THE CONCLUSION. 179 



fcion and Triumph, demanding as their completion 

 the Sanctified and Consecrated Best Exertions, in 

 the Future, and from this hour, of every Individual 

 Member of Society, in behalf of the Universal Good 

 of our Col ective Humanity. 



219. And, again, in conclusion of this special icork ; 

 Universology, as such, is a Determinate Science, as 

 much so as Geometry or Chemistry, and is not to be 

 classed with any speculative theory or so-called Sys- 

 tem of Philosophy whatsoever; but it is, at the 

 same time, a METHOD, still more distinctively than 

 a SCIENCE ; and, as a Method, it is characterized, 

 1. By a Primitive Radical Analysis of the Elements of 

 All Things ; that is to say, by the Analysis of the 

 Elements of each particular Sphere or Domain of 

 Being or Things; 2. By the discovery of the exist- 

 ence of Universal Echo, Analogy, or He/lection, as be- 

 tween the Elements of each .Domain, and those of every 

 other Domain; or of UNIVEKSAL ANALOGY in Elements ; 

 and, 3. By the demonstration, thence, of Parallel Series 

 of Evolution, from Analogic Elements, in all Spheres 

 and so, of Universal Analogy, ALSO in ELABORATION 

 or RESULTS ; both in respect to WHAT is, in Nature, and 



to WHAT REMAINS TO BE ACCOMPLISHED BY MAN. (193.) 



The student-reader is reminded that this work is only 



t/ 



the glimpse of an outline of an immense fabric. He 

 may see, as the child sees, at first, only a blurred im- 

 age of the New World which it opens ; it is, never- 

 theless, a Neiv World of Ideas, and it will clear to his 

 vision as he advances. 



