Adhyaya 10 — Jaimini’s Questions on Birth, Death, Karma, and the Embodied Journey
ततः सर्वेषु निस्तीर्णः पापी तिर्यक्त्वमश्नुते ।
कृमिकीटपतङ्गेषु श्वापदे मशकादिषु ॥
tataḥ sarveṣu nistīrṇaḥ pāpī tiryakatvam aśnute | kṛmi-kīṭa-pataṅgeṣu śvāpade maśakādiṣu ||
Entonces, después de atravesar todos esos infiernos, el pecador alcanza la existencia animal: entre gusanos, insectos y polillas; entre bestias y mosquitos y otros semejantes.
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Karma shapes not only pleasure and pain but the very capacity for agency: lower births restrict freedom, urging one to use human life to cultivate dharma and clarity.
Supports dharma/saṃsāra teaching; indirectly related to pratisarga (cycles of manifestation) insofar as it describes transmigration across forms.
The list of small creatures symbolizes contraction of consciousness—when awareness is narrowed by harmful tendencies, experience becomes confined to instinct and survival.