Vimokṣa-niścaya: Pañcaśikha’s Analysis of Aggregates, Guṇas, and Tyāga (मोक्षनिर्णयः)
सम्मोहकं तमो विद्यात् कृष्णमज्ञानसम्भवम् | प्रीतिदुःखनिबद्धांश्व समस्तांस्त्रीनथो गुणान्
bhīṣma uvāca | sammohakaṃ tamo vidyāt kṛṣṇam ajñāna-sambhavam | prīti-duḥkha-nibaddhāṃś ca samastāṃs trīn atho guṇān |
Bhishma dit : Qu’on comprenne que tamas est la puissance qui égare — sombre comme la noirceur — et qu’elle naît de l’ignorance. Parmi les trois qualités (guṇas) qui enchaînent tous les êtres, les dispositions qui font naître contentement et affection sont sāttvika, tandis que celles qui engendrent la souffrance sont rājasa. Ainsi doit-on discerner la nature des trois guṇas.
भीष्म उवाच
Bhishma defines the ethical-psychological markers of the guṇas: tamas is delusion and darkness arising from ignorance; sattva is associated with clarity and pleasant, affectionate states; rajas is associated with agitation that culminates in suffering. The teaching urges discernment of these inner forces to guide conduct toward dharma.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction on right living and inner discipline, Bhishma continues his counsel by classifying mental dispositions through the framework of the three guṇas, explaining how they manifest and how they bind beings.