Vidyā–Avidyā and the Twenty-Fifth Principle
Sāṃkhya–Yoga Clarification
एवं तस्य प्रवृत्तस्य नित्यमेवानुपश्यत: । रागद्वेषौ विवर्धेते हानित्यत्वमपश्यत:
evaṁ tasya pravṛttasya nityam evānupaśyataḥ | rāga-dveṣau vivardhete hānityatvam apaśyataḥ ||
ଏଭଳି ପ୍ରବୃତ୍ତିମାର୍ଗରେ ଲାଗିଥିବା ମନୁଷ୍ୟ ନିତ୍ୟ ବିଷୟବସ୍ତୁକୁ ଦେଖି ଚାଲେ, କିନ୍ତୁ ସେମାନଙ୍କର ଅନିତ୍ୟତା ଦେଖେ ନାହିଁ; ତେଣୁ ତାଙ୍କ ମନରେ ରାଗ ଓ ଦ୍ୱେଷ ବଢ଼ିଯାଏ। ଅନିତ୍ୟତାକୁ ଅଦୃଷ୍ଟ କରିବା ହିଁ ମନକୁ ପ୍ରିୟ-ଅପ୍ରିୟର ବନ୍ଧନରେ ପକାଇ ଦିଏ।
पराशर उवाच
Continual fixation on objects without insight into their impermanence strengthens rāga (attachment) and dveṣa (aversion). Ethical and spiritual clarity arises from seeing transience; otherwise the mind becomes reactive, driven by likes and dislikes.
Parāśara is explaining a psychological-spiritual mechanism: a person who stays in pravṛtti (worldly engagement) keeps observing desirable and undesirable objects, but because he does not perceive their anityatva (impermanence), his inner tendencies of attachment and aversion increase.