Śakra–Namuci-saṃvāda: Śoka-nivāraṇa and Daiva-vicāra
Indra and Namuci on grief, composure, and inevitability
शब्द: स्पर्श च रूप॑ं च रसो गन्धश्न मूर्तय: । एते ह्यामरणात् पञज्च षड्गुणा ज्ञानसिद्धये
śabdaḥ sparśaṃ ca rūpaṃ ca raso gandhaś ca mūrtayaḥ | ete hy ā-maraṇāt pañca ṣaḍ-guṇā jñāna-siddhaye ||
Disse Bhīṣma: “Som, tato, forma, sabor, cheiro e a corporificação material—estas são as qualidades que servem de meios para a realização do conhecimento sensorial, operando no ser vivo até o momento da morte. Só quando os sentidos entram em contato com tais qualidades surge a cognição distinta dos diversos objetos.”
भीष्म उवाच
Bhīṣma explains that cognition depends on the contact between the senses and their objects—sound, touch, form, taste, and smell—along with material embodiment; these function as the operative qualities enabling sensory knowledge throughout embodied life.
In Śānti Parva’s instruction section, Bhīṣma continues his philosophical teaching to Yudhiṣṭhira, analyzing how knowledge arises through the senses and their objects as part of a broader discourse on dharma and liberation-oriented understanding.