CHAPTER XII. 



FINAL KESUME OF THE SUBJECT. 



205. A final word must be said, here, in respect to 

 the Alwaso namings of Naturology, Scientology, and 

 Artology, respectively, which narnings furnish the 

 proper beginning-point for all subsequent distribu- 

 tions ; and the several senses in which these terms 

 may be taken must be pointed out and carefully dis- 

 tinguished by appropriate special sets of Alwaso 

 terms. The Indeterminate, Unlimited, or Infinite As- 

 pect of Universal Being, represented by the Vowel- 

 Sounds, is first in order, and has its own Naturisni, 

 Scientism and Artism. Some re-statement will be 

 necessary. The Central (Middle-mouth), most con- 

 densed, and, consequently, slenderest of the Vowels, 

 i (ee) signifies Thing, Entity, Being. The ending -ski 

 (skee) means Science. Iski is therefore Ontology (Gr. 

 onta, THINGS, BEINGS, from ei-mi, TO BE, and Lnrfos), 

 the Science of Thing in se or abstracted to the 

 uttermost, or, so far as may be, from those Relations 

 or Condilittn 1 * in which Things are always <ic/nu1h/ 

 found. Ordinary Ontology is still, however, not the 

 Science of R.ilimat Pure Being (J"io, 149, 15S), 



