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Shloka 21

Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna

आध्यात्मिकं च यल्लिङ्गं प्रत्यक्षं यस्य नो भवेत् असौ मूढो बहिः सर्वं कल्पयित्वैव नान्यथा

ādhyātmikaṃ ca yalliṅgaṃ pratyakṣaṃ yasya no bhavet asau mūḍho bahiḥ sarvaṃ kalpayitvaiva nānyathā

Para aquel a quien el Liṅga interior y espiritual no se le hace directamente evidente, ese es un necio: imagina todo como externo, sólo por proyección mental, y no de otro modo.

ādhyātmikampertaining to the inner Self/spirit
ādhyātmikam:
caand
ca:
yat-liṅgamthat Linga (the inner mark of Pati, Shiva)
yat-liṅgam:
pratyakṣamdirectly perceived/manifest
pratyakṣam:
yasyafor whom
yasya:
nanot
na:
bhavetbecomes/is
bhavet:
asauthat person
asau:
mūḍhaḥdeluded/confused
mūḍhaḥ:
bahiḥoutwardly/external
bahiḥ:
sarvameverything
sarvam:
kalpayitvāhaving imagined/constructed mentally
kalpayitvā:
evaonly/indeed
eva:
na anyathānot otherwise
na anyathā:

Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva-tattva teaching within the Purva-Bhaga discourse)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It prioritizes the inner Linga—direct inner recognition of Shiva (Pati) within consciousness—over mere externalized, imagined notions; outer worship is meant to mature into inward realization.

Shiva is indicated as the inwardly knowable reality (ādhyātmika-liṅga) that should become pratyakṣa through inner clarity; when this is absent, the pashu (bound soul) mistakenly projects truth outward under pasha (bondage).

A Pashupata-oriented inward turn: cultivating direct inner perception through dhyāna and viveka so that external worship is not mere kalpanā (mental construction) but a support for realizing the inner Linga.