Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 20

अव्यक्त–व्यक्त–कारणकार्यविवेकः

Avyakta–Vyakta and Causality: Discrimination of Field and Knower

नेन्द्रियर्मनस: सिद्धिर्न बुद्धि बुछाते मन: । न बुद्धिर्बुद्धाते5व्यक्तं सूक्ष्मं त्वेतानि पश्यति

nendriyair manasaḥ siddhir na buddhiḥ budhyate manaḥ | na buddhiḥ budhyate ’vyaktaṃ sūkṣmaṃ tv etāni paśyati ||

حواس من کو نہیں جانتے؛ من بدھی کو نہیں جانتا؛ اور بدھی لطیف، اَویَکت آتما کو نہیں جانتی۔ لیکن وہی لطیف اَویَکت آتما ساکشی ہے—وہ ان سب کو دیکھتا اور جانتا ہے۔

{'na''not', 'indriyaiḥ (indriya)': 'by the senses
{'na':
sense-faculties', 'manasaḥ (manas)''of the mind
sense-faculties', 'manasaḥ (manas)':
the mind', 'siddhiḥ''attainment
the mind', 'siddhiḥ':
successful apprehension/knowledge', 'buddhiḥ''intellect
successful apprehension/knowledge', 'buddhiḥ':
discriminative faculty', 'budhyate (√budh)''is understood/known
discriminative faculty', 'budhyate (√budh)':
apprehends', 'avyaktam''the unmanifest
apprehends', 'avyaktam':
not perceptible', 'sūkṣmam''subtle
not perceptible', 'sūkṣmam':
extremely fine, beyond gross perception', 'tu''but
extremely fine, beyond gross perception', 'tu':
however', 'etāni''these (senses, mind, intellect)', 'paśyati (√paś)': 'sees
however', 'etāni':

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhīṣma
I
indriya (senses)
M
manas (mind)
B
buddhi (intellect)
A
avyakta ātman (unmanifest Self)

Educational Q&A

The verse teaches a hierarchy of knowing: senses cannot grasp the mind, mind cannot grasp intellect, and intellect cannot grasp the subtle unmanifest Self; nevertheless the Self is the witnessing principle that illuminates and knows all mental and sensory operations.

In Śānti Parva, Bhīṣma instructs Yudhiṣṭhira on dharma and liberation-oriented wisdom. Here he explains an inner analysis of cognition to direct attention away from external faculties toward the witnessing Self as the basis of true knowledge.