Yājñavalkya on the Unity of Sāṃkhya and Yoga and the Marks of Meditative Composure
एतामक्षपयित्वा हि जायते नृपसत्तम । सा हास्य प्रकृतिर्दृष्टा तत्क्षयान्मोक्ष उच्यते
etām akṣapayitvā hi jāyate nṛpasattama | sā hāsya prakṛtir dṛṣṭā tatkṣayān mokṣa ucyate ||
瓦西什塔说道:“王中之最啊,正因具身者不能令此系缚之理穷尽,故而一次又一次地受生。此一‘分’即被见为其自性(Prakṛti)——生起之因。待那结合穷尽之时,便宣说为解脱。”
वसिष्ठ उवाच
Rebirth continues as long as the binding causal principle—described as a ‘portion/kalā’ functioning as one’s prakṛti—remains unexhausted; liberation is taught to arise when that conjunction is fully worn away.
Vasiṣṭha is instructing a king in a philosophical discourse on the cause of repeated birth and the condition for mokṣa, identifying prakṛti-like causality as the driver of saṃsāra and its cessation as liberation.