Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
युगान्तकोटी तौ तस्य धर्मकामावुभौ स्मृतौ ईषादण्डस्तथाव्यक्तं बुद्धिस्तस्यैव नड्वलः
yugāntakoṭī tau tasya dharmakāmāvubhau smṛtau īṣādaṇḍastathāvyaktaṃ buddhistasyaiva naḍvalaḥ
В конце эпох эти двое — Дхарма и Кама — поминаются как его космическая пара. Его погоняющий жезл (īṣā-daṇḍa) есть также Непроявленное (Avyakta); а его Буддхи, различающая мудрость, воистину есть pāśa — петля, что удерживает и привлекает существ.
Suta Goswami (narrating Purana doctrine to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Shiva (Pati) as the inner governor of cosmic principles—Dharma, Kāma, Avyakta, and Buddhi—so Linga worship is not merely external ritual but contemplation of the Lord who transcends and directs the tattvas.
Shiva is implied as the sovereign principle who holds together opposites and functions—ethical order (Dharma) and creative desire (Kāma)—and who commands the unmanifest source (Avyakta) and the binding/disciplining power of intellect (Buddhi), revealing him as Pati over Pasha.
A Pāśupata-style inner practice is suggested: using Buddhi (discrimination) to recognize and loosen Pasha (bondage) while meditating on the Linga as the transcendent Pati who impels (īṣā-daṇḍa) and restrains (noose) the mind and cosmos.