कपिल–स्यूमरश्मि संवादः
Kapila and Syūmaraśmi on Renunciation, Householder Support, and Epistemic Authority
न भूतानामहिंसाया ज्यायान् धर्मोडस्ति कश्नन । यस्मान्नोद्विजते भूतं जातु किंचित् कथंचन । सो<भयं सर्वभूतेभ्य: सम्प्राप्रोति महामुने
na bhūtānām ahiṁsāyā jyāyān dharmo 'sti kaścana | yasmān nodvijate bhūtaṁ jātu kiṁcit kathaṁcana | so 'bhayaṁ sarvabhūtebhyaḥ samprāpnoti mahāmune ||
Tūladhāra berkata: Tiada dharma yang lebih agung daripada ahimsa—tidak melakukan kekerasan terhadap makhluk hidup. Wahai mahamuni! Sesiapa yang tidak pernah menggelisahkan mana-mana makhluk walau dengan cara apa pun, memperoleh keadaan tanpa takut terhadap semua makhluk; kerana tidak memudaratkan sesiapa, dia menjadi aman di tengah semuanya.
तुलाधार उवाच
The verse declares ahiṁsā (non-injury to living beings) as the supreme dharma. A person who never causes any creature to feel fear or disturbance gains 'abhaya'—a secure, fear-free standing among all beings—because his conduct removes the very causes of hostility and retaliation.
In Śānti Parva’s instruction on dharma, Tūlādhar addresses a sage (mahāmune) and emphasizes an ethical hierarchy: above ritual or other duties stands non-violence. He frames it not only as a moral ideal but as a practical spiritual result—harmlessness leads to universal safety and peace.