Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
महाविमानमध्यस्था महानिद्रात्महेतुका / सर्वसाधारणी सूक्ष्मा ह्यविद्या पारमार्थिका
mahāvimānamadhyasthā mahānidrātmahetukā / sarvasādhāraṇī sūkṣmā hyavidyā pāramārthikā
无明(Avidyā)安住于显现秩序这“大乘具”之中,其根植于自性,正是引发“大眠”(mahānidrā)的因。它为一切众生所共,极其微细;在究竟的探问中,当知其为必须超越的根本原则。
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing King Indradyumna within the Ishvara Gita framework
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It implies that bondage is not due to the Atman itself but to avidyā—an extremely subtle, universal misapprehension that overlays the Self-sense and produces the ‘great sleep’ of spiritual unawareness; liberation comes by discerning and transcending this avidyā.
The verse points to viveka (discriminative insight) as the yogic remedy: by subtle inward inquiry and steady contemplation, one detects avidyā’s presence in the mind and dissolves it—aligning with Ishvara Gita-style discipline that culminates in knowledge (jñāna) supported by yogic steadiness.
In the Ishvara Gita’s synthesis, the teaching voice of Kurma (Vishnu) conveys a Shaiva-Yogic analysis of bondage (avidyā and mahānidrā) and its cessation, reflecting a shared non-dual soteriology rather than sectarian opposition.