तत्त्ववित्तु महाबाहो गुणकर्मविभागयोः । गुणा गुणेषु वर्तन्त इति मत्वा न सज्जते ॥
tattva-vit tu mahā-bāho guṇa-karma-vibhāgayoḥ | guṇā guṇeṣu vartanta iti matvā na sajjate ||
The tattva-vit sees gunas moving among gunas and does not become attached. Knowledge itself produces liberation.
Word by word (3)
- tattva-vit
- — knower of the truth/reality · Tattva = that-ness, truth, reality (from tat = that). Vit = knower (from vid, to know). The tattva-vit is one who has realized the actual structure of reality — who knows the distinction between Puruṣa and Prakṛti, Ātman and anātmā, witness and actor.
- guṇa-karma-vibhāgayoḥ
- — of the divisions of gunas and actions · Guṇa = the three qualities (tamas, rajas, sattva). Karma = action. Vibhāga = division, classification, distinction. The tattva-vit understands the specific distinctions between the gunas and how they drive specific kinds of action.
- guṇā guṇeṣu vartante iti matvā na sajjate
- — knowing 'gunas move among gunas' — does not become attached · Guṇā guṇeṣu vartante = gunas operate among gunas. The senses (gunas of the organ level) interact with sense objects (gunas of the object level) — it's all guna-interaction, nothing of the Self involved. Matvā = having understood. Na sajjate = does not become attached (from sañj, to cling). The knowledge itself produces non-attachment.
But the knower of truth, O mighty-armed Arjuna, about the divisions of gunas and actions — knowing that gunas operate among gunas — does not become attached.
A modern analogy
A scientist watching a chemical reaction: they see molecules interacting, not 'me' doing something to them. The emotion (rajas) reacts with the sense object (also rajas/tamas) — it's all Prakriti's chemistry. The tattva-vit watches this with the calm of the scientist, not the panic of the ego that has made it personal.
Take with you
- Understanding the guna-structure of reality — not as theory but as lived recognition — dissolves attachment.
- When you see an emotional reaction rising: 'rajas in me responding to rajas in that situation.' Guna meeting guna.
- Non-attachment is not forced indifference — it is the natural fruit of correct understanding.
- The tattva-vit path: inquire into what is actually happening, and the clinging naturally falls away.
V28 gives the epistemological basis for non-attachment: correct knowledge of the guna-structure naturally produces asakti (non-attachment). The verse contains one of the Gita's most compressed technical statements: guṇā guṇeṣu vartante — gunas (of the senses) operate among gunas (of the objects). Shankaracharya explains: every sensory experience is the interaction of the sense-organ's gunas with the sense-object's gunas. The Ātman (pure consciousness) is merely the witness of this interaction, not involved in it. When the tattva-vit sees this clearly, the ego's false claim of involvement is removed, and attachment (which requires that claim) cannot arise.
Public-domain translations (5) compare all →
But the knower of truth about the classification of qualities and actions, O mighty-armed, understanding that gunas act upon gunas, does not become attached. [1]
But he who knows the truth, O mighty-armed, about the divisions of the qualities and their functions, knowing that the gunas as senses merely rest in the gunas as objects, does not become attached. [4]
But he who knows the truth as to the division of quality and action — knowing that the qualities only act among qualities — is not attached. [6]
But he who looks upon the senses acting, And senses working in their proper stuff, Says, 'Here are forces working in their place,' Stays from attachment. [7]
But he who knows the truth about the divisions of qualities and actions, knowing that qualities act in qualities, does not become attached. [9]
This verse speaks to
Where this thread continues
All actions are done by the gunas of nature. The ego-deluded one thinks 'I am the doer' — this is the root of bondage.
Sitting as a neutral — unmoved by guṇas, knowing 'guṇas act' — firm, unshaken, the pure witness.
Krishna reopens with the supreme jñāna above all knowledge — knowing which every muni has reached parāṃ siddhim.
Transcending the three guṇas, the embodied one is freed from birth-death-age-pain and attains immortality.
Those who resort to this knowledge attain My own nature — neither reborn at creation nor disturbed at dissolution.
Sattva — luminous and stainless — yet binds the jīva through attachment to happiness and attachment to knowledge.