Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
अनादिमायसंभिन्ना त्रितत्त्वा प्रकृतिर्गुहा / महामायासमुत्पन्ना तामसी पौरुषी ध्रुवा
anādimāyasaṃbhinnā tritattvā prakṛtirguhā / mahāmāyāsamutpannā tāmasī pauruṣī dhruvā
ପ୍ରକୃତି—ଗୁହାସଦୃଶ ଗୁପ୍ତ ପ୍ରକଟତାର ଆଧାର—ଅନାଦି ମାୟାରେ ସଂମିଶ୍ରିତ ଓ ତ୍ରିତତ୍ତ୍ୱମୟୀ। ମହାମାୟାରୁ ଉତ୍ପନ୍ନ, ତାମସୀ ସ୍ୱଭାବା, ପୁରୁଷ-ସମ୍ବନ୍ଧିତ ଏବଂ ଧ୍ରୁବା।
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita context
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It distinguishes the witnessing principle (Puruṣa/Ātman) from Prakṛti: Prakṛti is a beginningless, Māyā-entangled power that manifests the world, while the Self is implied as the stable reference to which Prakṛti is ‘connected’ (pauruṣī) yet distinct.
The verse supports Sāṃkhya-Yoga discernment (viveka): meditation and inquiry separate Puruṣa from Prakṛti/Māyā by recognizing the guṇa-made, tamasic obscuration and thereby turning awareness back to the witnessing Self—an underpinning for Pāśupata-oriented liberation in the Ishvara Gita.
By presenting a shared metaphysical framework (Māyā–Prakṛti–Puruṣa discernment) taught in the Ishvara Gita, it aligns Shaiva and Vaishnava soteriology: the same Supreme Lord (Ishvara) reveals the structure of bondage (Māyā/guṇas) and the means of release (knowledge and Yoga).