Adhyāya 179 — Bharadvāja’s Reductionist Inquiry into Jīva and Pañcabhūta Dissolution
पिड़ला कुरर: सर्प: सारड्डान्वेषणं वने । इषुकार: कुमारी च षडेते गुरवो मम,पिंगला, कुरर पक्षी, सर्प, वनमें सारंगका अन्वेषण, बाण बनानेवाला और कुमारी कन्या--ये छः मेरे गुरु हैं
piṅgalā kuraraḥ sarpaḥ sāraṅgānveṣaṇaṁ vane | iṣukāraḥ kumārī ca ṣaḍ ete guravo mama ||
Bodhya nói: “Pingalā, chim kurara, con rắn, cuộc tìm kiếm sāraṅga trong rừng, người thợ làm tên, và cô gái trinh—sáu điều ấy là thầy của ta.”
बोध्य उवाच
Wisdom can be gained from observing even ordinary creatures and everyday situations; each ‘teacher’ embodies a practical lesson—especially about desire, fear, attention, and detachment—relevant to living dharmically.
Bodhyā lists six exemplars she has learned from—Piṅgalā, a kurara bird, a snake, a forest episode involving searching for a sāraṅga, an arrow-maker, and a maiden—setting up a sequence of illustrative stories or lessons drawn from them.