Prākṛta-pralaya, Pratisarga Doctrine, and the Ishvara-Samanvaya of Yoga and Devotion
श्रुतास्तु विविधा धर्मा वंशा मन्वन्तराणि च / सर्गश्च प्रतिसर्गश्च ब्रह्माण्यस्यास्य विस्तरः
śrutāstu vividhā dharmā vaṃśā manvantarāṇi ca / sargaśca pratisargaśca brahmāṇyasyāsya vistaraḥ
នៅទីនេះ បានស្តាប់ហើយនូវធម្មៈជាច្រើនប្រភេទ ពង្សាវតារ និងវដ្តមនុ (មន្វន្តរ) ផងដែរ; ទាំងសೃគ (ការបង្កើត) និងប្រតិសೃគ (ការបង្កើតឡើងវិញ) — នេះជាការពន្យល់ដ៏ទូលំទូលាយអំពីព្រះព្រហ្មណ្ឌៈ (សកលលោក) នេះ។
Sūta (traditional Purāṇic narrator) addressing the sages
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly: by framing the Purāṇa’s scope as creation, re-creation, and cosmic order (brahmāṇḍa-vistāra), it points to the larger metaphysical setting in which later teachings identify the Supreme as the ground of sarga and pratisarga beyond changing manvantara cycles.
None explicitly in this verse; it functions as a topical summary. In the Kurma Purana, such cosmological and dharma sections prepare the ground for later soteriological instruction (including Pāśupata-oriented discipline and devotion) by situating practice within cosmic cycles and sacred law.
Not directly; it lists Purāṇic themes rather than deity-unity doctrine. However, by emphasizing a single brahmāṇḍa-order governing dharma and creation cycles, it aligns with the Purāṇa’s broader integrative approach where sectarian teachings are placed within one overarching cosmic framework.