Sṛṣṭi-varṇana, Bhārata-khaṇḍa-mahātmya, and Jagad-bhūgola
Creation, Glory of Bhārata, and World Geography
एते द्वीपाः समुद्राश्च पूर्वस्मादुत्तशेत्तराः । ज्ञेया द्विगुणविस्तरा लोकालोकाञ्च पर्वतात् ॥ ४५ ॥
ete dvīpāḥ samudrāśca pūrvasmāduttaśettarāḥ | jñeyā dviguṇavistarā lokālokāñca parvatāt || 45 ||
此诸洲与诸海,后者皆次第大于前者;当知其广度层层倍增,延展直至洛迦阿洛迦山(Lokāloka)。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the ordered, measurable structure of creation, reminding the listener that the cosmos operates under divine law and proportion, culminating at Lokāloka—the symbolic boundary between the known (illumined) world and the unknown (darkness).
Indirectly, it supports Bhakti by framing the universe as an intelligible, divinely arranged system; such contemplation (smaraṇa) of the Lord’s cosmic order nurtures reverence and steadiness of mind, which are favorable to devotion.
This verse aligns most with Purāṇic cosmography used alongside Jyotiṣa-style (astronomical/astrological) imagination of space and boundaries, emphasizing proportion (dviguṇa-vistāra) and systematic description rather than ritual procedure.