And what’s interesting is that morning gives rise to day, as its opposite, like the spiritual versus the material. Then that too... it’s like some kind of binary code — or however mathematicians explain it. So, essentially, one becomes two — its opposite — like odd and even: the odd one becomes even two — morning and day. But then there’s also this mirrored reflection by properties. So if morning is one, symbolically, and day is two, then if we build a table beneath morning and day, under morning we should see its mirror reflection. And that reflection might even be diagonal — that’s also a possibility. But the essence is this: the reflection of morning — meaning one — should be four, which is night. And the reflection of two, which is day, would be evening — three. Of course, I still need to decode this properly and draw it correctly so that everything aligns — then everyone will be in shock. But the idea is that this is how the unfolding happens, how the whole thing breaks down. So morning is spiritual, day is material — its opposite — and their mirrored expressions are evening and night.
And then, what’s next — if we keep unfolding this, breaking it down even further? All of this still belongs to the world of the God of the Sun. But it turns out that these four worlds also have four opposing worlds — not under the Sun, but under the Moon. Whoa! And I also perceive it like this: if you draw it on a flat plane, you’d write “morning” in the top left corner, then to the right of it, you write “day” in the top right. Then, directly beneath “morning,” in the bottom left corner, you write “night,” because it’s the mirror reflection. And beneath “day,” in the bottom right, you write “evening,” as the reflection of “day.” And then it’s like we take this whole structure — this square — and that’s the Sun side. But now we can flip it, and we get four more world elements, not positive, but negative — under the Moon. And you see, it’s as if there’s always a kind of “morning” that then becomes something else... that is, it’s air... And then comes the transformation, where it turns into its opposite: day, which is earth. And then there’s the mirror side of that air and earth — this mirrored reflection produces different properties entirely: now it becomes ether and water as elements. And even these four elements — they exist in one form under the Sun, but if you flip them, they probably completely change their properties — turn into their full opposites — because now they’re under the Moon.