Adhyaya 17: लिङ्गोद्भव—ब्रह्मविष्ण्वहङ्कार-शमनं, ओंकार-प्रादुर्भावः, मन्त्र-तत्त्वं च
सृष्टा बुद्धिर्मया तस्याम् अहङ्कारस्त्रिधा ततः तन्मात्रापञ्चकं तस्मान् मनः षष्ठेन्द्रियाणि च
sṛṣṭā buddhirmayā tasyām ahaṅkārastridhā tataḥ tanmātrāpañcakaṃ tasmān manaḥ ṣaṣṭhendriyāṇi ca
De ce principe primordial, je fis naître la Buddhi (l’intellect). Dans la Buddhi, ensuite, surgit l’Ahaṅkāra (principe de l’ego) sous une forme triple. De cet Ahaṅkāra triple vinrent les cinq tanmātras (éléments subtils), et de lui aussi le mental, avec les six puissances des sens.
Suta Goswami (narrating the creation sequence as taught in the Linga Purana)
It frames Linga worship as worship of Pati (Shiva), the causal Lord from whom intellect, ego, mind, and senses arise—reminding the devotee that the Linga signifies the transcendent source beyond these instruments.
Shiva is implied as the sovereign cause who projects the inner apparatus (buddhi, ahaṅkāra, manas) and the subtle bases of experience (tanmātras), while remaining distinct from the pasha (bondage) that binds the pashu (individual soul).
It supports Pashupata-style inner discipline: observe and restrain ego, mind, and sense-powers as evolutes of prakṛti, turning awareness toward Shiva (Pati) through japa, dhyāna, and Linga-upāsanā.