सत्य–अनृत, प्रकाश–तमस्, स्वर्ग–नरक विवेचनम्
Truth and Untruth as Light and Darkness; Svarga and Naraka as Ethical Consequences
भूगुरुवाच अनन्तमेतदाकाशं सिद्धदैवतसेवितम् । रम्यं नानाश्रयाकीर्ण यस्यान्तो नाधिगम्यते
bhṛgur uvāca anantam etad ākāśaṁ siddha-daivata-sevitam | ramyaṁ nānāśrayākīrṇaṁ yasyānto nādhigamyate ||
婆利古说道:“牟尼啊,此天穹无边无际,为诸成就者与天神所往来礼敬。其境殊妙,充满种种居处与依止;而其尽头不可抵达,亦不可得知。”
भरद्वाज उवाच
The verse emphasizes the immeasurable vastness of ākāśa (space) and, by implication, the limits of ordinary perception and conceptual grasp. It points toward humility in knowledge and a contemplative orientation: reality contains countless realms and beings, and its ‘end’ is not something easily reached by mere inquiry.
In a didactic exchange, Bhṛgu describes the nature of the cosmos to a sage-interlocutor: space is infinite, inhabited by siddhas and deities, and contains many distinct abodes or worlds. The statement sets a cosmological frame for further ethical and spiritual instruction in Śānti Parva.