Kāraṇānvēṣaṇam: The 32 Marks of Hari, Defects (Doṣas), Death-Omens, and Hari’s Omnipresence in Social & Household Life
अतो हरः क्रोधरूपी सदैव तयोरभावात्सत्यमुक्तं तथैतत् / अतो द्वयं नास्ति रुद्रे खगेन्द्र शिश्रोदरे किञ्चिदाधिक्यमस्ति
ato haraḥ krodharūpī sadaiva tayorabhāvātsatyamuktaṃ tathaitat / ato dvayaṃ nāsti rudre khagendra śiśrodare kiñcidādhikyamasti
因此,哈罗(鲁陀罗)恒具忿怒之性;而因那两种(德相)在他身上缺失,所言确为真实。是故,鸟中王者啊,鲁陀罗中无有二相;唯于林伽与腹部之事上,传说略有些许偏盛与显著。
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda)
Concept: Differentiation of deities by intrinsic disposition (svabhava) and marks; Rudra characterized by krodha and specific bodily emphases.
Vedantic Theme: Guna-based typology within saguna theology; comparative theologies operate at the level of attributes, not ultimate non-duality.
Application: Recognize how temperament and symbolism shape religious archetypes; apply discernment when interpreting fierce imagery—read it as symbolic of transformative power and restraint.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.22.21-22 (lakshana criteria and contemplation)
This verse frames Rudra (Hara) as a divine principle embodying wrath/transformative force, emphasizing a specific theological function rather than ordinary anger—destruction that clears impediments and dissolves impurity.
It explicitly states that 'dvaya' (twofoldness/duality) is not present in Rudra, implying an undivided nature; any mention of bodily 'excess' is treated as a descriptive or symbolic feature, not a metaphysical division.
Read the verse as a reminder to transform anger into disciplined, purifying energy—using it to remove harmful habits and uphold dharma, rather than letting it become destructive in personal conduct.