Ahiṃsā as Threefold Restraint (Mind–Speech–Action) and the Ethics of Consumption
अचक्षुविंषयं प्राप्तं कं धर्मोडनुगच्छति । मनुष्यका स्थूल शरीर तो मरकर यहीं पड़ा रह जाता है और उसका सूक्ष्म शरीर अव्यक्तभावको प्राप्त हो जाता है--नेत्रोंकी पहुँचसे परे है। ऐसी दशामें धर्म किस प्रकार उसका अनुसरण करता है? ।।
Yudhiṣṭhira uvāca: acakṣu-viṣayaṁ prāptaṁ kaṁ dharmo ’nugacchati? Manuṣyasya sthūla-śarīraṁ tu mṛtvā ihaiva patitaṁ tiṣṭhati, tasya sūkṣma-śarīram avyaktabhāvaṁ prāpya netrāṇāṁ gocaraṁ na bhavati. Etādṛśyāṁ daśāyāṁ dharmaḥ kathaṁ tam anugacchati? Bṛhaspatir uvāca: pṛthivī vāyur ākāśam āpo jyotir mano ’ntakaḥ.
ユディシュティラは問うた。「人が眼の届く範囲を越えてしまったとき、ダルマは誰に従うのですか。人の粗大な身体は死ねばここに横たわる。しかし微細身は未顕の状態に至り、眼の及ぶところではなくなる。そのようなとき、ダルマはいかにして彼に随伴するのでしょうか。」ブリハスパティ(Bṛhaspati)は答え、地・風・空・水・光・心、そして終わりをもたらす者(死)という諸要素と諸力を挙げて説き起こし、見えなくなっても道徳的帰結は失われぬことを明らかにしようとした。
युधिछिर उवाच
That ethical consequence (dharma/karma) is not limited by physical visibility: even when the gross body remains and the subtle body becomes unmanifest, dharma still ‘follows’ through the causal order governing the person’s subtle existence and destiny.
Yudhiṣṭhira presses a philosophical doubt about how dharma can accompany someone who is no longer perceptible after death. Bṛhaspati begins his reply by invoking the elemental and inner principles (earth, air, space, water, light, mind) and death, setting up an explanation of post-mortem continuity and moral accountability.