Adhyaya 46 — Cosmic Dissolution, the Emergence of Brahma, and the Measures of Time (Yugas, Manvantaras, and Brahma’s Day)
अहर्मुखे प्रबुद्धस्तु जगदादिरनादिमान् ।
सर्वहेतुरचिन्त्यात्मा परः कोऽप्यपरक्रियः ॥
ahar-mukhe prabuddhas tu jagadādir anādimān |
sarva-hetur acintyātmā paraḥ ko 'py apara-kriyaḥ ||
宇宙の「昼」の始めに、世界の根源—しかも自らは無始なる者—が目覚める。万有の原因にして、その本性は不可思議、至上者であり、何ものにも依らずに働く。
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The ultimate cause is portrayed as beyond ordinary thought yet operative in cosmic order. This encourages humility in metaphysical claims and devotion/discipline aligned with a higher order rather than egoic control.
Sarga/Pratisarga theology: it identifies the transcendent regulator whose ‘awakening’ initiates the turn from dissolution to manifestation.
‘Awakening’ is figurative: consciousness does not literally sleep, but the metaphor indicates the onset of manifestation when the unmanifest becomes expressible—like awareness turning toward objects.