त्रिपुरमोहनम्
Tripuramohana — “The Delusion/Enchanting of Tripura”
दृष्टार्थप्रत्ययकरान्देहसौख्यैकसाधकान् । बौद्धागम विनिर्दिष्टान्धर्मान्वेदपरांस्ततः
dṛṣṭārthapratyayakarāndehasaukhyaikasādhakān | bauddhāgama vinirdiṣṭāndharmānvedaparāṃstataḥ
They promoted doctrines taught in the Buddhist tradition—doctrines that yield conviction only in what is immediately seen and aim solely at bodily comfort—thus turning away from the Veda, the highest authority for dharma and liberation.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Īśāna
Significance: Frames ‘Veda-paratva’ (Veda as highest authority) as a safeguard against doctrines seen as reducing dharma to empiricism and bodily comfort; in Siddhānta, such reductionism is read as bondage (pāśa) through avidyā and mis-aimed puruṣārtha.
It contrasts sense-based, worldly aims with Veda-rooted dharma that culminates in liberation, aligning with the Shaiva Siddhanta emphasis on transcending mere bodily pleasure toward Shiva-realization.
By upholding Vedic authority, it implicitly supports Veda-sanctioned Shaiva worship—such as Linga-pūjā and devotion to Saguna Shiva—as valid means that purify the soul and lead toward the supreme (Pati).
The takeaway is to follow Veda-aligned Shaiva practice—regular Shiva worship with mantra-japa (especially the Panchākṣarī, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) and disciplined dharma—rather than pursuing paths aimed only at bodily comfort.