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- (Part 6 of 8)
-
- ************************************************************
- YOGA FOR YELLOWBELLIES.
-
- SECOND LECTURE.
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-
- Mr. Chairman, Your Royal Highness, Your Grace, my lords, ladies
- and gentlemen.
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- In my last lecture I led you into the quag of delusion; I
- smothered you in the mire of delusion; I brought you to thirst in the
- desert of delusion; I left you wandering in the jungle of delusion, a
- prey to all the monsters which are thoughts. It came into my mind
- that it was up to me to do something about it.
- We have constantly been discussing mysterious entities as if we
- knew something about them, and this (on examination) always turned
- out not to be the case.
- 2. Knowledge itself is impossible, because if we take the
- simplest proposition of knowledge, S is P, we must attach some
- meaning to S and P, if our statement is to be intelligible. (I say
- nothing as to whether it is true!) And this involves definition.
- Now the original proposition of identity, A = A, tells us nothing at
- all, unless the second A gives us further information about the first
- A. We shall therefore say that A is BC. Instead of one unknown we
- have two unknowns; we have to define B as DE, C as FG. Now we have
- four unknowns, and very soon we have used up the alphabet. When we
- come to define Z, we have to go back and use one of the other let-
- ters, so that all our arguments are arguments in a circle.
- 3. Any statement which we make is demonstrably meaningless.
- And yet we do mean something when we say that a cat has four legs.
- And we all know what we mean when we say so. We give our assent to,
- or withhold it from, the proposition on the grounds of our experi-
- ence. But that experience is not intellectual, as above demonstra-
- ted. It is a matter of immediate intuition. We cannot have any
- warrant for that intuition, but at the same time any intellectual
- argument which upsets it does not in the faintest degree shake our
- conviction.
- 4. The conclusion to be drawn from this is that the instrument
- of mind is not intellectual, not rational. Logic is merely destruc-
- tive, a self-destructive toy. The toy, however, is in some ways also
- instructive, even though the results of its use will not bear exami-
- nation. So we make a by-law that the particular sorites which
- annihilate logic are out of bounds, and we go on reasoning within
- arbitrarily appointed limits. It is subject to these conditions that
- we may proceed to examine the nature of our fundamental ideas; and
- this is necessary, because since we began to consider the nature of
- the results of meditation, our conceptions of the backgrounds of
- thought are decided in quite a different manner; not by intellectual
- analysis, which, as we have seen, carries no conviction, but by
- illumination, which does carry conviction. Let us, therefore,
- proceed to examine the elements of our normal thinking.
- 5. I need hardly recapitulate the mathematical theorem which
- you all doubtless laid to heart when you were criticising Einstein's
- theory of relatively. I only want to recall to your minds the
- simplest element of that theorem; the fact that in order to describe
- anything at all, you must have four measurements. It must be so far
- east or west, so far north or south, so far up or down, from a
- standard point, and it must be after or before a standard moment.
- There are three dimensions of space and one of time.
- 6. Now what do we mean by space? Henri Poincare, one of the
- greatest mathematicians of the last generation, thought that the idea
- of space was invented by a lunatic, in a fantastic (and evidently
- senseless and aimless) endeavour to explain to himself his experience
- of his muscular movements. Long before that, Kant had told us that
- space was subjective, a necessary condition of thinking; and while
- every one must agree with this, it is obvious that it does not tell
- us much about it.
- 7. Now let us look into our minds and see what idea, if any, we
- can form about space. Space is evidently a continuum. There cannot
- be any difference between any parts of it because it is wholly
- *where*. It is pure background, the area of possibilities, a condi-
- tion of quality and so of all consciousness. It is therefore in
- itself completely void. Is that right, sir?
- 8. Now suppose we want to fulfil one of these possibilities.
- The simplest thing we can take is a point, and we are told that a
- point has neither parts nor magnitude, but only position. But, as
- long as there is only one point, position means nothing. No possi-
- bility has yet been created of any positive statement. We will
- therefore take two points, and from these we get the idea of a line.
- Our Euclid tells us that a line has length but no breadth. But, as
- long as there are only two points, length itself means nothing; or,
- at the most, it means separateness. All we can say about two points
- is that there are two of them.
- 9. Now we take a third point, and at last we come to a more
- positive idea. In the first place, we have a plane surface, though
- that in itself still means nothing, in the same way as length means
- nothing when there are only two points there. But the introduction
- of the third point has given a meaning to our idea of length. We can
- say that the line AB is longer than the line BC, and we can also
- introduce the idea of an angle.
- 10. A fourth point, provided that it is not in the original
- plane, gives us the idea of a solid body. But, as before, it tells
- us nothing about the solid body as such, because there is no other
- solid body with which to compare it. We find also that it is not
- really a solid body at all as it stands, because it is merely an
- instantaneous kind of illusion. We cannot observe, or even imagine,
- anything, unless we have time for the purpose.
- 11. What, then is time? It is a phantasm, exactly as tenuous
- as space, but the possibilities of differentiation between one thing
- and another can only occur in one way instead of in three different
- ways. We compare two phenomena in time by the idea of sequence.
- 12. Now it will be perfectly clear to all of you that this is
- all nonsense. In order to conceive the simplest possible object, we
- have to keep on inventing ideas, which even in the proud moment of
- invention are seen to be unreal. How are we to get away from the
- world of phantasmagoria to the common universe of sense? We shall
- require quite a lot more acts of imagination. We have got to endow
- our mathematical conceptions with three ideas which Hindu philoso-
- phers call Sat, Chit and Ananda, which are usually translated Being,
- Knowledge and Bliss. This really means: Sat, the tendency to
- conceive of an object as real; Chit, the tendency to pretend that it
- is an object of knowledge; and Ananda, the tendency to imagine that
- we are affected by it.
- 13. It is only after we have endowed the object with these
- dozen imaginary properties, each of which, besides being a complete
- illusion, is an absurd, irrational, and self-contradictory notion,
- that we arrive at even the simplest object of experience. And this
- object must, of course, be constantly multiplied. Otherwise our
- experience would be confined to a single object incapable of
- description.
- 14. We have also got to attribute to ourselves a sort of divine
- power over our nightmare creation, so that we can compare the differ-
- ent objects of our experience in all sorts of different manners.
- Incidentally, this last operation of multiplying the objects stands
- evidently invalid, because (after all) what we began with was absol-
- utely Nothingness. Out of this we have somehow managed to obtain,
- not merely one, but many; but, for all that, our process has followed
- the necessary operation of our intellectual machine. Since that
- machine is the only machine that we possess, our arguments must be
- valid in some sense or other conformable with the nature of this
- machine. What machine? That is a perfectly real object. It con-
- tains innumerable parts, powers and faculties. And they are as much
- a nightmare as the external universe which it has created. Gad, sir,
- Patanjali is right!
- 15. Now how do we get over this difficulty of something coming
- from Nothing? Only by enquiring what we mean by Nothing. We shall
- find that this idea is totally inconceivable to the normal mind. For
- if Nothing is to be Nothing, it must be Nothing in every possible
- way. (Of course, each of these ways is itself an imaginary some-
- thing, and there are Aleph-Zero -- a transfinite number -- of them.)
- If, for example, we say that Nothing is a square triangle, we have
- had to invent a square triangle in order to say it. But take a more
- homely instance. We know what we mean by saying 'There are cats in
- the room.' We know what we mean when we say 'No cats are in the
- room.' But if we say '*No* cats are *not* in the room,' we evidently
- mean that *some* cats *are* in the room. This remark is not intended
- to be a reflection upon this distinguished audience.
- 16. So then, if Nothing is to be really the absolute Nothing,
- we mean that Nothing does not enter into the category of existence.
- To say that absolute Nothing exists is equivalent to saying that
- everything exists which exists, and the great Hebrew sages of old
- time noted this fact by giving it the title of the supreme idea of
- reality (behind their tribal God, Jehovah, who, as we have previously
- shown, is merely the Yoga of the 4 Elements, even at his highest, --
- the Demiourgos) Eheieh-Asher-Eheieh, -- I am that I am.
- 17. If there is any sense in any of this at all, we may expect
- to find an almost identical system of thought all over the world.
- There is nothing exclusively Hebrew about this theogony. We find,
- for example, in the teachings of Zoroaster and the neo-Platonists
- very similar ideas. We have a Pleroma, the void, a background of all
- possibilities, and this is filled by a supreme Light-God, from whom
- drive in turn the seven Archons, who correspond closely to the seven
- planetary deities, Aratron, Bethor, Phaleg and the rest. These in
- their turn constitute a Demiurge in order to crate matter; and this
- Demiurge is Jehovah. Not far different are the ideas both of the
- classical Greeks and the neo-Platonists. The differences in the
- terminology, when examined, appear as not much more than the differ-
- ences of local convenience in thinking. But all these go back to the
- still older cosmogony of the ancient Egyptians, where we have Nuit,
- Space, Hadit, the point of view; these experience congress, and so
- produce Heru-Ra-Ha, who combines the ideas of Ra-Hoor-Khuit and Hoor-
- paar-Kraat. These are the same twin Vau and He' final which we know.
- Here is evidently the origin of the system of the Tree of Life.
- 18. We have arrived at this system by purely intellectual
- examination, and it is open to criticism; but the point I wish to
- bring to your notice tonight is that it corresponds closely to one of
- the great states of mind which reflect the experience of Samadhi.
- There is a vision of peculiar character which has been of
- cardinal importance in my interior life, and to which constant
- reference is made in my Magical Diaries. So far as I know, there is
- no extant description of this vision anywhere, and I was surprised on
- looking through my records to find that I had given no clear account
- of it myself. The reason apparently is that it is so necessary a
- part of myself that I unconsciously assume it to be a matter of
- common knowledge, just as one assumes that everyone knows that one
- possesses a pair of lungs, and therefore abstains from mentioning the
- fact directly, although perhaps alluding to the matter often enough.
- It appears very essential to describe this vision as well as
- possible, considering the difficulty of langauge, and the fact that
- the phenomena involved logical contradictions, the conditions of
- consciousness being other than those obtaining normally.
- The vision developed gradually. It was repeated on so many
- occasions that I am unable to say at what period it may be called
- complete. The beginning, however, is clear enough in my memory.
- 19. I was on a Great Magical Retirement in a cottage overlook-
- ing Lake Pasquaney in New Hampshire. I lost consciousness of every-
- thing but an universal space in which were innumerable bright points,
- and I realised that this was a physical representation of the uni-
- verse, in what I may call its essential structure. I exclaimed:
- 'Nothingness, with twinkles!' I concentrated upon this vision, with
- the result that the void space which had been the principal element
- of it diminished in importance. Space appeared to be ablaze, yet the
- radiant points were not confused, and I thereupon completed my
- sentence with the exclamation: 'But *what* Twinkles!'
- 20. The next stage of this vision led to an identification of
- the blazing points with the stars of the firmament, with ideas,
- souls, etc. I perceived also that each star was connected by a ray
- of light with each other star. In the world of ideas, each thought
- possessed a necessary relation with each other thought; each such
- relation is of course a thought in itself; each such ray is itself a
- star. It is here that logical difficulty first presents itself. The
- seer has a direct perception of infinite series. Logically, there-
- fore, it would appear as if the entire space must be filled up with a
- homogeneous blaze of light. This is not, however, the case. The
- space is completely full, yet the monads which fill it are perfectly
- distinct. The ordinary reader might well exclaim that such state-
- ments exhibit symptoms of mental confusion. The subject demands more
- than cursory examination. I can do no more than refer the critic to
- Bertrand Russell's 'Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy', where
- the above position is thoroughly justified, as also certain positions
- which follow.
- I want you to note in particular the astonishing final identifi-
- cation of this cosmic experience with the nervous system as described
- by the anatomist.
- 21. At this point we may well be led to consider once more what
- we call the objective universe, and what we call our subjective
- experience. What is Nature? Immanuel Kant, who founded an epoch-
- making system of subjective idealism, is perhaps the first philoso-
- pher to demonstrate clearly that space, time, causality (in short,
- all conditions of existence) are really no more than conditions of
- thought. I have tried to put it more simply by defining all possible
- predicates as so many dimensions. To describe an object properly it
- is not sufficient to determine its position in the space-time con-
- tinuum of four dimensions, but we must enquire how it stands in all
- the categories and scales, its values in all 'kinds' of possibility.
- What do we know about it in respect of its greenness, its hardness,
- its mobility, and so on? And then we find out that what we imagine
- to be the description of the object is in reality nothing of the
- sort.
- 22. All that we recorded is the behaviour of our instruments.
- What did our telescopes, spectroscopes, and balances tell us? And
- these again are dependent upon the behaviour of our senses; for the
- reality of our instruments, of our organs of sense, is just as much
- in need of description and demonstration as are the most remote
- phenomena. And we find ourselves forced to the conclusion that
- anything we perceive is only perceived by us as such 'because of our
- tendency so to perceive it.' And we shall find that in the fourth
- stage of the great Buddhist practice, Mahasatipatthana, we become
- directly and immediately aware of this fact instead of digging it out
- of the holts of these interminable sorites which badger us! Kant
- himself put it, after his fashion: 'The laws of nature are the laws
- of our own minds.' Why? It is not the contents of the mind itself
- that we can cognise, but only its structure. But Kant has not gone
- to this length. He would have been extremely shocked if it had ever
- struck him that the final term in his sorites was 'Reason itself is
- the only reality.' On further examination, even this ultimate truth
- turns out to be meaningless. It is like the well known circular
- definition of an obscene book, which is: one that arouses certain
- ideas in the mind of the kind of person in whom such ideas are
- excited by that kind of book.
- 23. I notice that my excellent chairman is endeavouring to
- stifle a yawn and to convert it into a smile, and he will forgive me
- for saying that I find the effect somewhat sinister. But he has
- every right to be supercilious about it. These are indeed 'old, fond
- paradoxes to amuse wives in ale-houses.' Since philosophy began, it
- has always been a favourite game to prove your axioms absurd.
- You will all naturally be very annoyed with me for indulging in
- these fatuous pastimes, especially as I started out with a pledge
- that I would deal with these subjcts from the hard-headed scientific
- point of view. Forgive me if I have toyed with these shining gos-
- samers of the thought-web! I have only been trying to break it to
- you gently. I proceed to brush away with a sweep of my lily-white
- hand all this tenuous, filmy stuff, 'such stuff as dreams are made
- of.' We will get down to modern science.
- 24. For general reading there is no better introduction than
- 'The Bases of Modern Science', by my old and valued friend the late
- J. W. N. Sullivan. I do not want to detain you too long with quota-
- tions from this admirable book. I would much rather you got it and
- read it yourself; you could hardly make better use of your time. But
- let us spend a few moments on his remarks about the question of
- geometry.
- Our conceptions of space as a subjective entity has been com-
- pletely upset by the discovery that the equations of Newton based on
- Euclidean Geometry are inadequate to explain the phenomena of gravi-
- tation. It is instinctive to us to think of a straight line; it is
- somehow axiomatic. But we learn that this does not exist in the
- objective universe. We have to use another geometry, Riemann's
- Geometry, which is one of the curved geometries. (There are, of
- course, as many systems of geometry as there are absurd axioms to
- build them on. Three lines make one ellipse: any nonsense you like:
- you can proceed to construct a geometry which is correct so long as
- it is coherent. And there is nothing right or wrong about the
- result: the only question is: which is the most convenient system
- for the purpose of describing phenomena? We found the idea of
- Gravitation awkward: we went to Riemann.)
- This means that the phenomena are not taking place against a
- background of a flat surface; the surface itself is curved. What we
- have thought of as a straight line does not exist at all. And this
- is almost impossible to conceive; at least it is quite impossible for
- myself to visualise. The nearest one gets to it is by trying to
- imagine that you are a reflection on a polished door-knob.
- 25. I feel almost ashamed of the world that I have to tell you
- that in the year 1900, four years before the appearance of Einstein's
- world-shaking paper, I described space as 'finite yet boundless,'
- which is exactly the description in general terms that he gave in
- more mathematical detail.(*) You will see at once that these three
- words do describe a curved geometry; a sphere, for instance, is a
- finite object, yet you can go over the surface in any direction
- without ever coming to an end.
- I said above that Riemann's Geometry was not quite sufficient to
- explain the phenomena of nature. We have to postulate different
- kinds of curvature in different parts of the continuum. And even
- then we are not happy!
- 26. Now for a spot of Sullivan! 'The geometry is so general
- that it admits of different degrees of curvature in different parts
- of space-time. It is to this curvature that gravitational effects
- are due. The curvature of space-time is most prominent, therefore,
- around large masses, for here the gravitational effects are most
- marked. If we take matter as fundamental, we may say that it is the
- presence of matter that causes the curvature of space-time. But
- there is a different school of thought that regards matter as due to
- the curvature of space-time. That is, we assume as fundamental a
- space-time continuum manifest to our senses as what we call matter.
- Both points of view have strong arguments to recommend them. But,
- whether or not matter may be derived from the geometrical peculiari-
- ties of the space-time continuum, we may take it as an established
- scientific fact that gravitation has been so derived. This is
- obviously a very great achievement, but it leaves quite untouched
- another great class of phenomena, namely, electro-magnetic phenomena.
- In this space-time continuum of Einstein's the electro-magnetic
- forces appear as entirely alien. Gravitation has been absorbed, as
- it were, into Riemannian geometry, and the notion of force, so far as
- gravitational phenomena are concerned, has been abolished. But the
- electro-magnetic forces still flourish undisturbed. There is no hint
- that they are manifestations of the geometrical peculiarities of the
- space-time continuum. And it can be shown to be impossible to relate
- them to anything in Riemann's Geometry. Gravitation can be shown to
- correspond to certain geometrical peculiarities of a Riemannian
- space-time. But the electro-magnetic forces lie completely outside
- this scheme.'
- 27. Here is the great quag into which mathematical physics has
- led its addicts. Here we have two classes of phenomena, all part of
- a unity of physics. Yet the equations which describe and explain the
- one class are incompatible with those of the other class! This is
- not a question of philosophy at all, but a question of fact. It does
- not do to consider that the universe is composed of particles. Such
- a hypothesis underlies one class of phenomena, but it is nonsense
- when applied to the electro-magnetic equations, which insist upon our
- abandoning the idea of particles for that of waves.
- Here is another Welsh rabbit for supper!
- 'Einstein's finite universe is such that its radius is dependent
- upon the amount of matter in it. Were more matter to be created, the
- volume of the universe would increase. Were matter to be annihilat-
- ed, the volume of space would decrease. Without matter, space would
- not exist. Thus the mere existence of space, besides its metrical
- properties, depends upon the existence of matter. With this concep-
- tion it becomes possible to regard all motion, including rotation, as
- purely relative.'
- Where do we go from here, boys?
- 28. 'The present tendency of physics is towards describing the
- universe in terms of mathematical relations between unimaginable
- entities.'
- We have got a long way from Lord Kelvin's too-often and too-
- unfairly quoted statement that he could not imagine anything of which
- he could not construct a mechanical model. The Victorians were
- really a little inclined to echo Dr. Johnson's gross imbecile stamp
- on the ground when the ideas of Bishop Berkeley penetrated to the
- superficial strata of the drink-sodden grey cells of that beef-witted
- brute.
- 29. Now, look you, I ask you to reflect upon the trouble we
- have taken to calculate the distance of the fixed stars, and hear
- Professor G. N. Lewis, who 'suggests that two atoms connected by a
- light ray may be regarded as in actual physical contact. The
- *interval* between two ends of a light-ray is, on the theory of
- relativity, zero, and Professor Lewis suggests that this fact should
- be taken seriously. On this theory, light is not propagated at all.
- This idea is in conformity with the principle that none but observ-
- able factors should be used in constructing a scientific theory, for
- we can certainly never observe the passage of light in empty space.
- We are only aware of light when it encouters matter. Light which
- never encounters matter is purely hypothetical. If we do not make
- that hypothesis, then there is no empty space. On Professor Lewis's
- theory, when we observe a distant star, our eye as truly makes
- physical contact with that star as our finger makes contact with a
- table when we press it.'
- 30. And did not all of you think that my arguments were argu-
- ments in a circle? I certainly hope you did, for I was at the
- greatest pains to tell you so. But it is not a question of argument
- in Mr. Sullivan's book; it is a question of facts. He was talking
- about human values. He was asking whether science could possibly be
- cognizant of them. Here he comes, the great commander! Cheer, my
- comrades, cheer!
- 'But although consistent materialists were probably always rare,
- the humanistically important fact remained that science did not find
- it necessary to include values in its description of the universe.
- For it appeared that science, in spite of this omission, formed a
- closed system. If values form an integral part of reality, it seems
- strange that science should be able to give a consistent description
- of phenomena which ignores them.
- 'At the present time, this difficulty is being met in two ways.
- On the one hand, it is pointed out that science remains within its
- own domain by the device of cyclic definition, that is to say, the
- abstractions with which it begins are all it ever talks about. It
- makes no fresh contacts with reality, and therefore never encounters
- any possibly disturbing factors. This point of view is derived from
- the theory of relativity, particularly from the form of presentation
- adopted by Eddington. This theory forms a closed circle. The
- primary terms of the theory, *point-events*, *potentials*, *matter*
- (etc. -- there are ten of them), lie at various points on the circum-
- ference of the circle. We may start at any point and go round the
- circle, that is, from any one of these terms we can deduce the
- others. The primary entities of the theory are defined in terms of
- one another. In the course of this exercise we derive the laws of
- Nature studied in physics. At a certain point in the cahin of
- deductions, at *matter*, for example, we judge that we are talking
- about something which is an objective concrete embodiment of our
- abstractions. But matter, as it occurs in physics, is no more than a
- particular set of abstractions, and our subsequent reasoning is
- concerned only with these abstractions. Such other characteristics
- as the objective reality may possess never enter our scheme. But the
- set of abstractions called matter in relativity theory do not seem to
- be adequate to the whole of our scientific knowledge of matter.
- There remain quantum phenomena.'
- Ah!
- 'So we leave her, so we leave her,
- Far from where her swarthy kindred roam -- kindred roam
- In the Scarlet Fever, Scarlet Fever,
- Scarlet Fever Convalescent Home.'
- 31. So now, no less than that chivalrous gentleman, His Grace,
- the Most Reverend the Archbishop of Canterbury, who in a recent
- broadcast confounded for ever all those infidels who had presumed to
- doubt the possibility of devils entering into swine, we have met the
- dragon science and conquered. We have seen that, however we attack
- the problem of mind, whether from the customary spiritual standpoint,
- or from the opposite corner of materialism, the result is just the
- same.
- One last quotation from Mr. Sullivan. 'The universe may ulti-
- mately prove to be irrational. The scientific adventure may have to
- be given up.'
- But that is all *he* knows about science, bless his little
- heart! We do not give up. 'You lied, d'Ormea, I do not repent!'
- The results of experiment are still valid for experience, and the
- fact that the universe turns out on enquiry to be unintelligible only
- serves to fortify our ingrained conviction that experience itself is
- reality.
- 32. We may then ask ourselves whether it is not possible to
- obtain experience of a higher order, to discover and develop the
- faculty of mind which can transcend analysis, stable against all
- thought by virtue of its own self-evident assurance. In the language
- of the Great White Brotherhood (whom I am here to represent) you
- cross the abyss. 'Leave the poor old stranded wreck' -- Ruach --
- 'and pull for the shore' of Neschamah. For above the abyss, it is
- said, as you will see if you study the Supplement of the fifth number
- of the First Volume of 'The Equinox', an idea is only true in so far
- as it contains its contradictory in itself.
- 33. It is such states of mind as this which constitute the
- really important results of Samyama, and these results are not to be
- destroyed by philosophical speculation, because they are not suscep-
- tible of analysis, because they have no component parts, because they
- exist by virtue of their very Unreason -- 'certum est quia ineptum!'
- They cannot be expressed, for they are above knowledge. To some
- extent we can convey our experience to others familiar with that
- experience to a less degree by the aesthetic method. And this
- explains why all the good work on Yoga -- alchemy, magick and the
- rest -- not doctrinal but symbolic -- the word of God to man, is
- given in Poetry and Art.
- In my next lecture I shall endeavour to go a little deeper into
- the technique of obtaining these results, and also give a more
- detailed account of the sort of thing that is likely to occur in the
- course of the preliminary practices.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- ---------------
- *TANNHAUSER, written in Mexico, O.F., August, 1900. See also my
- BERASHITH, written in Delhi, April, 1901.
-
-
- e he comes, the great commander! Cheer, my
- comrades, cheer!
- 'But although consistent materialists were probably always rare,
- the humanistically important fact remained that science did not find
- it necessary to include values in its description of the universe.
- For it appeared that science, in spite of this omission, formed a
- closed sy