Guest guest Posted August 6, 2009 Report Share Posted August 6, 2009 19.prakrthm purusham chaiva vidDhi anaadhi ubhou api Vikaaraan cha guNaan chaiva vidDhi prakrthisambhavaan Know both Prkrthi, the primordial nature and purusha, the individual self to be beginningless. The modifications and the gunas are born out of prkrthi. 20.kaaryakaaraNa karthrthve hethuH prakrthiH uchyathe purushaH sukha duhkhaanaam bhokthrthve hethuH uchyathe Prkrthi is the cause of its evolutes which are its effects. Purusha is the cause of the experiencing of sukha and duhkha. 21. purushaH prkrthisThaH hi bunkthe prakrthijaan guNaan kaaraNam guNa sangah asya sadhasathyonijanmasu Purusha in association in prakrthi experiences the gunasa of prakrthi. This is the cause of his being born in the good and evil wombs. The self , purusha of sankhya, and prkrthi , the primordial nature are both beginningless and all the modifications and attributes are those of prkrthi only, as purusha is changeless and without gunas. The modifications of the body, and the sense organs are the effect of prkrthi and its three gunas. while the experience of pleasure and pain is due to the action of purusha who associates himself with prkrthi. The term purusha refers to the indiviual self , jeeva, while the term prakrthi represents all that is anathman, non-self. The question may arise as to how the jiva, individual soul and the prkrthi are both said to be without beginning which goes contrary to the upanishadic statement 'sath alone was in the beginning , one only without a second.' Let us see how this is explained from the view point of advaita and visishtadvaita. According to advaita Brahman alone is real and the world, including the jiva is unreal, being the effect of avidhya , which is anadhi, beginningless. Hence purusha , the individual self and prkrthi the world are beginningless. According to visishtadvaita there are three reals, namely, Isvara, jiva and jagat, Isvara the inner self of all, jiva, the individual self and the world, jagat. This is not contrary to the upanishad because Brahman or Narayana is the cause of everything, all-pervading and imminent, being the inner Self. When the cause is real the effect is also real as a real thing cannot give rise to something which is unreal. Hence the world and the jiva are all modifications of the cause and form the sarira of Isvara the inner self.. Krishna now proceeds to explain how the individual self , who is of the nature of pure bliss experiences the joy and sorrow when it is associated with the body.. The self when embodied, becomes identified with the body which is the effect of prkrthi constituted of the three gunas and as a result, experiences the joy , sorrow etc which are the effects of the three gunas. This attachment to the gunas and its effects is the cause of the birth of the individual soul in different bodies. Acting through the body, influenced by the gunas, the jiva has to experience the results of the actions induced by the gunas, sinful or meritorious depending on the respective gunas which propel the actions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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