Adhyaya 8: Yogasthanas, Ashtanga Yoga, Pranayama-Siddhi, and Shiva-Dhyana leading to Samadhi
प्रत्याहारं पञ्चमो वै धारणा च ततः परा ध्यानं सप्तममित्युक्तं समाधिस्त्वष्टमः स्मृतः
pratyāhāraṃ pañcamo vai dhāraṇā ca tataḥ parā dhyānaṃ saptamamityuktaṃ samādhistvaṣṭamaḥ smṛtaḥ
Pratyāhāra é, de fato, o quinto membro; depois vem dhāraṇā. Dhyāna é declarado o sétimo, e samādhi é lembrado como o oitavo — os estágios superiores do Pāśupata-yoga que conduzem o paśu (alma vinculada) ao Senhor, Pati.
Suta Goswami (narrating the yoga teaching within the Linga Purana discourse)
It shifts worship from outer ritual alone to inner discipline: the devotee withdraws the senses (pratyāhāra), concentrates (dhāraṇā), meditates (dhyāna), and attains samādhi—making the heart a sanctum where Śiva is realized as Pati.
Śiva-tattva is implied as the supreme object of absorption: samādhi culminates in steadiness in the Lord beyond sensory dispersion, where the paśu’s pasha (bondage) is attenuated and the Pati is directly intuited.
The higher limbs of aṣṭāṅga within a Pāśupata orientation—pratyāhāra, dhāraṇā, dhyāna, and samādhi—presented as the practical ascent toward liberation (mokṣa) and Śiva-realization.