Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
सांख्यानां परमं सांख्यं ब्रह्मविज्ञानमुत्तमम् / संसारार्णवमग्नानां जन्तूनामेकमोचनम्
sāṃkhyānāṃ paramaṃ sāṃkhyaṃ brahmavijñānamuttamam / saṃsārārṇavamagnānāṃ jantūnāmekamocanam
سांکھْیوں میں پرم سانکھْی برہْم وِگیان ہے—سب سے اعلیٰ معرفت؛ سنسار کے سمندر میں ڈوبے ہوئے جانداروں کے لیے یہی واحد نجات ہے۔
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing King Indradyumna in the Ishvara Gita
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It identifies the highest discriminative wisdom (true Sāṃkhya) with Brahma-vijñāna—direct realization of Brahman/Atman—implying that liberation comes through insight into the one supreme Reality rather than mere analysis of categories.
The verse points to Brahma-vidyā as the liberating core; in the Ishvara Gita context this is pursued through disciplined Yoga—detachment from saṃsāra, contemplative discrimination (viveka), and God-centered practice aligned with Pāśupata-oriented spiritual discipline.
Though not naming them explicitly, it reflects the Kurma Purana’s synthetic stance: the liberating Brahma-vidyā taught by Lord Kūrma is the same supreme truth upheld across Shaiva and Vaishnava streams, emphasizing one moksha-giving Reality beyond sectarian difference.