Devadāru (Dāruvana) Forest: The Delusion of Ritual Pride, the Liṅga Crisis, and the Teaching of Jñāna–Pāśupata Yoga
अन्यानि चैव शास्त्राणि लोके ऽस्मिन् मोहनानितु / वेदवादविरुद्धानि मयैव कथितानि तु
anyāni caiva śāstrāṇi loke 'smin mohanānitu / vedavādaviruddhāni mayaiva kathitāni tu
وكذلك توجد في هذا العالم مؤلَّفات أخرى—وهي في الحقيقة ذات طابع مُضلِّل—مخالِفة لمذاهب الفيدا؛ ومع ذلك فقد أُعلنت هي أيضًا منّي وحدي.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) as Ishvara, instructing in a synthetic Shaiva-Vaishnava framework
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: raudra
It presents Ishvara as the ultimate source of even divergent teachings, implying a supreme sovereignty that can project delusion (mohana) while remaining the authoritative ground of Vedic truth.
No specific technique is described; the verse instead sets a discernment principle (viveka) for Yoga and Dharma—seek teachings aligned with Vedic dharma rather than delusive, Veda-opposing doctrines.
By speaking as the single Lord behind revelation and delusion alike, it supports the Purana’s non-sectarian, integrative stance—one Ishvara (honored as Vishnu/Kurma and also resonant with Shaiva theology) governs all śāstric manifestations.