Kośa-saṃjanana and Subtle Dharma
Treasury Formation and Fine-Grained Ethics
अयुद्धयमानस्य वधो दारामर्ष: कृतघ्नता | ब्रह्मवित्तस्य चादानं नि:शेषकरणं तथा
ayuddhayamānasya vadho dārāmarṣaḥ kṛtaghnatā | brahmavittasya cādānaṃ niḥśeṣakaraṇaṃ tathā ||
Bhīṣma dit : «Tuer celui qui ne combat pas, souiller l’épouse d’autrui, se montrer ingrat, s’emparer des biens d’un connaisseur de Brahman (un vénérable brāhmaṇa), et dépouiller quelqu’un de tout ce qu’il possède : de tels actes sont condamnés même parmi les brigands.»
भीष्म उवाच
Bhīṣma lists certain acts—killing a non-combatant, violating another’s wife, ingratitude, seizing a holy/learned person’s wealth, and stripping someone of all possessions—as gravely adharmic, so blameworthy that even criminals condemn them; the teaching is to renounce such conduct as fundamentally unrighteous.
In Śānti Parva’s instruction on dharma after the war, Bhīṣma advises Yudhiṣṭhira by enumerating behaviors that must be avoided; here he emphasizes moral limits that apply even in contexts of conflict and power.