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Shloka 24

Adhyaya 75: Nishkala–Sakala Shiva, Twofold Linga, and the Supremacy of Dhyana-Yajna

व्योमैकमपि दृष्टं हि शरावं प्रति सुव्रताः पृथक्त्वं चापृथक्त्वं च शङ्करस्येति चापरे

vyomaikamapi dṛṣṭaṃ hi śarāvaṃ prati suvratāḥ pṛthaktvaṃ cāpṛthaktvaṃ ca śaṅkarasyeti cāpare

โอ้ผู้มีวัตรอันประเสริฐ ดังท้องฟ้าอันเดียวเมื่ออาศัยชามจึงดูราวกับแบ่งส่วน ฉันใด บางท่านก็กล่าวถึงศังกระว่าเป็นทั้งต่างและไม่ต่าง ฉันนั้น

vyomasky/space
vyoma:
ekam apieven though one
ekam api:
dṛṣṭam hiis indeed seen/perceived
dṛṣṭam hi:
śarāvam pratiwith reference to a bowl (container)
śarāvam prati:
suvratāḥO virtuous/steadfast ones
suvratāḥ:
pṛthaktvamseparateness/distinction
pṛthaktvam:
caand
ca:
apṛthaktvamnon-separateness/non-difference
apṛthaktvam:
caand
ca:
śaṅkarasyaof Śaṅkara (Shiva)
śaṅkarasya:
itithus
iti:
caand
ca:
apareothers (some teachers/thinkers)
apare:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga worship as contemplation of the One Pati (Śiva) who appears as many forms without truly being divided—like space seeming partitioned by a vessel—so the Linga becomes a focus for realizing unity within apparent multiplicity.

Śiva is presented as simultaneously bheda (experienced as distinct in names, forms, and functions) and abheda (non-different, indivisible Reality). The distinction is experiential and contextual, not an ultimate fragmentation of Śiva.

A contemplative practice aligned with Pāśupata-oriented insight: during pūjā and japa, one trains the mind to see that apparent divisions (self/world/deity) are like ‘space in a pot’—useful for practice, but not ultimate in truth.