Jyotiṣa-śāstra Saṅgraha: Threefold Division, Gaṇita Methods, Muhūrta, and Planetary Reckoning
त्रिज्यागुणा दिनव्यासभक्ता चापं च शत्रवः । तत्कार्मुकमुदक्रांतौ धनहीनो पृथक्क्षते ॥ १२१ ॥
trijyāguṇā dinavyāsabhaktā cāpaṃ ca śatravaḥ | tatkārmukamudakrāṃtau dhanahīno pṛthakkṣate || 121 ||
திரிஜ்யாவால் பெருக்கி நாளின் விரிவால் வகுத்த மதிப்பால் ‘சாபம்’ கணிக்கப்பட வேண்டும்; பகைவரையும் எண்ண வேண்டும். அந்த ‘கார்முகம்’ உதயமானால், செல்வமற்றவன் தனித்த தீங்குக்கு ஆளாவான்।
Narada (teaching in a technical-interpretive register within the Moksha-Dharma discourse)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It shows that the Purana’s moksha-oriented teaching also accommodates practical discernment: time-measures and omens (interpreted through jyotiṣa-like language) are used to understand how worldly conditions such as prosperity or harm arise through karma and circumstance.
Indirectly: by highlighting instability in wealth and the rise of adversities, it nudges the seeker toward non-dependence on material security and toward steadiness in dharma—conditions supportive of sustained Vishnu-bhakti even when outcomes fluctuate.
Jyotiṣa-style technical vocabulary: trijyā (a geometrical/astronomical measure), dinavyāsa (day-length), and arc/bow terms (cāpa/kārmuka) used to frame predictive or interpretive statements about conditions like enmity and loss.