Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna
ज्ञानिनां सूक्ष्मममलं भवेत्प्रत्यक्षमव्ययम् यथा स्थूलमयुक्तानां मृत्काष्ठाद्यैः प्रकल्पितम्
jñānināṃ sūkṣmamamalaṃ bhavetpratyakṣamavyayam yathā sthūlamayuktānāṃ mṛtkāṣṭhādyaiḥ prakalpitam
Pour les jñānins, la Réalité subtile, sans tache et impérissable devient directement évidente; mais pour ceux qui ne sont pas unis par le yoga et manquent de discipline, elle n’est qu’imaginée comme une chose grossière, façonnée d’argile, de bois et autres matières.
Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching within the Linga Purana’s Shaiva doctrine)
It distinguishes outer, material representations (clay/wood lingas) from the inner aim of Linga worship: to realize the subtle, pure, imperishable Shiva-tattva directly through disciplined practice.
Shiva-tattva is presented as sūkṣma (subtle), amala (stainless), and avyaya (imperishable), knowable not merely by concept but as pratyakṣa—directly evident to the jñānin whose pasha (bondage) is weakened by yoga and insight.
Pashupata-style discipline (yoga-yukti): becoming “yukta” through inner concentration and purity so the Pati (Lord) is directly realized, rather than remaining at the level of external, gross constructions alone.