ABSTRACT

Thinking is a biological process, its manifestation is a function of the social organism. Thought and action are coterminous and the measure of consciousness is its productivity. The builded piles we construct into cities with all their intricate mechanism and design are the outward expression of a concomitant thought process. With the widening relationships of men and our closer national contacts, man's thought has come to encircle the earth and simultaneously it receives outward demonstration in the physical activity of the radiogram. Through the discoveries of Einstein, we have been led to outlooks that must inevitably bring into closer alignment the objective phenomena occurring within the physical universe and the subjective reactions that occur within the sphere of consciousness. Unlike the cosmic revolutions occurring within the planetary system, however, our thought is embarrassed in its progress by the traditional accumulations of much needless impediment.