ANALOGICAL AND ANALYTICAL ROOTS. 79 



116. The Proofs are Analytical, when, having ascer- 

 tained that a given Class of Sounds corresponds with 

 a given Cosinical Realm or General Category of 

 Thought and Being, as, for instance, the Thin Solid 

 Consonant-Sounds with The Abstract, and the Thick 

 Solids with The Concrete, we then analyze one of 

 these Cosmical Realms into its Constituents, and, at 

 the same time, analyze the corresponding Class of 

 Sounds into its Components, and assign these In- 

 dividual Component Sounds to the corresponding 

 several parts of the Cosmical Realm in question. It 

 is thus again that The Abstract itself being found to 

 be sometimes Simple or Single (as a One Line, or 

 One Point, etc.) and sometimes Compound or Pluri- 

 form (as that which is composed of many points or 

 many lines), we seek for a similar difference in Sub- 

 Classes of the corresponding Class of Sounds, and 

 find it as between the Statoids or Single " Hard 

 Cheeks " or Explodents, the Jc, t,p, which are made by 

 a single effort of the voice, on the one hand, and, on 

 the other, the Motoids or " Frictionals" 1 (or Compound 

 " Hard Cheeks ") sh, s } f, which involve a mixed vari- 

 ety of the -vibrations of the voice. The Simple Ab- 

 stract is reduced, by further Analysis, to Division, 

 Differentiation or DUISM, on the one hand, to Unition, 

 Integration or UNISM, on the other hand, and to the 

 Hinge-wise-ness Half Separative and Half Unifcive 

 the Cardinism (Lat. cardo, A HINGE) between Division 

 and Unition, which is the related TRLNISM of these 



1 Prof. Elsberg. 



