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Bg. 12.12
If you cannot take to this practice, then engage yourself in the cultivation of knowledge. Better than knowledge, however, is meditation, and better than meditation is renunciation of the fruits
Bg. 12.12
śreyaḥ — better; hi — certainly; jñānam — knowledge; abhyāsāt — than practice; jñānāt — than knowledge
Bg. 12.12
who are actually not able to follow the principles of Kṛṣṇa consciousness it is better to cultivate knowledge , because by knowledge one can be able to understand his real position. Gradually knowledge will develop to the point of meditation. In the cultivation of knowledge there are processes which make one understand that one himself is the
Bg. 12.1
senses; avyaktam — the unmanifested; teṣām — of them; ke — who; yoga-vit-tamāḥ — the most perfect in knowledge
Bg. 12.6-7
this verse is that one should not engage in the different processes of fruitive activity or cultivate knowledge
Bg. 12.18-19
association, always silent and satisfied with anything, who doesn’t care for any residence, who is fixed in knowledge
Bg. 12.12
Then one can come to the stage of knowledge, then to the stage of meditation, then to the stage of understanding It is for others, who are not at this stage; for them the gradual process of renunciation, knowledge,
Bg. 12.3-4
When a person comes to full knowledge after many births, he surrenders unto Lord Kṛṣṇa.
Chapter Twelve
TEXT 12: If you cannot take to this practice, then engage yourself in the cultivation of knowledge Better than knowledge, however, is meditation, and better than meditation is renunciation of the fruits association, always silent and satisfied with anything, who doesn’t care for any residence, who is fixed in knowledge
Bg. 12.5
if he wants to merge into the spiritual whole, he may accomplish the realization of the eternal and knowledgeable
Bg. 12.18-19
He is called fixed because he is fixed in his determination and knowledge.
Bg. 12.11
Thus one may gradually become elevated to the state of knowledge.