Mokṣa-dharma Yoga-Upadeśa: Equanimity, Sense-Restraint, and Vision of the Ātman (आत्मदर्शन-योगोपदेशः)
न त्वसौ चक्षुषा ग्राह्मो न च सर्वैरपीन्द्रियै: । मनसैव प्रदीपेन महानात्मा प्रदृश्यते
na tv asau cakṣuṣā grāhyo na ca sarvair apīndriyaiḥ | manasaiva pradīpena mahān ātmā pradṛśyate ||
Ngunit ang Kataas-taasang Sarili ay hindi nasasaklaw ng mata, ni ng lahat ng pandama man. Sa isip lamang—na naliliwanagan na parang lampara—nasasaksihan ang Dakilang Sarili.
ब्राह्मण उवाच
The Supreme Self is not an object of sensory perception; it is realized through inward illumination—mind refined into a clear, discerning ‘lamp’—suggesting disciplined ethics, restraint, and contemplative insight as the means to true vision.
A brāhmaṇa speaker instructs the listener that ultimate reality cannot be grasped externally through the senses; the discourse turns toward inner realization, using the lamp metaphor to emphasize contemplative knowledge over sensory evidence.