महात्मनः शरीरस्य चैतन्यात्सिद्धिरुच्यते पुरि शेते यतः पूर्वं क्षेत्रज्ञानं तथापि च //
mahātmanaḥ śarīrasya caitanyātsiddhirucyate puri śete yataḥ pūrvaṃ kṣetrajñānaṃ tathāpi ca //
Говорится, что осуществление (сиддхи) великой души, пребывающей в теле, возникает из сознательности тела; ибо Знающий Поле (кшетраджня) обитает в «граде», то есть в теле, с самого начала — и так остаётся.
Indirectly, it emphasizes what persists through change: the kṣetrajña (indwelling knower) remains within the ‘city’ of the body from the beginning, implying continuity of consciousness even as bodily states arise and pass.
It frames ethical life as rooted in inner awareness: a king or householder should govern senses and actions remembering the indwelling knower, treating the body as a managed ‘city’ and aiming at siddhi through disciplined consciousness.
Using the ‘puri’ (city) metaphor, the verse aligns with Vastu-style thinking: just as a city/house is organized around its presiding principle, the body is organized around the kṣetrajña—supporting ritual and Vastu readings that link outer structure with inner indweller.
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