Brahmacarya-Upāya: Jñāna, Śauca, and the Mind’s Role in Desire (शान्ति पर्व, अध्याय २०७)
विप्रचित्तिप्रधानांश्व दानवानसृजदू दनु: । दितिस्तु सर्वानसुरान् महासत्त्वानजीजनत्
Vipracitti-pradhānāṁś ca dānavān asṛjad ū Danuḥ | Ditis tu sarvān asurān mahāsattvān ajījanat ||
قال بهيشما: إن دانو أنجبت الدانافا، وكان فيبراتشِتّي ومن معه من أبرزهم. أمّا ديتي فقد صارت أمًّا لجميع الآسورا—كائناتٍ عظيمة البأس شديدة القوة.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse frames later ethical and political conflicts within a larger cosmic genealogy: powerful adversarial forces have identifiable origins, and understanding lineage helps interpret the emergence of rival dispositions and alliances in the world.
Bhīṣma is recounting mythic origins: Danu produces the Dānavas (with Vipracitti prominent), while Diti is described as the mother of all Asuras—establishing the ancestral background of major non-divine powers.