Jñāna-hetu-nirūpaṇa
On the Causes/Means of Knowledge
येये देवा विषयेषु निष्ठास्तेते देवा बहिरर्थभावाः / येये देवा बहिरर्थभावा मोक्षा दन्ये प्रलपन्तः सदैव
yeye devā viṣayeṣu niṣṭhāstete devā bahirarthabhāvāḥ / yeye devā bahirarthabhāvā mokṣā danye pralapantaḥ sadaiva
Ang mga diyos na nananatiling nakapirmi sa mga bagay ng pandama ay mga “diyos” na ang pananaw ay nakaharap sa labas, sa mga panlabas na bagay. At ang mga “diyos” na panlabas ang tingin ay walang tigil na nagsasalita tungkol sa isang kalayaang (mokṣa) nasa “iba pa”—na hindi naman nila maabot.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Outward orientation (bahir-artha-bhava) is bondage; mere discourse about moksha is futile without inward turning and realization.
Vedantic Theme: Distinction between paroksha-vada (talk) and aparoksha-anubhava (direct realization); necessity of antarmukhatva and vairagya for liberation.
Application: Audit one’s ‘spiritual talk’ versus practice: reduce performative discourse; cultivate inwardness through meditation, japa, and sense-restraint; prioritize direct sadhana over identity/status.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana (general): warnings against hypocrisy and mere verbal religiosity; Garuda Purana (general): emphasis on vairagya and bhakti as real means to moksha
This verse stresses that fixation on sense-objects creates an outward-turned mindset, which prevents genuine liberation; vairagya is implied as the corrective that turns awareness inward toward moksha.
It distinguishes outward attachment (viṣaya-niṣṭhā) from authentic liberation, implying that mere talk or status—even among devas—does not grant moksha without inner turning away from external objects.
Reduce compulsive sense-indulgence, cultivate inner discipline (japa, meditation, self-study), and treat ‘spiritual talk’ as secondary to lived detachment and ethical conduct.