मनस्–बुद्धि–गुणविचारः (Manas–Buddhi–Guṇa Inquiry) — Meditation and Nirguṇa Realization
चतुर्णा लोकपालानां शुक्रस्याथ बृहस्पते: । मसरुतां विश्वदेवानां साध्यानामश्चिनोरपि
caturṇāṃ lokapālānāṃ śukrasyātha bṛhaspateḥ | marutāṃ viśvadevāṇāṃ sādhyānām aśvinor api, tāta! varuṇa-kubera-indra-yamarāja—eteṣāṃ caturṇāṃ lokapālānāṃ, śukra-bṛhaspati-marudgaṇa-viśvedeva-sādhya-aśvinīkumāra-rudra-āditya-vasu-tathānyadevatānāṃ ca ye tathāvidhā lokāḥ, te sarve paramātmano paramadhāmasya samakṣaṃ naraka eva |
Bhīṣma dit : «Mon enfant, les mondes des quatre gardiens des directions—Varuṇa, Kubera, Indra et Yama—ainsi que les mondes de Śukra et de Bṛhaspati, des Maruts, des Viśvedevas, des Sādhyas et des Aśvins ; oui, les royaumes des Rudras, des Ādityas, des Vasus et des autres divinités encore—si élevés soient-ils—ne valent, en comparaison de la demeure suprême du Paramātman, rien de mieux que l’enfer.»
भीष्म उवाच
Even the highest celestial realms—those of major gods and divine hosts—are ultimately inferior when set against the Supreme Self’s highest abode; therefore one should not mistake heavenly attainment for the final good, but orient one’s life toward liberation and the supreme state.
In the Śānti Parva’s instruction section, Bhīṣma addresses the listener affectionately (“tāta”) and emphasizes a hierarchy of goals: he lists renowned divine realms and declares that, compared to the Supreme’s abode, they are as nothing—using ‘hell’ as a stark metaphor to redirect aspiration from worldly or heavenly reward to the highest spiritual end.