अहिंसा-प्रधान धर्मविचारः
Ahiṃsā as the Superior Dharma: Practical and Scriptural Reasoning
सर्वे देवा: प्राणिनां प्राणनान्ते गत्वा वृत्ता: संनिवृत्तास्तथैव । एवं सर्वे मानवा: प्राणनान्ते गत्वा वृत्ता देववद् राजसिंह
Pitāmaha uvāca: sarve devāḥ prāṇināṃ prāṇanānte gatvā vṛttāḥ saṃnivṛttās tathaiva | evaṃ sarve mānavāḥ prāṇanānte gatvā vṛttā devavad, rājasimha rājasimha |
Bhīṣma said: “At the end of life, all beings depart; and just as the gods withdraw and become inactive at the close of a life-span, so too do humans, at death, go onward according to their deeds. Some attain states like the gods, while others fall into hellish courses. When the force of their deeds is exhausted, they return again to this world and take birth once more among human and other wombs—much as the senses subside into sleep at the end of waking and reappear when waking returns.”
पितामह उवाच
Death is not an absolute end: beings depart to other realms in accordance with karma—some to divine-like states, some to painful/hellish states—and when the results of those deeds are exhausted, they return to embodied existence. The verse uses the analogy of waking and sleep: just as senses withdraw in sleep and re-emerge on waking, so embodied life withdraws at death and reappears through rebirth.
In the Śānti Parva’s instruction section, Bhīṣma (the Grandsire) addresses the king (rājasimha, commonly understood as Yudhiṣṭhira) and explains the moral-causal order governing post-mortem destinies. He frames the teaching as guidance for righteous living and governance by emphasizing that actions inevitably mature into results across lives.