Jīva–Ātman Inquiry; Kṣetrajña Doctrine; Karma-based Varṇa; Four Āśramas and Sannyāsa Discipline
सत्यानृतं तदुभयं प्राप्यते जगतीचरैः । तत्राप्येवंविधा लोके वृत्तिः सत्यानृते भवेत् ॥ ८४ ॥
satyānṛtaṃ tadubhayaṃ prāpyate jagatīcaraiḥ | tatrāpyevaṃvidhā loke vṛttiḥ satyānṛte bhavet || 84 ||
行走世间的众生,会遭遇真实、虚妄,乃至二者杂糅之境。因此在社会中,人们的实际行持也常随因缘而在真与伪之间形成相应的取舍。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It acknowledges the complexity of lived reality—people meet truth, falsehood, and mixed situations—so dharmic discernment is required to keep one’s conduct aligned with righteousness while moving toward moksha.
By stressing careful conduct amid moral ambiguity, it supports bhakti as a lived discipline: devotion is protected when speech and behavior are restrained and guided by dharma rather than convenience.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyakarana, Jyotisha, or Kalpa) is taught directly; the takeaway is applied niti/dharma—how to regulate one’s vṛtti (practical conduct) regarding truthful or untruthful circumstances.