HEAT AND COLD. 



active form, tends to lessen the trials of man in keeping 

 the earth inhabitable to his kind. And also lessening 

 his graft in bodily labors. Thereby forcing man in 

 every conceivable way to use his best energies to the 

 carrying out of the good work of conservation. 

 Thereby showing how man was in the beginning 

 formed for a cause and acted and will act along the 

 lines of the particular cause, as long as he can possibly 

 maintain conditions adaptable to his existence. Where 

 he does the greatest work toward the cause, he reaps 

 the greatest benefit for himself and his kind. 



All other forms of life are aiding toward plane- 

 tary conservation by means of their digestive organs, 

 which transform latent heat into active heat. But 

 man is the greatest slave of the world, because he not 

 only uses his digestive organs in transforming, but also 

 the muscles of his body and every nerve cell of his 

 brain. Man has also to act as the scavenger for all 

 animal life, because he has to hunt up means of pro- 

 curing food for all animal life; also care for their hy- 

 gienic conditions as a further means of his own perpetu- 

 ation. He is the servant of all animal life. He is the 

 slave of all animal life. And, in final conclusion, we 

 must admit that man is the one and only slave that actu- 

 ally exists. The slave of all orders of life as a further 

 means of his own sustenance, to finally conserve the one 

 great cause planetary continuation of life. 



To be more explicit in the judgment of man, in 

 the face of his own reasonings, accepted worldly. His 

 order of reasoning, as to the world and every conceiv- 



112 



