मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
इन्द्रियाणि मनश्चित्तबुद्ध्यहङ्कारसंज्ञितम् तथा सर्वमयं चैव आत्मस्था ख्यातिरेव च
indriyāṇi manaścittabuddhyahaṅkārasaṃjñitam tathā sarvamayaṃ caiva ātmasthā khyātireva ca
感官の諸能力は、意(manas)、チッタ(citta)、 बुद्धि(buddhi)たる知性、そして我執(ahaṅkāra)と共に—その名のとおり—すべて覚性に遍く浸されている。しかも自己に住する明知(khyāti)こそが、それら一切の根拠である。かくして縛られたパシュ(paśu)はこれらを覆いの縛(pāśa)として経験するが、主宰パティ(Pati)たるシヴァ(Śiva)は内なる証人として常住する。
Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana teaching to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It redirects worship from mere outer ritual to inner realization: the same Śiva honored in the Liṅga is the Witness-consciousness within, by which the senses and inner instruments function.
Śiva-tattva is implied as the ātma-sthā khyāti—the Self-abiding awareness that illuminates mind, intellect, and ego without being limited by them, standing as Pati over the paśu’s instruments.
A Pāśupata-oriented yogic takeaway is indriya-nigraha and antaḥkaraṇa-śuddhi: disciplining senses and refining mind–intellect–ego so awareness rests in the Self while performing Śiva-pūjā.