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Shloka 37

Adhyaya 70: आदिसर्गः—महत्-अहङ्कार-तन्मात्रा-भूतसृष्टिः, ब्रह्माण्डावरणम्, प्रजासर्गः, त्रिमूर्ति-शैवाधिष्ठानम्

अविशेषवाचकत्वाद् अविशेषास् ततस् तु ते प्रशान्तघोरमूढत्वाद् अविशेषास्ततः पुनः

aviśeṣavācakatvād aviśeṣās tatas tu te praśāntaghoramūḍhatvād aviśeṣāstataḥ punaḥ

अविशेषवाचकत्वाद् एतेऽविशेषा इति कथ्यन्ते। प्रशान्त-घोर-मूढत्वलक्षणत्रययोगाच्च पुनरप्यविशेषा उच्यन्ते॥

aviśeṣa-vācakatvātbecause of being denoted in non-specific (non-differentiating) language
aviśeṣa-vācakatvāt:
aviśeṣāḥundifferentiated, without distinct marks
aviśeṣāḥ:
tataḥ tutherefore indeed
tataḥ tu:
tethey
te:
praśāntacalm, quiescent
praśānta:
ghoraterrible, fierce
ghora:
mūḍhatvātbecause of the condition of delusion/obscuration
mūḍhatvāt:
tataḥ punaḥtherefore again
tataḥ punaḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames the devotee’s inner work in Linga-puja as moving beyond undifferentiated mental states (aviśeṣa) shaped by calm, fierceness, or delusion, toward clear discernment where Pashu recognizes Pati (Shiva) as distinct from Pasha (bondage).

By contrast: the verse points out that what is ‘aviśeṣa’ lacks true distinguishing insight, implying Shiva-tattva as the supreme Pati is not confined to the fluctuating triad of praśānta–ghora–mūḍha that marks conditioned experience.

A takeaway aligned with Pāśupata Yoga is viveka (discriminative insight): observing the mind’s calm/fierce/deluded modes as undifferentiated conditioning and re-centering awareness on Shiva as the liberating Pati through japa, dhyāna, and Linga-upāsanā.