E (A) RELATION. Ill 



E (a), RELATION ; Siding ; that which is accessory or 

 adjunct (applied or added to the centre) ; 

 iving-like, ancillary, or coefficient ; The Affec- 

 tion and Competency for relative and exact 

 or scientific knowledge, and discursive rea- 

 soning. 



A (ah), SUBSTANCE; thickness, richness, goodness; 

 THE GOOD. 



7(uh), TIME ; Flow, Flux, On-going ; Stream or Cur- 

 rent ; Vaguely PEOTENSIYE and Experiential. 



(aw), SPACE ; Expanse, Out-and-In-going ; EXTEN- 



SIONAL. 



O, PRESENTATION; View, Theory; Idea ; Aspect or 

 Prospect ; THE TRUE, The Lucid, or Luminous. 



opposite phenomenon occurs. These words are charged with such 

 an immense quantity of meaning, or, in other words, with such an 

 aggregate of different but related meanings, that they can only be 

 defined by accumulating a crowd of words from the Old-style or In- 

 stinctual Languages. The specializing division of this aggregate 

 meaning is then indicated by some new or additional element, and 

 the more special meaning by still another additional element, and 

 so on, until, in the end, the, exclusion of Ambiguity is attained to 

 to the estremest practicable degree, and the minutest specific dif- 

 ferences indicated. For example, i signifying all the various as- 

 pects of Being undifferentiated, mi signifies Affirmative Being, ni 

 Negative Being (Inness to the Vanishing Centre, In ; nor, neither), 

 li Perpetual or Continuous, Level or Similar Being, ri Temporary, In- 

 terrupted, or Broken Being ; (reflected, turned back), bi Concrete In- 

 organic Being, vi Concrete Organic Being, Life, etc. The Combina- 

 tions of the Syllabic Root- Words so formed then combine to repre- 

 sent still more specific meanings. The transcript of Nature is in 

 this way far more perfect than if the new language contained only 

 words of exact specification. 



