Two Faces of the Silent Guru: Vyakhyana Dakshinamurti and Jnana Dakshinamurti Shiva as the Primordial Teacher In the vast and layered tradition of Saiva theology, Shiva is not merely a deity of destruction or renewal. He is Mahaguru — the Supreme Teacher who holds the cosmos within his awareness and pours wisdom into those who are ready to receive it. Among his many forms, the Dakshinamurti aspect is perhaps the most philosophically profound. Seated under the eternal banyan tree, facing south — the direction associated with death, time, and transcendence — Shiva in the Dakshinamurti form embodies the act of teaching itself. This single overarching concept, however, manifests in two distinct iconographic and philosophical forms: Vyakhyana Dakshinamurti and Jnana Dakshinamurti. While both represent Shiva as the cosmic teacher, they address different dimensions of knowledge, spiritual transmission, and liberation. Understanding the distinction between these two forms is not merely ...