Devadāru (Dāruvana) Forest: The Delusion of Ritual Pride, the Liṅga Crisis, and the Teaching of Jñāna–Pāśupata Yoga
न केवलेन योगेन दृश्यते पुरुषः परः / ज्ञानं तु केवलं सम्यगपवर्गफलप्रदम्
na kevalena yogena dṛśyate puruṣaḥ paraḥ / jñānaṃ tu kevalaṃ samyagapavargaphalapradam
صرف یوگ سے پرم پُرش کا دیدار نہیں ہوتا؛ بلکہ درست طور پر قائم خالص گیان ہی اپورگ (مکتی) کا پھل عطا کرتا ہے۔
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing the sages/seekers in a liberation-teaching context
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme Puruṣa as not merely an object attained through technique; realization culminates in right knowledge (jñāna) that directly yields liberation (apavarga).
The verse implicitly critiques “yoga alone” as insufficient by itself; in the Kurma Purana’s framework, yogic discipline is supportive, but liberating completion requires samyak-jñāna (correct insight) to ripen practice into moksha.
By prioritizing liberating knowledge over sectarian method, it aligns with the Kurma Purana’s synthetic theology: the Supreme (addressed by Kūrma/Vishnu) is realized through truth-knowledge consistent with Shaiva-Pashupata and Vaishnava soteriology rather than exclusive identity claims.