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Shloka 114

Adhyaya 70: आदिसर्गः—महत्-अहङ्कार-तन्मात्रा-भूतसृष्टिः, ब्रह्माण्डावरणम्, प्रजासर्गः, त्रिमूर्ति-शैवाधिष्ठानम्

अतीतानि च कल्पानि सोदर्काणि सहान्वयैः अनागतेषु तद्वच्च तर्कः कार्यो विजानता

atītāni ca kalpāni sodarkāṇi sahānvayaiḥ anāgateṣu tadvacca tarkaḥ kāryo vijānatā

വിജ്ഞാനമുള്ളവൻ കഴിഞ്ഞുപോയ കല്പങ്ങളെ—അവയുടെ ക്രമം, ഫലങ്ങൾ, വംശപരമ്പരകൾ സഹിതം—വിവേകത്തോടെ ആലോചിക്കണം; വരാനിരിക്കുന്ന കല്പങ്ങളെയും അതുപോലെ തന്നെ നിരൂപിക്കണം।

atītānithose that have passed
atītāni:
caand
ca:
kalpānikalpas (cosmic aeons)
kalpāni:
sa-udarkāṇi (sodarkāṇi)together with their results/outcomes
sa-udarkāṇi (sodarkāṇi):
saha-anvayaiḥalong with their continuities, connections, and lineal successions
saha-anvayaiḥ:
anāgateṣuin those yet to come (future kalpas)
anāgateṣu:
tadvacin the same manner
tadvac:
caalso
ca:
tarkaḥreasoning, reflective inquiry, discernment
tarkaḥ:
kāryaḥshould be done/undertaken
kāryaḥ:
vijānatāby one who knows, by the discerning person.
vijānatā:

Suta Goswami

FAQs

It frames Linga-worship as grounded in jñāna and viveka: by understanding repeating kalpa-cycles and their outcomes, the devotee recognizes the Linga (Pati) as timeless while all manifested orders change.

By urging reasoning across past and future kalpas, it implies that Shiva-tattva (Pati) is constant beyond cyclical creation and dissolution, while the pashu-world and its lineages are contingent and recurring.

It highlights tarka-based viveka as a yogic discipline—supporting Pāśupata-style detachment from pasha (bondage) by seeing the patterned impermanence of kalpas and turning the mind toward the unchanging Lord.