Adhyaya 10 — Jaimini’s Questions on Birth, Death, Karma, and the Embodied Journey
रसहर्षभयोद्वेगक्रोधामर्षजरातुराम् ।
विज्ञातां स्वमृगग्राहिसंघपाशशताकुलाम् ॥
rasa-harṣa-bhaya-udvega-krodha-amarṣa-jarā-turām /
vijñātāṃ sva-mṛga-grāhi-saṃgha-pāśa-śatākulām
わたしは、この身を伴う存在が、情の「味」、喜び、恐れ、動揺、怒り、怨み、そして老いによって悩まされていると悟った。獲物を捕らえる狩人の群れが投げかけた数百の罠で満ちているかのように。
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Unexamined emotions and reactions function like traps that repeatedly capture the mind; discipline and insight are required to avoid being driven by fear, anger, and agitation.
A psychological-mokṣa teaching within narrative; not directly one of the five lakṣaṇas, but supportive of dharma and liberation aims in Purāṇic pedagogy.
The ‘hunters’ symbolize vāsanās/saṃskāras and sense-objects that ensnare awareness; seeing the mechanism is the first step toward cutting the pāśas through non-attachment and knowledge.