CONSTITUENTS OF THE UNIVERSE. 



XIII. The great motions of the universe 

 are simply self-motions, and have no other 

 cause for their presence. 



XIV. Motion has quantity or volume, and 

 that quantity, whether great or small, is not 

 an indefinite amount; but on the contrary it 

 is specific and definite, and that fact is one of 

 the conditions that have led to the accepted 

 but incorrect theories concerning what is usu- 

 ally supposed to be matter. 



XV. Motion cannot increase or decrease its 

 amount or quantity. 



XVI. The radial motion from the sun, 

 through its collision with the surface of the 

 earth, is the source of the complex movements 

 on this planet; manifested in vegetable and 

 animal life and other phenomena. 



XVII. Heat and light are radial motions. 



XVIII. Motion offers a resistance to other 

 motions. 



