Bhagavad Gita 14.18
Spoken by Krishna · Verse 18 of 27
ऊर्ध्वं गच्छन्ति सत्त्वस्था मध्ये तिष्ठन्ति राजसाः । जघनगुणवृत्तिस्था अधो गच्छन्ति तामसाः ॥
ūrdhvaṃ gacchanti sattva-sthā madhye tiṣṭhanti rājasāḥ | jaghana-guṇa-vṛtti-sthā adho gacchanti tāmasāḥ ||
Sattva-abiders go upward; rajasic dwell in the middle; tamas-abiders sink downward — the cosmic gradient.
Word by word (3)
- ūrdhvaṃ gacchanti sattva-sthāḥ
- — those abiding in sattva (sattva-sthāḥ = stationed/dwelling in sattva) go upward (ūrdhvam = upward, to higher realms)
- madhye tiṣṭhanti rājasāḥ
- — the rajasic (rājasāḥ) dwell/remain in the middle (madhye tiṣṭhanti = stay in the middle human/mixed realm)
- jaghana-guṇa-vṛtti-sthāḥ adho gacchanti tāmasāḥ
- — the tamasic (tāmasāḥ), abiding in the function (vṛtti) of the lowest (jaghana) guṇa, go downward (adho gacchanti)
Those stationed in sattva go upward (to higher realms). The rajasic dwell in the middle (the human realm and its equivalents). The tamasic — following the function of the lowest guṇa — go downward.
A modern analogy
The three guṇas define a vertical scale of consciousness. Sattva is an elevator going up — toward clarity, higher realms, wisdom. Rajas is an escalator staying level — continuous busy activity on the same floor. Tamas is gravity pulling down — toward heavier, denser, more unconscious forms of existence.
Public-domain translations (4) compare all →
Those who follow Sattva go upwards; the Rajasic remain in the middle; and the Tamasic, who follow the course of the lowest guṇa, go downwards. [1]
The Sattva-abiding go upwards; the Rajasika dwell in the middle; and the Tamasika, abiding in the function of the lowest Guna, go downwards. [4]
Those who are seated in goodness go upwards; those whose nature is passion remain in the middle; those whose nature is darkness and who follow the course of the lowest quality, go down. [9]
Those who are seated in Goodness go upwards; the Passionate remain in the middle; the Dark-natured, dwelling in the ways of the lowest quality, go down. [13]
This verse speaks to
Where this thread continues
The fruit of sattvic action is pure; the fruit of rajas is pain; the fruit of tamas is ignorance.
This most secret śāstra spoken — knowing it, one becomes truly wise and kṛta-kṛtya: all duties fulfilled.
Acting for reward is the lowest form of action. Seek the wisdom that transcends reward-seeking.
Dying in rajas, one is born among the action-attached; dying in tamas, one is born in irrational wombs.
Those who hate Me — cruel, vilest among humans — I continually cast into āsurī wombs, the inauspicious.
Tāmasic karma: begun from delusion, ignoring consequences, waste, injury to beings, and one's own capacity.
Verse 18 of 27 · back to Chapter 14