INTELLIGENCE, POWER, 



8. The rise of man to his civilized state has been so 

 recent and so rapid and man has been subjected to so much 

 out-crossbreeding that in order to account for the many 

 variations in the size of the energy-controlling organs we 

 have evoked De Vries' law of mutation. 



9. Temperature, humidity, and storm profoundly influ- 

 ence the size of the energy-controlling organs. 



10. The thinking part of the brain of man has unique 

 survival value. 



These ten biological principles, we believe, account for 

 the unique and variable intelligence, power, and personality 

 of animals and man. 



The first biological principle is that the universal energy 

 pattern of animals and man is the pattern of the unicellular 

 organism. In the higher animals the brain and all other nerve 

 tissue follow the pattern of the nucleus of a primordial 

 unicellular organism and, like the nucleus of the unicellular 

 organism, exhibit a positive sign of charge: all the other 

 organs and tissues of animals follow the pattern of the 

 cytoplasm of a primordial unicellular organism and, like 

 the cytoplasm of the unicellular organism, exhibit a negative 

 sign of charge. 



The second biological principle is that the bipolar theory 

 of the operation of man and animals offers an interpretation 

 of the mechanism of metabolism. 



When we dissect an animal or a man we see three great 

 systems: first, the brain and the infinite network of volun- 

 tary and involuntary innervation extending to the most 

 distant capillaries, muscle cells, and gland cells; second, 

 the heart, the blood vessels, and the capillaries extending 

 to every microscopical unit of living tissue in the body; 

 third, a system as essential as the other two, namely, the 

 great voluntary muscular system, which constitutes the 

 greatest mass of the body and is the mechanism by which 

 adaptive energy of the body is executed. 



There are millions of units of energy transformation to 



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