Nine Creations (Sarga), Guṇa-Streams of Beings, and Brahmā’s Progeny in Cyclic Time
ते च प्रकाशबहुलास्तमोद्रिक्ता रजोधिकाः / दुः खोत्कटाः सत्त्वयुता मनुष्याः परिकीर्तिता
te ca prakāśabahulāstamodriktā rajodhikāḥ / duḥ khotkaṭāḥ sattvayutā manuṣyāḥ parikīrtitā
人間は、明晰さと光明に富むが、なお闇(タマス)に触れられていると説かれる。ラジャスが優勢であるため激しい苦に傾きやすいが、それでもサットヴァの一分を備えている。
Narratorial voice (Purāṇic teaching context attributed to the Kurma Purana’s discourse tradition)
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By mapping human experience to guṇas—clarity (sattva), agitation (rajas), and darkness (tamas)—the verse implies that suffering and mental fluctuation belong to prakṛti; the Atman is understood as distinct from these changing qualities and is realized as guṇa-transcendent through purification.
The verse points to guṇa-śuddhi as a yogic aim: reducing rajas and tamas (sources of agitation and inertia) while cultivating sattva (clarity). In Kurma Purana’s broader yogic frame (including Pāśupata-oriented discipline), this supports practices like ethical restraint, regulated conduct, and contemplative steadiness that lessen duḥkha by stabilizing the mind.
While not naming Shiva or Vishnu directly, the guṇa-based analysis aligns with the Kurma Purana’s integrative theology: liberation is achieved by transcending guṇas through devotion and yoga as taught within a Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis, where the supreme teaching leads beyond rajas-tamas into sattvic clarity and ultimately to the guṇa-transcendent reality.