Jñāna-hetu-nirūpaṇa
On the Causes/Means of Knowledge
नित्यानन्दादन्यकामो न मेस्ति अतः सदा बहिरर्थैश्च शून्यः / ममापि भार्या बहिरर्थशून्या अमूढभावा मूढवतीव दृश्यते
nityānandādanyakāmo na mesti ataḥ sadā bahirarthaiśca śūnyaḥ / mamāpi bhāryā bahirarthaśūnyā amūḍhabhāvā mūḍhavatīva dṛśyate
နိစ္စအာနန္ဒမှ လွဲ၍ ငါ၌ အခြားဆန္ဒ မရှိ။ ထို့ကြောင့် ငါသည် အပြင်အရာဝတ္ထုတို့မှ အစဉ် ဗလာဖြစ်၏။ ငါ့ဇနီးလည်း အပြင်ရည်ရွယ်ချက်များမှ ဗလာဖြစ်သည်—သူမ၏ သဘာဝသည် မမိုက်မဲသော်လည်း မိုက်မဲသကဲ့သို့ ထင်မြင်ရ၏။
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Nitya-ananda as the only true desire; outward-objectlessness; recognition that apparent simplicity/foolishness can mask non-delusion and inner clarity.
Vedantic Theme: Ananda as svarupa; lokavyavahara vs paramarthika drishti; jnani’s seeming ordinariness (avadhuta-like).
Application: Prioritize inner contentment over acquisition; refrain from judging others’ spiritual maturity by appearances; cultivate simplicity and steady joy.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana thematic parallels on nitya-ananda, vairagya, and the hidden marks of wisdom (general)
This verse presents desirelessness rooted in “nityānanda” (ever-present bliss) as a mark of spiritual maturity—freedom from external aims that supports a calm, dharmic life and prepares one for the after-death journey described in the Preta Kanda.
By emphasizing the absence of “any other desire,” the verse points to an inwardly established consciousness; such inner steadiness reduces bondage to outward objects, a key condition for moving toward liberation rather than remaining caught in post-death distress and attachment.
Practice reducing compulsive wants, simplify goals, and cultivate inner contentment; evaluate daily actions by whether they strengthen clarity (amūḍhabhāva) rather than chasing external validation or possessions.