The Paradox of Perfect Memory: A Discourse on Ṛta
Yoga Parashara Mimamsa Commentary (This narrative is a highly advanced, composite philosophical exposition combining themes from the Upanishads (on Ṛta and Dharma) and Mimamsa commentary, but it does not correspond to a single, verifiable episode or verse in the major Puranas or Vedas.)
An advanced ascetic questions the cosmic deity Varuna on the limits of divine law (Ṛta). The ascetic posits a scenario where a soul forgets its Dharma due to trauma. Varuna reveals that Ṛta is not a static rule but a self-correcting mechanism, asserting that the struggle and process of recovering memory (smriti) is, in itself, the highest divine law.
The Paradox of Perfect Memory: A Discourse on Ṛta
An advanced ascetic questions the cosmic deity Varuna on the limits of divine law (Ṛta). The ascetic posits a scenario where a soul forgets its Dharma due to trauma. Varuna reveals that Ṛta is not a static rule but a self-correcting mechanism, asserting that the struggle and process of recovering memory (smriti) is, in itself, the highest divine law.
Yoga Parashara Mimamsa Commentary (This narrative is a highly advanced, composite philosophical exposition combining themes from the Upanishads (on Ṛta and Dharma) and Mimamsa commentary, but it does not correspond to a single, verifiable episode or verse in the major Puranas or Vedas.)
Sacred Storyen
Moral & Divine Teaching
True divine law is not a set of rules to be memorized, but a dynamic, self-correcting process. The very act of striving, struggling, and remembering is the ultimate manifestation of spiritual order (Dharma).