Genealogies from Dakṣa’s Daughters: Ṛṣi Lines, Agni-Forms, Pitṛ Classes, and the Transition to Manu’s Progeny
यश्चासौ तपते सूर्यः शुचिरग्निस्त्वसौ स्मृतः / तेषां तु संततावन्ये चत्वारिंश्च पञ्च च
yaścāsau tapate sūryaḥ śuciragnistvasau smṛtaḥ / teṣāṃ tu saṃtatāvanye catvāriṃśca pañca ca
ผู้ที่ส่องสว่างและแผดเผาเป็นดวงอาทิตย์นั้น ที่นี่ถูกระลึกว่าเป็น ‘ศุจิ-อัคนี’ และในสายสืบของท่านทั้งหลายยังมีอื่น ๆ อีก—รวมสี่สิบห้า
Sūta (narrator) recounting Purāṇic genealogy to the sages
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly, by identifying Sun and Fire as one radiant principle, the verse supports a Purāṇic tendency toward unity behind diverse forms—an outer cosmological echo of the inner non-difference taught in later spiritual sections.
No explicit yogic practice is taught in this verse; its function is cosmological-genealogical. In Kurma Purana’s broader arc, such cosmic correspondences become supports for contemplation (dhyāna) on divine radiance and order (ṛta).
It does not name Śiva or Viṣṇu directly; however, by presenting a unifying identification (Sun = pure Fire), it aligns with the Kurma Purana’s wider synthesis that reconciles divine names and functions within one sacred reality.