Mentality

CHAPTER 15

SOUND

According to LAWSONOMY colliding parts of matter throw off various substances of lesser density, one of which is sound.

The grinding together of solid substances will squeeze therefrom simultaneously, by pressure, such substances as light, electricity, heat and sound which will be drawn to various suction points at a distance.

The menorgs found good use for sound in the operation of their machine—MAN.

They first used it as a protection for man; so that he could detect approaching dangers coming from any direction in either daylight or darkness.

The menorgs built within the head of man a suction instrument that he calls his ear for the purpose of drawing within himself sounds from without.

As a protection to this organ they located it in the middle of the hardest bone in his body—the stony bone.

They arranged a curved passage to the ear from the two projections on the outside of the head which are constructed of skin and cartilage and which deflect sound into this passage. The use of a little wax keeps the walls of the opening moist and flexible. They closed the opening by stretching across it the tympanic membrane.

As sound is drawn into the ear by suction, it first passes through the outer opening in a rapid current of waves.

These waves strike against the tympanic membrane causing the three bones within the drum to shake from which pressure mental waves are created on the other side of the drum and are passed along in currents through the mental fibers to the inner ear and brain.

A wonderful transition is performed through the reduction of volume of sound that enters the outer ear from the greater density air and changes to the lesser density mentality utilized by the inner ear so that it can be recorded by the operating menorgs within their own sphere and density.

Thus, through this medium man is enabled to distinguish the nature of moving substances within the limits of his own sphere and have it shifted to the sphere of the menorgs that are located in his brain.

It is generally understood that Sound is not grasped by the outside ear when its flow is less than 16 waves or more than 38,000 waves per second.

The utilization of sound was one of the chief sources of man’s intellectual development.

The menorgs built within the larynx, vocal cords that emit sounds when moved by internal pressure.

Their earlier animal models were only able to utter hisses, grunts and squeaks but practical experience brought physical improvements which the menorgs introduced into man’s vocal instruments that gave him a larger field of action.

By constant practice in articulation man learned to combine sounds until he created a language containing thousands of words with which he records his thoughts so that followers may be benefited through the knowledge gained from practical experience and persistent meditation.

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