Acharya Prashant explains that while the core message of all spiritual texts and teachers is essentially the same, differences appear because the listeners vary. He emphasizes that words are spoken according to the specific state of mind and the questions of the listener, such as the difference between Arjun and King Janak. Therefore, one should never compare different scriptures, different speakers, or even different statements made by the same speaker at different times. What is appropriate and right changes constantly based on the context. Comparison is a product of the mind, and when you compare two things, the 'ego' or the 'judge' remains the master, reinforcing the very entity from which one seeks liberation. He further distinguishes between comparison and discretion or discernment. Comparison is based on personal biases, conditioning, and thoughts. Since the instrument of comparison—the self—is often biased or 'unhealthy,' the results of such comparisons cannot be accurate. Discretion, on the other hand, involves observing not just the objects being compared but also the one who is comparing. True discretion is the ability to distinguish between the mental and the non-mental, or the transient and the eternal. Acharya Prashant concludes that while one may have to make comparisons in worldly life, one should not take those comparisons or the comparing self too seriously; recognizing this transience is the essence of wisdom.