Mentality

CHAPTER 6

NATURE

Nature is the effect of microscopic action.

By microscopic action Nature enlarges the scope of living things.

Micro-organisms utilize Suction and Pressure with Penetrability to build up living things of greater proportions.

They build their models in seed of one scope and density and then draw within by suction, materials from without and by expansive assimilation they create living things of greater scope and density.

On the surface of the Earth the planning and building program of these micro-organisms was very simple at the start, but with much practical experience and a larger assortment of materials to work with they gradually gained efficiency in creating more complex forms of life.

The Earth was at one time but a swirling mass of densities trying to reach a central suction point.

But, little by little this swirling mass was drawn closer together towards the center until it rounded itself into circular form and then developed a crust of solid matter as a protection against external influences.

In order to prevent internal heat and gases from exploding it, pores were developed in the crust of the Earth through which waste matter could be conveniently eliminated.

From waste matter oozing through the pores of its crust as heat and gases and then mixing with the elements of air and water which surround the Earth, plus the elements from the Sun, Menorgs create living things of greater scope than themselves.

Vegetation was the first organic life to be introduced by Menorgs upon the face of the Earth and their initial design resulted in the production of a single blade of grass.

But they improved their designs through long periods of progressive efforts from which they acquired superlative qualities in planning and designing plants of various forms, colors and usefulness.

They gradually increased the scope of their productions from grass to vines, to bushes, to trees, from which they germinated vegetables, grains, berries, nuts, fruits and flowers of various kinds.

There is a big tree in California which horticulturists claim is over five thousand years of age. That is a more complex plant and required greater planning than that of the first blade of grass. Nature, however, does not begin with perfection but aims to finish with it.

But, notwithstanding that great progress has been made in the various designs of plant life, the fundamental principle has remained the same throughout the ages and each plant still stands hitched to the soil from which it draws its nourishment through roots sunk deep into the ground.

Assuming that the Earth has revolved around the Sun at least one billion times since the Menorgs made their first blade of grass, which means one billion years as man reckons time; then realizing that each year is divided into 365 1/4 days, which are again divided into 24 hours to each day, which are again divided into 60 minutes to each hour, which are again divided into 60 seconds to each minute; then allowing 1,000 years to elapse for each second in order to gauge Time according to the difference in scope, sphere and density of Menorgism, one can, by a superhuman stretch of inter-organic vision, get some sort of a faint conception of the prodigious work that had to be done in the meantime by the numberless living creatures, so small, according to man’s scope, that they cannot even be seen through the most searching of his microscopic glasses.

But, what a momentous act that creative genius accomplished who designed and supervised the construction of the first blade of grass.

That was the forerunner of all progressive developments in vegetation.

What an enormous debt of gratitude the human race owes that original microscopic thinker who started man’s source of nourishment here on Earth.

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