Śakra–Namuci-saṃvāda: Śoka-nivāraṇa and Daiva-vicāra
Indra and Namuci on grief, composure, and inevitability
तत्र विज्ञानसंयुक्ता त्रिविधा चेतना ध्रुवा । सुखदु:खेति यामाहुरदुः:खामसुखेति च
tatra vijñānasaṁyuktā trividhā cetanā dhruvā | sukhaduḥkheti yām āhur aduḥkhām asukheti ca ||
Bhīṣma dit : «En cette matière, la conscience, jointe au savoir discriminant, est assurément de trois sortes. Les sages la décrivent comme : (1) celle qui éprouve plaisir et peine, (2) celle qui est exempte de peine, et (3) celle qui est sans plaisir ; ils distinguent ainsi les réponses du mental selon ce qu’il faut accepter, rejeter ou mettre à l’écart.»
भीष्म उवाच
Bhishma classifies consciousness, when guided by discernment (vijñāna), into three stable modes: one that undergoes pleasure and pain, one that is free from pain, and one that is without pleasure—pointing to ethical discrimination in relation to objects as acceptable, rejectable, or to be treated with equanimity.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction to Yudhishthira, Bhishma continues a philosophical-ethical exposition, explaining how the mind’s awareness functions in different experiential modes and how discernment shapes one’s engagement with worldly objects.