तच् च ज्ञानमयं व्यापि स्वसंवेद्यम् अनौपमम् चतुष्प्रकारं तद् अपि स्वरूपं परमात्मनः
tac ca jñānamayaṃ vyāpi svasaṃvedyam anaupamam catuṣprakāraṃ tad api svarūpaṃ paramātmanaḥ
ആ പരമസത്യം ജ്ഞാന-ചൈതന്യസാരമാണ്—സർവ്വവ്യാപി, സ്വയംപ്രകാശം, സ്വയം തന്നാൽ അറിയപ്പെടുന്നതും ഉപമയില്ലാത്തതും. അതേ പരമാത്മസ്വരൂപം നാലുവിധമായിട്ടും പ്രസ്താവിക്കപ്പെടുന്നു।
Sage Parāśara (teaching Maitreya)
Concept: The supreme truth is consciousness itself—pervading all, self-revealing, incomparable—and the Supreme Self’s nature is described as fourfold.
Vedantic Theme: Atman
Application: Practice inward recollection (smṛti) and discrimination: notice awareness as self-evident, then orient devotion toward the Lord who is that all-pervading consciousness.
Vishishtadvaita: ‘Vyāpi’ supports the Lord’s immanence (antaryāmitva) while ‘anaupama’ preserves transcendence; the ‘fourfold’ points toward Pāñcarātra catur-vyūha articulation of the one divinity.
Vishnu Form: Para-Brahman
Bhakti Type: Shanta
Vyuha Form: Vasudeva
Antaryamin: Yes
It indicates that the Supreme Reality is self-revealing consciousness, not dependent on any external proof or instrument of knowledge, emphasizing transcendence and immediacy.
He presents the Paramatman as knowledge itself, all-pervading, incomparable, and directly self-known—then notes that this same reality is taught through a fourfold characterization.
The verse supports a Vaishnava Vedantic view of Vishnu as the Supreme Self: omnipresent, self-luminous, and unmatched—grounding devotion and metaphysics in one ultimate reality.