Dakṣa’s Progeny, Nṛsiṃha–Varāha Avatāras, and Andhaka’s Defeat
Hari–Hara–Śakti Synthesis
न मे विदुः परं तत्त्वं देवाद्या न महर्षयः / एको ऽयं वेद विश्वात्मा भवानी विष्णुरेव च
na me viduḥ paraṃ tattvaṃ devādyā na maharṣayaḥ / eko 'yaṃ veda viśvātmā bhavānī viṣṇureva ca
لا الآلهةُ وسائرُ أهلِ السماء، ولا حتى الحكماءُ العظام، يعرفون حقًّا حقيقتي العليا. إنما الذاتُ الكونيةُ الواحدةُ الشاملةُ لكل شيء تعرفُ نفسها بأنها بهافاني—وبأنها فيشنو أيضًا.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) speaking in a theological-advaitic register
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents the Supreme as the one viśvātmā (cosmic Self) whose reality is beyond the full grasp of gods and sages, implying self-luminous, non-dual knowledge where the Supreme alone truly knows itself.
This verse emphasizes tattva-jñāna (knowledge of the supreme principle) as the core aim; in the Kurma Purana’s broader yogic framework, such realization is approached through disciplined yoga and devotion that culminate in direct insight into the one all-pervading Ishvara.
By identifying the one viśvātmā as Bhavānī and also as Viṣṇu, it signals a synthetic, non-sectarian vision: the supreme reality is one, expressed through multiple divine names and forms rather than competing deities.