दमप्रशंसा — Praise of Self-Restraint
Dama
इन्द्रियोंकी उत्पत्ति और लय--ये दोनों कार्य रजोगुणमें ही होते हैं। विद्वान् पुरुष शास्त्रदृष्टिसे इन बातोंकी भलीभाँति परीक्षा करके यथोचित आचरण करे ।।
indriyāṇāṁ utpattiḥ layaś ca—ete ubhau kāryau rajoguṇe eva bhavataḥ | vidvān puruṣaḥ śāstradṛṣṭyā etāḥ kathāḥ samyak parīkṣya yathocitam ācaret || jñānendriyāṇi indriyārthān na upasarpanti atṛṣṇulam | hīnaiḥ karaṇaiḥ dehī na dehaṁ punaḥ arhati ||
Bhishma explains that the arising and dissolution of the senses are functions rooted in rajas (the quality of activity and agitation). Therefore, a wise person should examine these matters carefully through the lens of scripture and then act in a fitting way. When craving is absent, the cognitive senses no longer run toward their objects; and when the embodied self becomes free from attachment to sense-objects—its instruments effectively ‘weakened’—it does not take up another body again.
भीष्म उवाच
Craving drives the senses outward and sustains embodied existence; when thirst for objects is extinguished and the senses no longer pursue their targets, the basis for further embodiment (rebirth) is removed. Hence one should examine this through śāstra and practice appropriate restraint and detachment.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction section, Bhishma continues his counsel on inner discipline and liberation-oriented ethics, explaining how the guṇas—especially rajas—relate to the activity of the senses and how freedom from desire leads toward release from repeated embodiment.