Īśvara-gītā (Adhyāya 2) — Ātma-svarūpa, Māyā, and the Unity of Sāṅkhya–Yoga
पश्यन्ति मुनयो युक्ताः स्वात्मानं परमार्थतः / विकारहीनं निर्दुः खमानन्दात्मानमव्ययम्
paśyanti munayo yuktāḥ svātmānaṃ paramārthataḥ / vikārahīnaṃ nirduḥ khamānandātmānamavyayam
యోగంలో స్థిరమైన మునులు పరమార్థంగా తమ స్వాత్మను దర్శిస్తారు—అది వికారరహితం, దుఃఖరహితం, ఆనందస్వరూపం, అవ్యయం।
Narratorial/teaching voice within the Purva-bhaga (sage-instruction context of the Kurma Purana’s yoga-philosophy)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It defines the Self as ultimately real (paramārtha), changeless (vikārahīna), untouched by suffering (nirduḥkha), intrinsically blissful (ānandātmā), and imperishable (avyaya)—known by direct yogic insight rather than mere theory.
The verse emphasizes being “yukta”—steadily integrated in Yoga—implying collected mind, meditation (dhyāna), and inner absorption through which sages directly ‘see’ the Self beyond mental modifications.
While no deity-name appears, the teaching aligns with the Kurma Purana’s synthesis: the highest reality realized in Yoga is one, changeless Self—supporting a non-sectarian, non-dual framing often used to harmonize Shaiva and Vaishnava viewpoints.