But after learning how to quack and how to squeak, the children do not "go into the World," and they do not actually view anything either. Instead, the Orbis abruptly shifts to the philosophical and the invisible, perhaps hoping that a firm grasp of ducks and mice is sufficient for understanding the divine. Chapter 2 presents children with a crash course in theological metaphysics, where they learn that God is "in his Essence Spiritual, and One. In his personality, Three." They learn that He is "A Light inaccessible; and yet all in all. Every where and no where." Even if the Orbis is devoted to showing the world visually, its discussion of God is abstract and opaque. And the illustration for this chapter is nothing like the bearded old man we see on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. It is instead a complex diagram, faceless and geometric. So much for the goal of showing "The World of Things Obvious to the Senses."