Bhagavad Gita 13.2: Krishna replies: This body is called the field. One who knows it is called the knower of the field. So say the wise.

BG 13.2 , Krishna replies: This body is called the field. One who knows it is called the knower of the field. So say the wise.. Sanskrit, translation, and deep reflection. Study Kshetra Kshetrajna Yoga verse by verse with GitaPath.

BHAGAVAD GITA 13.2

sri-bhagavan uvaca idam shariram kaunteya kshetram ity abhidhiyate etad yo vetti tam prahuh kshetrajna iti tad-vidah

Krishna replies: This body is called the field. One who knows it is called the knower of the field. So say the wise.

The body and mind together constitute the kshetra, the field. Everything observable, from physical sensation to thought and emotion, is the field. The one who observes all of this without being reduced to it is the kshetrajna.

Understanding Bhagavad Gita 13.2

Bhagavad Gita 13.2 belongs to Chapter 13, Kshetra Kshetrajna Vibhaga Yoga: the yoga of distinguishing the field from its knower. The verse teaches: The body and mind together constitute the kshetra, the field. Everything observable, from physical sensation to thought and emotion, is the field. The one who observes all of this without being reduced to it is the kshetrajna. This is not abstract metaphysics. It is a practical pointer toward the most important self-inquiry a human being can undertake: who is the one aware of all this experience?

Study the Bhagavad Gita verse by verse with audio, reflection, and guided inquiry on GitaPath.

The Context of Chapter 13

Chapter 13 presents the Sankhya-Vedanta framework: all of reality is either kshetra (the observable field of body, mind, and world) or kshetrajna (the awareness that observes all of it). Verse 13.2 is one precise step in building this picture. Together, the 34 verses of Chapter 13 constitute the Gita’s most complete account of consciousness and matter.

Reflection and Practice

Reading verse 13.2 is the beginning, not the end. The real work is sitting with the teaching and asking: where do I still confuse the observer with the observed? Where do I take myself to be my thoughts, my emotions, my circumstances? The verse points to the exit from that confusion. Daily contemplation makes the pointing more precise.

Chapter 13’s teachings on consciousness and matter are some of the Gita’s most transformative. GitaPath makes them accessible daily.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the meaning of Bhagavad Gita 13.2?

BG 13.2 teaches: The body and mind together constitute the kshetra, the field. Everything observable, from physical sensation to thought and emotion, is the field. The one who observes all of this without being reduced to it is the kshetrajna. It is part of Chapter 13, Kshetra Kshetrajna Vibhaga Yoga, the chapter on the field and its knower.

How does this verse relate to self-knowledge?

Chapter 13 is fundamentally about knowing the difference between what you observe and who you are as the observer. Verse 13.2 adds one more layer to that understanding.

Can I understand this without knowing Sanskrit?

Yes. GitaPath provides transliteration, accessible English translations, and guided reflection that make each verse comprehensible and personally relevant regardless of prior background.

What is the context of BG 13.2 in Chapter 13?

Chapter 13 builds a systematic Sankhya-Vedanta account of reality. Verse 13.2 is one thread in that weave, and reading the surrounding verses on GitaPath reveals the full picture.

How does GitaPath help with Chapter 13?

GitaPath offers audio, daily reflection prompts, and a structured path through all 34 verses of Chapter 13, so that philosophical understanding gradually becomes direct experience.

The eye of knowledge sees what ordinary eyes cannot. Open it, one verse at a time.

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