Adhyaya 38 — Dattatreya on Non-Identification (Mamata) and the Path to Liberation
सम्यक्प्रपश्यतो ब्रह्मन् मम दुःखं न किञ्चन ।
असम्यग्दर्शिनो मग्नाः सर्वदैवासुखार्णवे ॥
samyak prapaśyato brahman mama duḥkhaṃ na kiñcana |
asamyagdarśino magnāḥ sarvadaivāsukhārṇave ||
婆罗门啊,对于如实正见者,毫无忧悲;而邪见之人,恒常沉没于不幸之海。
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Suffering is presented as dependent on ‘darśana’ (the way one sees). Ethical steadiness and peace follow from corrected understanding rather than mere external change.
This is upadeśa (instruction) embedded in narrative; it does not directly enumerate sarga/pratisarga/manvantara/vaṃśa/vaṃśānucarita, but supports the Purāṇa’s role as dharma-jñāna teaching.
‘Right seeing’ implies disentangling the Self from prakṛti’s fluctuations; the ‘ocean’ image hints at saṃsāra as a mental continuum sustained by misapprehension.