10 results for stemmed:roger
(Intrigued by giving such different and difficult material, Jane checked a few reference books before Pat Norelli’s Thanksgiving visit from Boston. Pat did take copies of the two sessions back to Roger Sullivan who sent us his opinions of them in later December. But first, here are the copies of Jane’s notes.)
(Now here is the reply Roger wrote to Jane on December 21, 1968, after he’d studied sessions 449 and 450. We hadn’t sent him copies of Jane’s own notes.)
(A note: as of now my original single and/or double spaced typewritten record of the Seth material is 4,636 pages long. Sessions 449 and 450 take up the last 18 pages— hence Roger’s references to numbers in the 4,000 category.)
(Below is a copy of three questions sent to Jane by Roger Sullivan, a friend of Pat Norelli; both live in Boston. Roger is working on a doctorate. [...]
(The equation she tried to give doesn’t make sense to her; she now looked at Roger’s questions again briefly. What she got when giving the equation was not really a vision, she said; it didn’t look like Roger’s writing; she seemed to get the data in words and feelings, numbers radiating or pulsating within at the appropriate times in the data.
[...] Roger’s list contained a fourth question addressed to Seth; this one concerns the Bahai faith, was formulated by a girl friend of Pat’s, and will be answered by Seth at a later date.
(The first 3 questions, as I copied them from Roger’s letter:
[...] See page 149-150 for an explanation of the circumstances surrounding the questions sent to Jane by Pat Norelli’s friend Roger.
(We would like to insert a note here to Roger, to the effect that we would like him to go over the two sessions and give us a detailed written summary of the data given through Jane, in answer to the mathematical questions he sent Jane. [...]
[...] See page 149 for a copy of Roger’s questions.)
[...] Roger, let us call him, is an idealist at heart, but he believes that the individual has little power in the world, and so he did not pursue his personal idealism in the events of his own life. “Everyone is a slave to the system.” [...]
Roger speaks the same way in any social group, and therefore to that extent spreads a negative and despairing aura. [...]
If Roger, mentioned earlier, had begun where he was, he would be a different, happier, more fulfilled person today. [...]