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Shloka 6

Adhyaya 87 — Saṃsāra-viṣa-kathana: Ājñā-śakti, Māyā-bandha, and Mokṣa by Prasāda

यदैवं मयि विद्वान् यस् तस्यापि न च सर्वतः एषा विद्या ह्यहं वेद्यः प्रज्ञैषा च श्रुतिः स्मृतिः

yadaivaṃ mayi vidvān yas tasyāpi na ca sarvataḥ eṣā vidyā hyahaṃ vedyaḥ prajñaiṣā ca śrutiḥ smṛtiḥ

“Aun cuando un sabio Me conozca de este modo, no Me comprende por completo en todos los aspectos. Pues ésta es la verdadera Ciencia: Yo solo soy Aquel que debe ser conocido, el Pati. Ésta es la lucidez despierta; esto mismo es Śruti y Smṛti.”

yadāwhen
yadā:
evaṁthus/in this manner
evaṁ:
mayiin Me
mayi:
vidvānthe learned/knower
vidvān:
yaḥwho
yaḥ:
tasya apieven for him
tasya api:
na caand not
na ca:
sarvataḥin all ways/entirely
sarvataḥ:
eṣāthis
eṣā:
vidyāknowledge/saving wisdom
vidyā:
hiindeed
hi:
ahamI
aham:
vedyaḥto be known/the knowable
vedyaḥ:
prajñāhigher insight/discriminative wisdom
prajñā:
eṣāthis
eṣā:
caand
ca:
śrutiḥrevealed scripture (Veda)
śrutiḥ:
smṛtiḥremembered tradition (Dharma-śāstra/Purāṇa)
smṛtiḥ:

Shiva (as the Supreme Teacher, Pati)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga-upāsanā as vidyā whose core is recognizing Shiva (Pati) as the single ultimate object of knowledge; worship is not mere ritual but a movement from partial knowing to direct orientation toward the Supreme.

Shiva is presented as the Vedya— the highest knowable reality—yet not exhaustible by conceptual learning; even the vidvān attains only non-total comprehension, indicating Shiva’s transcendence beyond limited cognition.

The verse emphasizes jñāna-based upāsanā aligned with Pāśupata orientation: cultivating prajñā (discriminative insight) so that Śruti-Smṛti guided practice leads the paśu (soul) toward Pati, loosening pāśa (bondage).