Page 137 - The Final Appeal to Mankind
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«The Final Appeal to Mankind» by Nicolai Levashov
difficult to find at that time of year. And, even if they could find the food, such
minuscule creatures could not survive. Unable to fly on their own — to satisfy need or
whim — they would be swept away by any passing breeze and consigned to an
untimely death. Caterpillars, on the other hand, can live on blades of grass, shrubs and
trees, voraciously consuming the leaves of plants and rapidly gaining the biomass
required to create a butterfly.
Thus, two different species of living organisms can consecutively live in a single
biomass. Such symbiosis of species permits the creatures to survive through a life
cycle. There are many types of insects which similarly demonstrate the symbiosis of
two distinct species, e.g., mosquitos, bees, termites, etc.
The same scenario may also be seen on other qualitative levels of evolution. In their
biological development, frogs (amphibians) have two evolutionary phases — tadpole
and frog. In the tadpole phase, the etheric body of a fish spirit inhabits the biomass.
But the complete transformation of the bio-mass into a fish does not take place because
the biomass has the genetics of a frog. The evolutionary development of the fish spirit
within the frog biomass continues until the developing biomass attains structural and
qualitative levels higher than that of the fish spirit. At this point the etheric body of the
fish exits the biomass, which it has developed, and the etheric body of a frog enters.
The transformation of the biomass into the image of a frog’s etheric body slowly
unfolds. First the front, then the rear legs begin to grow, the tail drops off, the internal
organs are modified and the external appearance changes. Certainly, many scientists
are aware of these phases, but no satisfactory explanation for the process has been
forthcoming. Indeed, it appears to be just taken for granted. To say, as does classical
biology, that, “ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny” really explains nothing at all. Our
natural environment is uniquely rich with life forms and mysteries. All that we need do
is look more deeply inside ourselves and into nature, and the solutions to many of its
mysteries will be revealed.
Naturally, a question arising in many minds is, “Who or what is responsible for these
evolutionary changes and how do they happen?”
The evolutionary development of living nature is reflected in genetics. The etheric
body of the symbiosing creature and that of the biomass into which the creature enters
are qualitatively identical at the moment they merge. Then, however, their speed of
development differs. If the biomass has a more evolved genetics than that of the etheric
body of the merging creature, they slowly move out of harmony with each other. At
the culmination of this process the etheric body of the symbiosing creature leaves the
biomass to be replaced by the etheric body of a different guest creature, one that is
qualitatively more in harmony with the genetic structure of the developed biomass.
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