Nine Creations (Sarga), Guṇa-Streams of Beings, and Brahmā’s Progeny in Cyclic Time
अष्टमो भौतिकः सर्गो भूतादीनां प्रकीर्तितः / नवमश्चैव कौमारः प्राकृता वैकृतास्त्विमे
aṣṭamo bhautikaḥ sargo bhūtādīnāṃ prakīrtitaḥ / navamaścaiva kaumāraḥ prākṛtā vaikṛtāstvime
والثامنة تُعلَن أنها الخلقة «العنصرية» (bhāutika)، أي تَجَلّي الكائنات ابتداءً من العناصر الغليظة. والتاسعة حقًّا هي خلقة «كاوْمارا» (Kaumāra). وهذه الخلقات تُوصَف بأنها معًا برَاكْرِتَا (صادرة عن الطبيعة الأولى، بركرتي) وفَيْكْرِتَا (صادرة عن التحوّل).
Sūta (narrating the Purāṇic teaching as received in the tradition)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
This verse focuses on the taxonomy of creation (sarga), implying that manifest worlds arise through Prakṛti and its transformations; the Atman/Iśvara is thereby understood as distinct from these evolving categories, the witnessing ground beyond prākṛta-vaikṛta processes.
No direct practice is prescribed in this verse; its value for Yoga is conceptual—by classifying prākṛta and vaikṛta manifestations, it supports viveka (discernment) used in contemplative traditions (including Pāśupata-oriented and Sāṅkhya-Yoga frameworks) to detach from the mutable and orient toward the unchanging Self/Iśvara.
Indirectly: by treating creation as a principled emanation from Prakṛti under higher governance, the Kurma Purana’s broader synthesis allows both Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava theologies to read the same cosmology as operating under the supreme Lord (Īśvara/Nārāyaṇa/Śiva) without contradiction.