Adhyaya 3 — The Dharmapakshis’ Past-Life Curse and Indra’s Test of Truthfulness
श्रूयतां च महाभाग यथा लोको विमुह्यति ।
कामक्रोधादिभिर्दोषैरवशः प्रबलारिभिः ॥
śrūyatāṃ ca mahābhāga yathā loko vimuhyati / kāmakrodhādibhir doṣair avaśaḥ prabalāribhiḥ //
「聞き給え、気高き御方よ。世間がいかに迷妄に陥るか—欲望と怒りなど、強大で敵のごとき過失に圧倒され、無力となり頼るところを失うのである。」
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The verse frames a core dharmic psychology: suffering and wrong action arise when the mind is conquered by internal ‘enemies’—desire, anger, and allied vices. Ethical life begins with recognizing these as hostile forces and cultivating restraint (dama), discernment (viveka), and steadiness (dhṛti).
This passage is not primarily sarga/pratisarga/manvantara/vaṃśa/vaṃśānucarita. It belongs to ancillary upadeśa (instruction) and dharma-nīti material that many Purāṇas include alongside the pañcalakṣaṇa framework.
Kāma and krodha are presented as ‘prabala-arayaḥ’ (mighty enemies), implying an inner battlefield. Esoterically, the ‘world’ (loka) also denotes the embodied field of experience; delusion arises when consciousness identifies with impulse and aversion, losing sovereignty (svātratya) and becoming ‘avaśa’ (compelled).