परं ब्रह्म यदाम्नातं निष्प्रपंचं निरात्मकम् । निर्विकल्पं निराकारमव्यक्तं स्थूलसूक्ष्मवत्
paraṃ brahma yadāmnātaṃ niṣprapaṃcaṃ nirātmakam | nirvikalpaṃ nirākāramavyaktaṃ sthūlasūkṣmavat
Aquel Brahman Supremo, según lo transmitido por la sagrada tradición, está más allá de toda manifestación, sin yo limitante, libre de toda distinción conceptual, sin forma e inmanifestado, y sin embargo lo penetra todo como si fuese a la vez lo burdo y lo sutil.
Skanda (continuing instruction to Agastya)
Tirtha: Avimukta (contextual)
Type: kshetra
Listener: Agastya
Scene: An abstract-leaning teaching moment: Skanda describes the formless Brahman; artists may depict a luminous, unfigured radiance (tejas) behind Skanda, with subtle overlays of gross (mountains, bodies) and subtle (prāṇa, light) dissolving into a single glow.
Liberation is grounded in realizing the Supreme as formless and unconditioned, beyond mental constructions.
The teaching is situated within the Avimukta Māhātmya of Kāśī, linking metaphysics to sacred geography.
None explicitly; it provides philosophical orientation (tattva-jñāna) supporting mokṣa.