Daṇḍotpatti-kathana (Origin and Function of Daṇḍa) — वसुहोम–मान्धातृ संवाद
दण्डे त्रिवर्ग: सततं सुप्रणीते प्रवर्तते दैवं हि परमो दण्डो रूपतो5ग्निरिवोत्थित:
daṇḍe trivargaḥ satataṃ supraṇīte pravartate | daivaṃ hi paramo daṇḍo rūpato 'gnir ivotthitaḥ ||
Bhishma dijo: Cuando el Daṇḍa—el poder del castigo y del buen gobierno—se administra de continuo y con rectitud, los tres fines de la vida—dharma, artha y kāma—avanzan en el orden debido y se cumplen con firmeza. Por ello se proclama que el Daṇḍa es una fuerza suprema, sancionada por lo divino, que se manifiesta con fulgor como el fuego: protege a los que guardan el orden y consume la maldad.
भीष्म उवाच
Properly administered daṇḍa (punitive and regulatory authority) is essential for sustaining the trivarga—dharma, artha, and kāma. Bhīṣma frames just punishment as a divinely grounded force that maintains moral and social order, likened to fire for its power to protect and to destroy wrongdoing.
In the Śānti Parva’s instruction on statecraft and ethics, Bhīṣma teaches Yudhiṣṭhira about the necessity of disciplined governance. Here he emphasizes that when royal authority is exercised correctly and consistently, society’s moral, economic, and personal aims can flourish; hence daṇḍa is praised as supreme and fiery in potency.