ध्यानयज्ञः, संसार-विष-निरूपणम्, पाशुपतयोगः, परा-अपरा विद्या, चतुर्वस्था-विचारः (अध्यायः ८६)
पैशाचे राक्षसे दुःखं याक्षे चैव विचारतः गान्धर्वे च तथा चान्द्रे सौम्यलोके द्विजोत्तमाः
paiśāce rākṣase duḥkhaṃ yākṣe caiva vicārataḥ gāndharve ca tathā cāndre saumyaloke dvijottamāḥ
पैशाच व राक्षस लोकांत दुःख आहे; आणि यक्ष लोकांतही, विचार करता, तसेच आहे. गंधर्व लोक व चंद्र लोकांतही तसेच; परंतु हे द्विजोत्तमा, सौम्य लोकांत अवस्था अधिक शुभ असते.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana discourse to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames worldly and celestial realms as still within karma-bound experience; Linga worship is implied as a Shaiva means to turn the pashu away from loka-seeking and toward Pati (Shiva), who grants freedom beyond all lokas.
By contrasting suffering and limited auspiciousness across realms, the verse points to the Shaiva Siddhanta stance that Shiva-tattva is not a loka but the transcendent Pati—beyond pleasure-pain duality and beyond karmic destinations.
A practice of viveka (discriminative reflection) is explicit (vicārataḥ), aligning with Pashupata-oriented vairagya: discerning the limits of all worlds and directing sadhana toward Shiva through mantra, puja, and inner detachment.