32 Origin of the Chemical Elements 



The Coelenterata are divided into 165 families, or thirty-three for 

 each of the five kinds of charges. 



The Polyzoa contains 44 families. 



Jordan gives Tj as the number characterizing the classification 

 of Reptilia. 



It would appear as though the reptiles were the product of the 

 indivisible accumulation of the primordial three and four as seven 

 throughout the stages of growth representing the six Epochs. 



The order Passeres are divided by Jordan, so that there are 165 

 families in the world of birds, or thirty-three for each of the five 

 different kinds of electric charge. This is the same number that 

 characterizes the classification of the Coelenterata. 



The number of families given by Jordan of the " bony fishes " is 

 308 or, seven times 44. 



The' Duck species number 44. 



This evidence of "the continuity" of life is further explained in 

 the condition under which it was possible for this association to 

 continue. It must be remembered that all forms of living things had 

 their development in the water, and the water, as a one-walled cell, 

 was always the connecting medium, as well as the separating medium 

 between material forms. 



Wje show a picture of Nautilus Pompilius (Plate 16, figs. 4 and 5) 

 belonging to the genus Mollusca. The outlines enclosing the nervous 

 system of this form are identical with those outlining the human 

 skull, cut through the jaws. 



What does this mean? That the genus Mollusca is made up of 

 groups of primordial negative charges, which finally grouped to- 

 gether to form the brain of man. The mollusca, as a family con- 

 taining many species, were the products brought forth by the recon- 

 struction of the whole magnetic field of gaseous electricity, broken 

 down into its definite number of parts, some of which became food 

 for other of its parts. The whole field, no matter how large or 

 how small, held the initial stages as food for the growth of both 

 animal and vegetable forms, so that the food was always present 

 in the reconstruction of the products of decomposition. 



This process of Evolution explains the inexplicable presence of 

 food for the new species, and the survival of the fittest was not a 

 chance or condition of " might," but a condition where the laws of 

 balance determined the survival of the species, by a particular con- 

 dition occupying space. 



Man, or the human family, could not appear on the earth until 

 a whole magnetic field of gaseous electricity had been built up in 

 the confines of space, the breaking down of which brought forth a 

 final indivisible combination between all the different kinds of 

 motions that could be grouped together as centres of force in that 

 particular field, arising through the different degrees of temperature 

 generated by increased accumulations represented by animal and 

 vegetable forms. 



Temperature did not provide a condition for the production of 

 living forms, but the accumulation of atomic groupings brought 



