Adhyaya 8: Yogasthanas, Ashtanga Yoga, Pranayama-Siddhi, and Shiva-Dhyana leading to Samadhi
विस्वरो विस्वरीभावो द्वंद्वानां मुनिसत्तमाः अग्रजः सर्वतत्त्वानां महान्यः परिमाणतः
visvaro visvarībhāvo dvaṃdvānāṃ munisattamāḥ agrajaḥ sarvatattvānāṃ mahānyaḥ parimāṇataḥ
O pinakadakilang mga muni, Siya ang Panginoon ng sansinukob at Siya rin ang mismong pagkapanganak ng sansinukob; lampas sa lahat ng magkapares na salungatan, Siya ang Unang-silang bago ang lahat ng tattva. Bagaman di masukat, Siya ang Mahān, ang Dakila, na sukat na pinagmumulan ng lahat ng sukat.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames the Linga as the sign of Pati—Shiva who both pervades and manifests the universe—so worship is not merely symbolic but a direct approach to the source of all tattvas.
Shiva is presented as prior to all tattvas (agrajaḥ), beyond dualities (dvandva-atīta), yet also the cosmic becoming (viśvarībhāvaḥ)—the transcendent-immanent Lord.
The key yogic takeaway is dvandva-jaya (mastery over opposites) central to Pashupata-oriented discipline: steadiness of awareness in Shiva as Pati, rather than fluctuation between pleasure–pain, gain–loss, honor–dishonor.