Aśvatthāmā’s Buddhi-Doctrine and Nocturnal Incursion Resolve (अश्वत्थाम्नः बुद्धिविचारः सौप्तिकसंकल्पश्च)
सर्वो हि मन्यते लोक आत्मानं बुद्धिमत्तरम् । सर्वस्यात्मा बहुमत: सर्वात्मानं प्रशंसति
sarvo hi manyate loka ātmānaṃ buddhimattaram | sarvasyātmā bahumataḥ sarvātmānaṃ praśaṃsati ||
Sañjaya dit : Car chacun dans le monde se croit le plus sage. Pour tout homme, son propre soi est ce qu’il estime le plus ; ainsi chacun se loue lui-même par-dessus tout.
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights a common ethical weakness: self-preference and pride. People tend to overestimate their own wisdom and value themselves most, which leads them to praise themselves rather than judge impartially. It cautions against ego-driven judgment, especially in morally charged situations.
Sañjaya offers a general observation about human nature—how people typically consider themselves wiser than others and praise themselves. In the Sauptika Parva’s grim aftermath of war, this functions as a reflective comment that frames motives and decisions as susceptible to ego and self-justification.