Atma-Jnana as the Direct Means to Moksha: Advaita, Maya, and the Three States
नाम पञ्चत्रिंशदुत्तरद्विशततमो ऽध्यायः श्रीभगवानुवाच / आत्मज्ञानं प्रवक्ष्यामि शृणु नारद तत्त्वतः / अद्वैतं साङ्ख्यमित्याहुर्योगस्तत्रैकचित्तता
nāma pañcatriṃśaduttaradviśatatamo 'dhyāyaḥ śrībhagavānuvāca / ātmajñānaṃ pravakṣyāmi śṛṇu nārada tattvataḥ / advaitaṃ sāṅkhyamityāhuryogastatraikacittatā
ဤသို့ဖြင့် အခန်း ၂၃၆ စတင်၏။ ဘုရားသခင်က မိန့်တော်မူသည်—“နာရဒာ၊ တတ္တဝကို အမှန်တကယ်နားထောင်လော့။ ငါသည် အတ္တဉာဏ်ကို ဟောပြမည်။ ထိုအရာကို အဒွိုင်တ (မနှစ်ခွဲ) ဟုလည်း၊ စाङ္ချာ ဟုလည်း ခေါ်ကြ၏။ ထိုအကြောင်း၌ ယောဂဟူသည် စိတ်တစ်ချက်တည်း တည်ငြိမ်ခြင်းပင် ဖြစ်၏။”
Śrī Bhagavān (the Blessed Lord, traditionally Lord Viṣṇu)
Concept: Atma-jnana is taught as Advaita; Sankhya is framed as non-dual discrimination; Yoga is defined as ekacittata (one-pointed mind).
Vedantic Theme: Shravana as the gateway to aparoksha-jnana; integration of sankhya-viveka with yogic concentration under Advaita.
Application: Adopt disciplined listening (shravana) to non-dual teaching; train attention to one-pointedness to stabilize insight.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.235.54 (Vedanta-shravana as means); Garuda Purana 1.236.2 (advaita-yoga frees; karma destroyed by bodha); Garuda Purana 1.236.3 (sad-vichara; jnana-vairagya)
This verse frames Ātma-jñāna as the core teaching to be heard “tattvataḥ” (in truth), implying it is a direct means to right understanding that supports liberation-oriented practice.
It presents them as complementary lenses: Advaita as the truth of non-duality, Sāṅkhya as discriminative understanding, and Yoga as the practical discipline of ekacittatā—steady one-pointed mind.
Study the Self (ātma-vicāra) with clarity, and support it with daily one-pointed attention practices—such as meditation or japa—to stabilize the mind (ekacittatā).