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onious and eternal scale of creation, according to fixed immut 

 able and unvarying laws of nature which are the laws of 

 Intelectuality. But as the force of Centrality, by the stimulation 

 of the essence, acts in the atoms, the beginner of the matter, the 

 matter is acted upon; by receiving the action of the force, the 

 matter becomes vibrating, producing the motion in matter. 

 Thus, the force of Centrality is the active force, while the force 

 of motion is passive. The motion, which is the actuated force 

 in matter, by the vibrating of the matter, appears before us in 

 different and varying states and forms, bringing hereby all 

 different forms and varying objects one from the other and one 

 after the other in the order of creation in actuality under the 

 action of the Centrality according to the laws or rules of Intel 

 lectuality. The motion is dependent upon the force of Central 

 ity, so long as Centrality acts in the Universal Essence, there is 

 motion in matter. Should, however, the force of Centrality 

 cease to exist, the motion, together with the matter, would also 

 cease to be in existence. The one general force, the Centrality 

 itself, is the emanation of the Absolute Intellectuality. 



SECOND LAW. 



Every individual object in the universe, by receiving the 

 action in matter from the general force, is in an internal double 

 motion, to move around its own axis and in an eliptical way. 

 That double motion must be equal, proportionately, to the mass 

 of matter of that body, to the number of atoms from which it is 

 composed. The more matter the object is composed of, the 

 greater is the total force of its motion. This double motion is 

 the nature of objects by themselves, since every object consists of an 

 aggregate and immense number of small portions or atoms of 

 matter, holding together by one common centre to be a body by 

 itself, so that the impulse in the centre acts upon every particle of 

 the body to keep its state and position in the body, producing 

 herewith a vibration in each particle, and those vibrations of 

 all the particles are opposed to each other, that every particle is 

 vibrated in a different direction from the other in the same body; 



