ध्यानयोगवर्णनम्
Description of the Path of Meditation
पञ्चात्मके पञ्चरतौ पज्चविज्ञानचेतने । शरीरे प्राणिनां जीवं वेत्तुमिच्छामि यादृशम्
bharadvāja uvāca | pañcātmake pañcaratau pañcavijñānacetane | śarīre prāṇināṃ jīvaṃ vettum icchāmi yādṛśam |
バラドヴァージャは言った。「生きとし生けるものの身体は五大より成り、五つの感官対象に喜びを求め、五つの認識の器官と心を備える。かかる身体の内に住むジーヴァ(生ける自己)がいかなるものか、私はそれを知りたい。」
भरद्वाज उवाच
The verse frames a classical inquiry: although the body is a five-element compound and the psyche engages the five sense-objects through the cognitive faculties and mind, there is an indwelling principle called jīva. Bharadvāja asks for a discriminative account of the jīva’s nature—setting up a teaching that distinguishes the self from bodily and sensory processes, a key step toward ethical restraint and liberation.
In Śānti Parva’s philosophical instruction, Bharadvāja addresses a teacher (contextually within the ongoing discourse on dharma and mokṣa) and poses a focused question: given the body’s elemental composition and its sensory-cognitive apparatus, what exactly is the resident jīva? This question initiates or advances a doctrinal explanation about the self and its relation to body, senses, and mind.