Ācamana-vidhi, Śauca, and Conduct Rules for Study, Eating, and Bodily Functions
नोच्छिष्टं कुर्वते मुख्या विप्रुषो ऽङ्गं नयन्ति याः / दन्तवद् दन्तलग्नेषु जिह्वास्पर्शे ऽशुचिर्भवेत्
nocchiṣṭaṃ kurvate mukhyā vipruṣo 'ṅgaṃ nayanti yāḥ / dantavad dantalagneṣu jihvāsparśe 'śucirbhavet
食事の最中に口を「ウッチシタ」(残滓による汚れ)とする者、あるいは食物や唾の滴が身体に落ちる者は不浄となる。また歯の間に食が挟まれば、それは歯に付着したものと同様に扱うべきであり、舌でそれに触れれば速やかに不浄となる。
Sūta (narrating traditional dharma-śāstra style rules of purity within the Kurma Purana’s discourse)
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: it teaches śauca (purity) as a discipline that steadies the embodied mind. Such bodily and behavioral restraint supports clarity (sattva) that is traditionally considered conducive to realizing the Atman.
It highlights preparatory discipline akin to niyama (śauca). By regulating eating and avoiding contamination (ucchiṣṭa, droplets, oral impurities), one cultivates bodily order and mental attentiveness that support mantra, japa, and meditation.
Not explicitly; the synthesis is contextual: the Purana frames shared dharmic disciplines (like śauca) as common groundwork for both Vaiṣṇava devotion and Śaiva/Pāśupata-oriented yoga, emphasizing a unified ethical-spiritual foundation.