Īśvara-gītā (Adhyāya 2) — Ātma-svarūpa, Māyā, and the Unity of Sāṅkhya–Yoga
तस्मादात्माक्षरः शुद्धो नित्यः सर्वगतो ऽव्ययः / उपासितव्यो मन्तव्यः श्रोतव्यश्च मुमुक्षुभिः
tasmādātmākṣaraḥ śuddho nityaḥ sarvagato 'vyayaḥ / upāsitavyo mantavyaḥ śrotavyaśca mumukṣubhiḥ
因此,求解脱者当礼敬观修此自我——不坏之体(akṣara)、清净、常住、遍一切处而不衰变;应当供奉而观想,应当思惟而省察,并应当聆听关于祂的圣教。
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing the sages (Ishvara-style teaching on Ātman and mokṣa)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It defines the Self as akṣara—imperishable—characterized by purity, eternality, all-pervasiveness, and freedom from decay, indicating an unchanging reality beyond bodily and mental change.
It points to a jñāna-oriented discipline: hearing sacred teaching (śravaṇa), reflective inquiry (manana), and sustained devotional contemplation (upāsanā), a practical triad used to stabilize realization for the mumukṣu.
By centering on the imperishable Ātman as the object of upāsanā and knowledge, it aligns with the Purāṇic synthesis where sectarian forms (Śiva/Vişṇu) converge in the one, all-pervading, undecaying Reality.