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Shloka 70

Adhyaya 8: Yogasthanas, Ashtanga Yoga, Pranayama-Siddhi, and Shiva-Dhyana leading to Samadhi

विस्वरो विस्वरीभावो द्वंद्वानां मुनिसत्तमाः अग्रजः सर्वतत्त्वानां महान्यः परिमाणतः

visvaro visvarībhāvo dvaṃdvānāṃ munisattamāḥ agrajaḥ sarvatattvānāṃ mahānyaḥ parimāṇataḥ

முனிசிறந்தோர்களே! அவரே விச்வேச்வரன், அவரே விச்வமாகும் நிலையுமாம்; எல்லா இரட்டைகளையும் (த்வந்த்வம்) கடந்தவர். எல்லா தத்துவங்களுக்கும் முன்னோன்; அளவிட முடியாதவராயினும், எல்லா அளவுகளுக்கும் அடிநிலையான அளவாகப் போற்றப்படும் மகான் அவரே।

viśvaraḥLord of the universe
viśvaraḥ:
viśvarī-bhāvaḥthe state of becoming the universe / cosmic manifestation
viśvarī-bhāvaḥ:
dvandvānāmof the dualities (pairs of opposites)
dvandvānām:
munisattamāḥO best among sages
munisattamāḥ:
agrajaḥthe first-born / prior to all
agrajaḥ:
sarva-tattvānāmof all principles (tattvas)
sarva-tattvānām:
mahānthe Great One (Mahān, cosmic principle / epithet of Shiva)
mahān:
yaḥwho
yaḥ:
parimāṇataḥwith respect to measure / as the ground of all measurement
parimāṇataḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames the Linga as the sign of Pati—Shiva who both pervades and manifests the universe—so worship is not merely symbolic but a direct approach to the source of all tattvas.

Shiva is presented as prior to all tattvas (agrajaḥ), beyond dualities (dvandva-atīta), yet also the cosmic becoming (viśvarībhāvaḥ)—the transcendent-immanent Lord.

The key yogic takeaway is dvandva-jaya (mastery over opposites) central to Pashupata-oriented discipline: steadiness of awareness in Shiva as Pati, rather than fluctuation between pleasure–pain, gain–loss, honor–dishonor.