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December 24th, 1917
Received by James Padgett.
Washington D.C.
I am here, Immanuel Kant.
I have listened to your conversation tonight and have been much
interested, so much that I have wondered what the source of your
apparent beliefs is, for I see that you are sincere in your declarations
of what you declare the truths to be.
I have been in the spirit world for a great many years, and have
not been idle as regards my investigation of the truth, and have
given my very strenuous efforts to learn the truth of man's destiny
and the ultimate end of his existence. I was a thinker when on earth,
and had a considerable reputation as to being a deep thinker of
things metaphysical and even today I have a large following among
those mortals who give their time and attention to the investigation
of the truths of the nature spoken of.
I have progressed very much, not only in the spheres in which I
have lived, but also in the development of my intellect and in the
development of my soul, for I enjoy a very considerable happiness,
and have been able to apply the moral principles that should govern
men in their relation to one another and to God, and have experienced
the benefit of such application. I have many associates like myself
in development of the dualities mentioned, and often do we assemble
and discuss these important principles of man's relationship to
God and to the development of man and the aim and ultimate destiny
of his existence.
Truth is, we know, of itself alone, and never changes, and when
we believe and are convinced that we have found a truth, we accept
it as a basis upon which to found our further efforts for investigation
and the discovery of other truths, and, as a consequence, we are
not compelled to depend upon mere speculation as we were when on
earth. We know that the spirit of man never ceases to live, and,
hence, immortality must be his certain portion in the great economy
of God, and that, as the law of being is progression, we must always
be enabled to progress. And having that fact from which to start
we continue our investigations and studies in the certain belief
that their results will be the discovery of the truths, and that
we must ultimately find the reason for man's existence, and his
final destiny.
But from what I have heard you and your friend say, there must
be a branch of truth that I or my friends, have never heard of or
attempted to investigate, and to me it sounds very attractive, and
so much so, that I would like to have some enlightenment from which
I may be able to postulate a premise upon which I may build a superstructure
if possible. I have, of course, heard a great deal of love and the
purification of the soul, and the necessity for men and spirit striving
to get rid of all those things that contaminate the soul and foster
the continuation of the in-harmony that now exists and keeps man
from becoming the perfect man, and spirit also.
I have heard that in the higher spiritual kingdom there are spirits
of men that have become perfect and existing in harmony with the
laws of God, yet they do not claim to be more than men - perfect
men. But you talk of a love that will make men, or the souls of
men, divine, in their constituency, and therefore, a part of that
divinity which we ascribe only to the Infinite; and I must tell
you that what you say has opened up to me a new vision of possibility
of study that may lead to what we now have no conception of.
I am sincere in what I write, and if you can help me in entering
on the study of the truths of which you speak, I will be very grateful,
and assure you that it will not be lost on an inattentive ear or
a mind stunted by a belief that it already knows all that can be
acquired, or the way to acquire all that may be learned. I was on
earth a philosopher and known as:
Immanuel Kant
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