कर्मनाशाभावः, गर्भे जीवप्रवेशः, आचारधर्मोपदेशः
Karma’s Non-Extinction, Jīva’s Entry into the Embryo, and Instruction on Conduct-Dharma
यथात्र कश्रिन्मेधावी दृष्टात्मा पूर्वजन्मनि । यत् प्रवक्ष्यामि तत् सर्व यथावदुपपद्यते
yathātra kaścin medhāvī dṛṣṭātmā pūrvajanmani | yat pravakṣyāmi tat sarvaṃ yathāvad upapadyate ||
यथात्र कश्चिन्मेधावी दृष्टात्मा पूर्वजन्मनि । यत् प्रवक्ष्यामि तत् सर्वं यथावदुपपद्यते ॥
ब्राह्मण उवाच
The speaker grounds his instruction in the authority of realized wisdom: true insight into the Self (ātma-darśana), even if attained in a prior life, enables one to speak correctly about the world’s impermanence. He also emphasizes that his forthcoming teaching will be rationally coherent (upapadyate) and properly stated (yathāvat).
A Brahmin speaker introduces a didactic passage, preparing the listener for a philosophical explanation. He claims that his forthcoming statements—especially concerning the transient nature of worldly existence—will match what a genuinely wise, self-realized person would say, and that they will be internally consistent and well-reasoned.