Daksha’s Sacrifice and the Origin of Kapalin Rudra (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)
द्वादशेव स चादित्याञ् शक्रादींश् च सुरोत्तमान् सकश्यपान् समामन्त्र्य सदस्यान् समचीकरत्
dvādaśeva sa cādityāñ śakrādīṃś ca surottamān sakaśyapān samāmantrya sadasyān samacīkarat
他邀请十二阿底提耶(Āditya),并召请释迦罗(Śakra,即因陀罗)等诸位上妙天神;又与诸迦叶波(Kaśyapa)一道,依礼召集之后,任命他们为祭会之成员(sadasya)。
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A yajña is portrayed as a collective, rule-governed undertaking requiring qualified participants. Authority (Dakṣa) functions through consultation and proper appointment, reflecting dharmic governance rather than arbitrary power.
Vamśānucarita (narrative of progenitors and gods) and ancillary dharma/ācāra material: the Purāṇa uses genealogical-divine groupings (Ādityas, Indra) to anchor ritual culture in cosmic society.
Inviting the Ādityas (order, law, solar regularity) and Indra (sovereignty) symbolizes aligning the sacrifice with cosmic governance. The ‘sadasya’ structure mirrors the ideal polity: many powers coordinated under dharma.