Vīrya, Māyā/Prakṛti, Śrī’s Inseparability, Paramāṇu, and Hari’s Infinitude
सानादि नित्या सत्यरूपा च विष्णोर्मिथ्या रूपा सा कथं स्यात्खगेन्द्र / सत्या तनुः प्रकृतेस्तन्निगूढा सत्यत्वमाहुर्व्यवहारार्थरूपम्
sānādi nityā satyarūpā ca viṣṇormithyā rūpā sā kathaṃ syātkhagendra / satyā tanuḥ prakṛtestannigūḍhā satyatvamāhurvyavahārārtharūpam
噢迦坚陀罗(伽楼陀),她(摩耶/自性)无始而常住,又被说为毗湿奴之力而真实——那么此形相怎会是“虚妄”?自性的身相真实,却隐伏于祂之中;而其“真实”乃就世间实用、往来经验(vyavahāra)而言。
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda)
Concept: Prakṛti/māyā is beginningless and eternal as Viṣṇu’s śakti; it is not ‘false’ in the sense of non-existent—its reality is affirmed for transactional experience (vyavahāra), while remaining hidden within Him.
Vedantic Theme: Two-level truth (vyavahāra vs. paramārtha) harmonized with īśvara-śakti doctrine; avoids crude illusionism and crude realism.
Application: Hold a balanced view: treat the world as meaningful for duty and devotion (vyavahāra), without mistaking it for the ultimate; use this to reduce anxiety and fanatic certainty in debates.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.3.26 (māyā as subtle prakṛti); Garuda Purana 3.3.25 (Indrajāla metaphor qualified)
This verse frames ‘reality’ as what functions in lived experience: Prakṛti is treated as real for worldly dealings (vyavahāra), even while deeper truth may be subtler than appearances.
It presents Prakṛti/Māyā as Viṣṇu’s beginningless power—concealed in Him—so it cannot be dismissed as merely ‘false’ when discussing the manifested world.
Act ethically within the world’s practical order—duties, consequences, and discipline matter—while remembering that ultimate clarity comes from seeing beyond mere appearances.