Adhyaya 11 — The Son’s Discourse on Embryogenesis, Birth, and the Wheel of Saṃsāra
स्मृतीस्तस्य प्रयान्त्यस्य बह्व्यः संसारभूमयः ।
ततो निर्वेदमायाति पीड्यमान इतस्ततः ॥
smṛtīstasya prayāntyasya bahvyaḥ saṃsārabhūmayaḥ / tato nirvedamāyāti pīḍyamāna itastataḥ
進むにつれて多くの記憶が彼に訪れる—輪廻(サンサーラ)の根拠に関する記憶である。やがて四方より責め苦を受け、彼は離欲へと至る。
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Suffering can catalyze wisdom: when the jīva vividly recalls repeated birth and pain, it naturally turns toward renunciation and ethical self-restraint.
This is a soteriological teaching (mokṣa-oriented instruction) rather than a pañcalakṣaṇa narrative unit.
The arising of smṛti in confinement suggests that when external distractions are removed, deeper saṃskāras surface. ‘Nirveda’ becomes the threshold where bondage can turn into inquiry (jijñāsā).