■ The student thought for a moment and said: This is why I have come to you. Please talk more about the depths.
● The Master rose slowly and approached the pale blackboard. He took a chalk and drew a large circle. Then drew a smaller circle inside it, and drew a few smaller circles inside each other, until he reached the central point. Then he returned to his seat and told the student, who was looking at these vague shapes with surprise: This is the geometric diagram of the problems of society. Each one of these circles represents a level of the problems of society. Each circle, on the one hand, rests upon the inner circle, and on the other hand, stabilizes the outer circle, until it reaches the central circle. This circle is the basis and root of the other circles; meaning that all the nested circles are formed from this central circle, because there is a cause-and-effect relationship among these circles. The superficial problems of society, including poverty, corruption, oppression, fear and all that you mentioned, are also based on the inner problems of society. For example, the problem of social crimes is based on the problem of poverty, and the problem of poverty is based on the problem of unemployment, and the problem of unemployment is based on the problem of underdevelopment of society, and the problem of underdevelopment of society is also based on more internal problems, until it ends with the main and fundamental problem.