Yoga, Nārāyaṇa as Supreme Principle, and the Emanation of Categories
Sāṅkhya-Yoga Outline
जन्म वृद्धि: क्षयश्चास्य प्रत्यक्षेणोपलभ्यते । सा तु चान्द्रमसी वृत्ति्न तु तस्य शरीरिण:
janma vṛddhiḥ kṣayaś cāsya pratyakṣeṇopalabhyate | sā tu cāndramasī vṛttir na tu tasya śarīriṇaḥ ||
Wika ni Bhīṣma: “Ang kapanganakan, paglaki, at pagkabulok ay tuwirang nakikita sa mundong ito. Ngunit ang pagbilog at pagliit na nakikita sa bilog ng buwan ay hindi pagbabago na pag-aari ng buwan mismo. Gayon din, ang nakikitang kapanganakan at iba pa ay sa katawan lamang nauukol, hindi sa Sariling may katawan.”
भीष्म उवाच
Perceived change—birth, growth, and decay—belongs to the body and to appearances, not to the embodied Self (ātman). The verse uses the moon’s waxing and waning as an analogy: the visible phases are an appearance, not an intrinsic alteration of the moon itself.
In Śānti Parva, Bhīṣma instructs Yudhiṣṭhira on dharma and higher knowledge. Here he advances a contemplative point: do not mistake observable bodily change for change in the Self; ethical steadiness and detachment arise from discerning the difference.