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Adhyāyas / Guṇatraya-Vibhāga Yogaḥ / verse 15

Mūla — the verse

Gita Press numbering
रजसि प्रलयं गत्वा कर्मसङ्गिषु जायते। तथा प्रलीनस्तमसि मूढयोनिषु जायते
rajasi pralayaṁ gatvā karma-saṅgiṣhu jāyate tathā pralīnas tamasi mūḍha-yoniṣhu jāyate
Anuṣṭubh(!!) irregular in source

Translation

Swami Gambhīrānanda · follows Śaṅkara-bhāṣya

When one dies while rajas predominates, they are born among people attached to activity. Similarly, when one dies while tamas predominates, they take birth among the stupid species.

हिन्दी अनुवाद — Swami Tejomayānanda

रजोगुण के प्रवृद्ध काल में मृत्यु को प्राप्त होकर कर्मासक्ति वाले (मनुष्य) लोक में वह जन्म लेता है तथा तमोगुण के प्रवृद्धकाल में (मरण होने पर) मूढ़योनि में जन्म लेता है।।

Pronunciation — Vaamshii

from Vaamshii
रजसिप् रलयङ् गत्वा
कर्म सङ्गिषु जायते
तथा प्र लीनस् तमसि (!!)
मूढ योनिषु जायते
॥ १५ ॥
Read each split group as one breath-unit; hyphens join pādas kept whole for the meter or a compound word. Symbols: # upadhmānīya (visarga before p/ph), % jihvāmūlīya (visarga before k/kh), ऽ avagraha (an elided a). Full method →

Word by word

padārtha
rajasiin the mode of passion
pralayamdeath
gatvāattaining
karma-saṅgiṣhuamong people driven by work
jāyateare born
tathālikewise
pralīnaḥdying
tamasiin the mode of ignorance
mūḍha-yoniṣhuin the animal kingdom
jāyatetakes birth

Themes

from The Thematic Companion to the Bhagavad Gītā

Meaning — Questions & Solutions

from Q&A with KnA
14.6–14.17, 14.10The three aspects, their signs, and their proportion.

K defines each (14.6–8). Sattva, being pure and luminous (nirmalatvāt prakāśakam), binds by attachment to happiness and to knowledge — the pleasant chain of feeling wise and serene. Rajas, of the nature of passion, born of craving and attachment (tṛṣṇā-saṅga-samudbhavam), binds by attachment to action — the restless chain of always doing. Tamas, born of ignorance, deludes all embodied beings, binding by heedlessness, sloth and sleep (pramāda-ālasya-nidrā) — the dull chain of inertia.

Their proportion (14.10) is dynamic, not fixed: “sattva prevails, overpowering rajas and tamas; rajas, overpowering sattva and tamas; and tamas likewise.” So it is never a single sole winner permanently — the three are always all present, in shifting dominance, one rising as the others recede, like three wrestlers taking turns on top. This is why a person is sattvic in the morning, rajasic at work, tamasic at night — the mix is a moving average, not a label. Their signs (14.11–13): when the light of knowledge shines through every gate of the body, sattva is dominant; greed, exertion, the undertaking of works, restlessness and craving betray rajas; darkness, inertia, heedlessness and delusion mark tamas. And their fruits at death (14.14–15) follow suit: dying in sattva, one goes to the pure worlds of the knowers; in rajas, one is reborn among the action-attached; in tamas, in the wombs of the deluded (leading downward).