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Agni Purana — Sahitya-shastra, Shloka 34

Discrimination of the Qualities of Poetry (Kāvya-guṇa-viveka) — Closing Verse/Colophon Transition

तर्कज्ञानं मुनेः कस्य कस्यचित् क्षणभङ्गिका भूतचैतन्यता कस्य ज्ञानस्य सुप्रकाशता

tarkajñānaṃ muneḥ kasya kasyacit kṣaṇabhaṅgikā bhūtacaitanyatā kasya jñānasya suprakāśatā

कस्य मुनेः तर्कज्ञानं प्रमाणं? कस्य मतस्य क्षणभङ्गिका (सर्ववस्तु)? कस्य भूतचैतन्यता? कस्य ज्ञानस्य स्वयम्प्रकाशता?

tarka-jñānamlogical knowledge / reasoning-knowledge
tarka-jñānam:
Karta (कर्ता)
TypeNoun
Roottarka (प्रातिपदिक) + jñāna (प्रातिपदिक)
FormNeuter (नपुंसकलिङ्ग), Nominative/Accusative (1st/2nd), Singular (एकवचन); here as topic/nominal: nominative; तत्पुरुषः
muneḥof the sage
muneḥ:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध/षष्ठी)
TypeNoun
Rootmuni (प्रातिपदिक)
FormMasculine (पुंलिङ्ग), Genitive (6th/षष्ठी), Singular (एकवचन)
kasyaof whom
kasya:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध/षष्ठी)
TypeNoun
Rootkim (सर्वनाम-प्रातिपदिक)
FormMasculine/Neuter (पुं/नपुं), Genitive (6th/षष्ठी), Singular (एकवचन); interrogative pronoun
kasyacitof someone
kasyacit:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध/षष्ठी)
TypeNoun
Rootkim (सर्वनाम-प्रातिपदिक) + cit (अव्यय-प्रत्यय)
FormMasculine/Neuter (पुं/नपुं), Genitive (6th/षष्ठी), Singular (एकवचन); indefinite pronoun
kṣaṇa-bhaṅgikāmomentariness
kṣaṇa-bhaṅgikā:
Karta (कर्ता)
TypeNoun
Rootkṣaṇa (प्रातिपदिक) + bhaṅgikā (प्रातिपदिक)
FormFeminine (स्त्रीलिङ्ग), Nominative (1st/प्रथमा), Singular (एकवचन); ‘momentariness’; तत्पुरुषः
bhūta-caitanyatāconsciousness as a real entity / consciousness of beings
bhūta-caitanyatā:
Karta (कर्ता)
TypeNoun
Rootbhūta (प्रातिपदिक) + caitanyatā (प्रातिपदिक)
FormFeminine (स्त्रीलिङ्ग), Nominative (1st/प्रथमा), Singular (एकवचन); ‘consciousness of beings / being-consciousness’; तत्पुरुषः
kasyaof whom
kasya:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध/षष्ठी)
TypeNoun
Rootkim (सर्वनाम-प्रातिपदिक)
FormMasculine/Neuter (पुं/नपुं), Genitive (6th/षष्ठी), Singular (एकवचन)
jñānasyaof knowledge
jñānasya:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध/षष्ठी)
TypeNoun
Rootjñāna (प्रातिपदिक)
FormNeuter (नपुंसकलिङ्ग), Genitive (6th/षष्ठी), Singular (एकवचन)
su-prakāśatāgreat clarity / self-luminosity
su-prakāśatā:
Karta (कर्ता)
TypeNoun
Rootsu (उपसर्ग/अव्यय) + prakāśatā (प्रातिपदिक)
FormFeminine (स्त्रीलिङ्ग), Nominative (1st/प्रथमा), Singular (एकवचन); ‘great clarity/luminosity’; उपसर्गपूर्वक-तत्पुरुषभाव

Lord Agni (in discourse to the sage Vasiṣṭha, presenting comparative philosophical positions)

Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Philosophy","secondary_vidya":"Samanya","practical_application":"Map doctrines to their hallmark theses (pramāṇa, kṣaṇabhaṅga, bhūta-caitanya, svaprakāśa-jñāna) to quickly identify schools during study, debate, or commentary.","sutra_style":true}

Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"List","entry_title":"Doctrinal Markers: Tarka-jñāna, Kṣaṇabhaṅga, Bhūta-caitanya, Svaprakāśa","lookup_keywords":["tarka-jñāna","kṣaṇabhaṅga","bhūta-caitanya","svaprakāśa-jñāna","darśana"],"quick_summary":"The verse poses diagnostic questions that distinguish philosophical systems: which accept inference as knowledge, which teach momentariness, which posit consciousness as inherent in beings, and which hold knowledge to be self-luminous."}

Concept: Darśana-parīkṣā by thesis-markers: pramāṇa status of tarka/anumāna (Nyāya etc.), kṣaṇikatva (Bauddha), bhūta-caitanya (Cārvāka/Lokāyata), svaprakāśa-jñāna (often Yogācāra/Advaita-inflected epistemologies; also debated across schools).

Application: Create a comparative table of schools and tick which theses they accept; use it to interpret later arguments and avoid category-mistakes in debate.

Khanda Section: Darshana / Jnana-yoga (Philosophical Inquiry: Epistemology and Momentariness)

Primary Rasa: adbhuta

Secondary Rasa: shanta

Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A sage presents four question-panels, each labeled with a doctrinal thesis, while students point to different school-emblems to match the thesis to the system.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, rishi in teaching posture, four framed panels with Sanskrit headings (tarka-jñāna, kṣaṇabhaṅga, bhūta-caitanya, svaprakāśa), students in attentive rows, temple-school ambience","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, central guru with gold halo-like arch, four gold-bordered tablets showing the theses, rich ornamentation, devotional-academic mood","mysore_prompt":"Mysore style, schematic instructional composition: a matrix chart of darśanas vs theses, guru pointing with stylus, clear legible labels and restrained palette","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, philosophical classroom with illustrated marginalia—four cartouches containing the theses, scholars in discussion, refined calligraphy and architectural depth"}

Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"instructional","suggested_raga":"Shankarabharanam","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"contemplative"}

Sandhi Resolution Notes: tarkajñānaṃ → tarka-jñānam; kṣaṇabhaṅgikā, bhūtacaitanyatā are compounds; no major external sandhi.

Related Themes: Agni Purana 346 (Darśana/Jñāna-yoga survey questions)

A
Agni
M
Muni
J
Jñāna
T
Tarka

FAQs

This verse imparts darśana-vidyā (philosophical classification): it frames key epistemic and metaphysical theses—tarka as a pramāṇa (means of knowledge), kṣaṇabhaṅga (momentariness), bhūta-caitanya (sentience principle), and jñāna-svayaṃprakāśatā (self-luminosity of cognition)—as markers for distinguishing schools.

By listing diagnostic doctrines used in Indian philosophical debate, the Agni Purana functions as a compendium that catalogs not only rituals and dharma but also technical categories of logic and metaphysics—showing how to map competing systems through their signature claims.

It encourages viveka (discriminative understanding): by examining what a view asserts about knowledge and reality, a seeker avoids confusion and cultivates right understanding, which supports steadiness in sādhanā and more informed pursuit of liberation-oriented practice.