Īśvara-gītā: Brahman as All-Pervading—Kāla, Prakṛti–Puruṣa, Tattva-Evolution, and Mokṣa
पुरुषः प्रकृतिस्थो हि भुङ्क्तेयः प्राकृतान् गुणान् / अहङ्कारविमुक्तत्वात् प्रोच्यते पञ्चविंशकः
puruṣaḥ prakṛtistho hi bhuṅkteyaḥ prākṛtān guṇān / ahaṅkāravimuktatvāt procyate pañcaviṃśakaḥ
ปุรุษะแม้อยู่ในปรากฤติ ก็เสวยคุณทั้งหลายอันเกิดจากปรากฤติ แต่เพราะพ้นจากอหังการ จึงถูกกล่าวว่าเป็นตัตตวะที่ยี่สิบห้า.
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita stream (Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It defines the Self as Puruṣa: consciousness that may appear to ‘experience’ Prakṛti’s guṇas through association, yet in truth remains free from egoity (ahaṅkāra) and thus stands apart as the twenty-fifth tattva.
The implied practice is ahaṅkāra-kṣaya (dissolution of ego-sense): discerning Puruṣa from guṇa-driven experience, cultivating witness-consciousness, and detaching from identification with sattva-rajas-tamas—key to the Kurma Purana’s Yoga-oriented liberation teaching.
By presenting a shared Sankhya-Yoga framework (Puruṣa beyond ahaṅkāra and guṇas) within the Ishvara Gita milieu, it supports the Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: the liberating knowledge taught is one, whether framed through Shaiva (Pāśupata) or Vaishnava (Kūrma/Vishnu) voice.