Samkhya-Yoga-Kundalini
The teaching of Samkhya philosophy begins with the problem of suffering. The sutras pertaining to this topic are summarized here. The sutras are clear and require little explanation.
At this time begins the explanation of Samkhya philosophy. The permanent cessation of the three kinds of suffering is the highest purpose of life.
Samkhya recognized three broad categories of pain:
Complete and permanent cessation cannot be accomplished by ordinary means, since the re-occurrence of pain in various forms is always observed.
Sutra 1.3 continues the thought from 1.2: (since the re-occurrence of pain in various forms is always observed), like the satisfaction of daily hunger. These too are a purpose of life, and many are engaged in the endeavor for relief of pain by ordinary means.
The ordinary means of preventing and mitigating pain, such as production of food, clothing, shelter, medicine, etc., are legitimate and necessary and are pursued by the majority of people worldwide. While these are legitimate pursuits, they are not the highest purpose of life.
The author states the reasons why ordinary means should be given up:
This is not for everyone, though. This pursuit is for men who are “skillful in argument”. These would have been the upper echelons of the society, who in our time would be the doctors, scientists, and engineers.
The author states a third reason why ordinary means should be given up, and that is because moksa or release from samsara has been declared by the scriptures to be the superior means.
Scriptural means are no different than ordinary means. This is further elaborated by Karika 2.
Pain is a disagreeable occurrence. From this, arises the desire to know the means to counter-act and prevent it. Seeing that there are many ordinary means of removing pain, it might be said that this inquiry into the means of removal is superfluous. Not so, because ordinary means cannot permanently and completely remove pain.
The scriptural means such as animal sacrifices and soma rituals, are like ordinary means, for they are accompanied by impurity, waste, and excess. The opposite is preferable. It consists of discriminative knowledge of the Manifest, the Unmanifest, and the Knower.
The three categories of suffering have implications for how the different kinds of pain can be counteracted. If you believe that the gods are causing your trouble, then the remedies will consist of sacrifices, rituals, prayers, and offerings to the gods. Civilized people develop rules of conduct in order to limit and deal with the kinds of pain that people inflict on one another. In general, people take all kinds of actions in order to try to prevent various types of suffering, and to mitigate it when it does occur. These “ordinary means” are legitimate and necessary pursuits in in life. But no matter what we do, pain always returns in one form or another. It has to be acknowledged that suffering is a fact of life and as long as we exist as embodied beings, we will experience suffering in one form or another.
According to Samkhya, the means of complete and permanent cessation of suffering consists of discriminative knowledge of the Manifest, the Unmanifest, and the Knower. What is meant by the Manifest, the Unmanifest, and the Knower and how to gain discriminative knowledge are the topics of Samkhya philosophy.