Manvantaras, Indras, Saptarṣis, and the Seven Sustaining Manifestations; Vyāsa as Nārāyaṇa
प्रधानं पुरुषः कालस्तत्त्वत्रयमनुत्तमम् / वासुदेवात्मकं नित्यमेतद् विज्ञाय मुच्यते
pradhānaṃ puruṣaḥ kālastattvatrayamanuttamam / vāsudevātmakaṃ nityametad vijñāya mucyate
Pradhāna (Urnatur), Puruṣa (das bewusste Selbst) und die Zeit—diese unübertreffliche Dreiheit der Tattvas—ist ewig von der Wesenheit Vāsudevas. Wer dies erkennt, wird befreit.
Lord Kūrma (Vāsudeva) instructing the sages/royal listener in a mokṣa-oriented teaching
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It identifies the ultimate ground of reality as Vāsudeva, in whom even the foundational categories—Nature (pradhāna), Consciousness (puruṣa), and Time (kāla)—are rooted; realizing this unity is presented as liberating knowledge.
The verse emphasizes jñāna-yoga: contemplative discernment of tattvas culminating in recognition of Vāsudeva as their inner essence; in the Kurma Purana’s yogic framing, such tattva-viveka supports steady meditation (dhyāna) leading to mokṣa.
By declaring the highest metaphysical principles to be ‘Vāsudeva-essenced,’ it reflects the Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where the supreme Lord (often articulated through both Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava language) is the single reality underlying all tattvas.