18. Renunciation and Surrender

Mokṣha Sanyās Yog

BG 18.15

These five are the essential causes for any action a person may perform, whether by physical effort, speech, or thought, and whether the action be righteous or immoral.

शरीरवाङ्मनोभिर्यत्कर्म प्रारभते नरः
न्याय्यं वा विपरीतं वा पञ्चैते तस्य हेतवः

  • śharīra-vāṅ-manobhir — with body, speech, or mind

    • śharīra

    • vāṅ

    • manobhir

  • yat — which

  • karma — action

  • prārabhate — performs

  • naraḥ — a person

  • nyāyyaṁ — proper

  • — or

  • viparītaṁ — improper

  • — or

  • pañchaite — these five

  • tasya — their

  • hetavaḥ — factors

...18.12

I will now tell you the five causes that must come together for an action to be accomplished.

[13]

There is the body, the personality, the sense organs, the various kinds of activities, and cosmic destiny.

[14]

These five are the essential causes for any action a person may perform, whether by physical effort, speech, or thought, and whether the action be righteous or immoral.

[15]

Those with impure intellect regard the soul as the only agent of action - they cannot see things as they really are.

[16]

Even though they may kill living beings, one who is free from pride and attachment is neither the one who kills nor are they bound by their actions.

[17]

Knowledge, the object of knowledge, and the knower are the three incentives to action. The act, the actor, and the instrument are its three constituents.

[18]

18.19...
Chapter 18, Verse 15