Computer programmers love to create video games that can put the player in a gigantic virtual world where they can blow up aliens
जय श्री कृष्ण
श्रीमद्भगवद्गीता 15.16
_द्वाविमौ पुरुषौ लोके क्षरश्चाक्षर एव च _
_क्षरः सर्वाणि भूतानि कूटस्थोऽक्षर उच्यते _
भावार्थ :
हे अर्जुन! संसार में दो प्रकार के ही जीव होते हैं एक नाशवान (क्षर) और दूसरे अविनाशी (अक्षर), इनमें समस्त जीवों के शरीर तो नाशवान होते हैं और समस्त जीवों की आत्मा को अविनाशी कहा जाता है। (१६)
Meaning:
There are two beings in this world, the perishable and the imperishable. All beings constitute the perishable, the Kootastha is called the imperishable.
Explanation:
Computer programmers love to create video games that can put the player
in a gigantic virtual world where they can blow up aliens. What is interesting
is that the same computer game can create a different world each time, with
different kinds of aliens in different place. In other words, the infinitely
complex virtual worlds created by the game can change, but the computer game
program remains the same. Our visible universe is quite similar.
Shri Krishna begins to summarize the teaching of this chapter by
asserting that everything in the world can be classified into two category. The
first category comprises the visible world, the tangible world which comprises
all living and inert beings. The second category comprises the invisible entity
called Maaya. Maaya is like the computer game program that is invisible, yet
has the power to create infinitely complex universes over and over again. The
first category is termed kshara or perishable, because the universe has a
beginning and end. The second category is termed akshara or imperishable,
because it outlives the perishable.
So therefore, let's examine this teaching from two standpoints. From our
standpoint, the standpoint of the "I" - the kshara, the perishable is
our physical body. The akshara, the imperishable is the jeeva, as defined in
the previous shlokas. From the standpoint of the world, the standpoint of the
"that" - the kshara is the visible universe. The akshara refers to
Maaya, the seed of infinite universes, present, past and future.
Let’s now look at some of the terms used in the shloka. Koota means
illusion, and therefore kootastha means that which can create several
illusions. Another clarification is around the imperishability of Maaya. If
Maaya is imperishable, how can we get out of it? The answer is that Maaya is
imperishable till we realize our true nature and attain liberation. Each
category is called a Purusha or a being because both of them are limitations or
upaadhis of Ishvara, as we shall see in the next shloka.
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