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Shloka 71

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 ||

اسی طرح کے بیدار ہونے اور انعکاس کے سبب اسے ‘پردھان’ کہا جاتا ہے۔ سانکھیا اور یوگ کے تَتّوَجْن، شروتی کے اشارات کے مطابق، یوں بیان کرتے ہیں کہ جیسے پانی میں چاند کا عکس دکھائی دیتا ہے، ویسے ہی چیتن جیواتما کی آگہی کی روشنی پرکرتی میں منعکس سی معلوم ہوتی ہے؛ اور اسی منعکس ادراک کے باعث پرکرتی ‘پردھان’ کہلاتی ہے۔

{'anena''by this
{'anena':
through this (instrumental of idam)', 'pratibodhena''by awakening/realization
through this (instrumental of idam)', 'pratibodhena':
by the ‘reflected’ apprehension', 'pradhānam''Pradhāna
by the ‘reflected’ apprehension', 'pradhānam':
unmanifest Nature (often identified with Prakṛti in Sāṅkhya)', 'pravadanti''they declare
unmanifest Nature (often identified with Prakṛti in Sāṅkhya)', 'pravadanti':
they describe', 'tat''that (principle)', 'sāṅkhya-yogāḥ': 'Sāṅkhya and Yoga (systems/paths of knowledge and discipline)', 'tattva-jñāḥ': 'knowers of reality
they describe', 'tat':
those who know the principles (tattvas)', 'yathā''according as
those who know the principles (tattvas)', 'yathā':
in the manner that', 'śruti-nidarśanāt''from the indications/illustrations of Śruti (Vedic revelation)
in the manner that', 'śruti-nidarśanāt':
on the authority of Śruti', 'prakṛti''Nature
on the authority of Śruti', 'prakṛti':
the field of manifesting qualities (guṇas)', 'jīva-ātman''the individual self (as spoken of in embodied context)', 'jñāna-svarūpa': 'whose nature is consciousness/knowledge', 'pratibimba': 'reflection
the field of manifesting qualities (guṇas)', 'jīva-ātman':
mirrored appearance (as in water)', 'candra''the moon', 'jala': 'water'}
mirrored appearance (as in water)', 'candra':

याज़्ञवल्क्य उवाच

Y
Yājñavalkya
P
Pradhāna
S
Sāṅkhya
Y
Yoga
Ś
Śruti
P
Prakṛti
J
Jīva/Ātman
M
Moon (candra)
W
Water (jala)

Educational Q&A

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.