Adhyaya 9 — Vasiṣṭha and Viśvāmitra’s Mutual Curse: The Āḍi–Baka Battle and Brahmā’s Pacification
शृण्वन्तावपि तौ वाक्यं ब्रह्मणोऽव्यक्तजन्मनः ।
कोपामर्षसमाविष्टौ युयुधाते न तस्थतुः ॥
śṛṇvantāv api tau vākyaṃ brahmaṇo 'vyakta-janmanaḥ /
kopāmarṣa-samāviṣṭau yuyudhāte na tasthatuḥ
ومع أنهم سمعوا كلامَ براهما، المولودَ من غير المتجلّي، فإنّ هذينِ—وقد استبدّ بهما الغضبُ والحنق—واصلا القتالَ ولم يكفّا.
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Hearing advice is not the same as receiving it. When kopa and amarṣa dominate, even authoritative instruction fails; this implies the need for inner discipline and, at times, decisive corrective power.
Didactic narrative illustrating the mechanics of adharma (anger/resentment) within mythic history; not a direct pañcalakṣaṇa enumeration.
Brahmā’s ‘Unmanifest’ epithet points to subtle truth; yet the combatants remain bound to gross agitation. Symbolically, when consciousness is seized by reactive patterns, even subtle insight cannot immediately arrest the momentum.