128 ORDINARY AND CARDIXARY. 



of the more Ordinary Transcendental Philosophers 

 in A n ski ; the Experientialists in 7"ski, Tho Idealists 

 in 0"ski, Plato in O n ski, Charles Fourier (Transcen- 

 dental Practical Philosopher) in U n ski, etc. To 

 Kant may be assigned the whole range of Au n ski, or 

 Transcendental Philosophy. The i (ee) and o, pass- 

 ing, by merely more stress or pressure (a squeezing 

 process), into y and w, Schelling (ie n ye n ) was the 

 only German Transcendentalist who went so far 

 towards Mysticism as to affiliate with Jacob Boahme, 

 and Plato by the similar tendency of his Yowel (o) 

 to become w (o-au=wau) holds a corresponding re- 

 lationship to Swedenborg, the great Theandrologist 

 and Pneumatologist, or the Prince of Theological and 

 Spiritual Science mixed with Mysticism; (Modulating 

 in ?6'au,?/au,^au, or, in a word, in Hwau n io.) 



159. Is it any wonder that a staunch Echosophist like 

 Herbert Spencer, (modulating in shaup and zhaub, or 

 pf and bv) has but little comprehension of, and finds 

 nothing to admire in Hegel, for example, (in e 11 ), whose 

 range of thought was so different from his own ; or that 

 Auguste Comte (in mlau) should feel so little sym- 

 pathy for the Metaphysicians, even those to whom he 

 was so greatly indebted. It will be the sublime of- 

 fice of Universology to interpret all these conflicting 

 systems of Thought to each other ; reconciling and co- 

 ordinating them all in a Higher Complex Unity ; and 

 in effecting this GRAND EECONCILIATION Alwato will 

 serve as one of the most effective Instruments. (For 

 the letter-references not explained above shaup, 

 zhanb, mlau see 138, 139, and Chapter 



