जनक–सुलभा संवादः
Janaka–Sulabhā Dialogue on Mokṣa and Non-attachment
अज्ञानसागरो घोरो हाव्यक्तोड्गाध उच्यते । अहन्यहनि मज्जन्ति यत्र भूतानि भारत,भरतनन्दन! अज्ञानरूपी समुद्र अव्यक्त, अगाध और भयंकर बताया जाता है। इसमें असंख्य प्राणी प्रतिदिन गोते खाते रहते हैं
ajñānasāgaro ghoro hy avyaktodgāḍha ucyate | ahany ahani majjanti yatra bhūtāni bhārata ||
Bhīṣma nói: “Biển vô minh được gọi là đáng sợ—vô hiển và sâu thẳm không dò. Trong đó, hỡi Bharata, chúng sinh ngày ngày lao xuống và chìm đắm.”
भीष्म उवाच
Ignorance is portrayed as a vast, terrifying, and unfathomable ocean; without true discernment (jñāna), beings repeatedly sink into delusion and suffering. The verse urges the cultivation of right knowledge and clarity as the ethical-spiritual remedy.
In Śānti Parva, Bhīṣma instructs Yudhiṣṭhira on dharma and liberation-oriented wisdom. Here he uses a metaphor—an ‘ocean of ignorance’—to describe the condition in which beings are continually overwhelmed, setting up the need for teachings that lead beyond confusion toward steadiness and insight.