227 Paripaka is maturing or ripening
ParipÄka (Maturing, Ripening)
ParipÄka, having the sense of completion by maturing or ripening, is a feature of Åaį¹
karaās GÄ«tÄ presentation. The meaning is that similar, intense saį¹skÄra-s repeatedly laid down, finally come to dominate the causal or unmanifest basis of the mind. The word āmaturingā implies some passage of time, though it may be very short.
For instance, he says that the SÄnkhya-buddhi or knowledge-mind comes about when the karma-yoga-buddhi or action-yoga-mind attains maturity:
11.49 Have recourse to the karma-yoga buddhi, or to the SÄnkhya buddhi which is bom when that is mature (tat-paripÄka-jÄyÄm).
The SÄnkhya-buddhi is only the rise of Knowledge. The Knowledge itself has to mature:
VII.19 The Knower who has attained mature Knowledge (prÄpta-paripÄka-jƱÄnam).
Both detachment and meditation have also a process of maturing:
XVIII.37 The happiness born of the maturing of Knowledge, detachment, meditation and samÄdhiā¦ is of sattva (jƱÄna-vairÄgya-dhyÄna-samÄdhi-paripÄka-jam sukham ā¦ sÄttvikam).
Another account of the rise of Knowledge is given in XIII. 11, in the commentary to the twentieth and final quality of those leading to Knowledge, namely tattva-jƱÄna-artha-darÅanam, or Seeing-the-goal-of- Knowledge-of-truth, which goal is mokį¹£a.
XIII.11 Knowledge of truth (tattva-jƱÄna) results from maturity of creative meditation (bhÄvanÄ-paripÄka-nimitta) on Humility (amÄnitva) and the others (Ädi) of the group up to the penultimate one, Constancy in Self-Knowledge (adhyÄtma-jƱÄna-nityatvam)
Elsewhere the process is referred to by different terms. In the comment on āstrength of yogaā (yoga-bala) under VIII.10, Åaį¹ kara says:
the strength of yoga is the fixity of mind arising from accumulation of samskÄra-s produced by samÄdhi (samÄdhi-ja-saį¹skÄra- pracaya-janita-citta-sthairya-lakį¹£aį¹a).
It is noteworthy that BhÄskara, perhaps a near contemporary, who in places of his own GÄ«tÄ commentary reproduces Åaį¹ kara, gives this same phrase but without the word samÄdhi. It is an example of how he avoided the terms of Yoga which Åaį¹ kara used so plentifully.