अव्यक्त–पुरुष–विवेकः (Discrimination of Avyakta/Prakṛti and Puruṣa) — Yājñavalkya’s Anvīkṣikī to Viśvāvasu
न चाभिमन्यते किंचिन्न च बुध्यति काषठवत् । तदा प्रकृतिमापन्नं युक्तमाहुर्मनीषिण:
na cābhimanyate kiṃcin na ca budhyati kāṣṭhavat | tadā prakṛtim āpannaṃ yuktam āhur manīṣiṇaḥ ||
瓦西什塔说道:当一个人对任何事物都不再认作“我所有”,甚至连寻常的觉知也不再起——如木段般安住——智者便宣说:他已归复自身本初之性,真实“系缚”于瑜伽。在此境中,心不起任何意向与造作,诸根不再外驰;此教旨指向离于占有与我慢的伦理自由,以内在的安定取代反应性的攫取。
वसिष्ठ उवाच
The verse defines a hallmark of yogic integration: the cessation of possessive identification (abhimāna) and reactive cognition, so that one abides in one’s own nature (prakṛti) without mental constructions. Ethically, it points to freedom from ‘mine-ness’ and ego-driven grasping, which stabilizes conduct and reduces harm.
Vasiṣṭha is instructing about inner realization and the yogic condition. He describes a state where the senses and mind no longer project outward and the person remains unmoved—‘like wood’—not as dullness, but as non-reactive steadiness that the wise recognize as true yoga and return to one’s pure nature.