HEAT AND COLD. 



brain on the part of tentacles of vision, we derive ap- 

 pearance of any and all things in nature. Lest ap- 

 pearance may foil us in deriving the truth of the parti- 

 cle in question as to appearance, we can resort to sound 

 to further test the truth of the tentacles of vision. If 

 we still remain in doubt as to its true place in nature, we 

 can transfer inward by tentacles of taste. If the result 

 fails to place the property as to law we can resort to 

 smell, whose tentacles transfer inward. We can also 

 test by touch. In each of these cases where we weigh 

 particles of matter, the tentacles convey inward parti- 

 cles derived by the chemical action of the many forms 

 of nerves. Each nerve having a tendency to take cer- 

 tain properties from the particle which has come into 

 contact with same, the nerve conveying same inward 

 to the brain. The brain forming five different com- 

 pounds out of properties derived from the five senses; 

 then balancing same and getting law as the result. The 

 result being mind. Thereby we derive as a result of 

 any and all tests in the action of determining matter, 

 law, mind. Or law and mind proves out to be one and 

 the same. 



Consequently we must acknowledge that the mind 

 that gets at nature's laws is as perpetual as nature's law 

 in itself. It is within the reach of all, as we all have the 

 means of weighing in five different ways. Matter is 

 before us all, and we have the means to derive law from 

 same. Deriving law from the action of nature's move- 

 ment on matter places immortality in our grasp. 



We will find also that when mind is the product of 



220 



