Adhyaya 8: Yogasthanas, Ashtanga Yoga, Pranayama-Siddhi, and Shiva-Dhyana leading to Samadhi
अलक्षणमनिर्देश्यम् अणोरल्पतरं शुभम् निरालम्बम् अतर्क्यं च विनाशोत्पत्तिवर्जितम्
alakṣaṇamanirdeśyam aṇoralpataraṃ śubham nirālambam atarkyaṃ ca vināśotpattivarjitam
شيفا المبارك بلا سِماتٍ مُعرِّفة ولا تُشير إليه الألفاظ؛ ألطف من ألطف ذرّة، بلا مُستند، فوق منال التعقّل، منزَّه عن النشوء والفناء معًا.
Suta Goswami (narrating Śiva-tattva to the sages of Naimiṣāraṇya)
It grounds Liṅga-pūjā in the insight that the Liṅga signifies the markless (alakṣaṇa) Pati—Śiva beyond name-and-form—so worship moves the paśu (soul) from external symbols toward inner realization.
Śiva is presented as nirguṇa and transcendent: inexpressible (anirdeśya), beyond inference (atarkya), independent (nirālamba), and untouched by origination and dissolution—thus the eternal Pati who is never bound by pāśa.
It implies Pāśupata-style inward contemplation: meditating on the supportless, inexpressible Śiva while loosening conceptual grasping, so the paśu disengages from pāśa through steady dhyāna rather than mere argumentation.