Kapālamocana: The Cutting of Brahmā’s Fifth Head, Śiva’s Kāpālika Vow, and Purification in Vārāṇasī
शङ्खचक्रगदापाणिः पीतवासा महाभुजः / विष्वक्सेन इति ख्यातो विष्णोरंशसमुद्भवः
śaṅkhacakragadāpāṇiḥ pītavāsā mahābhujaḥ / viṣvaksena iti khyāto viṣṇoraṃśasamudbhavaḥ
शङ्खचक्रगदापाणिः पीतवासा महाभुजः—विष्वक्सेन इति ख्यातो विष्णोरंशसमुद्भवः।
Narrator (Purāṇic narrator, traditionally Sūta) describing Vaishnava divine attendants within the Kurma Purana’s syncretic frame
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
By stating that Viṣvaksena is “born from a portion of Viṣṇu,” the verse uses the aṁśa (emanation) doctrine to indicate graded manifestations of divinity—implying a single supreme source (Īśvara) from whom powers and attendants proceed, consistent with the Kurma Purana’s theistic yet integrative metaphysics.
No explicit yogic technique is taught in this verse; instead it supports dhyāna (meditative visualization) through iconographic markers—conch, discus, mace, and yellow robes—used in devotional contemplation (upāsanā) that the Kurma Purana harmonizes with broader Yoga-śāstra disciplines.
While Śiva is not named here, the verse fits the Kurma Purana’s synthesis by presenting Viṣṇu’s emanational theology (aṁśa) in a way that parallels Purāṇic descriptions of divine manifestations across sects, supporting a non-hostile, integrative Shaiva–Vaishnava framework rather than exclusivism.