Daṇḍotpatti-kathana (Origin and Function of Daṇḍa) — वसुहोम–मान्धातृ संवाद
तीक्ष्णता मृदुता मृत्युरागमानागमौ तथा । विरोधश्चाविरोधश्व् कार्याकार्ये बलाबले
bhīṣma uvāca | tīkṣṇatā mṛdutā mṛtyur āgamānāgamau tathā | virodhaś cāvirodhaś ca kāryākārye balābale | arthānarthau sukha-duḥkhe dharmādharmau balābale | daurbhāgya-saubhāgye puṇya-pāpe guṇāvaguṇau kāmākāmau | ṛtu-māsau dina-rātrau kṣaṇaḥ pramādāpramādau harṣa-krodhau śama-damau | daiva-puruṣārthau bandha-mokṣau bhayābhaye hiṃsāhiṃse tapa-yajñau saṃyamaḥ | viṣāviṣe ādy-anta-madhye kārya-vistāraḥ madaḥ asāvadhānatā darpaḥ dambhaḥ dhairyam | nītī-anītī śakty-aśaktī mānaḥ stabdhatā vyayāvyaye vinayaḥ dānam | kālākālau satyāsatye jñānaṃ śraddhāśraddhe akarmaṇyatā udyogaḥ | lābhahānī jayaparājayau tīkṣṇatā-mṛdutā mṛtyuḥ ānā-jānaṃ virodhāvirodhau | kartavyākartavye sabalatā-nirbalatā asūyānasūye dharmādharmau lajjālajje | sampatti-vipattī sthānaṃ tejaḥ karma pāṇḍityaṃ vāk-śaktiḥ tathā tattva-bodhaḥ—ete sarve daṇḍasyaiva nāma-rūpāṇi bahūni | kurunandana! evaṃ jagati daṇḍasya bahavo rūpāṇi ||
Bhishma said: Sharpness and gentleness, death, coming and not coming; opposition and non-opposition; what ought to be done and what ought not; strength and weakness; profit and loss, pleasure and pain; dharma and adharma; good fortune and misfortune; merit and sin; virtue and defect; desire and absence of desire; seasons and months; day and night; a moment; heedlessness and vigilance; joy and anger; calm and self-restraint; destiny and human effort; bondage and liberation; fear and fearlessness; violence and non-violence; austerity and sacrifice; discipline; poison and non-poison; beginning, end, and middle; the expansion of an undertaking; intoxication, inattention, pride, hypocrisy, fortitude; right policy and wrong policy; power and powerlessness; honor, rigidity; expenditure and non-expenditure; humility and giving; timely and untimely; truth and falsehood; knowledge; faith and lack of faith; idleness and enterprise; gain and loss; victory and defeat—O delight of the Kurus, all these are but the many names and forms of daṇḍa (the principle of restraint/punishment and governance). Thus, in this world, daṇḍa appears in countless forms.
भीष्म उवाच
Bhishma teaches that daṇḍa—understood as the principle of restraint, correction, and governance—pervades worldly life. The many opposites (gentle/harsh, gain/loss, dharma/adharma, vigilance/heedlessness, etc.) are presented as diverse manifestations through which order is maintained and conduct is shaped.
In the Śānti Parva dialogue on kingship and ethics, Bhishma instructs Yudhiṣṭhira. Here he enumerates a long series of paired conditions and moral-psychological states to show that the king’s instrument of rule—daṇḍa—operates across all domains of life, not merely as physical punishment but as a comprehensive framework of regulation and discernment.