き)である。皆が微細身の内に宿りながら、互いを知覚しない。麗しき者よ、この七ホートリをその本性のままに見定めよ。」
ब्राह्मण उवाच
The verse teaches that the five sense-organs plus mind and intellect function as distinct ‘agents’ of experience. Even though they operate within the same subtle body, each has its own domain and does not directly ‘know’ the others; therefore one should discern their separate natures and functions.
A Brāhmaṇa speaker instructs a addressed listener (“O fair one”) using a ritual metaphor: the faculties are called ‘hotṛs’ (officiants), emphasizing that perception and cognition are performed by multiple distinct instruments rather than by a single undifferentiated faculty.