Prākṛta Sṛṣṭi and Pralaya: From Pradhāna to Brahmāṇḍa; Trimūrti Samanvaya
भूतादिर्महता तद्वदव्यक्तेनावृतो महान् / एते लोका महात्मनः सर्वतत्त्वाभिमानिनः
bhūtādirmahatā tadvadavyaktenāvṛto mahān / ete lokā mahātmanaḥ sarvatattvābhimāninaḥ
Ó grande alma: o princípio que começa pelos elementos (bhūta) é abrangido por Mahat; e, do mesmo modo, o próprio Mahat é velado pelo Inmanifesto (Avyakta). Estes mundos, ó magnânimo, estão permeados pela identificação com todos os tattva, os princípios cósmicos.
Narrator/Sage teaching cosmology (Purāṇic-Sāṃkhya exposition within the Kurma Purana’s discourse framework)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
By showing that worlds and experiences are layered within tattvas (elements → Mahat → Avyakta), the verse implies that the Self is distinct from these coverings; realization requires seeing all such categories as non-Self (ātma-viveka).
It supports tattva-viveka (discernment of principles) used in meditative withdrawal: one observes identification (abhimāna) with body, mind (Mahat), and causal nature (Avyakta), then releases it—an inner discipline aligned with Purāṇic Yoga and later Pāśupata-oriented renunciation of limited identities.
Indirectly, through shared metaphysical language: both Shaiva and Vaishnava teachings in the Kurma Purana employ the same tattva-framework, pointing beyond sectarian forms to the one transcendent reality that is prior to Mahat and Avyakta.