Canto 3: The Status Quo | Chapter 26: Fundamental Principles of Material Nature |
Bhaktivedanta VedaBase: Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 3.26.40
dyotanaḿ pacanaḿ pānam
adanaḿ hima-mardanam
tejaso vṛttayas tv etāḥ
śoṣaṇaḿ kṣut tṛḍ eva ca
SYNONYMS
dyotanam — illumination; pacanam — cooking, digesting; pānam — drinking; adanam — eating; hima-mardanam — destroying cold; tejasaḥ — of fire; vṛttayaḥ — functions; tu — indeed; etāḥ — these; śoṣaṇam — evaporating; kṣut — hunger; tṛṭ — thirst; eva — also; ca — and.
TRANSLATION
Fire is appreciated by its light and by its ability to cook, to digest, to destroy cold, to evaporate, and to give rise to hunger, thirst, eating and drinking.
PURPORT
The first symptoms of fire are distribution of light and heat, and the existence of fire is also perceived in the stomach. Without fire we cannot digest what we eat. Without digestion there is no hunger and thirst or power to eat and drink. When there is insufficient hunger and thirst, it is understood that there is a shortage of fire within the stomach, and the Āyur-vedic treatment is performed in connection with the fire element, agni-māndyam. Since fire is increased by the secretion of bile, the treatment is to increase bile secretion. The Āyur-vedic treatment thus corroborates the statements in Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam. The characteristic of fire in subduing the influence of cold is known to everyone. Severe cold can always be counteracted by fire.
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His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda, Founder Ācārya of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness