i
We shall never get straight till we
leave off trying to separate mind and matter.
Mind is not a thing or, if it be, we know nothing
about it; it is a function of matter. Matter
is not a thing or, if it be, we know nothing about
it; it is a function of mind.
We should see an omnipotent, universal
substance, sometimes in a dynamical and sometimes
in a statical condition and, in either condition,
always retaining a little of its opposite; and we should
see this substance as at once both material and mental,
whether it be in the one condition or in the other.
The statical condition represents content, the dynamical,
discontent; and both content and discontent, each
still retaining a little of its opposite, must be
carried down to the lowest atom.
Action is the process whereby thought,
which is mental, is materialised and whereby substance,
which is material, is mentalised. It is like
the present, which unites times past and future and
which is the only time worth thinking of and yet is
the only time which has no existence.
I do not say that thought actually
passes into substance, or mind into matter, by way
of action—I do not know what thought is—but
every thought involves bodily change, i.e. action,
and every action involves thought, conscious or unconscious.
The action is the point of juncture between bodily
change, visible and otherwise sensible, and mental
change which is invisible except as revealed through
action. So that action is the material symbol
of certain states of mind. It translates the
thought into a corresponding bodily change.
ii
When the universal substance is at
rest, that is, not vibrating at all, it is absolutely
imperceptible whether by itself or anything else.
It is to all intents and purposes fast asleep or,
rather, so completely non-existent that you can walk
through it, or it through you, and it knows neither
time nor space but presents all the appearance of
perfect vacuum. It is in an absolutely statical
state. But when it is not at rest, it becomes
perceptible both to itself and others; that is to
say, it assumes material guise such as makes it imperceptible
both to itself and others. It is then tending
towards rest, i.e. in a dynamical state.
The not being at rest is the being in a vibratory
condition. It is the disturbance of the repose
of the universal, invisible and altogether imperceptible
substance by way of vibration which constitutes matter
at all; it is the character of the vibrations which
constitutes the particular kind of matter. (May we
imagine that some vibrations vibrate with a rhythm
which has a tendency to recur like the figures in
a recurring decimal, and that here we have the origin
of the reproductive system?)
We should realise that all space is
at all times full of a stuff endowed with a mind and
that both stuff and mind are immaterial and imperceptible
so long as they are undisturbed, but the moment they
are disturbed the stuff becomes material and the mind
perceptible. It is not easy to disturb them,
for the atmosphere protects them. So long as
they are undisturbed they transmit light, etc.,
just as though they were a rigid substance, for, not
being disturbed, they detract nothing from any vibration
which enters them.
What will cause a row will be the
hitting upon some plan for waking up the ether.
It is here that we must look for the extension of
the world when it has become over-peopled or when,
through its gradual cooling down, it becomes less
suitable for a habitation. By and by we shall
make new worlds.