THE UNCONDITIONED AND THE CONDITIONED. 95 



128. Sir William Hamilton has, with great subtle- 

 ty, perceived The Infinite and The Absolute to be 

 the two species of a genus, which he calls The Un- 

 conditioned. This last, The Unconditioned, should 

 embrace, therefore, in its representation, both the 

 pure or unnasalized Yowels and the Nasal Yowels. 

 Hence its appropriate naming is au,i,au n ,io (ah-oo-ee- 

 ah-oo n -ee-o.) To this the proper and full antithet 

 is engkau,i,au n vlio (f.ngkah-oo-ee-ah-oo n -vlee-o) 

 meaning The Conditioned, including enkauvlio, The 

 Ordinary, and engkau n vlio, The Transcendental 

 Finite. Some of these terms may seem somewhat 

 awkward to the neophyte ; but the ideas themselves 

 are of the most subtle and embarrassing, and natural 

 language then exactly echoes this embarrassment. As 

 we descend to more feasible domains the words will 

 become correspondingly feasible. (The i at the mid- 

 dle of these compound terms means and.) It will 

 appear, elsewhere, that Shau,io (shah-oo-ee-o), 

 is the more usual naming for The Conditioned, 

 Aushio (ah-oosh-ee-o) for the Unconditioned ; Sau,io 

 (sah-oo-ee-o) for The Finite (The Collected and In- 

 cluded), and Ausio (ah-oos-ee-o) for The Infinite, 

 (The Excluded Unlimited.) ( .) 



129. Intermediate between these two, The Unlim- 

 ited " Reality " (The Yowels), and The " Limitation," 

 (Consonants), there is a still more subtle Spiritual 

 Region, the RATIONAL-BEING-DOMAIN, (the God-Spirits- 

 Humanity-domain), The Theandric Domain, or Thean- 

 drismus ; which is represented by the Ambigu's or 

 Coalescents (Half Yowels, half Consonants ; h, y, 



