SB 11.5.6
karmany akovidah stabdha
murkhah pandita-maninah
vadanti catukan mudha
yaya madhvya girotsukah
Translation by His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada:
Ignorant of the art of work, such arrogantly proud fools, enchanted and enlivened by the sweet words of the Vedas, pose as learned authorities and offer flattering entreaties to the demigods.
Purport by His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada:
The words karmany akovidah refer to those who are ignorant of the art of performing work in such a way that there will be no future bondage. This art is described in Bhagavad-gita: yajñarthat karmano ’nyatra loko ’yam karma-bandhanah. Work must be performed for the satisfaction of Visnu, otherwise work is the cause of future bondage in the cycle of repeated birth and death. The word stabdhah, “puffed up by false pride,” indicates that although ignorant persons do not know the art of working properly, they do not inquire from learned devotees, nor do they accept the advice of the Lord’s own men. Being infatuated by the fruitive results offered in the Vedas, such murkhas, or fools, think, “We are learned Vedic scholars; we have understood everything perfectly.” Thus they are attracted to such Vedic statements as apama somam amrta abhuma (“We have drunk the soma juice and now we are immortal”), aksayyam ha vai caturmasya-yajinah sukrtam bhavati (“For one who executes the caturmasya sacrifice there is inexhaustible pious reaction”), and yatra nosnam na sitam syan na glanir napy aratayah (“Let us go to that material planet where there is no heat, no cold, no diminution and no enemies”). Such foolish persons are unaware that even Lord Brahma, the creator of the universe, will die at the end of universal time, what to speak of materialistic followers of the Vedas who jump like frogs to the different celestial planets, seeking the highest standard of sense gratification. Such bewildered Vedic scholars dream of frolicking with the Apsaras, the gorgeous society girls of the heavenly planets who are expert in singing, dancing and in general stimulating uncontrollable lusty desires. Thus, those who are carried away by the heavenly phantasmagoria offered in the karma-kanda section of the Vedas gradually develop an atheistic mentality. Actually, the entire universe is meant to be offered to Lord Visnu as sacrifice. The conditioned soul can thereby gradually elevate himself to the eternal kingdom beyond the hallucination of material sense gratification. However, being puffed up by false pride, the materialistic followers of the Vedas remain perpetually ignorant of the supremacy and beauty of Lord Visnu.