Chapter 427 Material Reality _3

"The so-called 'things' connote existence and substantiation, their name and destiny bound to their actuality. Those who know speak of things by their understanding of them, skimming over the nature of all things. Their very nature has a reason for being; it is only with actuality that we may speak of them. Without actuality, there is nothing to be said..."

The initial observational analysis and methodological theory had been concluded, and from that point on, the worldview of the Mount Mo lineage began its introduction. Although the text seemed somewhat circuitous with a philosophical air, it really wasn't all that difficult to understand.

Here, it was simply the definition that the Mount Mo lineage, through observation, gave to natural existence: it encompassed all matter, entity, form, phenomena, and existence outside the subject, as the broadest and most universal concept.