One of the strongest arguments against the simplistic claim that “Rāśi Dṛṣṭi belongs only to Jaimini and is therefore somehow secondary or non-Parāśarian.”
The reality is more nuanced.
The opening chapters of Bṛhat Parāśara Horā Śāstra
themselves describe sign aspects before entering specifically Jaimini-oriented
topics like:
- Chara
Kārakas,
- Argalā,
- Pada,
- etc.
That alone indicates that the compilers/redactors of the
tradition did not see Rāśi Dṛṣṭi as alien to the broader Jyotiṣa framework.
Why This Matters
If Rāśi Dṛṣṭi were:
- merely
a late interpolation,
- or
exclusively the Jaimini doctrine,
Then its placement in foundational structural chapters of BPHS would make little sense.
Instead, its inclusion suggests:
- The
concept was already well-known,
- accepted
by astrological savants,
- and
viewed as a legitimate mode of relational influence.
The tradition appears to preserve two parallel systems:
- Graha
Dṛṣṭi (planetary aspect),
- Rāśi Dṛṣṭi
(sign aspect).
Not necessarily as competitors, but as different layers of
interpretation.
Graha Dṛṣṭi vs Rāśi Dṛṣṭi
A useful way to understand the distinction:
|
System |
Nature |
|
Graha Dṛṣṭi |
Planet-centric
influence |
|
Rāśi Dṛṣṭi |
Sign-field
relationship |
|
Partial
aspects |
Directional/intensity-based |
|
Rāśi aspects |
Structural/environmental |
Graha Dṛṣṭi asks:
“Which planet directly projects force?”
Rāśi Dṛṣṭi asks:
“Which domains/sign-fields are interacting?”
So, when planets occupy those interacting signs, they
naturally become participants in the sambandha.
Why Later Astrologers Narrowed It
Over time, many traditions became heavily Graha-Dṛṣṭi-centric
because:
- Graha
aspects are easier to quantify,
- easier
for predictive event timing,
- and
integrated into Ṣaḍbala, aspect strength, avasthās, etc.
Rāśi Dṛṣṭi remained more prominent in:
- Jaimini,
- rāśi-based
yogas,
- pāda
analysis,
- spiritual/structural
readings,
- and
certain South Indian paramparās.
But that does not invalidate it.
Important Historical Point
Classical Jyotiṣa was probably never as compartmentalised
historically as modern textbook presentations make it seem.
Modern students often hear:
- “This
is Parāśari,”
- “This
is Jaimini,”
as though the systems were sealed off.
But older savants frequently cross-used:
- rāśi dṛṣṭi,
- graha
dṛṣṭi,
- argalā,
- yogas,
- nakṣatra
logic,
- strength
systems,
all together.
The textual boundaries are cleaner than the actual
interpretive tradition.
If:
- BPHS
itself preserves Rāśi Dṛṣṭi in foundational chapters,
- and
ancient commentators continued transmitting it,
Then it is difficult to argue that Rāśi Dṛṣṭi is somehow
“inauthentic” or merely an optional curiosity.
Rather, it should be understood as:
- a
parallel aspect doctrine,
- operating
differently from Graha Dṛṣṭi,
- but
still capable of creating sambandha between signs, houses, and planetary
occupants.
Example:
- Aries
aspecting Aquarius,
- Jupiter
in Aries,
- Mars
in Aquarius,
does create a meaningful relational field between Jupiter
and Mars through Rāśi Dṛṣṭi — especially when reinforced by other factors.