Prajñā as Pratiṣṭhā — Indra–Kāśyapa Saṃvāda (Śānti-parva 12.173)
राज्ञश्न दर्शयामासु: शरीरं राजधर्मण: । कृतघ्नं परुषं तं च गौतम॑ं पापकारिणम्
rājñaś ca darśayāmāsuḥ śarīraṃ rājadharmaṇaḥ | kṛtaghnaṃ paruṣaṃ taṃ ca gautamaṃ pāpakāriṇam ||
Lalu mereka memperlihatkan kepada sang raja ‘tubuh’ dari dharma kerajaan itu sendiri—Gautama—yang terbukti tidak tahu berterima kasih, keras dalam ucapan dan perbuatan, serta bergelimang perbuatan dosa.
भीष्म उवाच
Royal duty (rājadharma) is not merely an abstract ideal; it is tested and made visible through concrete cases of wrongdoing. A king must recognize and judge traits like ingratitude (kṛtaghnatā), harshness (paruṣatā), and sinful conduct (pāpakarma) as ethical failures that threaten social order.
In Bhīṣma’s discourse, certain people present to the king an illustrative figure—Gautama—described as ungrateful, harsh, and sinful, as though he were the ‘embodiment’ of a lesson in rājadharma. The verse frames Gautama as a cautionary example for the king’s moral and judicial discernment.