Kāla-vibhāga: The Divisions of Time from Atom to Brahmā, and the Lord Beyond Time
लघूनि वै समाम्नाता दश पञ्च च नाडिका । ते द्वे मुहूर्त: प्रहर: षड्याम: सप्त नृणाम् ॥ ८ ॥
laghūni vai samāmnātā daśa pañca ca nāḍikā te dve muhūrtaḥ praharaḥ ṣaḍ yāmaḥ sapta vā nṛṇām
Quince laghus forman una nāḍikā (daṇḍa). Dos daṇḍas constituyen un muhūrta; y, según el cómputo humano, seis o siete daṇḍas hacen un prahara (yāma).
This verse defines a sequence of human time units—15 laghus = 1 nāḍikā, 2 nāḍikās = 1 muhūrta, and 2 muhūrtas = 1 prahara—building up to the day and week.
In Canto 3 Chapter 11, Śukadeva explains how time is measured from subtle to gross scales to show time’s role as the Lord’s regulating potency within creation.
By seeing time as sacred and structured, one can plan sādhana (japa, study, worship) in disciplined cycles (like muhūrtas), reducing distraction and increasing remembrance of the Lord.