400 PART V. WORKING STAGE. 



6. STATE (precise pure, average, casual, momentary, time-produced, 

 environment-produced, individual, transitional, exceptional, abnormal, 

 perfect, imperfect, and . . . state); 



7. CHANGE (precise movement activity process, from commencement 

 of change to its end, external and non-external influences, fertilisation 

 kariokynesis prenatal development birth growth adaptation regene- 

 ration reproduction senescence death decomposition, evolution ori- 

 gin history development transformation or dissolution and further 

 evolution, improvement deterioration, production accumulation distri- 

 butionexchange consumption, experiencing feeling reasoning con- 

 cluding, automatic-refleximpulsivehabitual deliberate action, and 

 ways of living and their formation and change . . .) ; and 



8. PERSONAL EQUATION (precise degree of more or less complete 

 interest preparedness liberty opportunity, of possessing stranger's fresh- 

 ness in viewing and weighing own facts and conclusions, and of more 

 or less permanent individuality, abnormality, unclearness ignorance 

 error prejudice deception, and . . .). 



C. Procedure Aspects of Phenomenon Investigated: 



1. Precise determination of the problem under investigation. (Conclu- 

 sion 14.) 



2. Accurate, minute, and, if possible, experimental examination under 

 the most varied conditions of space, time, and other circumstances, and 

 Immediate and scrupulous recording of results. (Conclusions 16 and 18.) 



3. Alertness, in order not to miss obscure, unobtrusive, and exceptional 

 facts. (Conclusion 21.) 



4. Systematic exhaustion, plus simple case and testing of divisions. 

 {Conclusions 19, 20, 17.) 



5. Degree-determination and dialectics. (Conclusions 27 and 28.) 



6. Luminous clearness and decided definiteness in thinking. (Conclu- 

 sion 15.) 



7. Graded, comprehensive, important, numerous, full, rational and 

 relevant, original, automatically initiated, and methodically developed 

 generalisations, deductions, and applications. (Conclusions 25, 31, 32.) 



8. Systematic verification, classification, balanced interim and final 

 statements, and lucid reports. (Conclusions 29, 33, 30, 34, 35.) 



FULLER LISTS. 



211. 37. 



3. (a) General Cosmology, comprises the fundamental pro- 

 perties of the Cosmos; 



(b) Universal Cosmology Criticism and Theory of Knowledge, 

 Theory of Being, General Methodology and Logics, . . .; 



(c) Non-Universal Cosmology Forms of matter and thought 

 (space, time, . . .); 



(d) General, Universal, and Non-Universal Cosmology, divided 

 each, as far as practicable, into General, Universal, and Non- 

 Universal. 



4. (a) General Physics, comprising the fundamental properties 

 of matter; 



(b) Universal Physics Gravitation ; Etheorology Light, Heat, 

 Magnetism, Electricity, Radiation; Mechanics (molecular and 

 molar); crystallography; chemistry; transition to life forms; 



(c) Non-Universal Physics (1) Astronomy (general, nebular, 

 stellar, solar, planetary, terrestrial, . . .); (2) Geognomy Gene- 



