Jyotiṣa-saṅgraha: Varga-vibhāga, Bala-nirṇaya, Garbha-phala, Āyuḥ-gaṇanā
धर्मध्यायारिगो जीवादिकत्र्यारिगो विधोः । पृध्यंत्यधीतपाः सुज्ञा ततोवृद्ध्यंत्यबंधुराः ॥ १५२ ॥
dharmadhyāyārigo jīvādikatryārigo vidhoḥ | pṛdhyaṃtyadhītapāḥ sujñā tatovṛddhyaṃtyabaṃdhurāḥ || 152 ||
よく学び修行を積んだ賢者たちは、主の敵――ダルマと観想に背く者、生きとし生けるものを害する者――について論争する。だがその論争からは、真の和合という親縁を欠く争い好きだけが、ますます増長してゆく。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in Moksha-dharma context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: raudra
It warns that even learned ascetics can fall into fruitless disputation; true spiritual growth comes from Dharma, meditation, and non-harm—not from argumentative victory.
By implying that devotion to the Lord (Vishnu) is incompatible with hostility to Dharma, dhyāna, and living beings; bhakti matures through humility, ahiṃsā, and inner steadiness rather than quarrel.
The verse indirectly cautions against misusing śāstra-learning (supported by Vedāṅga disciplines like Vyākaraṇa and Nyāya-style reasoning) for mere debate; study should serve dharma, meditation, and ethical conduct.