1 result for (book:tps2 AND session:602 AND stemmed:characterist)
[... 10 paragraphs ...]
The data was also given as I told you by speakers before the time of recognized written language. Some of the speakers were Sumari, and so we will often deal with speakers who were Sumari. Therefore the material will have a typical Sumari slant and interest, a characteristic focus upon certain areas.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
Sounds obviously existed before language. There is a pattern of sound beneath all languages, a bed of vocal communication that lies behind all language and alphabet. The vocal sounds of the Sumari language and characteristics as they are presently apparent to you will, hopefully, lead toward these clearly understood but logically unstructured sounds that are recognized by the organism and by the inner self, but ignored by the reasoning conscious mind that focuses upon the logical language.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
The body’s feeling, the sound of the words, convey(s) the message. So independently of any language there are sounds that in themselves convey such messages, that act upon the physical system. Their utterance demands certain characteristic uses of breath. What is felt by the organism approximates the meaning of the sounds, and to some extent is the meaning of the sounds.
[... 20 paragraphs ...]
Ruburt’s proficiency with rhythm and words and your proficiency with visual symbols will be put to use therefore. Again, your characteristics are admirably suited. You may be able to translate the verbalized sounds into pictures or into miniature pictures that later turn into symbols. There are various ways, in other words, open in which the information may finally be received.
[... 9 paragraphs ...]
(10:50.) As absolute manifestations of energy, one of their characteristics is the astonishing rapidity with which they can appear multidimensionally, simultaneously showing themselves in different guises while maintaining the basic integrity from which the guises spring. For later reference now add this: along these lines a number can be more than itself, and be duplicated invisibly as an equation, changing the nature of the equation and of the results, while never showing itself. A number can also parade as another number, over-weighing an equation. Some numbers have (in quotes) “silent partners.” They attract certain other numbers more than others.
[... 9 paragraphs ...]