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-XXX11170]
TRANSLATION
85
(169) The 'thirteen organs' consist of the eleven
sense-organs, the I-principle and the Will.
An organ is a particular kind of active gans—the ten external organs, agent, and nothing can be an 'active agent' Manas, Ahaikāra unless it has a function ; hence the author and Buddhi.
Seizing the next states the functions of the organsfunction of the “Having the functions of seizing, sustainsenses of action. Retention the ing and illuminating, respectively; that is
dhe, to say, the Motor organs have the fuction of Ahankara and Manas.
seizing; that is, they take up their respecManifestation- tive objects; i. e., extend their activities over of the intellectual organs
them;-the Will, the l-principle and the
Mind 'sustain' things through their function in the shape of the Vital Airs and the rest (mentioned before ); and lastly, the sensory organs 'illumine' (render perceptible ) their respective objects. (170) Since every action must have an object, the
objects of the above-mentioned functions The objects of are next named and classified—“The these functions, tenfold
18. seized" etc. These objects to be acted upon
by the thirteen organs are those that are to be seized, to be sustained and to be illumined. By 'seizure here is meant pervasion (extension). The five motor sense-organs * extend' over Speaking, Handling, Walking, Excretion and Gratification; and each of these being both 'celestial' and * non-celestial', these objects become tenfold. Similarly the object 'to be sustained by the three internal organs through their functions in the shape of the Vital Airs' etc., is the body, which is fivefold, being an aggregate of the five elementary substances; of these the Earth being an aggregate of sound, touch, colour, taste and odour. Each of these five being both. celestial and non-celestial', these objects 'to be sustained' also come to be tenfold. Similarly the objects affected by the five sensory organs are five-sound, touch,