Śuka–Janaka Saṃvāda: Āśrama-krama, Jñāna-vijñāna, and the Marks of Liberation (शुक-जनक संवादः)
अफ-#-राज त्रयोदशाधिकत्रिशततमो< ध्याय: अध्यात्म
yājñavalkya uvāca | pādāv adhyātmam ity āhur brāhmaṇās tattvadarśinaḥ | gantavyam adhibhūtaṃ ca viṣṇus tatrādhidaivatam ||
یاج्ञولکْی نے کہا—اے راجن! حقیقت بین برہمن کہتے ہیں کہ دونوں پاؤں ادھیاتم ہیں؛ پہنچنے کی منزل ادھی بھوت ہے؛ اور وہاں وِشنو ادھی دیوتا ہے۔
याज़्वल्क्य उवाच
The verse presents a threefold interpretive framework: adhyātma (inner/self-related), adhibhūta (the embodied/material field), and adhidaivata (the presiding divine principle). It maps ‘feet’ to the inner dimension, the ‘destination’ to the field of beings/objects, and identifies Viṣṇu as the divine presider over that domain—linking spiritual practice, worldly reality, and divine governance into one coherent view.
In Śānti Parva’s instructional setting, the sage Yājñavalkya addresses a king and conveys what truth-seeing Brahmins teach. He explains how to understand key terms (adhyātma, adhibhūta, adhidaivata) through symbolic correspondences, guiding the listener toward a disciplined, theologically grounded understanding of reality.