Ataptatanà « () refers to someone who has not subjected himself to the heat of tapas.
Ataptatanà « derives from atapta () which means - 'not heated, cool' (from tapa () meaning 'to burn, heat up') and tanà « () â means - 'body, the physical self'; therefore, ataptatanà « literally means â 'he whose body or mass is not prepared in fire', 'raw'.
The compound word ataptatanà « appears in the mantras of the Mandala 9 of the Rigveda. In a sukta addressed to PavmÃÂna Somo DevatÃÂ, Rishi Pavitra prays:
In this mantra, ataptatanà «h, refers to the one who has not subjected himself to the heat of tapas, tadÃÂmah refers to one who is raw and who therefore, aà Ânute - cannot experience the highest bliss because his body is not yet properly prepared to receive the knowledge he seeks.
In his Satyarth Prakash (Light of Truth), Swami Dayananda Saraswati explains that tapas does not refer to branding one's body with literal fire, and this is also clarified by Rishi Pavitra in the subsequent mantra which reads:
Tapas (or tapasya) is practical discipline; according to the Bhagavada Gita (17.14).
"Worship of gods, the twice-born, one's elders, the teachers, and the wise men, purity, straightness of conduct, chastity, and non-violence: these are the tapasya of the body.
The finishing phase of a scholar's higher education was called tapasya in the time of Krishna. Gandhi considered tapasya to be the test of love, ahimsa, self-suffering, and self-sacrifice, which are essential in the quest for truth.
Accordingly, ataptatanà « refers to someone who has not yet experienced such practical discipline.