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Letter: Musings on orderliness

Editor, Gazette-Journal:

Every person has a respect for orderliness. It is the quality or state of being organized. One example of orderliness is that of making one’s bed or sorting out one’s laundry. Each requires a certain system of thought.

To be orderly, one must have some concept of time and time’s demands. A job then has a special place at a special time. Each man has his own system of orderliness. Some are naturally sloppy, while others are very precise in their goal.

The function of the mind is a function of the organization of thought. Each neuron has a very specific and orderly job to do. Thoughts run back and forth upon well-ordered networks of brain fibers. The whole operation of thought is based on a divine order of things.

When a man reaches, for example, for a glass, the brain sends an order to a type of electrical charge, which in turn contacts an orderly system of nerves. Without this system of nerves, the body part could not function.

Ord...

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