Geeta-Physics

Bhagavad Gītā — Svarloka · Geeta-Physics
Svarloka · The Realm of Knowledge

Bhagavad Gītā

भगवद् गीता

A living dialogue on action, knowledge, devotion, and liberation.

This page will become a complete, searchable study portal for the Bhagavad Gītā — all 700 ślokas, with Sanskrit, transliteration, translation, and verse-by-verse commentary by Dr. Tejaswi. A digital scripture library built for serious study.


The Project

Ride with God —
A key to the Gītā

Every world scripture is filled with symbols. If the key to a symbol is not known, the scripture becomes obscure. The Bhagavad Gītā is no exception — it is a text built on symbolic architecture, and decoding that architecture is the first act of real study.

This commentary — titled Ride with God: Key to the Bhagavad Gītā — approaches every verse through two simultaneous lenses: the Mundane (M) and the Spiritual (S). Neither is optional. Without the first, spiritual knowledge floats without ground. Without the second, the outer world answers nothing fundamental. Both are needed for a balanced journey into the truth of life.

The symbols — Arjuna, Kṛṣṇa, the five white horses, the chariot, Dhṛtarāṣṭra, Kurukṣetra — are not decorative. They are precision instruments. Each is decoded etymologically, through number, colour, and root-word, and then read on both levels. This is not a scholarly exercise. It is a set of keys given to the sincere aspirant so they may unlock the wisdom within — and recognise it as their own.

"Scripture is verily ourselves in physical form. Its pages are our lives and its words are the contents of our lives. The garb of a world scripture may change with time, space, culture — but not the content."

Dr. Tejaswi · Introduction to the Commentary
M
Mundane Perspective
Our relation with the external world — morality, ethics, duties, right action, and the practical navigation of life's conflicts and choices.
S
Spiritual Perspective
Our relation with the true self — the microcosm of inner faculties (mind, senses, discrimination, the sense of 'I am') and the macrocosm of the Universal Spirit.
The Symbolic Keys
Every character, number, and name in the Gītā carries a precise etymological and symbolic meaning. This commentary decodes them — layer by layer — so the text becomes transparent.
Chapter Summaries
Each chapter closes with a synthesis that goes beyond M and S — an integrated view of the chapter as a movement in the whole, written as lived understanding.

The Interpretive Map

Three Yogas, one text

The classical division of the Gītā into three paths — each a different orientation of the inner life, each valid, each pointing toward the same summit.

कर्म
Chapters 1 – 6
Karma Yoga
The Path of Right Action

Act — but without attachment to the fruit of action. Karma Yoga is not passivity; it is full engagement in one's duty, offered without ego-clinging. Arjuna's crisis is resolved not by retreat but by understanding the nature of action itself. These chapters establish the psychological and ethical foundation of the entire text.

Chapters 1 – 6 · 282 Ślokas
भक्ति
Chapters 7 – 12
Bhakti Yoga
The Path of Devotion

Know the divine — not as an external object of worship, but as the ground of all existence. Bhakti Yoga is the path of devotion, surrender, and relational awareness. These chapters reveal the nature of Kṛṣṇa as the cosmic principle — the one who pervades all matter, all mind, all time. The famous Viśvarūpa vision belongs here.

Chapters 7 – 12 · 209 Ślokas
ज्ञान
Chapters 13 – 18
Jñāna Yoga
The Path of Knowledge

Discriminate between the field and the knower of the field — kṣetra and kṣetrajña. Jñāna Yoga is the path of direct insight: seeing through appearances, past the guṇas, beyond the ego-structure, to the ātman that witnesses without being touched. These chapters are philosophically the most demanding and the most complete.

Chapters 13 – 18 · 209 Ślokas

The Complete Text

The 18 Chapters

Seven hundred verses. Eighteen chapters. One unbroken dialogue. The full architecture of the Bhagavad Gītā — each chapter a complete movement in the larger symphony of inquiry.

Karma Yoga · Ch. 1–6
Bhakti Yoga · Ch. 7–12
Jñāna Yoga · Ch. 13–18
01
Chapter 1
Arjuna Viṣāda Yoga
The crisis that begins the dialogue. Arjuna surveys the battlefield and collapses under the weight of grief, doubt, and attachment.
47 ślokas Coming Soon
02
Chapter 2
Sāṅkhya Yoga
The philosophical foundation of the entire text. Knowledge of the ātman, the nature of the real, and the first articulation of karma yoga.
72 ślokas Coming Soon
03
Chapter 3
Karma Yoga
Why action is unavoidable and how right action — offered without ego — is itself a path to liberation.
43 ślokas Coming Soon
04
Chapter 4
Jñāna Karma Sanyāsa Yoga
The unity of knowledge and action. Kṛṣṇa reveals the doctrine of avatāra and the fire of jñāna that burns all karma.
42 ślokas Coming Soon
05
Chapter 5
Karma Sanyāsa Yoga
Renunciation versus action — and why they are not opposites. The liberated person acts fully while remaining inwardly still.
29 ślokas Coming Soon
06
Chapter 6
Ātma Saṃyama Yoga
The discipline of meditation. How to steady the restless mind, withdraw from the senses, and establish oneself in the ātman.
47 ślokas Coming Soon
07
Chapter 7
Jñāna Vijñāna Yoga
Kṛṣṇa reveals his nature as the ground of all existence — the higher and lower prakṛti — and the rarity of one who truly knows.
30 ślokas Coming Soon
08
Chapter 8
Akṣara Brahma Yoga
The imperishable Brahman. The nature of death, rebirth, and the paths of return — light and dark, liberation and cycle.
28 ślokas Coming Soon
09
Chapter 9
Rājavidyā Rājaguhya Yoga
The sovereign knowledge and sovereign secret. The divine pervades all things without being contained by any. The yoga of pure devotion.
34 ślokas Coming Soon
10
Chapter 10
Vibhūti Yoga
The divine manifestations. Kṛṣṇa enumerates his presence in the brightest, strongest, and most excellent of all things.
42 ślokas Coming Soon
11
Chapter 11
Viśvarūpa Darśana Yoga
The vision of the cosmic form — the universe as divine body, time as destroyer, the overwhelming reality behind all appearances.
55 ślokas Coming Soon
12
Chapter 12
Bhakti Yoga
Who is the devotee? The qualities that mark the one who is dear to the divine — equanimity, freedom from fear, purity of intent.
20 ślokas Coming Soon
13
Chapter 13
Kṣetra Kṣetrajña Vibhāga Yoga
The field and the knower of the field. One of the most philosophically precise chapters — the anatomy of matter, self, and witness.
35 ślokas Coming Soon
14
Chapter 14
Guṇatraya Vibhāga Yoga
The three guṇas — tamas, rajas, sattva — as the forces that bind the ātman to the body and drive all behaviour and experience.
27 ślokas Coming Soon
15
Chapter 15
Puruṣottama Yoga
The tree of existence whose roots are above. The nature of the supreme person — beyond the perishable and the imperishable.
20 ślokas Coming Soon
16
Chapter 16
Daivāsura Sampad Vibhāga Yoga
Divine and demonic qualities — the two tendencies within the human being, and the consequences of following each.
24 ślokas Coming Soon
17
Chapter 17
Śraddhātraya Vibhāga Yoga
The three types of faith — and how sattva, rajas, and tamas shape worship, food, sacrifice, and spiritual orientation.
28 ślokas Coming Soon
18
Chapter 18
Mokṣa Sanyāsa Yoga
The summation of everything. Renunciation, liberation, the highest knowledge, and Arjuna's final answer: I will act.
78 ślokas Coming Soon

Study Pathways

Explore the Gītā
by Theme

The Gītā is not a linear argument — it is a web of ideas that illuminate each other. These thematic pathways let you enter the text through the question that matters most to you right now.

Karma
Action, duty, and the law of consequence — what it means to act rightly without being enslaved by result.
Coming Soon
Dharma
Right action and moral order — the particular duty of one's nature, circumstance, and role.
Coming Soon
ज्ञ
Knowledge
Discrimination, insight, and seeing clearly — the difference between the real and the apparent.
Coming Soon
Devotion
Surrender, love, and divine relation — the yoga of the heart that transcends technique.
Coming Soon
Mind
Discipline, restlessness, and mastery — the mind as both the cause of bondage and the instrument of liberation.
Coming Soon
वि
Detachment
Freedom from clinging and outcome — vairāgya as the ground of equanimity, not indifference.
Coming Soon
The Self
Ātman, identity, and the witness — the unchanging ground beneath the changing stream of experience.
Coming Soon
गु
Guṇas
The three forces shaping all of nature and behaviour — tamas, rajas, sattva — and how to move beyond them.
Coming Soon
ध्
Meditation
Inward steadiness and contemplative practice — the techniques and the understanding that makes them work.
Coming Soon
मो
Liberation
Freedom, peace, and transcendence — mokṣa as the natural condition of the ātman, not a future attainment.
Coming Soon
ने
Leadership
Action under pressure and the weight of responsibility — what the Gītā reveals about leading others.
Coming Soon
वि
Inner Conflict
Doubt, grief, paralysis, and choice — Arjuna's crisis as the universal human condition before decisive action.
Coming Soon

The Learning Pathways

Four ways to enter
the text

The Gītā can be approached through different orientations. Each pathway is complete in itself — choose the one that corresponds to how you think and what you are looking for.

I
Chapter by Chapter

Follow the text in the order it was composed. Begin with Arjuna's crisis in Chapter 1 and progress through the full arc of the dialogue — from paralysis to liberation. This is the traditional path and the one that reveals the inner logic of the whole.

Sequential Study →
II
Verse by Verse with Commentary

Enter a single chapter and read every śloka with its Sanskrit, transliteration, translation, and Dr. Tejaswi's commentary. This is the most rigorous mode — suited for deep study, contemplation, and those who want to sit with the text rather than survey it.

Śloka Study →
III
By Theme

Choose a concept — karma, the self, liberation, the guṇas — and follow that thread across all 18 chapters. This mode is ideal for those who arrive with a specific question, a practical concern, or a philosophical inquiry they want the Gītā to speak to directly.

Thematic Study →
IV
Search the Archive

When the full archive is live, you will be able to search the entire text by keyword, concept, Sanskrit term, or cross-reference. The Gītā as a navigable knowledge base — every verse findable, every idea traceable to its source in the text.

Coming Soon →

Featured Verse

The commentary
in action

Each verse is presented in Sanskrit with transliteration and translation — then read through two lenses simultaneously: the Mundane (M) and the Spiritual (S). This dual reading is what makes this commentary different from any other.

Bhagavad Gītā · Chapter 1 · Verse 1 Dhṛtarāṣṭra Uvāca
धर्मक्षेत्रे कुरुक्षेत्रे समवेता युयुत्सवः।
मामकाः पाण्डवाश्चैव किमकुर्वत सञ्जय॥
dharmakṣētrē kurukṣētrē samavētā yuyutsavaḥ
māmakāḥ pāṇḍavāścaiva kimakurvata sañjaya
Dhṛtarāṣṭra asked Sañjaya: "In the holy field of Kurukṣetra, what did they do — the armies of mine and of the Pāṇḍavas — who have gathered there with the zeal to fight?"
Symbolic Key · Kurukṣetra

Kṣētra means not only a physical field or land, but also the human body. Kuru derives from the root kṛ — to act, to do. Kurukṣetra is therefore the field of action: the body-mind complex in which the war of life is perpetually being waged. That this battlefield is called a dharmakṣetra — a field of eternal principles — is Vyāsa's first signal that this text is not merely a historical account but a map of inner reality.

M Mundane Perspective

The blindness to truth asks the inner-voice: "What did the elements of obstacles and right-attempts do in the external battle of life? Did my army of troubles, struggles and hardships take over — or did the army of strong-will, right attitude and right action prevail?"

Dhṛtarāṣṭra is not merely a blind king. He is the blindness within each of us — the part that cannot perceive the light of discrimination and yet, through its very anxiety, seeks to know which side is winning. The fact that he must ask rather than see is the starting point of the entire dialogue.

S Spiritual Perspective

The emperor of the darkness within asked the spiritual conscience: "What did the spiritual forces and the anti-spiritual forces do in the internal battle of life? Did the forces of mental strength, power of discrimination, and God-surrender take the upper hand — or the anti-spiritual forces of desire, possessiveness, ego, and the sense of 'mine'?"

Sañjaya — whose name means 'one who has completely conquered' — represents the pure spiritual conscience that can witness the entire war from within and transmit its truth even to a blind king. The Gītā begins in the tension between blindness and conscience. That tension is universal.


The Evolving Archive

A living project,
growing verse by verse

"The purpose of this work is fulfilled if the reader is able to crack the code of LIFE and make it a blissful journey by riding along with the God forever." Dr. Tejaswi · Ride with God: Key to the Bhagavad Gītā

This project is not a static publication. It is a growing archive — built incrementally, verse by verse, as commentary is written, revised, and deepened. The full 700-verse text will take time to complete. That is appropriate. The Gītā rewards patience.

When complete, this portal will be one of the most rigorous and readable verse-by-verse commentaries available in English — philosophically serious, cross-disciplinary, and fully searchable.

Landing Page & Architecture
The full page structure, chapter grid, yoga map, and thematic pathways.
Live
Featured Verses
Select verses from across the 18 chapters with full commentary.
In Progress
Chapter 2 — Sāṅkhya Yoga
Complete verse-by-verse commentary on the philosophical heart of the text.
Coming Soon
Thematic Index
All 12 themes mapped across all 700 verses — navigable by concept.
Coming Soon
Full Text Search
Search by Sanskrit term, concept, keyword, or cross-reference.
Coming Soon
Complete 700-Verse Archive
All 18 chapters with full commentary, cross-links, and study tools.
Long Term

Begin

The text is
already waiting.

You need not read it in order. You need not understand everything at once. The Gītā asks only one thing of the reader: sincerity. Come to it with a real question, and it will answer — not once, but repeatedly, with increasing precision, as you grow.

Begin wherever you are drawn. The full text will meet you.

Dr. Tejaswi Katravulapally

PhD (Quantum Physics), M.Sc. (IIT Madras), B.Tech. (LNMIIT).

Bridging the depths of Science and the wisdom of the Vedas

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