Adhyāya 214: Tapas Redefined—Perpetual Discipline, Hospitality, and the Ethics of Eating (तपः-निरूपणम्, विघसाशी-अतिथिप्रिय-धर्मः)
ये वै शुक्रगतिं विद्युर्भूतसंकरकारिकाम् । विरागा दग्धदोषास्ते नाप्नुयुर्देहसम्भवम्
ye vai śukragatiṁ vidyur bhūtasaṅkarakārikām | virāgā dagdhadoṣās te nāpnuyur dehasambhavam ||
毗湿摩说道:凡真正了知精液之行道,乃致有身众生相杂相乱之因者,便生离染;既焚尽诸过,便不复堕入再受身生之系缚。
भीष्म उवाच
Insight into sexual impulse and procreation as binding forces leads to dispassion (virāga). Through detachment and inner purification (burning doṣas), one avoids further embodiment—i.e., does not return to bodily birth.
In Bhishma’s instruction in the Śānti Parva, he presents an ascetic-ethical point: those who understand the binding consequences of generative desire turn away from it, purify themselves, and thereby escape repeated birth.