नारद–शुक संवादः
Impermanence, Svabhāva, and Śuka’s Resolve for Yoga
अनेन प्रतिबोधेन प्रधान प्रवदन्ति तत् । सांख्ययोगाश्च तत्त्वज्ञा यथाश्रुतिनिदर्शनात्
anena pratibodhena pradhānaṁ pravadanti tat | sāṅkhyayogāś ca tattvajñā yathāśrutinidarśanāt ||
Sa ganitong paraan ng paggising at pagmuni, tinatawag nila iyon na ‘Pradhāna’ (ang unang-ugat na Kalikasan). Ang mga nakakabatid ng katotohanan sa Sāṅkhya at Yoga, ayon sa mga pahiwatig ng paghahayag na Veda, ay nagpapaliwanag: kung paanong ang buwan ay waring nasasalamin sa tubig, gayon din ang liwanag ng kamalayan na pag-aari ng may-malay na Sarili ay tila nasasalamin sa Prakṛti; at dahil sa nasasalaming pag-unawang ito, tinatawag ang Prakṛti na Pradhāna.
याज़्ञवल्क्य उवाच
Pradhāna (primordial Nature) is spoken of as Prakṛti insofar as it appears to ‘carry’ cognition due to a reflected awareness: consciousness belongs to the Self, yet it seems mirrored in Nature—like the moon reflected in water—producing the appearance that Prakṛti is knowing.
Yājñavalkya is explaining a Sāṅkhya–Yoga account of how experience arises: the Self is intrinsically conscious, while Prakṛti is the material basis; by Śruti-supported reasoning and analogy, he clarifies why the primordial principle is termed Pradhāna and how apparent knowing can be attributed to Nature through reflection.