Adhyāya 25 — Liṅga-māhātmya (The Chapter on the Liṅga): Hari’s Śiva-Worship and the Fiery Pillar Theophany
एतद्धि परमं ज्ञानमव्यक्तं शिवसंज्ञितम् / येन सूक्ष्ममचिन्त्यं तत् पश्यन्ति ज्ञान वक्षुषः
etaddhi paramaṃ jñānamavyaktaṃ śivasaṃjñitam / yena sūkṣmamacintyaṃ tat paśyanti jñāna vakṣuṣaḥ
இதுவே பரம ஞானம்—அவ்யக்தம், ‘சிவ’ என அழைக்கப்படுவது. இதனால் ஞானக் கண்கள் உடையோர் அந்த நுண்ணிய, சிந்திக்க இயலாத தத்துவத்தை காண்கிறார்கள்।
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in a Shaiva-Vaishnava synthesis
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme Reality as avyakta (unmanifest), sūkṣma (subtle), and acintya (beyond thought), knowable not by ordinary senses but by jñāna—direct wisdom-vision.
The verse points to jñāna-yoga: cultivating the jñāna-cakṣus (eye of knowledge) through disciplined contemplation and inner stillness, by which the subtle, unmanifest Reality is directly ‘seen’.
By calling the supreme, unmanifest Knowledge “Śiva” within a Kurma (Vishnu) discourse, it expresses the Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: the highest Reality is one, named Śiva/Vishnu according to approach, realized through knowledge.