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Poet's Code of Ethics
1.To attain the brotherhood-of-man idea by giving righteous action
and good-will service to every man instead of taking from him that
which he has.
2.To discover that all men are extensions of each other, that man is
made for man, and that the hurt of one man is the hurt of all men.
3.To develop character, intelligence and good citizenship by teaching
every man from early youth how to be a good neighbor and a loyal
citizen.
4.To discover one's inner Self by awakening within him that spark of
divine genius which lies dormant in every man.
5. To teach man to think rather than to remember and repeat.
6. To realize that work done for the material world should be for man's
enoblement, and not for grinding his soul out in the gears of
industrial machines.
7. To know that man is Mind, not body; that he is immortal Spirit, not
mortal flesh, that he is good, not bad.
8. To judge the righteousness and religion of any man by what he does
to his fellow man and not by his belief's, doctrines, creeds, or
dogmas.
Lao and Walter Russell added number 9 and 10, in essence:
9. To give a scientific course for the study of the application of the
Spencer Code of Human Relations.
10. To combine science and philosophy in a unified teaching.
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