July 16, 1980
July 16, 1980
[There is] something great, too big for our minute brain to form a concept of. Something magnificent, that can’t as yet be comprehended by a brain that has as elements of reasoning only three-dimensional themes.
As new elements – elements that are considered abstract – as these elements begin to form a small image in a brain, as inconceivable as it may still be, the realm of all possibilities starts to appear, and comprehension begins to be established; understanding gradually comes and the general change will take place.
Therefore, no matter how much you want to try to rationalize, you can rationalize with all the subjects concerning the rational plane, rational now, which doesn’t mean eternally rational.
I mean that, while we only have three-dimensional elements, our brain will reason with these elements. Therefore, many possibilities that exist don’t find in our brains the so-called logic today, since our brain doesn’t have at its disposal elements for the comprehension of all that which transcends the pure rational materialism of our days – which, by the way, is advanced.