Shloka 3

आत्मा च प्रकृतिं मुक्त्वा तच्छरीरं विमुज्चति । शरीरतश्न निर्मुक्त: कथमन्यत्‌ प्रपद्यते,जीवात्मा प्रकृति (मूल विद्या) और उससे उत्पन्न होनेवाले शरीरका कैसे त्याग करता है? और शरीरसे छूटकर दूसरेमें वह किस प्रकार प्रवेश करता है?

ātmā ca prakṛtiṁ muktvā taccharīraṁ vimucyati | śarīrataś ca nirmuktaḥ katham anyat prapadyate ||

कश्यप उवाच—आत्मा च प्रकृतिं मुक्त्वा तच्छरीरं विमुञ्चति । शरीरतश्च निर्मुक्तः कथमन्यत् प्रपद्यते ॥

आत्माthe self (soul)
आत्मा:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootआत्मन्
FormMasculine, Nominative, Singular
and
:
TypeIndeclinable
Root
प्रकृतिम्nature; primal matter
प्रकृतिम्:
Karma
TypeNoun
Rootप्रकृति
FormFeminine, Accusative, Singular
मुक्त्वाhaving released/abandoned
मुक्त्वा:
TypeVerb
Rootमुच्
Formक्त्वा (absolutive/gerund), Parasmaipada (usage)
तत्that
तत्:
Karma
TypePronoun
Rootतद्
FormNeuter, Accusative, Singular
शरीरम्body
शरीरम्:
Karma
TypeNoun
Rootशरीर
FormNeuter, Accusative, Singular
विमुञ्चतिreleases; abandons
विमुञ्चति:
TypeVerb
Rootमुच् (वि-)
FormLat (Present), Parasmaipada, Third, Singular, Active
शरीरतःfrom the body
शरीरतः:
Apadana
TypeNoun
Rootशरीर
FormNeuter, Ablative, Singular
निर्मुक्तःfreed; released
निर्मुक्तः:
Karta
TypeAdjective
Rootमुच् (निर्-)
Formक्त (past passive participle), Masculine, Nominative, Singular
कथम्how
कथम्:
TypeIndeclinable
Rootकथम्
अन्यत्another (thing/body)
अन्यत्:
Karma
TypeAdjective
Rootअन्य
FormNeuter, Accusative, Singular
प्रपद्यतेattains; enters; resorts to
प्रपद्यते:
TypeVerb
Rootपद् (प्र-)
FormLat (Present), Atmanepada, Third, Singular, Middle

काश्यप उवाच

K
Kāśyapa
Ā
Ātman (jīva)
P
Prakṛti
Ś
Śarīra (body)

Educational Q&A

The verse frames a key metaphysical inquiry: the relation between consciousness (ātman/jīva) and material causality (prakṛti), asking how death occurs (the self’s separation from the body) and how rebirth occurs (the self’s movement to another embodiment), thereby pointing to karma-driven transmigration and the possibility of liberation through disentanglement from prakṛti.

Kāśyapa, as a teacher-figure, poses a doctrinal question to clarify the mechanics of embodiment: how the jīva departs the present body and how it comes to take up another. The focus is explanatory and ethical-philosophical, preparing for an account of karma, subtle embodiment, and the conditions that lead either to further birth or to release.