Karma-vāda Critiqued, Varṇāśrama Reframed, and the Soul’s Distinction from the Body
कथं वर्तेत विहरेत् कैर्वा ज्ञायेत लक्षणै: । किं भुञ्जीतोत विसृजेच्छयीतासीत याति वा ॥ ३६ ॥ एतदच्युत मे ब्रूहि प्रश्नं प्रश्नविदां वर । नित्यबद्धो नित्यमुक्त एक एवेति मे भ्रम: ॥ ३७ ॥
kathaṁ varteta viharet kair vā jñāyeta lakṣaṇaiḥ kiṁ bhuñjītota visṛjec chayītāsīta yāti vā
हे अच्युत प्रभो! एकाच जीवाला कधी नित्यबद्ध तर कधी नित्यमुक्त असे म्हणतात; मला त्याची खरी स्थिती कळत नाही. तत्त्वप्रश्नांची उत्तरे देण्यात आपण श्रेष्ठ आहात; कृपा करून सांगा—नित्यबद्ध व नित्यमुक्त जीवांची लक्षणे कोणती? ते कसे वागतात, कसे विहार करतात, कोणत्या चिन्हांनी ओळखावे? ते काय खातात, काय त्यागतात, कसे झोपतात, बसतात किंवा चालतात?
In previous verses Lord Kṛṣṇa has explained to Uddhava that an eternally liberated soul is beyond the three modes of material nature. Since a liberated soul is considered to be beyond even the superior mode of goodness, how can he be recognized? By false identification with the modes of nature, which produce one’s own material body, one is bound by illusion. On the other hand, by transcending the modes of nature, one is liberated. However, in ordinary activities — such as eating, evacuating, relaxing, sitting and sleeping — a liberated soul and a conditioned soul appear to be the same. Therefore Uddhava is inquiring, “By what symptoms can I recognize that one living entity is performing such external activities without false ego, and by what symptoms can I recognize one who is working under the illusory bondage of material identification? This is difficult, because the ordinary bodily functions of liberated and conditioned personalities appear similar.” Uddhava has approached the Supreme Personality of Godhead, taking Him as his personal spiritual master, and wants to be enlightened about how to understand the differences between material and spiritual life.
This verse frames the inquiry: a liberated soul is to be recognized by observable symptoms—conduct, associations, and daily habits—distinct from the conditioned state; the detailed answer is given by Krishna in the surrounding Uddhava-gita teachings.
Uddhava is resolving a philosophical doubt: the self is one, yet scripture speaks of souls as ever-bound and ever-free. He asks Krishna (Acyuta) to clarify how this distinction is understood and recognized in life.
Examine your own life through the lens Uddhava requests—behavior, association, and habits—and align them with devotion and spiritual clarity rather than impulses that reinforce conditioned identity.