महाभूतान्यहङ्कारो बुद्धिरव्यक्तमेव च।
इन्द्रियाणि दशैकं च पञ्च चेन्द्रियगोचराः।।13.6।।
Verse Audio
mahā-bhūtāny ahankāro buddhir avyaktam eva cha
indriyāṇi daśhaikaṁ cha pañcha chendriya-gocharāḥ
Core Philosophical Concepts
constituents of field
psychophysical aggregate
sense dynamics
desire and aversion
embodied process
Word-by-Word Meanings
mahā-bhūtāni (mahā-bhūtāni) — the (five) great elements; ahankāraḥ (ahankāraḥ) — the ego; buddhiḥ (buddhiḥ) — the intellect; avyaktam (avyaktam) — the unmanifested primordial matter; eva (eva) — indeed; cha (cha) — and; indriyāṇi (indriyāṇi) — the senses; daśha-ekam (daśha-ekam) — eleven; cha (cha) — and; pañcha (pañcha) — five; cha (cha) — and; indriya-go-charāḥ (indriya-go-charāḥ) — the (five) objects of the senses;
Translation (English)
The great elements, egoism, intellect, and also the Unmanifested Nature, the ten senses, and one mind, and the five objects of the senses.
Translation (Hindi)
।।13.6।। पंच महाभूत, अहंकार, बुद्धि, अव्यक्त (प्रकृति), दस इन्द्रियाँ, एक मन, इन्द्रियों के पाँच विषय।।
Verse Summary(English)
The great elements, egoism, intellect, and also the Unmanifested Nature, the ten senses, and one mind, and the five objects of the senses. It defines both the structure of embodied experience and the virtues that constitute real knowledge.
Verse Summary(Hindi)
पंच महाभूत, अहंकार, बुद्धि, अव्यक्त (प्रकृति), दस इन्द्रियाँ, एक मन, इन्द्रियों के पाँच विषय।। इस भाग में शरीर-मन-इंद्रिय-प्रकृति के संघटन को क्षेत्र के रूप में स्पष्ट किया गया है।