Brahmāṇḍa-Āvaraṇa Nirūpaṇa, Virajā-Setu, and Prākṛta–Vaikṛta Sṛṣṭi
अशीतिह्यष्टका प्रोक्ता अष्टपञ्च खगेश्वर / चत्वारिंशद्ब्रह्मकल्प एवं प्राह चतुर्मुखः
aśītihyaṣṭakā proktā aṣṭapañca khageśvara / catvāriṃśadbrahmakalpa evaṃ prāha caturmukhaḥ
Wahai Penguasa burung, Garuḍa! Dinyatakan bahwa ada delapan puluh delapan satuan yang disebut aṣṭakā, dan juga delapan puluh lima; serta empat puluh Brahmā-kalpa— demikian ujar Brahmā yang bermuka empat.
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda, citing Brahma)
Concept: Purāṇic cosmology uses multiple counting schemes (aṣṭakā, kalpa) transmitted by Brahmā; numbers may be pedagogical rather than merely arithmetic.
Vedantic Theme: Kāla as a cosmic principle; relative measures within māyā while truth remains one.
Application: Study cosmological enumerations with hermeneutic caution—track definitions (what an ‘aṣṭakā’ denotes) and context before asserting certainty.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: cosmic seat/assembly (implied)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana cosmology/time-measure discussions around kalpa, manvantara, yuga counts (contextual parallels).
This verse anchors Garuda Purana’s cosmology in Brahmā’s authority, using kalpa enumeration to frame sacred history and the vast scale in which dharma and creation unfold.
Indirectly: by situating human life and post-death teachings within immense cosmic cycles (kalpas), it suggests the soul’s journey is governed by orderly, divinely articulated cosmic law rather than randomness.
It encourages humility and long-term dharmic thinking—treating ethical action, study, and ritual discipline as meaningful within a larger cosmic order.