Module 3 of 7 · Pārāśara-rājamārga

षड्बल-गणित-अध्यायः

Ṣaḍbala-gaṇita-adhyāya

BPHS Ch. 17–27 — The Six-fold Strength (Ṣaḍ-Bala)

~100 min · 2 prerequisite(s)

Pārāśara's six-strength framework — sthāna, dik, kāla, ceṣṭā, naisargika, dṛk — each measuring a different facet of a graha's interpretive weight.

Viṣaya-sūcī · Topics
  • Ṣaḍ-bala = six strengths summed
  • Sthāna-bala — uccha, mūla-trikoṇa, sva-rāśi, mitra-rāśi, sama, śatru, nīca rankings
  • Dig-bala — Sūrya/Maṅgala strong in 10th; Candra/Śukra in 4th; Bṛhaspati/Budha in 1st; Śani in 7th
  • Kāla-bala — day/night, paksha, year, month strengths
  • Naisargika-bala — fixed values by graha (Sūrya highest, Śani lowest)
  • Dṛk-bala — strength from being aspected by other grahas
  • Ceṣṭā-bala — strength from motion (retrograde adds strength)

1. Saṃkṣepa

साराशं · विषय-विस्तारःSāra-aṃśa · Viṣaya-vistāraSummary — the topic unfolded

Ṣaḍ-bala is Pārāśara's quantitative model of graha-strength. Pre-classical and Tājika traditions tended to use single-criterion strength measures (just exaltation, or just dignity); BPHS introduced a six-component sum that's more interpretively robust. The six components are: sthāna-bala (positional strength based on rāśi placement and varga dignity); dig-bala (strength from the 'right' house for each graha); kāla-bala (temporal — day/night, paksha, etc.); naisargika-bala (inherent strength, fixed per graha); dṛk-bala (strength gained from being aspected); ceṣṭā-bala (strength from motion, primarily relevant to non-luminaries).

Each component is itself sub-divided. Sthāna-bala alone has five sub-components (uccha, mūla-trikoṇa, sapta-vargaja, kendrādi, drekkana). The computational details fill ten BPHS chapters (Ch. 17–27 inclusive, with Ch. 70 covering the synthesis). The /graha-bala engine surface computes the full ṣaḍ-bala for any chart.

Why ṣaḍ-bala matters interpretively: it converts the qualitative 'this graha is well-placed' / 'this graha is afflicted' into a numerical comparison. When Jupiter has 9.5 rūpas of total bala and Saturn has 5.2, the kāraka-of-jñāna (Jupiter) is clearly the dominant interpretive voice for that chart. The numbers are not predictions; they're prioritization signals.

2. Śāstra-Pramāṇa

शास्त्र-प्रमाण · ग्रन्थ-निर्देशाःŚāstra-pramāṇa · Grantha-nirdeśāḥClassical anchors — textual references
BPHSCh. 17

Bala-kathana — the introductory chapter on ṣaḍ-bala.

BPHSCh. 18

Sthāna-bala — positional strength (uccha, mūla-trikoṇa, own-sign).

BPHSCh. 19

Dig-bala — directional strength.

BPHSCh. 20

Kāla-bala — temporal strength.

BPHSCh. 21

Naisargika-bala — natural-luminosity strength.

BPHSCh. 22

Dṛk-bala — aspectual strength.

BPHSCh. 27

Upagraha-adhyāya — sub-planets that affect bala computations.

All anchor references map to chapter structures in our annotated library at /library. We point to topics — the Jyotiṣī interprets, the substrate computes; we do not predict from these texts on your behalf.

3. Abhyāsa

अभ्यासः · प्रयोग-मार्गःAbhyāsa · Prayoga-mārgaPraxis — the path of application

Engine surfaces (substrate compute)

Exercises

  1. Computation

    Open /graha-bala for any chart. Note the six sub-components for each graha. Which graha has the highest total bala? Which has the lowest? Now open /chart and observe — does the strongest graha's bhāva-placement correspond to a prominent life-area?

  2. Computation

    Open /bhava-bala. Bhāva-bala extends the ṣaḍ-bala framework to houses. The 1st-house bala summarizes lagna-strength; the 10th-house bala summarizes career-stability. Look at the strongest and weakest bhāva for any chart.

4. Agrima

अग्रिमम् · पथः निरन्तरःAgrima · Pathaḥ nirantaraNext — the continuing path
ॐ सरस्वत्यै नमः · ॐ हयग्रीवाय नमः
KAAL Truth #5 · structured study · sources cited · the Jyotiṣī interprets