A Possibility 109 



zation due to irritation in the sexual organs is 

 the readiest and most vivid form that men 

 experience. Other forms could not come into 

 existence if sex visualization had not in its 

 struggles wrought out the means by which 

 they express themselves. 



If these statements in any way represent 

 what actually takes place, consequences follow 

 which, in a measure, conform to what we know 

 of organic development. The outer body may 

 be said to be in a struggle with the inner body. 

 It has growth on its side and makes organs in 

 harmony with its needs, while the inner body, 

 inferior in growth, is superior as a means of 

 propagating nervous currents. It, then, is the 

 source of emotions which cut down the outer 

 body and retard its specialization. It endeavors 

 to produce various organs in the embryo, but 

 the inner emotions cause reductions that dis- 

 place them. The embryo goes through a series 

 of partial developments which are never com- 

 pleted because of the lack of harmony between 

 the outer and inner bodies. So long as new 

 emotions arise from new nervous developments, 

 the organs of the body can never be in equilib- 



