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Shloka 8

Adhyaya 87 — Saṃsāra-viṣa-kathana: Ājñā-śakti, Māyā-bandha, and Mokṣa by Prasāda

न ह्येषा प्रकृतिर्जैवी विकृतिश् च विचारतः विकारो नैव मायैषा सदसद्व्यक्तिवर्जिता

na hyeṣā prakṛtirjaivī vikṛtiś ca vicārataḥ vikāro naiva māyaiṣā sadasadvyaktivarjitā

ນີ້ບໍ່ແມ່ນປຣະກຣິຕິທີ່ເກີດຈາກຊີວະ; ແລະເມື່ອພິຈາລະນາຢ່າງຖືກຕ້ອງ ກໍບໍ່ແມ່ນພຽງການປ່ຽນແປງທົ່ວໄປ. ມັນບໍ່ແມ່ນມາຍາທີ່ເປັນຜົນຜະລິດດ້ວຍ. ມັນຢູ່ເຫນືອຄູ່ຕົວຕົນ/ບໍ່ຕົວຕົນ ແລະປາສຈາກການປະກົດແບບຈຳແນກ—ຊີ້ໄປຫາຫຼັກສູງສຸດຄື ພະປະຕິ (ພຣະສິວະ) ກ່ອນທຸກການປາກົດ.

nanot
na:
hiindeed
hi:
eṣāthis (principle)
eṣā:
prakṛtiḥprimordial nature
prakṛtiḥ:
jaivībelonging to/produced from the jīva (individual soul)
jaivī:
vikṛtiḥderivative product/effect
vikṛtiḥ:
caand
ca:
vicārataḥupon inquiry/discrimination
vicārataḥ:
vikāraḥtransformation/modification
vikāraḥ:
na evanot at all
na eva:
māyāveiling power/measure of manifestation
māyā:
eṣāthis
eṣā:
satbeing/real
sat:
asatnon-being/unreal
asat:
vyaktimanifest particularization/explicit manifestation
vyakti:
varjitādevoid of/without.
varjitā:

Suta Goswami (narrating the doctrinal teaching as preserved in the Linga Purana)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It clarifies that the Supreme indicated by the Liṅga is not a material product (prakṛti/vikāra) nor a limited manifestation; Liṅga-upāsanā is thus directed to Pati (Śiva) who transcends sat–asat and all visible particularization.

Śiva-tattva is presented as beyond the categories that define created reality—neither jīva-derived nature nor a changeable effect, and not merely Māyā—signifying the unconditioned Lord who is prior to manifestation (vyakti) and the dualities of being/non-being.

The verse primarily supports tattva-viveka (discriminative knowledge) central to Pāśupata-oriented sādhana: the practitioner distinguishes Pati (Śiva) from Pāśa (Māyā/bondage) and Prakṛti, grounding worship and meditation in the transcendent Liṅga-principle.