Jyotiṣa-śāstra Saṅgraha: Threefold Division, Gaṇita Methods, Muhūrta, and Planetary Reckoning
गतगम्यांतराभ्यस्तं विभजेत्तत्त्वलोचनैः । तदवाप्तफलं योज्यं ज्यापिंडे गतसंज्ञके ॥ ९९ ॥
gatagamyāṃtarābhyastaṃ vibhajettattvalocanaiḥ | tadavāptaphalaṃ yojyaṃ jyāpiṃḍe gatasaṃjñake || 99 ||
Avec l’œil de discernement des principes (tattva), qu’on distingue ce qui est déjà passé, ce qui reste à atteindre et ce qui, entre les deux, a été exercé; puis que le fruit ainsi obtenu soit appliqué au « jyāpiṇḍa », le “paquet de corde”, nommé « gata » (ce qui est allé).
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a technical-analytical context within Moksha Dharma)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It emphasizes tattva-viveka—discriminating the past, the yet-to-come, and the intermediate—then consciously integrating the true outcome into one’s disciplined practice, which supports steadiness on the path to moksha.
Though technical in tone, it supports bhakti indirectly by training the mind to stop clinging to what is ‘gone’ and stop chasing what is ‘yet to be reached,’ so devotion can become present, steady, and properly applied.
The verse reflects a procedural, method-based approach typical of Vedanga-style thinking—careful classification (vibhāga) and correct application (yojana) of derived results—akin to how technical disciplines treat rules and outcomes.