Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna
प्रत्ययार्थं हि जगताम् एकस्थो ऽपि दिवाकरः एको ऽपि बहुधा दृष्टो जलाधारेषु सुव्रताः
pratyayārthaṃ hi jagatām ekastho 'pi divākaraḥ eko 'pi bahudhā dṛṣṭo jalādhāreṣu suvratāḥ
高き誓いの者よ、衆生の確信のために、太陽は一処にありながら、水をたたえた器に映って多くのように見える。同様に、一なるパティ(シヴァ)は、パシュのウパーディによって多様に知覚されるが、本質においては不二である。
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya; presenting a Shaiva philosophical analogy)
It teaches that the one Supreme (Pati) can be approached through many forms and loci of worship (including the Linga), just as one sun appears as many in water—supporting ekatva (oneness) behind diverse upāsanā.
Shiva-tattva is one, unwavering, and non-dual; multiplicity belongs to reflections produced by upādhis (limiting conditions) in the pashu’s perception, not to Shiva’s essential reality.
It points to Pāśupata/Śaiva yogic discernment (viveka): reduce the mind’s upādhis and see the one Pati beyond many appearances—supporting steady dhyāna on the Linga as a unifying support (ālambana).