BOOK 2. THE BATH SCHOOL. N. LEVASHOV'S «SVETL BROOM» IN A. KHATYBOV'S «BATH SCHOOL» AND A LABOUR SPADE

Book 2. The Bath School. Chapter 5. Correction of the Brain structure before and after taking the Bath 238 comparable in their significance to the Great Flood. In order to somehow ease this oncoming period for people, it is necessary to build a design for a future world outlook that differs from today's as far as a ship differs from house. All the rest, in my opinion, IS USELESS IN THE STRATEGIC PERSPECTIVE , because building a house on the eve of the flood, using old knowledge and old worldview, is doomed to failure. The house is good on the land; at sea it is a coffin. The same should be applied to the Knowledge, “gained” by the absolute majority. It is necessary to search for something new, fundamentally different, but not create a "protective" construction, relying on the today’s knowledge; search for those like-minded people who have got at the meaning of the events taking place. It is necessary to start a search (if, of course, there is a desire to survive) looking into what is left to us by N. Levashov , the Scientist who DID NOT FINISH WRITING his third book, "The Mirror of My Soul", but he laid the foundation for moving forward – to a new world perception and gaining one’s own New Knowledge. That's what I proceeded from, when "taking up the pen." 5.1. For the people from the locomotive Imagine the Mankind in the form of a train. Ahead is the locomotive dragging the train carriages behind it. First follow passenger carriages, followed by freight trucks and the tank trucks close the train. PEOPLE go on this train. They HAVE DIFFERENT OVERALL VIEW OF THE OUTSIDE WORLD . Those sitting in the locomotive see the surrounding space at maximum width, as they sit in front of a huge windshield with large windows on each side. The outside world for them is seen in the same way as the space inside the locomotive. In the passenger carriages there is no windshield, there are only large side windows that open the view on both sides. If you wish, you can even lean out of the window look a little ahead. The world outside the carriage is of no doubt for these passengers as well as for those in the locomotive. There are no windows in the freight trucks, but there are slits to which one can cling to and see the outside world. But most of them do not look through the slits, for they are busy with their "truck" affairs. For them, THE MAIN REALITY IS THE TRUCK SPACE . As if there is no world outside the truck. It would be considered non-existent, if not for the slits through

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