Multi-form Manifestations, Indra–Kāma Incarnations, Pravāha, and the Twofold Buddhi
Sense-Discipline and Exclusive Refuge in Viṣṇu
नीचाया जांबवत्याश्च शेषसाम्यं च कुत्रचित् / श्रूयते च मया कृष्ण निमित्तं ब्रूहि मे प्रभो
nīcāyā jāṃbavatyāśca śeṣasāmyaṃ ca kutracit / śrūyate ca mayā kṛṣṇa nimittaṃ brūhi me prabho
ឱ ព្រះក្រឹṣṇa ខ្ញុំបានឮនៅកន្លែងខ្លះថា មានភាពស្រដៀងគ្នាខ្លះរវាង នីចា និងជាំបវតី ហើយក៏មានភាពស្រដៀងជាមួយសេសផងដែរ។ ឱ ព្រះអម្ចាស់ សូមប្រាប់ខ្ញុំអំពីមូលហេតុនេះ។
Garuda (Vinata-putra) addressing Lord Vishnu (Krishna)
Concept: Nimitta-jijñāsā (seeking the cause) regarding perceived correspondences among figures (Nīcā, Jāmbavatī, Śeṣa); encourages reasoned reconciliation of variant reports (śruti/anuśrava).
Vedantic Theme: Inquiry (vicāra) as a means to remove confusion; discerning causal relations and levels of meaning (literal/symbolic) in sacred narratives.
Application: When encountering conflicting sources, ask for the underlying principle; practice respectful questioning of teachers/texts and avoid premature conclusions.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.28.8-9 (context: consorts, multi-form doctrine)
This verse shows the Purāṇic method of inquiry: apparent resemblances in names, roles, or attributes are treated as clues to deeper causes (nimitta), such as divine function, past associations, or cosmic arrangement.
Garuda, as the questioner, brings a heard tradition (śrūyate) to Lord Vishnu/Kṛṣṇa and requests the underlying reason, setting up Vishnu’s authoritative explanation in the surrounding narrative.
Cultivate disciplined inquiry: when encountering conflicting or puzzling traditions, seek the underlying principle and context rather than relying on hearsay—an approach useful for studying scripture and living with discernment (viveka).