An Exposition of the Distinctions of Creation, Inert Matter, and the Lord
रजः प्रधानं यत्तत्वं महत्तत्तवमितीरितम् / सर्गं त्विमं विजानीयाद्गुणवैषम्यनामकम्
rajaḥ pradhānaṃ yattatvaṃ mahattattavamitīritam / sargaṃ tvimaṃ vijānīyādguṇavaiṣamyanāmakam
جس تَتْو میں رجوگُن غالب ہو، اُسے ‘مہتّتَتْو’ کہا گیا ہے۔ اور اس سَرگ (سِرِشْٹی) کو ‘گُن وَیشَمْیَ’ یعنی تین گُنوں کی ناہمواری کے نام سے سمجھو۔
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Mahat-tattva is characterized here by rajas predominance; creation is termed guṇa-vaiṣamya—disequilibrium among sattva, rajas, tamas.
Vedantic Theme: Interplay of guṇas as the proximate mechanism of manifestation; naming/knowing (saṃjñā-jñāna) as a step toward discernment (viveka).
Application: Diagnose personal states via guṇas: when rajas dominates, ‘mahat’ becomes outward-activating; restore balance through sattvic disciplines (diet, conduct, meditation) to reduce agitation.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.4.11 (Mahat from guṇas); Garuda Purana 3.4.15 (request for meaning of guṇa-vaiṣamya)
This verse identifies creation as beginning when the guṇas lose equilibrium; that imbalance (guṇa-vaiṣamya) is the trigger for cosmic manifestation.
By grounding the universe in guṇas and Mahat-tattva, it frames embodied life as arising from guṇic conditions—helping explain why karma and tendencies operate through the qualities of nature.
Observe how rajas (restlessness and compulsive activity) drives the mind; cultivating balance—especially sattva—supports clarity, ethical choices, and steadier spiritual practice.