Ahiṃsā as Threefold Restraint (Mind–Speech–Action) and the Ethics of Consumption
युधिषछ्िर उवाच आखायात॑ मे भगवता गर्भ: संजायते यथा । यथा जातस्तु पुरुष: प्रपद्यति तदुच्यताम्
Yudhiṣṭhira uvāca: ākhyātaṁ me bhagavatā garbhaḥ saṁjāyate yathā | yathā jātas tu puruṣaḥ prapadyati tad ucyatām ||
یُدھِشٹھِر نے کہا—اے بھگون! آپ نے مجھے بتا دیا کہ گَربھ (جنین) کس طرح پیدا ہوتا ہے۔ اب یہ فرمائیے کہ جو انسان پیدا ہو چکا، وہ پھر کس طرح بندھن میں گرفتار ہو جاتا ہے؟
युधिषछ्िर उवाच
The verse frames a moral-spiritual inquiry: understanding birth is incomplete without understanding how a person becomes bound again—through entanglement in actions, desires, and their consequences. It sets up instruction on the causes of bondage and the path to avoid it.
In Anuśāsana Parva’s didactic dialogue, Yudhiṣṭhira, having heard an explanation of embryonic formation, asks the revered teacher to continue by explaining the next stage: how the born human being becomes ensnared in worldly bondage.