Bhagavad-gītā As it Is << 18 - Conclusion – The Perfection of Renunciation >>
<< VERSE 22 >>
यत तु कृत्स्नवद एकस्मिन कार्ये सक्तम अहैतुकम अतत्त्वार्थवद अल्पं च तत तामसम उदाहृतम
yat tu kṛtsna-vad ekasmin kārye saktam ahaitukam atattvārtha-vad alpaṁ ca tat tāmasam udāhṛtam
WORD BY WORD
yat that which; tu but; kṛtsna-vat as all in all; ekasmin in one; kārye work; saktam attached; ahaitukam without cause; atattva-artha-vat without knowledge of reality; alpam very meager; ca and; tat that; tāmasam in the mode of darkness; udāhṛtam is said to be;
TRANSLATION
| And that knowledge by which one is attached to one kind of work as the all in all, without knowledge of the truth, and which is very meager, is said to be in the mode of darkness.
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PURPORT
| The “knowledge” of the common man is always in the mode of darkness or ignorance because every living entity in conditional life is born into the mode of ignorance. One who does not develop knowledge through the authorities or scriptural injunctions has knowledge that is limited to the body. He is not concerned about acting in terms of the directions of scripture. For him God is money, and knowledge means the satisfaction of bodily demands. Such knowledge has no connection with the Absolute Truth. It is more or less like the knowledge of the ordinary animals: the knowledge of eating, sleeping, defending and mating. Such knowledge is described here as the product of the mode of darkness. In other words, knowledge concerning the spirit soul beyond this body is called knowledge in the mode of goodness, knowledge producing many theories and doctrines by dint of mundane logic and mental speculation is the product of the mode of passion, and knowledge concerned only with keeping the body comfortable is said to be in the mode of ignorance.
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