Īśvara-gītā: Vibhūtis of the Supreme Lord and the Paśu–Paśupati Doctrine of Bondage and Release
चतुर्विंशकमव्यक्तं प्रधानं गुणलक्षणम् / अनादिमध्यनिधनं कारणं जगतः परम्
caturviṃśakamavyaktaṃ pradhānaṃ guṇalakṣaṇam / anādimadhyanidhanaṃ kāraṇaṃ jagataḥ param
The unmanifest Pradhāna (avyakta), characterized by the guṇas, is the twenty-fourth principle. Without beginning, middle, or end, it is the supreme causal ground of the universe.
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing sages (Sāṅkhya-style cosmological teaching within the Purva-bhāga narrative frame)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
This verse primarily defines Pradhāna (Prakṛti) as the unmanifest, guṇa-constituted causal ground of cosmic evolution; by implication in Purāṇic synthesis, the Self/Iśvara stands distinct from yet sovereign over this causal Nature.
No specific practice is prescribed in this line; it supplies the contemplative framework used in Yoga—discriminating the unmanifest guṇa-based Prakṛti from the seer/knower—supporting viveka (discernment) that later matures into disciplined meditation.
The verse itself is cosmological (Pradhāna/guṇas) rather than sectarian; in the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis, such Sāṅkhya categories are presented as shared doctrinal ground under the one supreme Lord revered as both Hari and Hara.