Vidyā–Avidyā and the Twenty-Fifth Principle
Sāṃkhya–Yoga Clarification
अप्रियाण्यवमानांश्व दुःखं बहुविधात्मकम् । फलार्थी तत्फलं त्यक्त्वा प्राप्रोति विषयात्मकम्
apriyāṇy avamānāṁś ca duḥkhaṁ bahuvidhātmakam | phalārthī tatphalaṁ tyaktvā prāpnoti viṣayātmakam ||
Parāśara disse: “Aquele que age desejando frutos encontra o que é desagradável—insultos e muitos tipos de sofrimento. Mas quando renuncia a esse mesmo fruto da ação, alcança a realidade interior de todos os objetos da experiência: o Brahman supremo, o Senhor que é o Si-mesmo de tudo.”
पराशर उवाच
Desire for the fruits of action binds one to unpleasant outcomes—humiliation and varied suffering—whereas renouncing attachment to results (phala-tyāga) leads toward realization of the Supreme Brahman, the Self underlying all experiences.
In Śānti Parva’s instruction on liberation-oriented dharma, the sage Parāśara teaches that motivated, result-seeking action produces distress, but abandoning fixation on outcomes transforms action into a means for spiritual attainment—culminating in realization of Brahman.