उद्योगपर्व — अध्याय 33: धृतराष्ट्र-विदुर संवादः (विदुरनीतिः)
अनर्थमर्थतः पश्यन्नर्थ चैवाप्यनर्थत: । इन्द्रियेरजितैर्बाल: सुदुःखं मनन््यते सुखम्
anartham arthataḥ paśyann arthaṃ caivāpy anarthataḥ | indriyer ajitair bālaḥ suduḥkhaṃ manyate sukham ||
قال فيدورا: الأحمق الذي لم يُحكم سلطانَه على حواسه يرى الضارَّ نافعًا والنافعَ ضارًّا؛ حتى إنه يعدّ أشدَّ العذاب سعادةً، لأن الحواس المنفلتة تُشوّه حكمه وتمييزه.
विदुर उवाच
Without mastery over the senses, a person’s moral and practical discernment collapses: he mislabels harm as benefit and benefit as harm, and can even embrace suffering as if it were happiness. The verse urges indriya-nigraha (sense-restraint) as a foundation for right judgment and dharmic living.
In Udyoga Parva, Vidura delivers ethical counsel (Vidura-nīti) in the tense lead-up to war, warning that uncontrolled senses and deluded judgment drive people toward ruin while they imagine they are pursuing welfare and pleasure.