Review Bhagavad Gita 14.19-14.27: Krishna teaches how the seer recognizes the gunas as the doers, describes the marks of one beyond them, and gives unwavering devotion as the way to Brahman.
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Question 1
What insight does Krishna say leads a seer toward His divine nature in verse 14.19?
Krishna shifts the learner from ownership to witness-vision. Nature acts through the gunas, while the realized seer knows the higher reality beyond them.
According to verse 14.20, what happens when the embodied soul transcends the three gunas?
The goal is not merely improving one guna. Krishna says crossing all three frees the embodied soul from the cycle of bodily suffering and grants immortality.
What does verse 14.23 add to the portrait of the gunateeta?
Krishna deepens the witness teaching from verse 14.19. The liberated person remains steady because they see the movements as nature acting through its qualities.
Which pair of verses describes the gunateeta through equality toward ordinary gains, losses, and social reactions?
These verses make the witness state visible in daily life. The person beyond the gunas is not tilted by comfort, possessions, praise, status, or social sides.
What direct means for crossing the gunas does Krishna give in verse 14.26?
After describing the marks of freedom, Krishna gives the living means: unwavering devotion to Him carries the seeker beyond the gunas and toward Brahman.
The chapter ends by grounding transcendence in Krishna Himself. Devotion works because He is the support of Brahman, immortality, Dharma, and final joy.