Puṣkara-dvīpa, Lokāloka, and the Measure of the Brahmāṇḍa
Cosmic Egg
महेश्वरः परो ऽव्यक्तादण्डमव्यक्तसंभवम् / अण्डाद् ब्रह्मा समुत्पन्नस्तेन सृष्टमिदं जगत्
maheśvaraḥ paro 'vyaktādaṇḍamavyaktasaṃbhavam / aṇḍād brahmā samutpannastena sṛṣṭamidaṃ jagat
Mahēśvara, le Seigneur suprême, au-delà du Non-manifesté, fit surgir l’Œuf cosmique, né de l’Avyakta. De cet Œuf naquit Brahmā ; et par lui fut créé cet univers tout entier.
Narrator/Teacher voice within the Purāṇic dialogue (cosmogonic exposition attributed to the Kurma Purana’s teaching tradition)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents the Supreme Lord (Maheshvara) as transcendent to the unmanifest source and as the initiating cause of manifestation—implying a highest reality beyond prakṛti (avyakta) that empowers cosmic emergence.
No direct practice is prescribed in this verse; its yoga-relevance is contemplative: meditation on the Unmanifest (avyakta) and the Lord as the supreme cause supports sāṅkhya-yoga style discernment between prakṛti (source) and īśvara (sovereign principle).
By naming Maheshvara as the supreme cosmic initiator while retaining a Purāṇic framework shared across traditions, it supports the Kurma Purana’s synthetic theology where supreme lordship is expressed in forms honored by both Shaiva and Vaishnava lineages.