Yogasutra – Part 3 – Vibhūti-Pāda – Powers – Verse 3.17   «   »

Yogasutra – Part 3 – Vibhūti-Pāda – Powers – Verse 3.17   «   »

शब्दार्थप्रत्ययानामित रेतराध्यासात्
सङ्करस्तत्प्रविभाग संयमात्सर्वभूतरुतज्ञानम् ॥ ३.१७॥

śabdārthapratyayānāmita retarādhyāsāt
saṅkarastatpravibhāgasaṃyamātsarvabhūtarutajñānam .. 3.17..

17. By making Samyama on word, meaning and knowledge, which are ordinarily confused, comes the knowledge of all animal sounds.

Commentary on Sri Patanjali Yogasutra by Swami Vivekananda

The word represents the external cause, the meaning represents the internal vibration that travels to the brain through the channels of the Indriyas, conveying the external impression to the mind, and knowledge represents the reaction of the mind, with which comes perception. These three, confused, make our sense-objects. Suppose I hear a word; there is first the external vibration, next the internal sensation carried to the mind by the organ of hearing, then the mind reacts, and I know the word. The word I know is a mixture of the three — vibration, sensation, and reaction. Ordinarily these three are inseparable; but by practice the Yogi can separate them. When a man has attained to this, if he makes a Samyama on any sound, he understands the meaning which that sound was intended to express, whether it was made by man or by any other animal.


Yogasutra – Verse 3.17 – Yogasutra-3.17-śabdārthapratyayā – In Sanskrit with English Transliteration, Translation, Meaning and Commentary by Swami Vivekananda – Yogasutra-3-17