mahatpadamatraitat samarpitam. ejatprāṇannimiṣacca yadetajjānatha sadasadvareṇyaṁ paraṁ vijñānādyadvariṣṭhaṁ prajānām. (2.2.1)
āviḥ – self-shining; sannihitam – very near; guhācaram – manifests always in the buddhi; nāma – well known; mahatpadam – the most exalted; ejat – moves; prāṇat – is alive; ca – and; nimiṣat – that closes (and opens) the eyes; yad etat – all these; atra – here; samarpitam – are placed; sad-asat – with form and without form; variṣṭham – free from all limitations; vareṇyam – the most worshipful; yat – which; vijñānāt – from perception and inference; param – beyond; prajānām – of all beings; jānatha – may you know; etat – this
Brahman is self-shining, very near and always manifests in the buddhi. It is the most exalted goal. (Anything) which moves, is alive, that closes and opens eyes—all these here are placed in this Brahman. It is with and without form, free from any limitation and most worshipful. It is beyond the perception and inference of all beings. May you know this Brahman.
Śaṅkara gives here the analogy of spokes on the hub of a chariot’s wheel to point out how everything has its being in Brahman. Without the hub the spokes have no being. Similarly, everything is placed in this Brahman alone. The hub and the spokes enjoy the same order of reality. The example, therefore, has a limited scope and is meant only to show that the hub supports all the spokes. These factors have their being in the hub of Brahman. It is not a hub of activity; it is a hub of placement.
The first step in recognising the vastu is to know that one is not the upādhi. The next step is to see that one is not enclosed in the upādhi. The final step is to know oneself as the one in whom all the upādhis are placed.
Any knowledge is gained by the senses and mind through perception and inference, and whatever knowledge is gained by a person through these means is aparā-vidyā. The knowledge of Brahman, on the other hand, is parā-vidyā which is not available for perception and inference. Brahman does not require the mind and senses to reveal itself because it is self-evident and reveals everything else.
~Dayananda
Bright, existing very close, known as moving in the cavity of the heart; great and the support of all; in Him is all the universe centred round; what moves, breathes and winks. Know it, which is both with form and without form, the most adorable, the highest of beings, the One beyond the understanding of creatures.
Bright – Consciousness is considered to be bright in the sense it is the light that illumines for us our thoughts and ideas.
Moving in the cavity of the heart – In the love-heart is the cave of intellect in which intelligence resides; and according to the language of Vedānta, Ᾱtman or the Spirit is the central light in the intelligence. The Consciousness is to be realised in the intelligence when it is integrated completely through a harmonious process of balanced development of both the head and the heart.
~Chinmayananda
THE LUMINOUS BRAHMAN dwells in the cave of the heart and is known to move there. It is the great support of all; for in It is centred everything that moves, breathes, and blinks. O disciples, know that to be your Self-that which is both gross and subtle, which is adorable, supreme, and beyond the understanding of creatures.
Brahman is without any form. How, then, can It be known? The Upanishad describes the method of Its realization: All things perceived in the universe are effects and therefore limited. They are dependent upon something else, which is their cause. Brahman is the cause and support of everything, gross and subtle, and also of maya. That Brahman, again, is the inmost Self of all and the illuminer of their mental states.
~Nikhilananda



















