Bővebb ismertető
IntroductionUniversal life upon universal matter is an idea to which the mind instinctively clings. Kingdoms without kings and subjects, continents without cities, cities without citizens, houses without families, ships without crews, and railway trains without passengers, are contingencies as probable as solar systems without ^ planets, or planets without inhabitants.Sir David Brewster More Worlds than One,1854The destiny of Man. Could it be on a plane unknown? Our physical cosmos? Is it really an illusory transience?Man's origin, according to the great and arcane texts of the East, and thence his eventual return, are from within the stellar regions. Man apparently first manifested physical existence countless milliards of aeons ago in a place far, far from this green and fertile time traveller we call the Earth. The records of first manifestation are in the compass of all; locked into cell DNA and genetically coded to presently defy attempted unravelling of timeless secrets. But within all there is a 'knowing' which can not be suppressed. Of all the ages and times, this is the period when great