Atma-Jnana as the Direct Means to Moksha: Advaita, Maya, and the Three States
व्यापकत्वात्कथं याति को याति क्व स याति च / अनन्तत्वान्नदेशो ऽस्ति अमूर्तित्वाद्गतिः कुतः
vyāpakatvātkathaṃ yāti ko yāti kva sa yāti ca / anantatvānnadeśo 'sti amūrtitvādgatiḥ kutaḥ
Yamang ang Sarili ay laganap sa lahat, paano ito “makaaalis”? Sino ang umaalis, at saan ito tutungo? Yamang ito’y walang hanggan, walang tiyak na pook para rito; at yamang ito’y walang anyo, saan magmumula ang paggalaw?
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: The all-pervading, infinite, formless Self has no locomotion or destination; ‘going’ belongs to body-mind, not Ātman.
Vedantic Theme: Nonlocality of Ātman/Brahman; negation of spatial predicates (deśa-gati) for the Self; adhyāropa-apavāda via inquiry questions.
Application: When fear of death/afterlife arises, inquire ‘who goes?’; separate awareness from changing experiences; meditate on all-pervasiveness (vyāptitva) and formlessness (amūrtatva).
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana jñāna section negating bodily identification and spatial notions (contextual).
This verse clarifies that the true Self (Ātman) is not a traveling entity; being infinite and formless, it does not ‘go’ anywhere, which supports the text’s liberating, non-dual perspective.
It implies that ‘going’ belongs to embodied or subtle processes, not to the Ātman itself; the Self is beyond location and motion, so any post-death journey described elsewhere pertains to the subtle body and karmic experience, not the ultimate Self.
Cultivate detachment and self-inquiry: remember that your deepest identity is not confined to body or place, which reduces fear of death and strengthens ethical living grounded in inner awareness.