मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
अचेतनां सर्वगतां सूक्ष्मां प्रसवधर्मिणीम् प्रकृतिं सर्वभूतानां युक्ताः पश्यन्ति योगिनः
acetanāṃ sarvagatāṃ sūkṣmāṃ prasavadharmiṇīm prakṛtiṃ sarvabhūtānāṃ yuktāḥ paśyanti yoginaḥ
เหล่าโยคีผู้ตั้งมั่นในโยคะย่อมประจักษ์ “ปรกฤติ” อันไร้สำนึก แผ่ซ่านทั่ว สุดละเอียด และมีธรรมชาติให้กำเนิดการปรากฏ—ว่าเป็นฐานเหตุที่ทำงานอยู่ในสรรพสัตว์ทั้งปวง
Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching contextually within the Purva-Bhaga discourse)
It frames the manifest world as Prakṛti—subtle, productive, and insentient—thereby implying that worship of Shiva as Pati (the conscious Lord) transcends the created field and its powers, directing devotion beyond mere nature to the Supreme.
By highlighting Prakṛti as acetanā (insentient), the verse implicitly distinguishes Shiva-tattva as the conscious Pati who is not Prakṛti; He is the sovereign knower and liberator of the Pashu from the Pasha constituted through nature and its evolutes.
It emphasizes yogic integration (yukta) and direct inner perception (paśyanti) of subtle tattvas—an insight aligned with Pashupata-oriented discipline where discernment of Prakṛti and its binding function supports detachment and Shiva-oriented realization.