Karmic Causes of Narakas and the Irremediability of Ingratitude (Kṛtaghna-doṣa)
ऋषय ऊचुः कर्मणा येन येनेह यान्ति शालकटङ्कट स्वकर्मफलभोगार्थं नरकान् मे शृणुष्व तान्
ṛṣaya ūcuḥ karmaṇā yena yeneha yānti śālakaṭaṅkaṭa svakarmaphalabhogārthaṃ narakān me śṛṇuṣva tān
Các hiền triết nói: “Bởi bất cứ hành nghiệp nào mà ở đời này (người ta) đi đến những cảnh giới ấy, hỡi Śālakaṭaṅkaṭa, hãy nghe từ ta về các địa ngục đó—(nơi được vào) để thọ hưởng quả báo của chính nghiệp mình.”
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The governing principle is personal moral accountability: one undergoes results that are ‘one’s own’ (sva-karma). Punishment is not arbitrary; it is framed as experiential fruition (bhoga) of causally connected deeds.
This is dharma/karma exposition embedded in dialogue—ancillary instruction supporting Purāṇic religious education. It does not directly instantiate the five defining topics but functions as normative teaching often interwoven with them.
The phrase ‘svakarmaphalabhogārtham’ signals a cosmic moral order: the universe is intelligible as an ethical field where experiences correspond to prior choices. Naraka becomes not merely a place, but a symbol of consequence and moral pedagogy.