Mentality

CHAPTER 16

WATER

Chemists have a formula for the compound called water known as H20, meaning that in the water molecule, two atoms of hydrogen are bound up with one atom of oxygen.

This combination of elements gives to water a greater density than that of air, heat, light, electricity or sound, because of its closer mass formation.

On the other hand water is of lesser density than stone or iron because it is not so closely massed as they are.

In building and operating man the menorgs use water to a large extent. They use water power to run the machinery of man. They use internal suction and pressure to force the water upward against the pull of the Earth’s suction downward.

In the center of his body they put a suction and pressure pump, known as the heart, which is connected with two sets of tubes through which is forced watery currents of plasma to all parts of the body carrying with it red and white blood corpuscles.

These tubes taper in size as they spread out further away from the heart.

One set of tubes—arteries—enclose the blood streams that move the food and oxygen to the cells of the entire system.

The other set of tubes—veins—enclose the currents of blood that carry waste matter from the cells which is thrown out of the system by the operation of the lungs.

These tubes are divided again and again into smaller branches as they spread throughout the body and finally become so small that they cannot be seen by man without the use of a microscope. By this method of stepping downward in size the density of the water is gradually reduced to gaseous formation to adjust itself to the sphere and scope of the menorgs.

The smallest of these tubes are known as capillaries from which the cells draw their oxygen and nourishment from the red blood corpuscles.

After these blood corpuscles have discharged their cargoes of life giving materials to the different cells and are reloaded with waste matter they are then drawn back to the heart again through the veins which act as the sewer pipes of the system. (Except one vein running from the lungs to the heart.)

The menorgs have built in each cell of man a minute suction and pressure pump which acts for the cell as the heart acts for the entire body.

The menorgs have balanced the entire system so well that the combined pull and push of all the cells of the whole body equals the pull and push of the heart’s power plant.

Before I explained PENETRABILITY in MANLIFE in 1923 no one seemed to know the cause of capillary action. The two foregoing paragraphs should clear up that problem for you.

When one studies the contents of my books MANLIFE and CREATION and learns the principles of PENETRABILITY as I have so plainly outlined them, all minor problems theoretically concocted in connection with Physics will fade away like ghosts in haunted houses.

Advance to Chapter 17.
Return to Contents.
Return to Home Page.


Please mail to: WebMaster@Lawsonomy.org should you have questions or concerns about this site.