TWENTY VALUES OF
AN ENLIGHTENED MIND
This text is based on the book
“The Value of Values”
by Swami Dayananda Saraswati
Compiled by Lidija Silneva
Jñāna - values
In the Bhagavad Gītā, there are a few verses that deal with
what we may call ‘values’. The Gītā calls these values jñāna,
which means knowledge. However, jñāna, used in the sense of
values, is not the knowledge of the self that is both the means
and the end of Vedantic teaching. Here, jñāna stands for the
collection of qualities of the mind in the presence of which, in a
relative measure, knowledge of the self can take place; in the
substantial absence of which, self-knowledge does not take
place, no matter how adequate is the teacher or how authentic
is the teaching.
Lord Kṛṣṇa enumerates twenty qualities of the mind, which he
terms ‘jñāna’ or knowledge
The 20 values
1. AMĀNITVAM
absence of conceit
2. ADAMBHITVAM
absence of pretence
3. AHIMSĀ
not hurting
4. KṢĀNTIḤ
glad acceptance
5. ĀRJAVAM
rectitude
6. ĀCĀRYOPĀSANAM
service to the teacher
7. ŚAUCAM
inner and outer purity
8. STHAIRYAM
steadfastness
9. ĀTMAVINIGRAHAḤ
mastery over the mind
10. INDRIYĀRTHEṢU VAIRĀGYAM
dispassion towards sense objects
11. ANAHAÑKĀRAḤ
absence of self-importance
12. JANMA-MṚTYU-JARĀ-VYĀDHI-DUḤKHA-DARŚANAM
reflection on the limitations of birth, death, old age, sickness and pain
13. ASAKTIḤ
absence of a sense of ownership
14. ANABHIṢVAṄGAḤ PUTRA-DĀRA-GṚHĀDIṢU
absence of obsession to son, wife, house and so on
15. NITYAM SAMACITTATVAM IṢṬA-ANIṢṬA-UPAPATTIṢU
constant equanimity towards desirable and undesirable results
16. MAYI ANANYA-YOGENA BHAKTIḤ AVYABHICĀRIṆĪ
unswering devotion to Me characterised by non-separateness from Me
17. VIVIKTADEŚASEVITVAM
preference for a secluded place
18. ARATIḤ JANASAMSADI
absence of craving for social interaction
19. TATTVA-JÑĀNĀRTHA-DARŚANAM
commitment to Self-knowledge
20. ADHYĀTMA-JÑĀNA-NITYATVAM
understanding the ultimate validity of Self-knowledge
Knowledge
These are declared to be knowledge and what is opposed to
it is ignorance.
As we have seen, ‘knowledge’ as used here does not mean
knowledge of the self but stands for those qualities that prepare
the mind for the knowledge of the self. Jñāna indicates those
qualities of the mind that must be present for the vastu, the
truth, to be known. The list of values constituting jñāna is long
but the qualities are interrelated. They define a harmonious
frame of mind in which knowledge can occur.
Each of the terms used by Lord Kṛṣṇa highlights a certain attitude, the value
for which must be discovered personally, in order that the attitude becomes a
natural aspect of the seeker’s mind.
When the total value of these values is understood, one sees that these
attitudes have the highest personal value for everyone.