Adhyāya 189: Japa—Inquiry into the Jāpaka, Method
Vidhi), and Fruit (Phala
पिशाचा राक्षसा: प्रेता विविधा म्लेच्छजातय: । प्रणष्टज्ञानविज्ञाना: स्वच्छन्दाचारचेष्टिता,वे ज्ञान-विज्ञानसे हीन और स्वेच्छाचारी लोग पिशाच, राक्षस, प्रेत तथा नाना प्रकारकी म्लेच्छ-जातिके होते हैं
piśācā rākṣasāḥ pretā vividhā mlecchajātayaḥ | praṇaṣṭajñānavijñānāḥ svacchandācāraceṣṭitāḥ ||
Wika ni Bharadvāja: “Ang mga nawalan ng tunay na kaalaman at pag-unawa, at kumikilos ayon sa kapritso—walang pagpipigil sa asal at gawa—ay ibinibilang sa mga piśāca, rākṣasa, preta, at sa sari-saring lahing mleccha. Ipinapakita ng taludtod na ang pagkasira ng isip at asal ay pagbagsak sa mga anyong di-makatao, at nagbababala na ang kalayaang walang dharma ay nauuwi sa sariling pagkapahamak.”
भरद्वाज उवाच
The verse teaches that when people lose knowledge (jñāna) and discernment (vijñāna) and live by mere whim (svacchanda), their conduct becomes adharma; such a life is portrayed as a descent into ‘inhuman’ categories (piśāca/rākṣasa/preta), emphasizing that ethical restraint and right understanding are essential to human dignity.
In the Śānti Parva’s instruction on dharma and right living, Bharadvāja characterizes certain degraded modes of life: those who are intellectually and morally ruined and act without restraint are described using traditional typologies of beings and outsider groups, as a didactic warning about the consequences of abandoning dharmic conduct.