The attitude of human thought in its main trends to the 'world beyond' was always
entirely wrong.
The 'world beyond' of the spiritualists, in all
the existing versions of it, is but a naive
and primitive representation of the unknown.
In 'positivism' people have denied the world beyond altogether, because, refusing to
admit the possibility of logical relations other than those formulated by Aristotle and
Bacon, people denied the
very existence
of anything that appeared senseless and
impossible from the point of view of these formulae. And in 'spiritualism' they
attempted to build a noumenal world on the pattern of the phenomenal, i.e. against
reason, in defiance of the forces of nature, they wanted at all costs to prove that the
world beyond is
logical from our point of view
, that the same laws of causation operate
there as in our world, and that the world beyond is nothing more than a continuation of
ours.
Positivist philosophy saw the absurdity of dualistic theses, but, unable to widen the
field of its activity limited by logic and the 'infinite sphere', it could not think of
anything better than
DENIAL
.
Only mystical philosophy felt the possibility of relations other than these of the
phenomenal world. But it dwelt on vague and
nebulous sensations, unable to define or
classify them.
Science must come to mysticism,
and then to the study of forms of consciousness
and consequently of perception - other than ours. Science must throw off almost
everything old and must start from a new theory of cognition, for mysticism offers a
new approach.
Science cannot deny the fact that mathematics grows, widens and passes beyond the
boundaries of the visible and measurable world. Whole sections
of mathematics
examine quantitative relations which do not exist and
never existed
in the real world of
positivism, i.e. relations to which there are no corresponding realities in the visible, i.e.
the three-dimensional world.
But there cannot be any mathematical relations for which there would be no
corresponding realities at all. Consequently, mathematics transcends
the boundaries of
this world and peeps into the world of the unknown. It is a
telescope
by means of
which we begin to investigate the
space of many dimensions
with its worlds.
Mathematics goes in the vanguard of our thought, in the vanguard of our powers of
imagination and representation. It
already
calculates relationships
which we are totally
incapable of imagining or even thinking about.
All this cannot be denied even from the strictly 'positivist', i.e.
positive
point of
view. And, having admitted the possibility of widening the field of mathematics
beyond the limits of the world
known through the senses, i.e. beyond the limits of the world
accessible
(be it only
theoretically) to the organs of sense and to apparatus,
science must, by this very fact,
admit the expansion of the real world far beyond the limits of the 'infinite sphere' and
logic. In other words it must recognize the reality of the 'world of many dimensions'.
The recognition of the reality of the world of many dimensions is an
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