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divisible by the mental process, how is it possible that a point 

 which is divisible in actuality should be mentally indivisible? 

 If there is no physical point that is indivisible, how can there 

 be a mathematical point which is mentally indivisible ? The 

 truth, however, is, that mind in itself is without all limitation. 

 If we mentally imagine a mathematical line, that line is endless, 

 although in actuality there is no such a line in existence, for all 

 actual figures are limited. So also can we think of a mathema 

 tical line which can be endlessly divided, although there is no 

 such divisible small particles in actual existence. The quiddity 

 of mind itself is limitless but the unlimited mind forms judgments 

 about the limits of things of actual existence that they are limited. 

 The mind judges about a triangle which exist in practice that it 

 is limited by three sides, although the abstract mathematical 

 triangle is not a thing that is limited by three sides, but merely &quot; 

 the laws, the limitation conceived about the physical triangle. 

 The mind thinks, in the same wise, about the radii of a circle, the 

 straight lines limited between the centre and the periphery, 

 although the mental line has no limit and no end. The cogit 

 ation of the mind, the act of thinking itself is not limited in time 

 or in space; it has no points, no lines, no areas, no extension, 

 no definite time and no measurable space. The act of thinking^ or 

 cogitation itself consists only of the laws of the images of things that exist 

 in manifestation or actuality. The laws of the triangle, the square, 

 the circle and of all the images of limited things of actual exist 

 ence are absolutely unlimited laws in the mind, in absolute 

 intellectuality itself which is the one general image of all the 

 things that exist as a whole. The cogitation of the intellect 

 forms the judgments about the images of all limited beings in 

 actuality that their limitations be manifested according to the 

 limitless laws of intellectuality. The unlimited laws of the 

 mind, as the mind is unlimited, become limitations in the things 

 that exist in actuality, because these things are limited. The 

 unlimited mind judges about the mathematical point that it 

 should be mentally indivisible, because that point is nothing but 

 the laws of the point which exists in limited actuality. The law 

 of that point is that it be mentally indivisible in order to form 



