Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
कराला पिङ्गलाकारा नामभेदामहामदा / यशस्विनी यशोदा च षडध्वपरिवर्तिका
karālā piṅgalākārā nāmabhedāmahāmadā / yaśasvinī yaśodā ca ṣaḍadhvaparivartikā
Sie ist Karālā, von piṅgala-gestalt, fahl-golden; sie ist der Große Stolz, der aus den Unterschieden der Namen hervorgeht. Sie ist Yaśasvinī und Yaśodā, und sie ist die Kraft, die den sechsfachen kosmischen Pfad (ṣaḍadhvā) wendet und ordnet.
Lord Kurma (as the teacher of the Ishvara Gita)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By presenting Shakti as both the source of “name-differences” and the regulator of the ṣaḍadhvā, the verse implies that multiplicity and cosmic order arise through divine power, while the Supreme remains the underlying reality beyond nominal distinctions.
The verse points to a key contemplative move in Pāśupata-leaning teaching: seeing “nāmabheda” (mere name-based differentiation) as a cause of delusion/pride, and meditating on the divine governance of the ṣaḍadhvā—i.e., tracing experience back through cosmic categories toward the Lord.
Using Śaiva technical language (ṣaḍadhvā) within the Ishvara Gita spoken by Lord Kurma (Vishnu), the verse reflects the Purana’s synthesis: the same supreme divinity is taught through both Vaiṣṇava and Śaiva frameworks, with Shakti operating as the shared cosmic power.