Vidyā–Avidyā and the Twenty-Fifth Principle
Sāṃkhya–Yoga Clarification
सुखे तु वर्तमानो वै दुःखे वापि नरोत्तम | सुवृत्ताद् यो न चलते शास्त्रचक्षु;ः स मानव:
sukhe tu vartamāno vai duḥkhe vāpi narottama | suvṛttād yo na calate śāstracakṣuḥ sa mānavaḥ ||
មិនថាស្ថិតក្នុងសុខ ឬជួបទុក្ខក្តី ឱ មនុស្សប្រសើរ អ្នកណាដែលមិនបែរចេញពីសុចរិត—ដោយមានសាស្ត្រជាភ្នែកដឹកនាំ—អ្នកនោះហើយជាមនុស្សគួរគោរពពិតប្រាកដ។
पराशर उवाच
A person’s true worth is shown by steadiness in dharma: remaining anchored in good conduct and guided by śāstra, without wavering in either pleasure or pain.
In Śānti Parva’s instruction on dharma and right living, Parāśara addresses a listener as ‘narottama’ and defines the mark of a genuine human being as unwavering adherence to virtuous conduct, supported by scriptural discernment, regardless of changing circumstances.