मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
वायुः संभवते खात्तु वाताद्भवति वै जलम् जलात् सम्भवति प्राणः प्राणाच्छुक्रं विवर्धते
vāyuḥ saṃbhavate khāttu vātādbhavati vai jalam jalāt sambhavati prāṇaḥ prāṇācchukraṃ vivardhate
虚空(kha/ākāśa)より風が生じ、風よりまことに水が生ずる。水より prāṇa(生命の息)が起こり、prāṇa より śukra(生殖の精髄)が養われ増大する。かくして有身のパシュは、主宰 Pati たるシヴァの統御のもと、タットヴァが段階的に展開して形づくられる。
Suta Goswami (narrating the cosmological teaching within the Linga Purana to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames embodiment as a stepwise manifestation of tattvas under Śiva (Pati). Linga worship reminds the devotee that the same Lord who transcends creation also governs the elemental chain that forms the pashu, making worship a return from effects to the Cause.
By implying an ordered emergence of principles, it points to Śiva-tattva as the supreme regulator beyond the elements—Pati who enables manifestation while remaining unbound, unlike the pashu who becomes conditioned through prāṇa and bodily essences.
It implicitly supports prāṇa-sādhana (discipline of vital breath) central to Pāśupata-oriented yoga: refining prāṇa helps loosen pāśa (bondage) tied to bodily processes, turning the practitioner toward Śiva through inner purity and controlled life-force.