अविद्या-पञ्चक, नवसर्ग-क्रमः, प्रजापति-प्रसवः
Vibhaga 1, Adhyaya 5
दत्तोर्णं वेदबाहुं च पुत्रीं चान्यां दृषद्वतीम् पुत्राणां षष्टिसाहस्रं संनतिः सुषुवे शुभा
dattorṇaṃ vedabāhuṃ ca putrīṃ cānyāṃ dṛṣadvatīm putrāṇāṃ ṣaṣṭisāhasraṃ saṃnatiḥ suṣuve śubhā
La auspiciosa Saṃnati dio a luz a Dattorṇa y Vedabāhu, y también a otra hija, Dṛṣadvatī; y engendró sesenta mil hijos, extendiendo así la estirpe en el despliegue de la creación bajo la disposición del Señor (Pati).
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana to the sages of Naimisharanya)
Though this verse is genealogical, it supports the Purva-Bhaga’s creation-framework in which Linga worship is later grounded: the manifest world (pashu-jagat) expands through ordered progeny under the sovereignty of Pati (Shiva), making ritual worship meaningful within a structured cosmos.
Shiva-tattva is implied as Pati—the transcendent Lord who presides over srishti without being reduced to it. The multiplication of beings (many sons and daughters) points to the Lord’s governance of manifestation while remaining beyond the bonds (pāśa) that bind individual souls (paśu).
No direct puja-vidhi or Pāśupata Yoga technique is stated here; the takeaway is preparatory: it situates later Linga-puja and Pāśupata discipline within the broader cosmological account of how embodied beings (paśus) arise in creation.