saṃprajñāta
Devanāgarī: संप्रज्ञात Translation: distinguished, discerned, known accurately; completely known; total knowing Similar words:jñāna, vijñāna, prajñā, prajñāta Related concepts:samādhi, dhyāna, layaAppears in
Yoga Sūtra:Chapter 1: 17
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Commentaries around
“When Jīva, attached to Prakṛti,
realizes its own true nature with
clear understanding, all desires,
arising from the three Guṇa and
their variations cease entirely.
This state of Vairāgya,
free from all types of desire,
is called Para Vairāgya.”
– T Krishnamacharya on Yoga Sūtra Chapter One verse 16
“Insight follows the aggregate
of deliberation on the gross,
to reflection on the subtle,
resulting in a feeling of happiness,
culminating in a sense of oneness.”
– Paul Harvey on Yoga Sūtra Chapter One verse 17
“In Sūtra 1.17 Patañjali presents Asmitā, or the
sense of oneness, as the culmination of four
successively subtle forms of a meditational
process, collectively described as Saṃprajñāta.
How do we compare Asmitā in this verse
with the Asmitā described as one of the
five Kleśa listed in Chapter Two verse 3?”
– Paul Harvey on Yoga Sūtra Chapter One verse 17