Satya-lakṣaṇa (The Characteristics and Forms of Truth) | सत्यलक्षणम्
एष चेष्टयते सम्यक् प्राणिन: सम्यगायतः: । असम्यगायतो भूयश्चनेष्टते विकृतं नूषु
eṣa ceṣṭayate samyak prāṇinaḥ samyag-āyataḥ | asamyag-āyato bhūyaś ceṣṭate vikṛtaṃ nṛṣu ||
ນາຣະດະ ກ່າວວ່າ: «ເມື່ອຫຼັກຊີວິດນີ້ ຂະຫຍາຍແລະເຮັດວຽກຢ່າງຖືກຕ້ອງໃນກາຍ ໃນຮູບຂອງລົມຫາຍໃຈແຫ່ງຊີວິດ ແລະອື່ນໆ ມັນເຮັດໃຫ້ສັດມີຊີວິດທັງປວງສາມາດເຄື່ອນໄຫວຢ່າງເປັນລະບຽບ. ແຕ່ເມື່ອມັນບໍ່ເຮັດວຽກຖືກທາງ ມັນກໍກ່ອນໃຫ້ເກີດການເຄື່ອນໄຫວບິດເບືອນ ແລະ ຄວາມຜິດປົກກະຕິໃນກາຍຂອງມະນຸດ».
नारद उवाच
Rightly regulated prāṇa (vital force) sustains orderly action and well-being; when prāṇa becomes imbalanced or improperly directed, it produces disorder—both as bodily विकृति (abnormality) and as distorted activity—implying an ethical need for self-regulation and balance.
In Śānti Parva’s instructional setting, Nārada explains a principle of embodied life: the properly functioning life-breath animates all beings, while its improper functioning leads to dysfunction and disturbance in humans.