Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna
प्रकृतिस्तस्य पत्नी च पुरुषो लिङ्गमुच्यते वक्त्राद्वै ब्राह्मणाः सर्वे ब्रह्मा च भगवान्प्रभुः
prakṛtistasya patnī ca puruṣo liṅgamucyate vaktrādvai brāhmaṇāḥ sarve brahmā ca bhagavānprabhuḥ
تُعلَنُ بْرَكْرِتي (Prakṛti) زوجةً له، ويُقال إنّ بُرُوشا (Puruṣa) هو اللِّينغا (Liṅga)، العلامةُ العُليا. ومن فمه، حقًّا، يخرج جميعُ البراهمة؛ وهناك أيضًا يولد براهما، البهاغافان المبارك، الربّ السيّد.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purva-Bhaga account of creation and manifestation to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames the Liṅga as Puruṣa—pure consciousness—while Prakṛti is His Śakti; thus worship of the Liṅga is worship of Śiva as Pati, the transcendent principle behind creation.
Śiva-tattva is indicated as Puruṣa identified with the Liṅga, the supreme sign beyond form, while Prakṛti functions as His power (Śakti) through which manifestation proceeds.
The verse supports Liṅga-upāsanā grounded in tattva-jñāna: meditating on the Liṅga as Puruṣa (Pati) and recognizing Prakṛti as Śakti—an inner alignment foundational to Pāśupata-oriented contemplation and Śiva-pūjā.