Kapālamocana: The Cutting of Brahmā’s Fifth Head, Śiva’s Kāpālika Vow, and Purification in Vārāṇasī
एवं विवदतोर्मोहात् परस्परजयैषिणोः / आजग्मुर्यत्र तौ देवौ वेदाश्चत्वार एव हि
evaṃ vivadatormohāt parasparajayaiṣiṇoḥ / ājagmuryatra tau devau vedāścatvāra eva hi
ดังนั้น เมื่อเทพทั้งสองหลงมัวเมา โต้เถียงกันด้วยความใคร่จะชนะกันและกัน พระเวททั้งสี่ก็ได้มาถึงยังสถานที่ที่ทั้งสองประทับอยู่
Purana-narrator (Suta/Vyasa tradition) describing events
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly: it shows that delusion (moha) fuels conflict even among exalted beings, while Vedic wisdom represents the higher discerning knowledge that dispels ignorance—an essential condition for realizing the Self beyond rivalry and ego.
No specific technique is named, but the verse implies the Yogic principle of overcoming moha and victory-seeking (ahaṃkāra-driven impulse). In Kurma Purana’s broader teaching, such purification supports disciplined practice—restraint, clarity, and scriptural alignment—central to Pashupata-oriented spiritual training.
By portraying “two deities” caught in delusion and then bringing in the Vedas as the harmonizing authority, the text leans toward reconciliation through higher dharma—consistent with the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis where sectarian rivalry is subordinated to Vedic truth.