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Bhagavad Gita 7.4

Spoken by Krishna ☆ Key verse · Verse 4 of 30

भूमिरापोऽनलो वायुः खं मनो बुद्धिरेव च | अहङ्कार इतीयं मे भिन्ना प्रकृतिरष्टधा ||४||

bhūmir āpo'nalo vāyuḥ khaṃ mano buddhir eva ca | ahaṅkāra itīyaṃ me bhinnā prakṛtir aṣṭadhā || 4 ||

Earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intellect, ego — these eight are the divisions of My lower nature.

Word by word (3)
bhūmiḥ āpaḥ analaḥ vāyuḥ kham — manaḥ buddhiḥ eva ca ahaṅkāraḥ
— earth, water, fire, air, ether — mind, intellect, and ego · bhūmi = earth (pṛthvī-tattva, the solid element). āp = water (the fluid element — āpaḥ plural). anala = fire (tejas-tattva — the energizing, transforming element). vāyu = air (the gaseous element, motion). kha = ether/space (ākāśa — the subtlest of the five elements, which accommodates the others). These are the pañca-mahābhūtas (five great elements) of the Sāṃkhya cosmology. Then: manas = mind (the sense-processing faculty). buddhi = intellect (the discriminating faculty). ahaṅkāra = ego/I-sense (the sense of individual identity, from aham = I + kāra = maker). These eight together constitute the aparā-prakṛti — the lower nature of Krishna.
iti iyaṃ me bhinnā prakṛtiḥ aṣṭadhā
— thus is My prakṛti divided eightfold · iti = thus, this is (indicating conclusion of the list). iyam = this (feminine pronoun — referring to prakṛti, which is feminine). me = My (genitive — belonging to Krishna). bhinnā = divided, differentiated (from √bhid, to split). prakṛtiḥ = nature, the creative power (feminine — the fundamental creative matrix from which phenomena arise). aṣṭadhā = eightfold (aṣṭa = eight; -dhā suffix = in this many ways). The cosmological claim: the entire phenomenal world of matter and mind — earth, water, fire, air, space, mind, intellect, ego — is the differentiated expression of Krishna's own aparā (lower) nature. This does not make the world secondary or unreal; it makes it Krishna's self-expression. The eight are not foreign to Krishna — they are his bhinnā (differentiated) prakṛti.
aparā-prakṛti / aṣṭadhā (the Sāṃkhya-Gita synthesis)
— the eight-element lower nature — where Sāṃkhya's cosmic categories become Krishna's self-disclosure · V4's eightfold list is the Gita's integration of Sāṃkhya cosmology into devotional theology. In classical Sāṃkhya, the twenty-five tattvas (realities) are categorized without reference to a personal Divine. The Gita takes the core eight (five elements + three inner faculties) and declares them MY nature (me bhinnā prakṛti). This is a theological transformation: the impersonal cosmic categories of Sāṃkhya become the personal self-expression of Krishna. The practitioner who knows the eight elements of V4 as Krishna's aparā-prakṛti sees the Divine in the structure of material and mental reality — not as a separate mystical realm but as the very texture of ordinary experience.

Earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intellect, and ego — this is My nature divided into eight.

A modern analogy

A musician has both the instrument (aparā — the physical object, the strings, the body of the guitar) and the musician's own consciousness, creativity, and intentionality (parā — the life-element behind the music). The instrument is 'lower' only in the sense that without the musician's consciousness, it produces no music. The eightfold lower nature of this verse is the cosmic instrument; the higher nature named in the next verse is the cosmic musician.

What it does NOT mean

The word 'lower' (aparā) does NOT mean worthless or evil. Aparā = not-the-highest (a-parā), the relatively lower compared to the parā (higher) nature taken up in the very next verse. The physical world and the faculties of mind are not to be rejected or despised — they are the Krishna's own nature. 'Lower' is relative: aparā is the field; parā is the knower of the field.

Take with you

  • This verse gives the practitioner a cosmological framework: the physical world (bhūmi through ākāśa) and the inner faculties (mind, intellect, ego) are all Krishna's aparā-prakṛti. Seeing them as such transforms ordinary experience into an encounter with the Divine.
  • The placement of ahaṅkāra (ego) as the eighth element of aparā-prakṛti is significant: the ego-sense is part of the lower nature, not the inner reality. It is a faculty, not the self. This is the diagnostic that the higher-nature teaching that follows builds on.
  • In practice: when you encounter any of the eight elements in experience — the solidity of earth, the fluidity of emotion/water, the heat of fire, the movement of air, the openness of space, the fluctuations of mind, the clarity of intellect, the sense of 'I' — you can recognize these as Krishna's aparā-prakṛti manifesting.

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Public-domain translations (6) compare all →

Earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intellect, and ahaṅkāra — thus is My prakṛti divided eightfold. [1]

Bhumi (earth), Ap (water), Anala (fire), Vayu (air), Kha (ether), mind, intellect, and egoism: thus is My Prakriti divided eightfold. [4]

Earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intellect, and ego — thus is my Prakriti divided eightfold. [5]

Earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intellect, and individuality — this is the eightfold division of my nature. [6]

Earth, water, flame, air, ether, life, and mind, and individuality — those eight make up the showing of My lower Nature. [7]

Earth, water, fire, air, space, mind, intellect, and ego — thus is My nature eightfold-divided. [9]

This verse speaks to

Where this thread continues

Verse 4 of 30 · back to Chapter 7