Human Development

Vairagya

Description:
This state arising naturally as, discovering the reality of [Brahman], the transient ceases to attract one. The beginning of dispassion is the decision to take on a disciplined course of action such as demanded of the traveller on the yogic path. Practice of discipline sharpens dispassion, and the two are interdependent. Finally, the adept reaches a state of thirstlessness, [vitrisna], when the mundane life is abandoned and there is absence of all desire for the pleasures and values of the world.
Context:
Together with discrimination - [viveka], desire for liberation - [mumuksutva] and the six great virtues - [satkasampatti], listed by Shankara as one of the four requirements for one who has spiritual aspirations. One of the essential steps in [jnana yoga], the way of knowledge.<
Broader:
Jnana yoga