Jñāna-hetu-nirūpaṇa
On the Causes/Means of Knowledge
बलज्ञाना दिकं सर्वं चिन्तनीयं न संशयः / तथापि वायौ दृश्यन्ते बलज्ञानादिव्यक्तयः
balajñānā dikaṃ sarvaṃ cintanīyaṃ na saṃśayaḥ / tathāpi vāyau dṛśyante balajñānādivyaktayaḥ
一切要素,如力量与智慧等,皆应当观照思惟,毫无疑惑;然而在风神伐由(Vāyu)之中,确实可见力量、智慧等种种显现。
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda)
Concept: Śakti (power) and jñāna can be inferred through their vyakti (manifestations); observation supports metaphysical claims about degrees of expression.
Vedantic Theme: From pratyakṣa/anumāna (observation/inference) toward tattva-vicāra; guṇa/śakti seen through effects.
Application: Study capacities (strength, intelligence) by their expressions and conditions; cultivate them intentionally while recognizing they manifest variably across substrates.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.12.51
This verse uses Vayu as an example to show that even subtle, unseen principles can display observable effects like power and purposeful activity, supporting reflection on subtle causation.
By pointing to wind—unseen yet clearly effective—the verse implies that qualities (like strength or cognition) can be inferred from their manifestations, a key approach when discussing subtle-body functions and invisible agencies.
Judge causes by their effects: cultivate discernment by observing outcomes (in behavior, health, and conduct) rather than dismissing what is not immediately visible.