जय श्री कृष्ण
श्रीमद्भगवद्गीता - 15.18
Some schools of thought assert that the Purushottama is only the intelligent cause and not the material cause
_यस्मात्क्षरमतीतोऽहमक्षरादपि चोत्तमः ।_
_अतोऽस्मि लोके वेदे च प्रथितः पुरुषोत्तमः ॥_
भावार्थ :
क्योंकि मैं ही क्षर और अक्षर दोनों से
परे स्थित सर्वोत्तम हूँ,
इसलिये इसलिए संसार में तथा वेदों में
पुरुषोत्तम रूप में विख्यात हूँ। (१८)
Meaning:
For, I transcend the perishable and also
am superior to the imperishable. Therefore, in the world and in the Vedas, I am
well known as the foremost person.
Explanation:
Now, Shri Krishna reveals his true identity as Purushottama, the uttama
Purusha, the foremost person, which is a poetic means of referring to the
eternal essence, the pure brahman without any limitations. The root of the
sanskrit word "uttama" is "ut" or high. This means that
there is nothing higher than Purushottama. The imperishable, also known as
Prakriti or Maaya, could be considered superior to the perishable world,
because Prakriti is the cause and the world is its effect. Any cause is
superior than its effect, just like the parents are superior to their children.
Since Prakriti exists only as an adhyaasa, a projection on Purushottama, he is
greater than anything else.
Let us also look at the significance of Purushottama by going deeper
into what is meant by cause and effect. According to Vedanta, there are two
types of causes. The material cause is the substance which makes the effect. A
clay pot is made of clay, so its material cause, its upaadaana kaarana, is
clay. But the pot did not make itself. There was an intelligence in the form of
a potter that created the clay pot. This is the second type of cause is the
nimitta kaarana, known as the intelligent or efficient cause.
Some schools of thought assert that the Purushottama is only the
intelligent cause and not the material cause. He is like the potter who is
distinct and separate than his creation. But in the Advaita school, the
Purushottama is not only considered the intelligence behind creation, he is
also the raw material behind the creation. The Mundaka Upanishad compares
Purushottama to the spider who weaves the web from within himself, and
eventually, pulls back the web into himself.
We should again not forget that this uttama Purusha, this foremost
person, is nothing but our own self, our "I". In fact, uttama Purusha
in Sanskrit grammatically means the first person, the "I". He is
beyond the perishable tree of samsaara, and also beyond the seed of this tree
in the form of Prakriti. What is the result of knowing this uttama Purusha? We
will see in the next shloka.
Chant
the mantra you have faith in
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