Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna
ये तत्र पश्यन्ति शिवं त्रिरस्रे त्रितत्त्वमध्ये त्रिगुणं त्रियक्षम् ते यान्ति चैनं न च योगिनो ऽन्ये तया च देव्या पुरुषं पुराणम्
ye tatra paśyanti śivaṃ trirasre tritattvamadhye triguṇaṃ triyakṣam te yānti cainaṃ na ca yogino 'nye tayā ca devyā puruṣaṃ purāṇam
そこ(そのヨーガの座)においてシヴァを観ずる者—三稜(トリアドによって知られる超越の実在)にして、三タットヴァの中に住し、三グナを通して顕れ、かつ三眼の主—その者は彼に到達する。だが他のヨーギーは、そのデーヴィー(シャクティ)に導かれずしては、永遠の古きプルシャに至ることはできない。
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It shifts worship from outer form to inner realization: true Linga-upāsanā culminates in direct vision of Pati (Śiva) within the field of tattvas and guṇas, attained by grace—especially through Śakti.
Śiva is presented as the Three‑Eyed Lord who pervades the triadic structure of reality (tattvas/guṇas) yet remains the eternal Puruṣa to be directly realized—suggesting immanence in manifestation and transcendence beyond bondage (pāśa).
A contemplative Pāśupata-oriented yoga: meditative “seeing” (darśana) of Śiva in the inner locus, emphasizing Śakti’s guidance/anugraha as the decisive factor for the yogin to reach the Supreme.