it. In some situations, a logical view contends with a more irrational, magical one. Today, the morning group praying, evening hymn singing, Christian Republican Right Wing feed their feelings of being on the side of God by dividing people into those that are like them and good and those that President Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft calls the evil doing “bad guys.” As noted previously, psychoanalytic theory posits that the evil doing others may represent the projected repository of our own unacceptable impulses and inclinations. It became quite clear in my own psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic training that it is in healing our split and knowledge of our own unacceptable things that will lead to our understanding and forgiveness of others. As we dig deeper into global brain-mind dynamics of emergent high-energy fixation, stuck repetitiousness and splitting, we encounter their universality in the structures of mathematical thought. Did we just make them fit? Do these thought forms map onto internal and external physical reality? Are these abstract concepts and operations simply products of our biological brains manifested as psychological mechanics and used to explain to ourselves what we perceive and think? Does a square have external reality or is it a universally imagined something, and, as such, represented only in our minds and the pictures of it we draw? Is mathematical understanding simply inborn perceptual skills combined with developed and practiced logical cognition? Or, do we take the Platonic view of mathematical relations: these abstractions are the ultimate realities, antedating and persisting through the past, present and future of the universe and omnipresent. Where can the conceptual boundary be drawn between the physical reality of the Babylonian surveyors use of the Pythagorean theorem to calculate distances, that the sum of the squares of the lengths of the two legs of a right triangle is equal to the square of the length of its hypoten