Cosmic Manifestation, Mahāmāyā’s Mandate, Varṇāśrama-Dharma, and the Unity of the Trimūrti
प्रथमा भावना पूर्वे सांख्ये त्वक्षरभावना / तृतीये चान्तिमा प्रोक्ता भावना पारमेश्वरी
prathamā bhāvanā pūrve sāṃkhye tvakṣarabhāvanā / tṛtīye cāntimā proktā bhāvanā pārameśvarī
先のサーンキヤの教えでは、第一の観想は「アクシャラ(不滅)」への観想であると宣せられる。さらに第三の教えにおいて、究竟の観想が説き明かされる—主に帰一する最上の「パラメーシュヴァリー」観想である。
Sūta (narrator) conveying the Purāṇic teaching in the Kurma Purana’s doctrinal discourse
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It points to the Akṣara (the Imperishable) as the core object of contemplation in Sāṃkhya, indicating an unchanging, transcendent principle that stands beyond perishable phenomenas (changing phenomena).
It highlights bhāvanā—systematic meditative cultivation—first as Akṣara-bhāvanā (contemplation on the Imperishable) and culminates in pārameśvarī-bhāvanā, an Īśvara-centered contemplation aligned with Pāśupata-style theistic yoga.
By moving from Akṣara contemplation to pārameśvarī (Parameśvara-centered) contemplation, the verse supports the Kurma Purana’s integrative stance: liberation is framed through a supreme Lord principle that harmonizes sectarian emphases rather than insisting on separation.