Chapter 299 — ग्रहहृन्मन्त्रादिकम्
Grahahṛn-Mantras and Allied Procedures
गुरुदेवादिकोपाच्च पञ्चोन्मादा भवन्त्य् अथ त्रिदोषजाः सन्निपाता आगन्तुरिति ते स्मृताः
gurudevādikopācca pañconmādā bhavanty atha tridoṣajāḥ sannipātā āganturiti te smṛtāḥ
由师长、诸天等之忿怒,可生五种狂乱(unmāda)。其被记述为:由三多沙(doṣa)所生者、由三多沙合扰之“萨尼帕塔”(sannipāta)者,以及外来所致之“阿甘图迦”(āgantuka)者。
Lord Agni (in Agni Purana’s instructional dialogue)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Ayurveda","secondary_vidya":"Philosophy","practical_application":"Roga-nidāna classification for unmada (insanity): distinguishes doṣaja, sannipātaja, and āgantuka types, with a moral/relational trigger (guru-deva-kopa) noted.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"List","entry_title":"Unmāda-bheda: doṣaja, sannipātaja, āgantuka (fivefold set)","lookup_keywords":["unmada","tridoshaja","sannipata","agantuka","guru-deva-kopa"],"quick_summary":"Insanity is classified into types rooted in doṣic disturbance, combined doṣas (sannipāta), and external causation (āgantuka), with guru/deity displeasure cited as a precipitating factor in the fivefold scheme."}
Dosha: Tridosha
Concept: Causality is multi-layered: physiological (doṣa), systemic (sannipāta), and external/numinous (āgantuka), with relational-ethical disharmony (guru/deva-kopa) acknowledged.
Application: Adopt a layered assessment model for mental disturbance: treat body, stabilize system-wide imbalance, and address external/social-spiritual stressors.
Khanda Section: Ayurveda (Roga-nidana / Manasika-roga: Unmada—insanity)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A teaching scene on mental illness classification: a physician-sage explains unmada types—doṣic, sannipātic, and āgantuka—while illustrating triggers like guru/deity displeasure.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style, Ayurvedic teacher with palm-leaf text, three symbolic figures representing Vāta/Pitta/Kapha and a combined sannipāta form, plus a shadowy āgantuka presence; calm earth tones and bold outlines.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, seated vaidya with gold-highlighted manuscript, three doṣa emblems and a combined emblem, a protective deity vignette indicating āgantuka; ornate gold borders.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting, diagrammatic instructional panel: headings 'doṣaja', 'sannipātaja', 'āgantuka', with a small scene of guru/deva-kopa as trigger; fine linework and clarity.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, scholarly medical consultation, patient with disturbed expression, physician explaining categories with illustrated chart, subtle supernatural motif for āgantuka, detailed interior setting."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"slow","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: gurudevādikopācca → guru-deva-ādi-kopāt ca; bhavanty atha → bhavanti atha; āganturiti → āgantuḥ iti.
Related Themes: Agni Purana 299 (graha and affliction discussion continuing)
It gives an Ayurvedic diagnostic classification (roga-nidāna) of unmāda (insanity), distinguishing doṣaja (doṣa-born), sannipātaja (combined-doṣa), and āgantuka (externally caused) forms, while also noting etiological triggers like the wrath of guru/deities.
Beyond theology, it preserves medical taxonomy: the Purana integrates Ayurveda’s clinical framework (doṣa-based causation and external causation) into a Purāṇic compendium, illustrating its multi-disciplinary scope.
By linking mental affliction to guru/deva-kopa, it underscores dharmic conduct—respect toward teachers and the divine—as a protective factor, implying that ethical and devotional alignment supports mental and bodily well-being.