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PREFATORY NOTE Although this text i
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Tales to His Grandson, that the Thi
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first thing, is to prepare a nucleu
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PROLOGUE I am. . .? But what has be
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"black" thoughts, I had decided to
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with the impressions with which dif
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It would, strictly speaking, even b
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Under such conditions of tension ye
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Only the next morning, when it bega
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On this original instrument I then
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And I also knew that the reason for
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there, then also in an almost delir
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Instead of lying down to sleep awhi
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I could not attain the state of "re
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The difference between Him and my s
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always in my various general states
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Even my propensity during this peri
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physical body of mine, but sucked f
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From such a "promenade," it was dis
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my exposition, I made it a custom i
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ciently long and serious mentation,
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First to die, from a long-standing
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The fact is that my mother knew not
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I began once more to remember these
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From the very beginning, from the 1
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already here, that, in their compos
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All three of the aims, self-imposed
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- Page 98 and 99: SECOND TALKdelivered by me in the s
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- Page 126 and 127: FOURTH TALKdelivered by me on Decem
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part of the brain, the second, in a
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Work went so well that by nine o'cl
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woke up my secretary who was sleepi
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as soon as I should begin the writi
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was not a 'blood brother' of his an
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"All present sat or kneeled quietly
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In short, irrespective of my unquen
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I took The New York Times, a huge,
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THE OUTER AND INNER WORLD OF MANTHE
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logical Clinic for the Aged of the
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in general and of its separate impo
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which have already been mentioned.O
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The first is the outer world—in o
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This principle, which is beyond sci
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And as soon as a man begins to thin