98 PHILOSOPHY, SCIENCE, RELIGION. 



TABLE No. 6. 



3. Iu,ia, (ee-oo-ee-ali), RELIGION. 



(Ecstatic, Vital, Cuhninative, Harmonic.) 

 (Cf. Gr. en WELL, and Gr. ending -ia, The Essence of all Good.) 



2. Oski, (o-skee), SCIENCE, in the High Idealistic 



Sense. SCIENTO-PHILOSOPHY. (B. O. Index.) 



(Pure Theoretical, Guiding, Governing.) 



1. Auski, (ah-oo-skee), PHILOSOPHY. 



(Metaphysical, and Practical, as Basis.) 



Two Grand Leading SUB-SCIENCES. 



2. I,iaski, (ee-ee-ah-skee), COMPAEOLOGY, (Science 

 of the Identity of Principle as occurring in different 

 Spheres or Domains.) 



1. I,ioski, (ee-ee-o-skee), MONOSPHEROLOGY (Sci- 

 ences of the Single Sphere or of Single Spheres.) 



(These two also culminate in luski the Science 

 of Religion as Harmonic Reconciliation.) 



133. Among the sets of correlative terms employed 

 in General Science, two of the most important, while 

 yet of the most vaguely comprehended, are the terms 

 Homogeneous and Heterogeneous. The first of these is 

 derived from two Greek words, liomolos, SAME or 

 SIMILAE, and genos, KIND or SORT, and the second from 

 heteros, OTHER, and genos. Etyinologically, there- 

 fore, Homogeneous means or THE SAME KIND, and 

 Heterogeneous, OF DIFFERENT KIND or KINDS ; but the 

 etymological meaning of scientific terms frequently 

 gives a very inadequate idea of their actual meaning 

 as they are practically applied. 



