Prākṛta-pralaya, Pratisarga Doctrine, and the Ishvara-Samanvaya of Yoga and Devotion
सनत्कुमाराद् भगवान् मुनिः सत्यवतीसुतः / लेभे पुराणं परमं व्यासः सर्वार्थसंचयम्
sanatkumārād bhagavān muniḥ satyavatīsutaḥ / lebhe purāṇaṃ paramaṃ vyāsaḥ sarvārthasaṃcayam
De Sanatkumāra, le vénérable sage Vyāsa, fils de Satyavatī, reçut ce Purāṇa suprême, compendium qui rassemble l’essence de toutes les fins et de tous les sens.
Purāṇic narrator (Sūta-style lineage narration; not a direct dialogue line of Kurma here)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly: by calling the Purāṇa “sarvārtha-saṃcaya,” it frames the teaching as encompassing the highest puruṣārtha—mokṣa—whose realization is classically tied to knowing the Self (ātman) beyond limited aims.
No single practice is named in this verse; it establishes textual lineage and authority, preparing the ground for later Kurma Purana teachings—especially Pāśupata-leaning disciplines and devotion-driven contemplation that culminate in liberation.
It does not explicitly mention Śiva or Viṣṇu; instead, it legitimizes the Kurma Purana’s comprehensive scope—within which the Purāṇa later presents a Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis (unity of the supreme reality approached through multiple theistic forms).