Adhyāya 240: Indriya–Manas–Buddhi–Ātman — The Inner Hierarchy and Restraint (इन्द्रिय-मनस्-बुद्धि-आत्म-क्रमः)
प्रमोहो भ्रम आवर्तो घ्राणं श्रवणदर्शने । अद्भुतानि रसस्पर्शे शीतोष्णे मारुताकृति:,सत्त्वसंसेवनाद धीरो निद्रामुच्छेत्तुमरहति । विद्वानोंने योगके जो काम, क्रोध, लोभ, भय और पाँचवाँ स्वप्र--ये पाँच दोष बताये हैं उनका पूर्णतया उच्छेद करे। इनमेंसे क्रोधको शम (मनोनिग्रह) के द्वारा जीते, कामको संकल्पके त्यागद्वारा पराजित करे तथा धीर पुरुष सत्वगुणका सेवन करनेसे निद्राका उच्छेद कर सकता है
vyāsa uvāca | pramoho bhrama āvarto ghrāṇaṃ śravaṇadarśane | adbhutāni rasasparśe śītoṣṇe mārutākṛtiḥ | sattvasaṃsevanād dhīro nidrām ucchettum arhati |
Vyāsa said: Delusion, error, and mental whirl arise through the senses—through smell, through hearing and sight; through taste and touch come strange fascinations; and through the experience of cold and heat the wind-like restlessness of the mind is stirred. A steady person, by cultivating sattva (clarity and balance), becomes fit to cut off sleep (sloth and heedlessness). Therefore the wise should completely uproot the five faults taught in yoga—desire, anger, greed, fear, and sleep/drowsiness: anger is conquered by calm self-restraint, desire by abandoning impulsive resolve, and sleep by sustained cultivation of sattva.
व्यास उवाच
Sense-contact can generate delusion and restless mental whirl; the remedy is disciplined self-restraint and the cultivation of sattva. Specifically, anger is subdued by calm control (śama), desire by relinquishing impulsive resolve (saṅkalpa-tyāga), and drowsiness by sustained sattvic living.
In the didactic discourse of the Śānti Parva, Vyāsa instructs on inner discipline: he analyzes how the senses trigger confusion and agitation, then prescribes yogic remedies—especially sattva-cultivation—to uproot key moral-psychological दोष (faults) such as desire, anger, and sleepiness.