Multi-form Manifestations, Indra–Kāma Incarnations, Pravāha, and the Twofold Buddhi
Sense-Discipline and Exclusive Refuge in Viṣṇu
कामावतारो विज्ञेयः संदेहो नात्र विद्यते / यो रुद्रपुत्रः स्कन्दस्तु काम एव प्रकीर्तितः
kāmāvatāro vijñeyaḥ saṃdeho nātra vidyate / yo rudraputraḥ skandastu kāma eva prakīrtitaḥ
当知此乃迦摩之化身,于此毫无疑惑。那位鲁陀罗之子斯坎达,确被宣说为迦摩自身。
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Avatāra/āveśa-style identification: a deity-principle (Kāma) can be proclaimed present in another divine person (Skanda).
Vedantic Theme: One power appearing as many agencies; functional unity behind distinct divine names.
Application: Read Purāṇic identities as layered: mythic persona + underlying principle (desire/impulse as cosmic force) operating through a warrior-deity.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.28.31 (Kāma as Sudarśana); Garuda Purana 3.28.33 (Skanda etymology; Sanatkumāra as Kāma-avatāra)
This verse asserts a specific Puranic theological identity: Skanda (Rudra’s son) is declared to be Kāma, emphasizing unity or re-manifestation of divine functions such as desire/impulse in a different deity-form.
Within the Garuda Purana’s instructional narration (Vishnu teaching Garuda), it provides doctrinal clarification—removing ‘saṃdeha’—about divine identities and incarnational understanding used to frame later teachings on dharma and cosmology.
It encourages seeing divine forces as interconnected and recognizing how desire (kāma) should be understood, disciplined, and oriented toward dharma rather than denied or misunderstood.