e premte, 26 tetor 2007

The application of these rules to one"s daily life must be varied with



each individual
The application of these rules to one"s daily life must be varied with
each individual. The most practical method is for the individual to
begin the improvement he would seek by constructing a typical day"s
program in which time is provided for, say, breathing and other
exercises in bed, bath, toilet, walk to business, meals, amusement,
etc., with special notes and memoranda as to the particular faults of
omission and commission to be corrected. One might also, as Benjamin
Franklin records in his autobiography, keep a daily record for a week as
to how nearly the program is lived up to. By dint of such and other
stimuli, the transition in habits can be made, after which the 'rules'
cease to be rules, as carrying any sense of restriction, and become
automatic like putting on or taking off one"s clothes.




In fact, a very noted professor in Berlin University developed



a series of properties of odd perfect numbers in his lectures
on the theory of numbers, and then followed these developments
with the statement that it is not known whether any such
numbers exist
In fact, a very noted professor in Berlin University developed
a series of properties of odd perfect numbers in his lectures
on the theory of numbers, and then followed these developments
with the statement that it is not known whether any such
numbers exist. This raises the interesting philosophical
question whether one can know things about what is not known to
exist; but the main interest from our present point of view
relates to the fact that the meaning of odd perfect number is
so very elementary that all can easily grasp it, and yet no one
has ever succeeded in proving either the existence or the
non-existence of such numbers.




When standing, do not keep the heels together and toes out, as in the



ordinary attitude prescribed by athletic manuals, and the military
attitude of 'attention
When standing, do not keep the heels together and toes out, as in the
ordinary attitude prescribed by athletic manuals, and the military
attitude of 'attention.' Correct posture is more like the military
attitude 'at rest'--namely, heels apart, toes straight forward, the
sides of the feet forming two sides of a square. This attitude gives
stability and poise and insures a proper distribution of the weight of
the body upon the structures of the feet.