नारद–शुक संवादः
Impermanence, Svabhāva, and Śuka’s Resolve for Yoga
विश्वाविश्वेति यदिदं गन्धर्विेन्द्रानुपृच्छसि । विश्वाव्यक्तं परं विद्याद् भूतभव्यभयंकरम्
viśvāviśveti yad idaṃ gandharvīndrānupṛcchasi | viśvāvyaktaṃ paraṃ vidyād bhūtabhavyabhayaṅkaram ||
याज्ञवल्क्य म्हणाले—हे गंधर्वेंद्र! तू ‘विश्वा’ आणि ‘अविश्व’ यांविषयी जे विचारतोस, ते जाण—‘विश्वा’ हे परम अव्यक्त आहे; तेच सर्वोच्च तत्त्व, जे भूत आणि भविष्यकालीन प्राण्यांनाही भयप्रद भासते।
याज़्ञवल्क्य उवाच
The verse identifies the highest reality as the all-pervading Unmanifest (avyakta), beyond the categories of ‘universal’ and ‘non-universal’ as ordinarily conceived, and portrays it as a transcendent principle that inspires awe across time (past and future).
In a philosophical exchange in Śānti Parva, Yājñavalkya responds to a question posed to him (addressed as ‘lord of the Gandharvas’) about the notions of viśva and aviśva, redirecting the inquiry toward the supreme, unmanifest ground of existence.