The ten properties included in saltwater or goodness are gladness, cheerfulness, enthusiasm, fame, righteousness, contentment, faith, sincerity, librarlitie and lordship.
The nine properties included in Rajas or passion are belief in the deities, charity, enjoyment and endurance of happiness and sorrow, disunity, exhibition of manliness, lust and wrath, intoxication,pride,malice and disposition to revile.
The eight qualities included in Tamas or darkness are unconsciousness stupifaction, excess of stupifaction, muddiness of unde.rstanding, blindness, sleep, heedlessness and procrastination.
The seven incidents of buddhi or understanding are Mahatma, consciousness and the five subtle essences.
The six incidents of mind are mind and the five senses.
The five incidents appertaining to space are space, water, WI d, light and earth.
According to a different school of philosophy buddhi or the understanding is said to have four incidents appetizing to it, doubt ascertaining pride and memory.
Tamas also is regarded to have only three incidents inability of comprehension, partial comprehension, and totally erroneous comprehension.
Rajas passion is having only two incidents of inclination and sorrow.
Santa has but one incident enlightenment.
This is an interesting philosophical classification of human nature and consciousness. It resembles ideas found in the Mahabharata's Moksha Dharma and later Sankhya thought, where the entire universe and the human mind are analyzed according to the three gunas—Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas.
Sattva (Goodness) – 10 qualities
Sattva is the principle of light, harmony, purity, and wisdom.
The qualities listed are:
Gladness
Cheerfulness
Enthusiasm
Fame born of good conduct
Righteousness (Dharma)
Contentment
Faith
Sincerity
Liberality (generosity)
Lordship or self-mastery
A person dominated by Sattva becomes calm, joyful, balanced, and naturally inclined toward truth.
Rajas (Passion) – 9 qualities
Rajas is activity, ambition, desire, and restlessness.
The qualities listed are:
Attachment to rituals and deities for desired results
Charity performed with expectation
Enjoyment of pleasure and endurance of pain
Disunity and competition
Display of manliness, power, or achievement
Lust
Wrath
Intoxication and pride
Malice and criticism of others
Rajas keeps the world moving, but it also binds one through desires and attachments.
Tamas (Darkness) – 8 qualities
Tamas is inertia, ignorance, and obscuration.
Its qualities are:
Unconsciousness
Stupor
Excessive dullness
Confused understanding
Blindness (literal or spiritual)
Sleep
Heedlessness
Procrastination
A Tamasic person postpones what should be done and often fails to see reality clearly.
Seven incidents of Buddhi (Understanding)
The passage then moves deeper into metaphysics.
The seven are:
Mahat (Cosmic Intelligence)
Individual consciousness 3-7. The five subtle essences (tanmatras) of sound, touch, form, taste, and smell.
This describes how intelligence manifests and becomes the basis of the material world.
Six incidents of Mind
Mind (Manas)
Hearing
Touch
Sight
Taste
Smell
The mind coordinates the information received by the five senses.
Five incidents relating to the material world
The passage likely refers to the five great elements (Pancha Mahabhutas):
Space (Akasha)
Air (Vayu)
Fire/Light (Agni)
Water (Ap)
Earth (Prithvi)
These are regarded as the building blocks of the physical universe.
Alternative philosophical classification
Another school simplifies these categories.
Four functions of Buddhi
Doubt
Determination or ascertainment
Pride (sense of "I know" or egoic appropriation)
Memory
Three forms of Tamas
Non-comprehension
Partial comprehension
Wrong comprehension
This is a profound observation. Ignorance is not merely knowing nothing. It may be:
Not understanding,
Understanding only partly,
Understanding incorrectly.
The third is often the most dangerous.
Two forms of Rajas
Inclination or desire
Sorrow
Desire and sorrow are linked. When desire is fulfilled, more desire arises; when frustrated, sorrow appears.
One characteristic of Sattva
Enlightenment
Ultimately all the many virtues of Sattva culminate in a single result: illumination of truth.
A beautiful takeaway
The sages are telling us that:
Tamas hides reality.
Rajas distracts us from reality.
Sattva reveals reality.
When Tamas decreases, we awaken. When Rajas becomes purified, we serve. When Sattva becomes perfect, wisdom dawns.
Yet even Sattva is not the final goal. The highest state is to transcend all three gunas and abide in the Self, as taught in the Bhagavad Gita:
"The one who sees that the gunas alone act, and knows That which is beyond the gunas, attains My Being."
This classification is not merely about the universe; it is a mirror for self-examination. Every day we can ask ourselves:
Is this thought arising from Tamas?
Is this desire arising from Rajas?
Is this clarity arising from Sattva?
That inquiry itself is the beginning of wisdom.