सर्वस्वस्यापहारे तु वक्तव्यमनृतं भवेत् । तत्रानृतं भवेत् सत्यं सत्यं चाप्यनृतं भवेत्
sarvasvasyāpahāre tu vaktavyam anṛtaṃ bhavet | tatrānṛtaṃ bhavet satyaṃ satyaṃ cāpy anṛtaṃ bhavet ||
ଶ୍ରୀକୃଷ୍ଣ କହିଲେ—ସର୍ବସ୍ୱ ଅପହୃତ ହେଉଥିବାବେଳେ ଅସତ୍ୟ କହିବା ମଧ୍ୟ କର୍ତ୍ତବ୍ୟ ହୋଇପାରେ। ସେହି ସଙ୍କଟରେ ‘ଅସତ୍ୟ’ ହିଁ ସତ୍ୟର କାମ କରେ, ଏବଂ ‘ସତ୍ୟ’ ମଧ୍ୟ ପରିଣାମରେ ଅସତ୍ୟ ସଦୃଶ ହୋଇଯାଏ।
श्रीकृष्ण उवाच
Truthfulness is a major dharma, but it is not mechanically absolute: when total dispossession or grave harm is at stake, speech must be judged by its dharmic consequence. In extreme situations, a literal untruth may serve the higher truth of protecting life, justice, and rightful welfare; conversely, a literal truth that enables harm can become ethically ‘untrue’.
In Karṇa Parva, amid the moral pressures of war and strategy, Śrī Kṛṣṇa articulates a principle of contextual ethics: he explains how dharma can require flexible application of satya (truth-speaking) when circumstances involve severe threat such as the loss of one’s entire means or safety.