Mentality

CHAPTER 11

MATERIALS

Plans are made with the mind but machines are made with materials.

The quality of a machine is manifested by the excellence of the materials that are put into it.

The variety of materials put into machines creates their complexity and usefulness.

So, the extensiveness of selection of materials to be used in the construction of a machine adds usefulness to the designer’s product.

In the year of 1909, I planned an airliner that would carry a large number of passengers through the air in a comfortable cabin in which they could stand up straight and walk about with the same freedom as in railroad coaches.

But ten years elapsed before the aircraft industry developed to a stage whereby the proper materials could be furnished for the airliner. So it was not until 1919 that my plans could be made into a machine.

In 1909 there were no engines that could power an airliner. There were no wheels or tires that could hold up such a machine. There were no aircraft instruments of any kind at that time. There were no such words as airliner or aircraft in any dictionary.

All those things and many others had to be developed before the first airliner could be put into service as a practical machine.

Once the principle was introduced and a machine was built that proved itself practical it was then merely a matter of repetition to put many airliners into useful service in all parts of the world.

Nature believes in repetition and once a machine is introduced and made useful then quantity production follows.

Nature wastes nothing; it makes use of everything.

The utilization of everything without the loss of anything creates variety in materials and machines.

So the difference in animals is caused by the difference in the planning of the menorgs and their finished product is the result of the materials with which they have to work.

The menorgs are great laboratorians. They understand the composition of such densities as water, air, heat, cold, light, sound, electricity, mentality and various gases from whence they extract their materials with which to build their machines.

They build their machines as the necessity for them arises.

Some animals are designed and built to live upon one kind of food and others are designed and built to live upon another kind of food in order to utilize everything without the loss of anything.

Thus, they make a horse or an elephant to live upon live, fresh, plant food and they make a crocodile or a vulture to live upon dead, rotten, animal food.

The menorgs turn death and decomposition into life and composition through the construction of different machines capable of utilizing every element cast out of decaying carcasses of either plants or animals or from the odors or gases emanating from stagnant water, air or other densities

So, notwithstanding that it was by the superior planning of some inventive menorg that man was originated, it was also because there were at hand the right materials with which he could be successfully constructed and operated that man was actually brought to life.

Of course the better and better planning and building of each succeeding animal by the menorgs led up to the origin of man; each designing genius endeavored to outdo all predecessors through successive improvements.

The best qualities of insects, birds, fish and quadrupeds were emulated while their bad features were eliminated.

The innate desire among menorgs to improve living creatures according to Natural Laws predominated until finally man was planned by one of their best thinkers. Then he was constructed and operated by innumerable mechanics and subsequently the original design was improved continuously and multiplied in numbers until now the entire earth is overrun by this two legged strutter.

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