Akṣara–Kṣara Viveka: Vasiṣṭha–Karāla-Janaka Saṃvāda (अक्षर-क्षर विवेकः)
भवत्यल्पफलं कर्म सेवितं नित्यमुल्बणम् । अबुद्धिपूर्व धर्मज्ञ कृतमुग्रेण कर्मणा
bhavaty alpaphalaṁ karma sevitaṁ nityam ulbaṇam | abuddhipūrvaṁ dharmajña kṛtam ugreṇa karmaṇā ||
知法者啊!纵是粗猛之业,若屡屡习行,在无先见之明而为时,亦能结得些许果报——虽其果甚微。以凶烈手段(如暴力)所作之行,即便出于无知,亦终成熟为报;但其果远不及明知而故意所作之同业。
पराशर उवाच
Actions inevitably bear fruit, but intention and awareness modulate the magnitude of the result: wrongdoing done knowingly is more culpable, while the same done in ignorance yields a comparatively smaller (though still real) consequence—especially if it becomes habitual.
In Śānti Parva, Parāśara instructs King Janaka on ethical causality. He explains how repeated harsh conduct and violent acts, even when done without clear understanding, still generate karmic results, though less than deliberate wrongdoing.