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THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
A DISCOURSE AT THE SOCIETY OF THEOPHILANTHROPISTS, PARIS
Religion has two principal enemies, Fanatism and Infidelity, or that which is called Atheism. The first requires to be combatted by reason and morality, the other by natural philosophy.
The existence of a God is the first dogma of the Theophilanthropists. It is upon this subject that I solicit your attention; for though it has been often treated of, and that most sublimely, the subject is inexhaustible; and there will always remain something to be said that has not been before advanced. I go therefore to open the subject, and to crave your attention to the end. The Universe is the bible of a true Theophilanthropist. It is there that he reads of God. It is there that the proofs of his existence are to be sought and to be found. As to written or printed books, by whatever name they are called they are the works of man's hands, and carry no evidence in themselves that God is the author of any of them. It must be in something that man could not make that we must seek evidence for our belief, and that something is the universe, the true Bible, — the inimitable work of God. Contemplating the universe, the whole system of Creation, in this point of light, we shall discover, that all that which is called natural philosophy is properly a divine study. It is the study of God through his works. It is the best study, and the only one by which we can gain a glimpse of his perfection. Do we want to contemplate his power? We see it in the immensity of the Creation. Do we want to contemplate his wisdom? We see it in the unchangeable order by which the incomprehensible WHOLE is governed. Do we want to contemplate his munificence? We see it in the abundance with which he fills the earth. Do we want to contemplate his mercy? We see it in his not withholding that abundance even from the unthankful. In fine, do we want to know what GOD is? Search not written or printed books, but the Scripture called the Creation. It has been the error of the schools to teach astronomy, and all the other sciences, and subjects of natural philosophy, as accomplishments only; whereas they should be taught theologically, or with reference to the Being who is the author of them: for all the principles of science are of divine origin. Man cannot make, or invent, or contrive principles: he can only discover them; and he ought to look through the discovery to the author. When we examine an extraordinary piece of machinery, an astonishing pile of architecture, a well executed statue, or an highly finished painting, where life and action are imitated, and habit only prevents our mistaking a surface of light and shade for cubical solidity, our ideas are naturally led to think of the extensive genius and talents of the artist. When we study the elements of geometry, we think of Euclid. When we speak of gravitation, we think of Newton. How then is it, that when we study the works of God in the creation, we stop short, and do not think of GOD? It is from the error of the schuss in having taught those subjects as accomplishments only, and thereby separated the study of them from the Being who is the author of them. The schools have made the study of theology to consist in the study of opinions in written or printed books; whereas theology should be studied in the works or books of the creation. The study of theology in the books of opinions has often produced fanatism, rancour, and cruelty of temper; and from hence have proceeded the numerous persecutions, the fanatical quarrels, the religious burnings and massacres, that have desolated Europe. But the study of theology in the works of creation produces a direct contrary effect. The mind becomes at once enlightened and serene, a copy of the scene it beholds: information and adoration go hand in hand; and all the social faculties become enlarged. The evil that has resulted from the error of the schools, in teaching natural philosophy as an accomplishment only, has been that of generating in the pupils a species of Atheism. Instead of looking through the works of creation to the Creator himself, the stop short, and employ the knowledge they acquire to create doubts of his existence. They labour with studied ingenuity to ascribe every thing they behold to innate properties of matter, and jump over all the rest by saying, that matter is eternal. Let us examine the subject; it is worth examining; for if we examine it through all its cases, the result will be, that the existence of a SUPERIOR CAUSE, or that which man calls GOD, will be discoverable by philosophical principles. In the first place, admitting matter to have properties, as we see it has, the question still remains, how came matter by those properties? To this they will answer, that matter possessed those properties eternally. This is not solution, but assertion; and to deny it is equally as impossible of proof as to assert it. It is then necessary to go further; and therefore I say, — if there exist a circumstance that is not a property of matter, and without which the universe, or to speak in a limited degree, the solar system composed of planets and a sun, could not exist a moment, all the arguments of Atheism, drawn from properties of matter, and applied to account for the universe, will be overthrown, and the existence of a superior cause, of that which man calls God, becomes discoverable, as is before said, by natural philosophy. I go now to shew that such a circumstance exists, and what it is. The universe is composed of matter, and as a system, is sustained by motion. Motion is not a property of matter, and without this motion, the solar system could not exist. Were motion a property of matter, that undiscovered and undiscoverable thing called perpetual motion would establish itself. It is because motion is not a property of matter, that perpetual motion is an impossibility in the hand of every being but that of the Creator of motion. When the pretenders to Atheism can produce perpetual motion, and not until then, they may expect to be credited. The natural state of matter, as to place, is a state of rest. Motion, or change of place, is the effect of an external cause acting upon matter. As to that faculty of matter that is called gravitation, it is the influence which two or more bodies have reciprocally on each other to unite and be at rest. Every thing which has hitherto been discovered, with respect to the motion of the planets in the system, relatesonly to the laws by which motion acts, and not to the cause of motion. Gravitation, so far from being the cause of motion to the planets that compose the solar system, would be the destruction of the solar system, were revolutionary motion to cease; for as the action of spinning upholds a top, the revolutionary motion upholds the planets in their orbits, and prevents them from gravitating and forming one mass with the sun. In one sense of the word, philosophy knows, and atheism says, that matter is in perpetual motion. But the motion here meant refers to the state of matter, and that only on the surface of the earth. It is either decomposition, which is continually destroying the form of bodies of matter, or recomposition, which renews that matter in the same or another form, as the decomposition of animal or vegetable substances enter into the composition of other bodies. But the motion that upholds the solar system is of an entire different kind, and is not a property of matter. It operates also to an entire different effect. It operates to perpetual preservation, and to prevent any change in the state of the system. Giving then to matter all the properties which philosophy knows it has, or all that atheism ascribes to it, and can prove, and even supposing matter to be eternal, it will not account for the system of the universe, or of the solar system, because it will not account for motion, and it is motion that preserves it. When, therefore, we discover a circumstance of such immense importance, that without it the universe could not exist, and for which neither matter, nor any nor all the properties can account, we are by necessity forced into the rational comfortable belief of the existence of a cause superior to matter, and that cause man calls GOD. As to that which is called nature, it is no other than the laws by which motion and action of every kind, with respect to unintelligible matter, is regulated. And when we speak of looking through nature up to nature's God, we speak philosophically the same rational language as when we speak of looking through human laws up to the power that ordained them. God is the power of first cause, nature is the law, and matter is the subject acted upon. But infidelity, by ascribing every phænomenon to properties of matter, conceives a system for which it cannot account, and yet it pretends to demonstration. It reasons from what it sees on the surface of the earth, but it does not carry itself on the solar system existing by motion. It sees upon the surface of the earth, but it does not carry itself on the solar system existing by motion. It sees upon the surface a perpetual decomposition and recomposition of matter. It sees that an oak produces an acorn, and acorn an oak, a bird an egg, an egg a bird, and so on. In things of this kind it sees something which it calls a natural cause, but none of the causes it sees is the cause of that motion which preserves the solar system. Let us contemplate this wonderful and stupendous system consisting of matter, and existing by motion. It is not matter in a state of rest, nor in a state of decomposition or recomposition. It is matter systematized in perpetual orbicular or circular motion. As a system that motion is life of it; as animation is life to an animal body, deprive the system of motion, and, as a system, it must expire. Who then breathed into the system the life of motion? What power impelled the planets to move, since motion is not a property of the matter of which they are composed? If we contemplate the immense velocity of this motion, our wonder becomes increased, and our adoration enlarges itself in the same proportion. To instance only one of the planets, that of the earth we inhabit, its distance from the sun, the centre of the orbits of all the planets, is, according to observations of the transit of the planet Venus, about one hundred million miles; consequently, the diameter of the orbit, or circle in which the earth moves round the sun, is double that distance; and the measure of the circumference of the orbit, take as three times its diameter, is six hundred million miles. The earth performs this voyage in three hundred and sixty-five days and some hours, and consequently moves at a rate of more than one million six hundred thousand miles every twenty-four hours. Where will infidelity, where will atheism, find cause for this astonishing velocity of motion, never ceasing, never varying, and which is the preservation of the earth in its orbit? It is not by reasoning from an acorn to an oak, from and egg to a bird, or from any change in the state of matter on the surface of the earth, that this can be accounted for. Its caue is not to be found in matter, nor in any thing we call nature. The atheist who affects to reason, and the fanatic who rejects reason, plunge themselves alike into inextricable difficulties. The one perverts the sublime and enlightening study of natural philosophy into a deformity of absurdities by not reasoning to the end. The other loses himself in the obscurity of metaphysical theories, and dishonours the Creator, by treating the study of his works with contempt. The one is a half-rational of whom there is some hope, the other a visionary to whom we must be charitable. When at first thought we think of a Creator, our ideas appear to us undefined and confused; but it we reason philosophically, those ideas can be easily arranged and simplified. It is a Being whose power is equal to his will. Observe the nature of the will of man. It is of an infinite quality. We cannot conceive the possibility of limits to the will. Observe, on the other hand, how exceedingly limited is his power of acting compared with the nature of his will. Suppose the power equal to the will, and man would be a God. He would will himself eternal, and be so. He could will a creation, and that could make it. In this progressive reasoning, we see in the nature of the will of man half of that which we conceive in thinking of God; add the other half, and we have the whole idea of a being who could make the universe, and sustain it by perpetual motion; because he could create that motion. We know nothing of the capacity of the will of animals, but we know a great deal of the difference of their powers. For example, how numerous are the degrees, and how immense is the difference of power, from a mite to a man. Since then every thing we see below us shews a progression of power, where is the difficulty in supposing that there is, at the summit of all things, a Being in whom an infinity of power unites with the infinity of the will. When this simple idea presents itself to our mind, we have the idea of a perfect Being, that man calls God. It is comfortable to live under the belief of the existence of an infinite protecting power; and it is an addition to that comfort to know that such a belief is not a mere conceit of the imagination, as many of the theories that is called religious are; nor a belief founded only on tradition or received opinion; but is a belief deducible by the action of reason upon the things that compose the system of the universe; a belief arising out of visible facts: and so demonstrable is the truth of this belief, that if no such belief had existed, the persons who now controvert it would have been the persons who would have produced and propagated it; because by beginning to reason they would have been led to reason progressively to the end, and thereby have discovered that matter and the properties it has will not account for the system of the universe, and that there must necessarily be a superior cause. It was the excess to which imaginary systems of religion had been carried, and the intolerance, persecutions, burnings and massacres they occasioned, that first induced certain persons to propagate infidelity; thinking, that upon the whole it was better not to believe at all than to believe a multitude of things and complicated creeds that occasioned so much mischief in the world. But those days are past, persecution hath ceased, and the antidote then set up against it has no longer even the shadow of apology. We profess, and we proclaim in peace, the pure, unmixed, comfortable, and rational belief of a God, as manifested to us in the universe. We do this without any apprehension of that belief being made a cause of persecution as other beliefs have been, or of suffering persecution ourselves. To God, and not to men, are all men to account for their belief. It has been well observed, at the first institution of this Society, that the dogmas it professes to believe are from the commencement of the world; that they are not novelties, but are confessedly the basis of all systems of religion, however numerous and contradictory they may be. All men in the outset of the religion they profess are Theophlanthropists. It is impossible to form any system of religion without building upon those principles, and therefore they are not sectarian principles, unless we suppose a sect composed of all the world. I have said in the course of this discourse, that the study of natural philosophy is a divine study, because it is the study of the works of God in the creation. If we consider theology upon this ground, what an extensive field of improvement in things both divine and human opens itself before us! All the principles of science are of divine origin. It was not man that invented the principles on which astronomy, and every branch of mathematics, are founded and studied. It was not man that gave properties to the circle and the triangle. Those principles are eternal and immutable. We see in them the unchangeable nature of the Divinity. We see in them immortality, and immortality existing after the material figures that express those properties are dissolved in dust. The Society is a present in its infancy, and its means are small; but I wish to hold in view the subject I allude to, and instead of teaching the philosophical branches of learning as ornamental accomplishments only, as they have hitherto been taught, to teach them in a manner that shall combine theological knowledge with scientific instruction. To do this to the best advantage, some instruments will be necessary, for the purpose of explanation, of which the Society is not yet possessed. But as the views of this Society extend to public good as well as to that of the individual, and as its principles can have no enemies, means may devised to procure them. If we unite to the present instruction a series of lectures on the ground I have mentioned, we shall, in the first place, render theology the most delightful and entertaining of all studies. In the next place we shall give scientific instruction to those who could not otherwise obtain it. The mechanic of every profession will there be taught the mathematical principles necessary to render him a proficient in his art; the cultivator will there see developed the principles of vegetation; while at the same time, they will be led to see the hand of God in all things.
This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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ADDRESS
of
WILLIAM ROBERT GROVE, Esq., Q.C., M.A., F.R.S.,
PRESIDENT.
If our rude predecessors, who at one time inhabited the caverns which surround this town, could rise from their graves and see it in its present state, it may be doubtful whether they would have sufficient knowledge to be surprised.
The machinery, almost resembling organic beings in delicacy of structure, by which are fabricated products of world-wide reputation, the powers of matter applied to give motion to that machinery, are so far removed from what must have been the conceptions of the semibarbarians to whom I have alluded, that they could not look on thorn with intelligent wonder.
Yet this immense progress has all been effected step by step, now and then a little more rapidly than at other times; but, viewing the whole course of improvement, it has been gradual, though moving in an accelerated ratio. But it is not merely in those branches of natural knowledge which tend to improvements in economical arts and manufacture*, that science has made great progress. In the study of our own planet and the organic beings with which it is crowded, and in so much of the universe, as vision, aided by the telescope, has brought within the scope of observation, the present century has surpassed any antecedent period of equal duration.
It would be difficult to trace out all the causes which have led to the increase of observational and experimental knowledge.
Among the more thinking portion of mankind the gratification felt by the discovery of new truths, the expansion of faculties, and extension of the boundaries of knowledge have been doubtless a sufficient inducement to the study of nature; while, to the more practical minds, the reality, the certainty, and the progressive character of the acquisitions of natural science, and the enormously increased means which its applications give, have impressed its importance as a minister to daily wants and a contributor to ever-increasing material comforts, luxury, and power.
Though by no means the only one, yet an important cause of the rapid advance of science is the growth of associations for promoting the progress either of physical knowledge generally, or of special branches of it. Since the foundation of the Royal Society, now more than two centuries ago, a vast number of kindred societies have sprung up in this country and in Europe. The advantages conferred by these societies are manifold; they enable those who are devoted to scientific research, to combine, compare, and check their observations, to assist, by the thoughts of several minds, the promotion of the inquiry undertaken; they contribute from a joint purse to such efforts as their members deem most worthy; they afford a means of submitting to a competent tribunal notices and memoirs, and of obtaining for their authors and others, by means of the discussions which ensue, information given by those best informed on the particular subject; they enable the author to judge whether it is worth his while to pursue the subjects he has brought forward, and they defray the expense of printing and publishing such researches as are thought deserving of it.
These advantages, and others might be named, pertain to the Association the 36th Meeting of which we are this evening assembled to inaugurate; but it has, from its intermittent and peripatetic character, advantages which belong to none of the societies which are fixed as to their locality.
Among these are the novelty and freshness of an annual meeting, which, while it brings together old Members of the Association, many of whom only meet on this occasion, always adds a quota of new Members, infusing new blood, and varying the social character of our meetings.
The visits of distinguished foreigners, whom we have previously known by reputation, is one of the most delightful and improving of the results. The wide field of inquiry, and the character of communications made to the Association, including all branches of natural knowledge, and varying from simple notices of an interesting observation or experiment, to the most intricate and refined branches of scientific research, another valuable characteristic.
Lastly, perhaps the greatest advantage resulting from the annual visits of this great parliament to new localities is that, while it imparts fresh local knowledge to the visitors, it leaves behind stimulating memories, which rouse into permanent activity dormant or timid minds — an effect which, so far from ceasing with the visit of the Association, frequently begins when that visit terminates.
Every votary of physical science must be anxious to see it recognized by those institutions of the country which can to the greatest degree promote its cultivation and reap from it the greatest benefit. You will probably agree with me that the principal educational establishments on the one hand, and on the other the Government, in many of its departments, are the institutions which may best fulfil these conditions. The more early the mind is trained to a pursuit of any kind, the deeper and more permanent are the impressions received, and the more service can be rendered by the students.
M Quo semel est imbuta reoons servabit odorem Twta dm."
Little can be achieved in scientific research without an acquaintance with it in youth; you will rarely find an instance of a man who has attained any eminence in science who has not commenced its study at a very early period of life. Nothing, again, can tend more to tho promotion of science than the exertions of those who have early acquired the Jjdos resulting from a scientific education. I desire to make no complaint of the tardiness with which science has been received at our public schools and, with some exceptions, at our Universities. These great establishments have their roots in historical periods, and long time and patient endeavour is requisite before a new branch of thought can be grafted with success on a stem to which it is exotic. Nor should I ever wish to see the study of languages, of history, of all those refined associations which the past has transmitted to us, neglected; bat there is room for both. It is sad to see the number of so-called educated men who, travelling by railway, voyaging by steamboat, consulting the almanac for the time of sunrise or full-moon, have not the most elementary knowledge of a steam-engine, a barometer, or a quadrant; and who will listen with a half-confessed faith to the most idle predictions as to weather or cometio influences, while they are in a state of crass ignorance aa to the cause of the trade-winds or the form of a comet's path. May we hope that the slight infiltration of scientific studies, now happily commenced, will extend till it ocoupies its fair space in the education of the young, and that those who may be able learnedly to discourse on the Eolic digamma will not be ashamed of knowing the principles on which the action of an air-pump, an electrical machine, or a telescope depends, and will not, as Bacon complained of his contemporaries, despise such knowledge as something mean and mechanical.
To assert that the great departments of Government should encourage physical science may appear a truism, and yet it is but of late that it has been seriously done; now, the habit of consulting men of science on important questions of national interest is becoming a recognized practice, and in a time, which may seem long to individuals, but is short in the history of a nation, a more definite sphere of usefulness for national purposes will, I have no doubt, be provided for those duly qualified men who may be content to give up the more tempting study o& abstract science for that of its practical applications. In this respect the Report of the Kew Committee for this year affords a subject of congratulation to those whom I have the honour to address. The Kew Observatory, the petted child of the British Association, may possibly become an important national establishment; and if so, while it will not, I trust, lose its character of a home for untrammelled physical research, it will have superadded some of the functions of the Meteorological Department of the Board of Trade with a staff of skilful and experienced observers.
This is one of the results which the general growth of science, and the labours of this Association in particular, have produced; but I do not propose on this occasion to recapitulate the special objects attained by the Association, this has been amply done by several of my predecessors; nor shall I confine my address to the progress made in physical science since the time when my most able and esteemed Mend and predecessor addressed you at Birmingham. In the various reports and communications which will be road at your Sections, details of every step which has been made in science since our last Meeting will be brought to your notice, and I have no doubt fully and freely discussed.
I purpose, with your kind permission, to submit to you certain views of what has within a comparatively recent period been accomplished by science,
. what have been the steps leading to the attained results, and what, as far as we may fairly form an opinion, is the general character pervading modern discovery.
It seems to me that the object we have in view would bo more nearly approached, by each President, chosen as they are in succession as repre- senting different branches of science, giving on these occasions either an account of the progress of the particular branch of science he has cultivated, when that is not of a very limited and special character, or enouncing his own view of the general progress of science ; and though this will necessarily involve much that belongs to recent years, the confining a President to a mere risumS of what has taken place since our last Meeting would, I venture with diffidence to think, limit his means of usefulness, and render his discourse rather an annual register than an instructive essay.
I need not dwell on tho common-place hut yet important topics of the material advantages resulting from the application of science; I will address myself to what, in my humble judgment, are the lessons we have learned and the probable prospects of improved natural knowledge.
One word will give you the key to what I am about to discourse on; that word is continuity, no new word, and used in no new sense, but perhaps applied more generally than it has hitherto been. We shall see, unless I am much mistaken, that the development of observational, experimental, and even deductive knowledge is either attained by steps so extremely small as to form really a continuous ascent; or, when distinct results apparently separate from any coordinate phenomena have been attained, that then, by the subsequent progress of science, intermediate links have been discovered uniting the apparently segregated instances with other more familiar phenomena.
Thus the more we investigate, the more we find that in existing phenomena graduation from the like to the seemingly unlike prevails, and in the changes which take place in time, gradual progress is, and apparently must be, the course of nature.
Let me now endeavour to apply this view to the recent progress of some of the more prominent branches of science.
In Astronomy, from the time when the earth was considered a flat plain bounded by a flat ocean, — when the sun, moon, and stars were regarded as lanterns to illuminate this plain, — each successive discovery has brought with it similitudes and analogies between this earth and many of the objects of the universe with which our senses, aided by instruments, have made us acquainted. I pass, of course, over those discoveries which have established the Copernican system as applied to our sun, its attendant planets, and their satellites. The proofs, however, that gravitation is not confined to our solar system, but pervades the universe, have received many confirmations by the labours of Members of this Association; I may name those who have held the office of President, Lord Kossc, Lord Wrottesley, and Sir J. Herschel, the latter having devoted special attention to the orbits of double stars, the former to those probably more recent systems called nebulae. Double stars seem to be orbs analogous to our own 6un and revolving round their common centre of gravity in a conic-section curve, as do the planets with which we are more intimately acquainted; but the nebulas present more difficulty, and some doubt has been expressed whether gravitation, such as we consider it, acts with those bodies (at least those exhibiting a spiral form) as it does with us ; possibly some other modifying influence may exist, our present ignorance of which gives rise to the apparent difficulty. There is, however, another class of observations quite recent in its importance, and which has formed a special subject of contribution to the Reports and Transactions of this Association; I allude to those on Meteorites, at which our lamented Member, and to many of us our valued friend, Prof. Baden Powell assiduously laboured, for investigations into which a Committee of this Association is formed, and a series of star-charts for enabling observers of shooting-stars to record their observations was laid before the last Meeting of the Association by Mr.Glaisher.
It would occupy too much of your time to detail the efforts of Bessel, Bchwinke, the late Sir J. Lubbock, and others, as applied to the formation of star-charts for aiding the observation of meteorites which Mr. Alexander Herschel, Mr. Brayley, Mr. Sorby, and others are now studying.
Dr. Olmeied explained the appearance of a point from which the lines of flight of meteors seem to radiate, as being the perspective vanishing point of their parallel or nearly parallel courses appearing to an observer on tho earth as it approaches them. The uniformity of position of these radiant points, the many corroborative observations on the direction, the distances, and the velocities of these bodies, the circumstance that their paths intersect the earth's orbit at certain definite periods* and the total failure of all other theories which have been advanced, while there is no substantial objection to this, afford evidence almost amounting to proof that these are cosmical bodies moving in the interplanetary space by gravitation round the sun, and some perhaps round planets. This view gives us a new element of continuity. Tho universe would thus appear not to have the extent of empty space formerly attributed to it, but to be studded between the larger and more visible masses with smaller planets, if the term be permitted to be applied to meteorites.
Observations are now made at the periods at which meteors appear in greatest numbers — at Greenwich by Mr. Glaishcr, at Cambridge by Prof. Adams, and at Hawkhurst by Mr. Alexander Herschel &mdash and every preparation is made to secure as much accuracy as can, in the present state of knowledge, be secured for such observations.
The number of known asteroids, or bodies of a smaller size than what are termed the ancient planets, has been so increased by numerous discoveries, that instead of seven we now count eighty-eight as the number of recognized planets — a field of discovery with which the name of Hind will be ever associated.
If we add these, the smallest of which is only twenty or thirty miles in diameter, indeed cannot be accurately measured, and if we were to apply the same scrutiny to other parts of the heavens as has been applied to the zone between Mors and Jupiter, it is no far-fetched speculation to suppose that in addition to asteroids and meteorites, many other bodies exist until the spaee occupied by our solar system becomes filled up with planetary bodies varying in size from that of Jupiter (1240 times larger in volume than the earth) to that of a cannon-ball or even a pistol-bullet.
The researches of Leverrier on the intra-mercurial planets come in aid of these views ; and another half century may, and not improbably will, enable us to ascertain that the now seemingly vacant interplanetary spaces are occupied by smaller bodies which have hitherto escaped observation, just as the asteroids had until the time of Olbers and Piazzi. But the evidence of continuity as pervading the universe does not stop at telescopic observation; ehemistry and physical optics bring usnewproofs. Those meteoricbodies which have from time to time come so far within reach of the earth's attraction as to fall upon its surface, give on analysis metals and oxides similar to those which belong to the structure of the earth — they come as travellers bringing specimens of minerals from extra-terrestrial regions.
In a series of papers recently communicated to the French Academy, M. Daubree has discussed the chemical and mineralogical character of meteorites as compared with the rocks of the earth. He finds that the similarity of terrestrial rocks to meteorites increases as we penetrate deeper into the earth's crust, and that some of the deep-seated minerals have a composition and characteristics almost identical with meteorites [olivine, heraoHte, and serpentine, for instance, closely resemble them]; that as we approach the surface, rooks having similar components with meteorites aro found, but in a state of oxidation, which necessarily much modifies their mineral charaoter, and which, by involving secondary oxygenized compounds, must also change their chemical constitution. By experiments he has succeeded in forming from terrestrial rocks substances very much resembling meteorites. Thus close relationship, though by no means identity, is established between this earth and those wanderers from remote regions, some evidence, though at present incomplete, of a common origin.
Surprise has often been expressed that, while the mean specific gravity of this globe is from five to six times that of water, the mean specific gravity of its crust is barely half as great. It has long seemed to me that there is no ground for wonder here. The exterior of our planet is to a considerable depth oxidated; the interior is in all probability free from oxygen, and whatever bodies exist there are in a reduced or deoxidated state, if so, their specific gravity must necessarily be higher than that of their oxides or chlorides, Ac.: we find, moreover, that some of the deep seated minerals have a higher specific gravity than the average of those on the surface; olivine, for instance, has a specific gravity of 3*3. There is therefore no & priori improbability that the mean specific gravity of the earth should notably exceed that of its surface ; and if we go further and suppose the interior of the earth to be formed of the same ingredients as the exterior, minus oxygen, chlorine, bromine, &c., a specific gravity of 5 to 6 would not be an unlikely one. Many of the elementary bodies entering largely into the formation of the earth's crust are as light or lighter than water, — for instance, potassium, sodium, etc; others, such as sulphur, silicon, aluminium, have from two to three times its specific gravity ; others, again, as iron, copper, sine, tin, seven to nine times ; while others, lead, gold, platinum, &c, are much more dense, — but, speaking generally, the more dense are the least numerous. There seems no improbability in a mixture of such substances producing a mean specific gravity of from 5 to 6, although it by no means follows, indeed the probability is rather the other way, that the proportions of the substances in the interior of the earth are the same as on the exterior. It might be worth the labour to ascertain tho mean specific gravity of all the known minerals on the earth's surface, averaging them in the ratios in which, as far as our knowledge goes, they quantitatively exist, and assuming them to exist without the oxygen, chlorine, &c., with which they are, with some rare exceptions, invariably combined on the surface of the earth : great assistance to the knowledge of the probable constitution of the earth might be derived from such an investigation.
While chemistry, analytic and synthetic, thus aids us in ascertaining tho relationship of our planet to meteorites, its relation in composition to other planets, to the sun, and to more distant suns and systems is aided by another science, viz. optics.
That light passing from one transparent medium to another should carry with it evidence of the source from which it emanates, would, until lately, have seemed an extravagant supposition ; but probably (could we read it) everything contains in itself a large portion of its own history.
I need not detail to you the discoveries of Kirchhoff, Bunsen, MiUer, Huggins, and others, they have been dilated on by my predecessor. Assuming that spectrum analysis is a reliablo indication of the presence of given substances by the position of transverse bright lines exhibited when they are burnt and of transverse dark lines when light is transmitted through their vapours, though Pliicker has shown that with some substances these lines vary with temperature, the point of importance in the view I am presenting to you is, that while what may be called comparatively neighbouring cosmical bodies exhibit lines identical with many of those shown by the components of this planet, as we proceed to the more distant appearances of the nebulas we get bat one or two of such lines, and we get one or two new bands not yet iden- tified with any known to be produced by substances on this globe.
Within the last year Mr. Huggins has added to his former researches observations on the spectrum of a comet (comet 1 of 1866), the nucleus of which shows but one bright line, while the spectrum formed by the light of the coma is continuous, seeming to show that the nucleus is gaseous while the coma would consist of matter in a state of minute division shining by reflected light : whether this be solid, liquid, or gaseous is doubtful ; but the author thinks it is in a condition analogous to that of fog or cloud. The position in the spectrum of the bright line furnished by the nucleus is the same as that of nitrogen, which also is shown in some of the nebulae.
But the moat remarkable achievement by spectrum analysis is the record of observations on a temporary star which has shone forth this year in the constellation of the northern crown about a degree S.E. of the star e. When it was first seen, May 12th, it was nearly equal in brilliancy to a star of the second magnitude ; when observed by Mr. Huggins and Dr. Miller, May 16th, it was reduced to the third or fourth magnitude. Examined by these observers with the spectroscope, it gave a spectrum which they state was unlike that of any celestial body they had examined.
The light was compound and had emanated from two different sources. One spectrum was analogous to that of the sun, viz., formed by the light of an incandescent solid or liquid photosphere which had suffered absorption by the vapours of an envelope cooler than itself. The second spectrum consisted of a few bright lines, which indicated that the light by which it was formed was emitted by matter in the state of luminous gas. They consider that, from the position of two of the bright lines, the gas must be probably hydrogen, and from their brilliancy compared with the light of the photosphere the gas must have been at a very high temperature. They imagine the phenomena to result from the burning of hydrogen with some other element, and that from the resulting temperature the photosphere is heated to incandescence.
There is strong reason to believe that this star is one previously seen by Argelander and Sir J. Herschel, and that it is a variable star of long or irregular period; it is also notable that some of its spectrum lines correspond with those of several variable stars. The time of its appearance was too short for any attempt to ascertain its parallax ; it would have been important if it could even have been established that it is not a near neighbour, as the magnitude of such a phenomenon must depend upon its distance. I forbear to add any speculations as to the cause of this most singular phenomenon; however imperfect the knowledge given us by these observations, it is a groat triumph to have caught this fleeting object, and obtained permanent records for the use of future observers.
It would seem as if the phenomenon of gradual change obtained towards the remotest objects with which we are at present acquainted, and that the farther we penetrate into space the more unlike to those we are acquainted with become the objects of our examination, &mdash: sun, planets, meteorites, earth similarly though not identically constituted, stars differing from each other and from our system, and nebula? more remote in space and differing more in their characters and constitution.
While we thus can to some extent investigate the physical constitution of the most remote visible substances, may we not hope that some further insight as to the constitution of the nearest, viz. our own satellite, may be given us by this class of researches? The question whether the moon possesses any atmosphere may still be regarded as unsolved. If there be any, it must bo exceedingly small in quantity and highly attenuated. Calculations, made from occultation of stars, on the apparent differences of the semidiameter of the bright and dark moon give an amount of difference which might indicate a minute atmosphere, but which Mr. Airy attributes to irradiation.
Supposing the moon to be constituted of similar materials to the earth, it must be, to say the least, doubtful whether there is oxygen enough to oxidate the metals of which she is composed; and if not, the surface which we see most be metallic, or nearly so. The appearance of her craters is not unlike that seen on the surface of some metals, such as bismuth, or, according to Professor Phillips, silver, when cooling from fusion and just previous to solidifying; and it might be a fair subject of inquiry whether, if there be any coating of oxide on the surface, it may not be so thin as not to disguise the form of the con- gealed metallic masses, as they may have set in cooling from igneous fusion* M. Chacornac's recent observations lead him to suppose that many of the lunar craters were the result of a single explosion, which raised the surface as a bubble and deposited its debris around the orifice of eruption.
The eruptions on the surface of the moon clearly did not take place at one period only, for at many parts of the disk craters may be seen encroaching on and disfiguring more ancient craters, sometimes to the extent of three or four successive displacements : two important questions might, it seems to me, be solved by an attentive examination of such portions of the moon. By observing carefully with the most powerful telescopes the character of the ridges thus successively formed, the successive states of the lunar surface at different epochs might be elucidated ; and secondly, as on the earth we should look for actual volcanic action at those points where recent eruptions have taken place, so on the moon the more recently active points being ascertained by the successive displacement of anterior formations, it is these points which should be examined for existing disruptive disturbances. Metius and Fabricius might be cited as points of this character, having been found by M. Chacornac to present successive displacements and to be perforated by numerous channels or cavities. M. Chacornac considers that the seas, as they are called, or smoother portions of the lunar surface have at some time made inroads on anteriorly formed craters ; if so, a large portion of the surface of the moon must have been in a fused, liquid, senuliquid, or alluvial state long after the solidifying of other portions of it. It would be difficult to suppose that this state was one of igneous fusion, for this could hardly exist over a large part of the surface without melting up the remaining parts ; on the other hand, the total absence of any signs of water, and of any, or, if any, only the most attenuated, atmosphere, would make it equally difficult to account for a large diluvial formation.
Some substances, like mercury on this planet, might have remained liquid after others had solidified; but the problem is one which needs more examination and study before any positive opinion can be pronounced.
I cannot pass from the subject of lunar physics without recording the obligation we are under to our late President for his most valuable observations and for his exertion in organizing a band of observers devoted to the examination of this our nearest celestial neighbour, and to Mr. Nasmyth and Mr. De la Rue for their important graphical and photographical contributions to " 'i subject. The granular character of the sun's surface observed by Mr. vth in 1860 is also a discovery which ought not to be passed over in Before quitting the subject of Astronomy I cannot avoid expressing a feeling of disappointment that the achromatic telescope, which has rendered such notable service to this science, still retains in practice the great defect which was known a century ago at the time of Hall and Dollond, namely, the inaccuracy of definition arising from what was termed the irrationality of the spectrum, or the incommensurate divisions of the spectra formed by flint and crown glass.
The beautiful results obtained by Blair have remained inoperative from the circumstance that evaporable liquids being employed between the lenses, a want of permanent uniformity in the instrument was experienced; and notwithstanding the high degree of perfection to which the grinding and polishing object-glasses has been brought by Clarke, Cooke, anil Mertz, notwithstanding the greatly improved instrumental manufacture, the defect to which I have adverted remains unremedied and an eyesore to the observer with the refracting telescope.
We have now a large variety of different kinds of glass formed from different metallic oxides. A list of many such was given by M. Jacquelain a few years back; the last specimen which I have seen is a heavy highly refracting glass formed from the metal thallium by M. Lamy. Among all these could no two or three be selected which, having appropriate re- fracting and dispersing powers, would have the coloured spaces of their respective spectra if not absolutely in the same proportions, at all events much more nearly so than those of flint and crown glass ? Could not, again, oily or resinous substances, such as castor oil, Canada balsam, Ac, having much action on the more refrangible rays of the spectrum, be made use of in combination with glass lenses to reduce if not annihilate this signal defect? This is not a problem to the solution of which there seems any insuperable difficulty; the reason why it has not been solved is, I incline to think, that the great practical opticians have no time at their disposal to devote to long tentative experiments and calculations, and on the other hand the theoretic opticians have not the machinery and the skill in manipulation requisite to give the appropriate degree of excellence to the materials with which they experiment ; yet the result is worth labouring for, as, could the defect be remedied, the refracting telescope would make nearly as great an advance upon its present state as the achromatic did on the single lens refractor.
While gravitation, physical constitution, and chemical analysis by the spectrum show us that matter has similar characteristics in other worlds than our own, when we pass to the consideration of those other attributes of matter which were at one time supposed to be peculiar kinds of matter itself, or, as they were called, imponderables, but which are now generally, if not universally, recognized as forces or modes of motion, we find the evidence of continuity still stronger.
When all that was known of magnetism was that a piece of steel rubbed against a particular mineral had the power of attracting iron, and, if freely suspended, of arranging itself nearly in a line with the earth's meridian, it seemed an exceptional phenomenon. When it was observed that amber, if rubbed, had the temporary power of attracting light bodies, this also seemed something peculiar and anomalous. What are now magnetism and electricity ? farces so universal, so apparently connected with matter as to become two of its invariable attributes, and that to speak of matter not being capable of being affected bv these forces would seem almost as extravagant as to speak of matter not being affected by gravitation.
»So with light, heat, and chemical affinity, not merely is every form of matter with which wo are acquainted capable of manifesting all these modes of force, but so-called matter supposed incapable of such manifestations would to most minds cease to be matter.
Further than this it seems to me (though, as I have taken an active part for many years, now dating from a quarter of a century, in promoting this view, 1 may not be considered an impartial judge) that it is now proved that all these forces are so invariably connected inter se and with motion as to be regarded as modifications of each other, and as resolving themselves objectively into motion, and subjectively into that something which produces or resists motion, and which we call force.
1 may perhaps be permitted to recal a forgotten experiment, which nearly a quarter of a century ago I showed at the London Institution, an experiment simple enough in itself, but which then seemed to me important from the consequences to be deduced from it, and the importance of which will be much better appreciated now than then.
A train of multiplying wheels ended with a small metallic wheel which, when the train was put in motion, revolved with extreme rapidity against the periphery of the next wheel, a wooden one. In the metallic wheel was placed a small piece of phosphorus, and as long as the wheels revolved, the phosphorus remained unchanged, but the moment the last wheel was stopped by moving a small lever attached to it, the phosphorus burst into flame. My object was to show that while motion of the mass continued, heat was not generated, but that when this was arrested, the force continuing to operate, the motion of the mass became heat in the particles. The experiment differed from that of Rumford's cannon-boring and Davy's friction of ice in showing that there was no heat while the motion was unresisted, but that the heat was in some way dependent on the motion being impeded or arrested. We have now become so accustomed to this view, that whenever we find motion resisted we look to heat, electricity, or some other force as the necessary and inevitable result.
It Would be out of place here, and treating of matters too familiar to the bulk of my audience, to trace how, by the labours of Oersted, Seebeck, Faraday, Talbot, Daguerre, and others, materials have been provided for the generalization now known as the correlation of forces or conservation of energy, while Davy, Eumford, Seguin, Mayer, Joulo, Hclmholts, Thomson, and others (among whom I would not name myself, were it not that I may be misunderstood and supposed to have abandoned all claim to a share in the initiation of this, as I believe, important generalization) have carried on the work; and how, sometimes by independent and, as is commonly the case, nearly simultaneous deductions, sometimes by progressive and accumulated disco- veries, the doctrine of the reciprocal interaction, of the quantitative relation, and of the necessary dependence of all the forces has, I think I may venture to say, been established.
If magnetism, be, as it is proved to be, connected with the other forces or affections of matter, if electrical currents always produce, as they are proved to do, lines of magnetio force at right angles to their lines of action, mag- netism must be cosmical, for where there is heat and light, there is electricity and consequently magnetism. Magnetism, then, must be cosmical and not merely terrestrial. Could we trace magnetism in other planets and suns as a force manifested in axial or meridional lines, i. e. in lines cutting at right angles the curves formed by their rotation round an axis, it would be a great step ; but it is one hitherto unaccomplished. The apparent coincidences between the maxima and minima of solar spots, and the decennial or undecennial periods of terrestrial magnetic intensity, though only empirical at present, might tend to lead us to a knowledge of the connexion we are seeking ; and the President of the Royal Society considers that an additional epoch of coincidence has arrived, making the fourth decennial period ; hut some doubt is thrown upon these coincidences by the magnetic observations made at Greenwich Observatory. In a paper published in the ' Transactions of the Royal Society/ 1863, the Astronomer Royal says, speaking of results ex- tending oyer seventeen years, there is no appearance of decennial cycle in the recurrence of great magnetio disturbances ; and Mr. Glaisher last year, in the physical section of this Association, stated that after persevering examination he had been unable to trace any connexion between the magnetism of the earth and the spots on the sun.
Mr. Airy, however, in a more recent paper, suggests that currents of magnetic force having reference to the solar hour are detected, and seem to produce vortices or circular disturbances, and he invites further cooperative observation on the subject, one of the highest interest, but at present re- maining in great obscurity.
One of the most startling suggestions as to the consequence resulting from the dynamical theory of heat is that made by Mayer, that by the loss of vis viva occasioned by friction of the tidal waves, as well as by their forming, as it were, a drag upon the earth's rotatory movement, the velocity of the earth's rotation must be gradually diminishing, and that thus, unless some undiscovered compensatory action exist, this rotation must ultimately cease, and changes hardly calculable take place in the solar system.
M. Delaunay considers that part of the acceleration of the moon's mean motion which is not at present accounted for by planetary disturbances, to be due to the gradual retardation of the earth's rotation ; to which view, after an elaborate investigation, the Astronomer Royal has given his assent.
Another most interesting speculation of Mayer is that with which you are familiar, viz., that the heat of the sun is occasioned by friction or percussion of meteorites falling upon it: there are some difficulties, not perhaps in- superable, in this theory. Supposing such cosmical bodies to exist in suffi- cient numbers they would, as they revolve round the sun, fall into it, not as an aerolite falls upon the earth directly by an intersection of orbits, but by the gradual reduction in size of the orbits, occasioned by a resisting medium ; some portion of force would be lost, and heat generated in space by friction against such medium ; when they arrive at the sun they would, A»mming them, like the planets, to have revolved in the same direction, all impinge in a definite direction, and we might expect to see some symptoms of such in the sun's photosphere ; but though this is in a constant state of motion, and the direction of these movements has been carefully investigated by Mr, Carrington and others, no such general direction is detected ; and M. Faye, who some time ago wrote a paper pointing out many objections to the theory of solar heat being produced by the fall of meteoric bodies into the sun, has recently investigated the proper motions of sun-spots, and believes he has re- moved certain apparent anomalies and reduced their motions to a certain re- gularity in the motion of the photosphere, attributable to some general action arising from the internal mass of the sun.
It might be expected that comets, bodies -so light and so easily deflected from their course, would show some symptoms of being acted on by gravita- tion, were such a number of bodies to exist in or near their paths, as are presupposed in the mechanical theory of solar heat.
Assuming the undulatory theory of light to be true, and that the motion
IxiV ' REPORT— 186G.
which constitutes light is transmitted across the interplanetary spaces by a highly elastic ether, then, unless this motion is confined to one direction, unless there he no interference, unless there he no viscosity, as it is now- termed, in the medium, and consequently no friction, light most lose some- thing in its progress from distant luminous bodies, that is to say, must lose something as light ; for, as all reflecting minds are now convinced that force cannot he annihilated, the force is not lost, hut its mode of action4s~ehanged. If light, then, is lost as light (and the observations of Strove* seem to show this to he so, that, in fact, a star maybe so far distant that it can never he seen in consequence of its luminous emissions becoming extinct), what becomes of the transmitted force lost as light, but existing in some other form? So with heat: our sun, our earth, and planets are constantly radiat in g heat into space, so in. all probability are the other suns, the stars, and their attendant planets. What becomes of the heat thus radiated into space ? If the uni- verse have no limit, and it is difficult to conceive one, heat and light should be everywhere uniform ; and yet more is given off than is received by each cosmical body, for otherwise night would be as light and as warm as day. What becomes of the enormous force thus apparently non-recurrent in the same form? Does it return as palpable motion? Does it move or contri- bute to move suns and planets ? and can it be conceived as a force similar to that which Newton speculated on as universally repulsive and capable of being substituted for universal attraction ? We are in no position at present to answer such questions as these ; but I know of no problem in celestial dynamics more deeply interesting than this, and we may be no further re- moved from its solution than the predecessors of Newton were from the simple dynamical relation of matter to matter which that potent intellect detected and demonstrated.
Passing from extraterrestrial theories to the narrower field of molecular physics, we find the doctrine of correlation of forces steadily making its way. In the Bakerian Lecture for 1863 Mr. Sorby shows, not perhaps a direct correlation of mechanical and chemical forces, but that when, either by solu- tion or by chemical action, a change in volume of the resulting substance as compared with that of its separate constituents is effected, the action of pressure retards or promotes the change, according as the substance formed would occupy a larger or a smaller space than that occupied by its separate constituents ; the application of these experiments to geological inquiries as to subterranean changes which may have taken place under great pressure is obvious, and we may expect to form compounds under artificial compression which cannot be found under normal pressure.
In a practical point of view the power of converting one mode of force into another is of the highest importance, and with reference to a subject which at present, somewhat prematurely perhaps, occupies men's minds, viz. the prospective exhaustion of our coal-fields, there is every encouragement de- rivable from the knowledge that we can at will produce heat by the expendi- ture of other forces ; but, more than that, we may probably be enabled to absorb or store up as it were diffused energy — for instance, Berthelot has found that the potential energy of formate of potash is much greater than that of its proximate constituents, caustic potash and carbonic oxide. This change may take place spontaneously and at ordinary temperatures, and by such change carbonic oxide becomes, so to speak, reinvested with the amount of potential energy which its carbon possessed before uniting with oxygen, or, in other words, the carbonic oxide is raised as a force-possessor to the place of carbon by the direct absorption or conversion of heat from surrounding matter.
■ — H
ADDRESS. I.XV
Here we have, as to force-absorption, an analogous result to that of the for- mation of coal from carbonic acid and water ; and though this is a mere illus- tration, and may never become economical on a large scale, still it and similar examples may calm apprehension as to future means, of supplying heat, should our present fuel become exhausted. As the sun's force, spent in times long past, is now returned to us from the coal which was formed by that light and heat, so the sun's rays, which are daily wasted, as far as we are concerned, on the sandy deserts of Africa, may hereafter, by chemical or mechanical means, be made to light and warm the habitations of the denizens of colder regions. The tidal wave is, again, a large reservoir of force hitherto almost unused.
The valuable researches of Prof. Tyndall on radiant heat afford many in* stances of the power of localizing, if the term bo permitted, heat which would otherwise be dissipated.
The discoveries of Graham, by which atmospheric air, drawn through films of caoutchouc, leaves behind half its nitrogen, or, in other words, becomes richer by half in oxygen, and hence has a much increased potential energy, not only show a most remarkable instance of physical molecular action, merging into chemical, but afford us indications of means of storing up force, much of the force used in working the aspirator being capable at any period, however remote, of being evolved by burning the oxygen with a com- bustible.
What changes may take place in our modes of applying force before the coal-fields are exhausted it is impossible to predict. Even guesses at the probable period of their exhaustion are uncertain. There is a tendency to substitute for smelting in mctallurgic processes, liquid chemical action, which of course has the effect of saving fuel ; and the waste of fuel in ordinary operations is enormous, and can be much economized by already known pro- cesses. It is true that we are, at present, far from seeing a practical modo of replacing that granary of force the coal-fields ; but we may with confidence rely on invention being in this case, as in others, born of necessity, when the necessity arises.
I will not further pursue this subject ; at a time when science and civiliza- tion cannot prevent large tracts of country being irrigated by human blood in order to gratify the ambition of a few restless men, it seems an over-refined sensibility to occupy ourselves with providing means for our descendants in the tenth generation to warm their dwellings or propel their locomo- tives.
Two very remarkable applications of the convertibility of force have been recently attained by the experiments of Mr. Wilde and Mr. Holz ; the former finds that, by conveying electricity from the coils of a magneto-electric ma- chine to an electro-magnet, a considerable increase of electrical power may be attained, and by applying this as a magneto-electric machine to a second, and this in turn to a third electro-magnetic apparatus, the force is largely augmented. Of course, to produce this increase, more mechanical force must be nsed at each step to work the magneto-electric machines ; but provided this be supplied there hardly seems a limit to the extent to which mechanical may be converted into electrical force.
Mr. Holz has contrived a Franklinic electrical machine, in which a similar principle is manifested. A varnished glass plate is made to revolve in close proximity to another plate having two or more pieces of card attached, which are electrified by a bit of rubbed glass or ebonite ; the moment this is effected a resistance is felt by the operator who turns the handle of the machine^ and
1866, e
Ixvi KEPOKT — 1866.
the slight temporary electrization of the card converts into a continuous flood of intense electricity the force supplied by the arm of the operator.
These results offer great promise of extended application ; they show that, by a mere formal disposition of matter, one force can be converted into an- other, and that not to the limited extent hitherto attained, but to an extent coordinate, or nearly so, with the increased initial force, so that, by a mere change in the arrangement of apparatus, a means of absorbing and again eliminating in a new form a given force may be obtained to an indefinite extent. As we may, in a not very distant future, need, for the daily uses of mankind, heat, light, and mechanical force, and find our present resources exhausted, the more we can invent new modes of conversion of forces, the more prospect we have of practically supplying such want It is but a month from this time that the greatest triumph of force-conversion has been attained. The chemical action generated by a little salt water on a few pieces of nno will now enable us to converse with inhabitants of the opposite hemisphere of this planet, and
" Put a girdle round about the earth in forty minutes."
The Atlantic Telegraph is an accomplished fact.
In physiology very considerable strides are being made by studying the relation of organized bodies to external forces ; and this branch of inquiry has been promoted by the labours of Carpenter, Bence Jones, Playfair, E. Smith, Frankland, and others. Yegetables acted on by light and heat, decompose water, ammonia, and carbonic acid, and transform them into, among other substances, oxalate of lime, lactic acid, Btarch, sugar, stearine, urea, and ultimately albumen ; while the animal reverses the process, as does vegetable decay, and produces from albumen, urea, stearine, sugar, starch, lactic acid, oxalate of lime, and ultimately ammonia, water, and carbonic acid.
As, moreover, heat and light are absorbed, or converted in forming the syn- thetic processes going on in the vegetable, so conversely heat and sometimes light is given off by the living animal ; but it must not be forgotten that the line of demarcation between a vegetable and an animal is difficult to draw, that there are no single attributes which are peculiar to either, and that it is only by a number of characteristics that either can be defined.
The series of processes above given may be simulated by the chemist in his laboratory; and the amount of labour which a man has undergone in the course of twenty-four hours may be approximately arrived at by an exami- nation of the chemical changes which have taken place in his body, changed forms in matter indicating the anterior exercise of dynamical force. That muscular action is produced or supported by chemical change would probably now be a generally accepted doctrine ; but while many have thought that muscular power is derived from the oxidation of albuminous or nitrogenized substances, several recent researches seem to show that the latter is rather an accompaniment than a cause of the former, and that it is by the oxidation of carbon and hydrogen compounds that muscular force is supplied. Tranbe has been prominent in advancing this view, and experiments detailed in a paper published this year by two Swiss professors, Drs. Fick and Wislicenus, which were made by and upon themselves in an ascent of the Eaulhorn, have gone far to confirm it. Having fed themselves before and during the ascent, upon starch, fat, and sugar, avoiding all nitrogenized compounds, they found that the consumption of such food was amply sufficient to supply the force necessary for their expedition, and that they felt no exhaustion. By appro- priate chemical examination they ascertained that there was no notable
ADDRESS. lxvii
increase in the oxidation of the nitrogenized constituents of the body. After calculating the mechanical equivalents of the combustion effected, they then state, as their first conclusion, that " The burning of protein substances cannot be the only source of muscular power, for we have here two cases in which men performed more measurable work than the equivalent of the amount of heat, which, taken at a most absurdly high figure, could be calculated to result from the burning of the albumen."
They further go on to state that, so far from the oxidation of albuminous substances being the only source of muscular power, " the substances by the burning of which force is generated in the muscles, are not the albuminous constituents of those tissues, but non-nitrogenous substances, either fats or hydrates of carbon,' 9 and that the burning of albumen is not in any way concerned in the production of muscular power.
We must not confuse the question of the food which forms and repairs muscle and gives permanent capability of muscular force with that which sup- plies the requisites for temporary activity ; no doubt the carnivora are the most powerfully constituted animals, but the Chamois, Gazelle, &c, have great temporary capacity for muscular exertion, though their food is vegetable ; for concentrated and sustained energy, however, they do not equal the carnivora ; and with the domestic graminivora we certainly find that they are capable of performing more continuous work when supplied with those vegetables which contain the greatest quantity of nitrogen.
These and many similar classes of research show that in chemical in- quiries, as in other branches of science, we are gradually relieving ourselves of hypothetical existences, which certainly had the advantage that they might be varied to suit the requirements of the theorist.
Phlogiston, as Lavoisier said with a sneer, was sometimes heavy, sometimes light ; sometimes fire in a free state, sometimes combined ; sometimes passing through glass vessels, sometimes retained by them ; which by its protean changes explained causticity and non-causticity, transparency and opacity, colours and their absence. As phlogiston and similar creations of the mind have passed away, so with hypothetic fluids, imponderable matters, specific ethers, and other inventions of entities made to vary according to the re- quirements of the theorist, I believe the day is approaching when these will be dispensed with, and when the two fundamental conceptions of matter and motion will be found sufficient to explain physical phenomena.
The facts made known to us by geological inquiries, while on the one hand they afford striking evidence of continuity, on the other, by the breaks in the record, may be used as arguments against it. The great question once was, whether these chasms represent sudden changes in the formation of the earth's crust, or whether they arise from dislocations occasioned since the original deposition of strata or from gradual shifting of the areas of sub- mergence. Few geologists of the present day would, I imagine, not adopt the latter alternatives. Then comes a second question, whether, when the geological formation is of a continuous character, the different characters of the fossils represent absolutely permanent varieties, or may be explained by gradual modifying changes.
Prof. Ansted, summing up the evidence on this head as applied to one division of stratified rocks, writes as follows : — " Paleontologists have endea- voured to separate the Lias into a number of subdivisions, by the Ammonites, groups of species of those shells being characteristic of different zones. The evidence on this point rests on the assumption of specific differences being indicated by permanent modifications of the structure of the shell.
e2
Ixviii eeport — 1866.
But it is quite possible that these may mean nothing more than would be due to some change in the conditions of existence. Except between the Marl- stone and the Upper lias there is really no palaeontological break, in the proper sense of the words ; alterations of form and size consequent on the occurrence of circumstances more or less favourable, migration of species, and other well-known causes sufficiently account for many of those modifications of the form of the shell that have been taken as specific marks. This view is strengthened by the fact that other shells and other organisms generally show no proof of a break of any importance except at the point already alluded to."
But, irrespectively of another deficiency in the geological record, which will be noticed presently, the physical breaks in the stratification make it next to impossible to fairly trace the order of succession of organisms by the evidence afforded by their fossil remains. Thus thero are nine great breaks in the Palaeozoic series, four in the Secondary, and one in the Tertiary, besides those between Palaeozoic and Secondary and Secondary and Tertiary respectively. Thus in England there are sixteen important breaks in the succession of strata, together with a number of less important interruptions. But although these breaks exist, we find pervading the works of many geologists a belief, re- sulting from the evidence presented to their minds, sometimes avowed, sometimes unconsciously implied, that the succession of species bears some definite relation to the succession of strata. Thus Prof. Bamsay says that " in cases of superposition of fossiliferous strata, in proportion as the species are more or less continuous, that is to say, as the break in the suc- cession of life is partial or complete, so was the time that elapsed between the close of the lower and the commencement of tho upper strata a shorter or a longer interval. The break in life may be indicated not only by a difference in species, but yet more importantly by the absence of older and appearance of newer allied or unallied genera."
Indications of the connexion between cosmical studies and geological re- searches are dawning on us : there is, for instance, some reason to believe that we can trace many geological phenomena to our varying rotation round the sun ; thus more than thirty years ago Sir J. Herschel proposed an explanation of the changes of climate on the earth's surface as evidenced by geological phenomena, founded on the changes of excentricity in the earth's orbit.
He said he had entered on the subject " impressed with the magnificence of that view of geological revolutions which regards them rather as regular and necessary efforts of great and general causes, than as resulting from a series of convulsions and catastrophes regulated by no laws and reducible to no fixed principles."
As the mean distance of tho earth from the sun is nearly invariable, it would seem at first sight that the mean annual supply of light and heat received by the earth would also be invariable ; but according to his calcula- tions it is inversely proportional to the minor axis of the orbit : this would give less heat when the excentricity of the earth's orbit is approaching to- wards or at its minimum. Mr. Croll has recently shown reason to believe that the climate, at all events in the circumpolar and temperate zones of the earth, would depend on whether the winter of a given region occurred when the earth at its period of greatest excentricity was in aphelion or perihelion — if the former, the annual average of temperature would be lower ; if the latter, it would be higher than when the excentricity of the earth's orbit were less or approached more nearly to a circle. He calculates the difference in the amount of heat at the period of maximum excentricity of the
ADDRESS. lm
earth's orbit to be as 19 to s 26, according as the winter would take place when the earth was in aphelion or in perihelion. His reason may he briefly stated thus : assuming the mean annual heat to be the same, whatever the execn- tricity of orbit, yet if the extremes of heat and cold in winter and summer be greater, a colder climate will prevail, for there will bo more snow and ice accumulated in the cold winter than the hot summer can molt — a result, aided by the shelter from the sun's rays, produced by the vapour suspended in consequence of the aqueous evaporation ; hence we should get glacial periods, when the orbit of the earth is at its greatest excen tricity, at those parts of the earth's surface where it is winter when the earth is in aphelion ; carboni- ferous or hot periods where it is winter in perihelion ; and normal or tem- perate periods when the excentricity of orbit is at a minimum ; all these would gradually slide into each other, and would produce at long distant periods alternations of cold and heat, several of which we actually observe in geo- logical records.
If this theory be borne out, we should approximate to a test of the time which has elapsed between different geological epochs. Mr. Croll's compu- tation of this would make it certainly not less than 100,000 years since the last glacial epoch, a time not very long in geological chronology — probably it is much more.
When we compare with the old theories of the earth, by which the apparent changes on its surface were accounted for by convulsions and . cataclysms, the modern view inaugurated by Lyell, your former President, and now, if not wholly, at all events to a great extent adopted, it seems strange that the referring past changes to similar causes to those which are now in operation should have remained uninvestigated until the present century; but with this, as with other branches of knowledge, the most simple is fre- quently the latest view which occurs to the mind. It is much more easy to invent a Deux ex maehind than to trace out the influence of slow continuous change; the love of the marvellous is so much more attractive than the patient investigation of truth, that wo find it to have prevailed almost uni- versally in the early stages of science.
In astronomy we had crystal spheres, cycles, and epicycles ; in chemistry the philosopher's stone, the elixir vit®, the archaeus or stomach demon, and phlogiston ; in electricity the notion that amber possessed a soul, and that a mysterious fluid could knock down a steeple. In geology a deluge or a volcano was supplied. In palaeontology a new race was created whenever theory required it : how such new races began, the theorist did not stop to inquire.
A. curious speculator might say to a palaeontologist of even recent date, in the words of Lucretius,
" Nam neque de ccelo cecidisse animalia possunt Nee tcrrcstria do Bains exiase lacunis. • • • • •
E nihilo si cresccro possent, (Turn) fiercnt juvenes subito ex infantibus parvis, E terraque exorta repente arbusta salirent ; Quorum nil fieri manifestum est, omnia quando Paulatim creaount, ut par eat, semine oerto, Creacentesque genua servant "
— which may be thus freely paraphrased : " You have abandoned the belief in one primaeval creation at one point of time, you cannot assert that an ele- ph ant existed when the first saurians roamed over earth and water. Without, then, in any way limiting Almighty power, if an elephant were created without progenitors, the first elephant must, in some way or other, have
hx REPOBT— 1866.
physically arrived on this earth. Whence did he come ? did he fall from tho sky (t. e. from the interplanetary space)? did he rise moulded ont of a mass of amorphous earth or rock ? did he appear out of the cleft of a tree ? If he had no antecedent progenitors, some such beginning must be assigned to him." I know of no scientific writer who has, since the discoveries of geology have become familiar, ventured to present in intelligible terms any definite notion of how such an event could have occurred : those who do not adopt some view of continuity are content to say Qod willed it ; but would it not be more reverent and more philosophical to inquire by observation and experiment, and to reason from induction and analogy, as to the probabilities of such frequent miraculous interventions ?
I know I am touching on delicate ground, and that a long time may elapse before that calm inquiry after truth which it is the object of associations like this to promote can be fully attained ; but I trust that the members of this body are sufficiently free from prejudice, whatever their opinions may be, to admit an inquiry into the general question whether what we term species are and have been rigidly limited, and have at numerous periods been created complete and unchangeable, or whether, in some mode or other, they have not gradually and indefinitely varied, and whether the changes due to the influ- ence of surrounding circumstances, to efforts to accommodate themselves to surrounding changes, to what is called natural selection, or to tho necessity of yielding to superior force in the struggle for existence, as maintained by our illustrious countryman Darwin, have not so modified organisms as to enable them to exist under changed conditions. I am not {going to put for- ward any theory of my own, I am not going to argue in support of any special theory, but having endeavoured to show how, as science advances, the continuity of natural phenomena becomes more apparent, it would be cowardice not to present some of the main arguments for and against con- tinuity as, applied to the history of organic beings.
As we detect no such phenomenon as the creation or spontaneous genera- tion of vegetables and animals which are large enough for the eye to see without instrumental assistance, as we have long ceased to expect to find a FlesiosauruB spontaneously generated in our fish-pond, or a Pterodactyk in our pheasant-cover, the field of this class of research has become identified with the field of the microscope, and at each new phase the investigation ha* passed from a larger to a smaller class of organisms. The question whether among the smallest and apparently the most elementary forms of organic life the phenomenon of spontaneous generation obtains, has recently formed the subject of careful experiment and animated discussion in Franco. If it could be found that organisms of a complex character were generated with- out progenitors out of amorphous matter, it might reasonably be argued that a similar mode of creation might obtain in regard to larger organisms. Although we see no such phenomenon as the formation of an animal such as an elephant, or a tree such as an oak, excepting from a parent which resembles it, yet if the microscope revealed to us organisms, smaller but equally complex, so formed without having been reproduced, it would render it not improbable that such might have been the case with larger organic beings. The controversy between M. Pasteur and M. Pouchet has led to a very close investigation of this subject, and tho general opinion is that when such precautions are taken as exclude from the substance submitted to experiment all possibility of germs from the atmosphere being introduced, as by passing the air which is to support the life of the animalculm through tubes heated to redness and other precautions, no formation of organisms
ADDRESS. lxxi
takes place. Some experiments of Dr. Child's, communicated to the lloyal Society daring the last year, again throw doubt on the negative results obtained by M. Pasteur ; so that the question may be not finally determined, bat the balance of experiment and opinion is against spontaneous generation.
One argument presented by M. Pasteur is well worthy of remark, viz. that in proportion as oar means of scrutiny become more searching, heterogeny, or the development of organisms without generation from parents of similar organism, has been gradually driven from higher to lower forms of life, so that if some apparent exceptions still exist they are of the lowest and simplest forms, and these exceptions may probably be removed, as M. Pasteur considers he has removed them, by a more searching investigation.
If it be otherwise, if heterogeny obtains at all, all will now admit that at present the result of the most careful experiments shows it to be confined to the most simple organic structures, such as vibrions and bacteria, and that all the progressive and more highly developed forms are, as far as the most en- larged experience shows, generated by reproduction.
The great difficulty which is met with at the threshold of inquiry into the origin of species, is the definition of species ; in fact species can hardly be denned without begging the question in dispute.
Thus if 8peoies be said to be a perseverance of type incapable of blending itself with other types, or, which comes nearly to the same thing, incapable of producing by union with other types offspring of an intermediate cha- racter which can again reproduce, we arrive at this result, that whenever the advocate of continuity shows a blending of what had been hitherto deemed separate species, the answer is, they were considered separate species by mistake, they do not now oome under the definition of species, because they interbreed.
The line of demarcation is thus ex hypothesi removed a step further, so that, unless the advocate of continuity can, on his side, prove the whole question in dispute, by showing that all can directly or by intermediate varieties reproduce, he is defeated by the definition itself of species.
On the other hand, if this, or something in fact amounting to it, be not the definition of species — if it be admitted that distinct species can, under certain favourable conditions, produce intermediate offspring capable of re- production, then continuity in some mode or other is admitted.}
The question then takes this form. Are there species or are there not ? Is the word to be used as signifying a real, natural distinction, or as a mere co n v e nient designation applied to subdivisions having a permanence which will probably outlive man's discussions on the subject, but not an absolute fixity? The same question, in a wider sense, and taking into consideration a much longer time, would be applicable to genera and families.
Actual experiment has done little to elucidate the question, nor, unless we can suppose the experiments continued through countless generations, is it likely to contribute mueh to its solution. We must therefore have recourse to the enlarged experience or induction from the faots of geology, palaeon- tology, and physiology, aided by analogy from the laws of action which nature evidences in other departments.
The doctrine of gradual succession is hardly yet formularized, and though there are some high authorities for certain modifications of such view, the preponderance of authority would necessarily be on the other side. Geology and paleontology are recent sciences, and we cannot tell what the older authors would have thought or written had the more recently discovered mots been presented to their view. Authority, therefore, does not much help as on this question.
lxxii report— 1866,
Geological discoveries Beemed, in the early period of the science, to show complete extinction of certain species and the appearance of new ones, great gaps existing between the characteristics of the extinct and the new species. As science advanced, these were more or less filled np ; the apparent dif- ficulty of admitting unlimited modification of species would seem to have arisen from the comparison of the extreme ends of the scale where the inter* mediate links or some of them were wanting.
To suppose a Zoophyte the progenitor of a Mammal, or to suppose at some particular period of time a highly developed animal to have come out of nothing, or suddenly grown out of inorganic matter, would appear at first sight equally extravagant hypotheses. As an effort of Almighty creative power, neither of these alternatives presents more difficulty than the other; but as we have no means of ascertaining how creative power worked, but by an examination and study of the works themselves, we are not likely to get either side proved to ocular demonstration. A single phase in the progress of natural transmutation would probably require a term far transcending all that embraced by historical records ; and on the other hand, it might be said, sudden creations, though taking place frequently, if viewed with reference to the immensity of time involved in geological periods, may be so rare with reference to our experience, and so difficult of clear authentication, that the non-observation of such instances cannot be regarded as absolute disproof of their possible occurrence.
The more the gaps between species are filled up by the discovery of inter- mediate varieties, the stronger becomes the argument for transmutation and the weaker that for successive creations, because the former view then becomes more and more consistent with experience, the latter more discor- dant from it. As undoubted cases of variation, more or less permanent, from given characteristics, are produced by the effects of climate, food, domestica- tion, &c, the more species are increased by intercalation, the more the di- stinctions slide down towards those which are within the limits of such observed deviations ; while on the other hand, to suppose tho more and more frequent recurrence of fresh creations out of amorphous matter, is a multipli- cation of miracles or special interventions not in accordance with what wc see of the uniform and gradual progress of nature, either in the organic or inorganic world. If we were entitled to conclude that the progress of dis- covery would continue in the same course, and that species would become indefinitely multiplied, the distinctions would become infinitely minute, and all lines of demarcation would cease, the polygon would become a circle, the succession of points a line. Certain it is that the more we observe, the more we increase the subdivision of species, and consequently the number of these supposed creations; so that new creations become innumerable, and yet of these we have no one well-authenticated instance, and in no other observed opera- tion of nature have we seen this want of continuity, these frequent peraallum deviations from uniformity, each of which is a miracle*
The difficulty of producing intermediate offspring from what are termed distinct species and the infecundity in many instances of hybrids are used as strong arguments against continuity of succession ; on the other hand, it may be said long-continued variation through countless generations has given rise to such differences of physical charaoter, that reproduction is difficult in some cases and in others impossible.
Suppose, for instance* M to represent a parent-race whoso offspring by
"<ssive changes through eons of time have divaricated, and produced on
10 hand a species A, and on the other a species Z, the changes here have
to great that we should never expect directly to reproduce an interme-
ADDRESS. lxXlii
diate between A and Z. A and B on the one hand, and Y and Z on the other, might reproduce ; but to regain the original type M, we must not only rctrooede through all the intermediates, but must have similar circumstances recalled in an inverse order at each phase of retrogression, conditions which it is obviously impossible to fulfil. But though among the higher forms of organic structure we cannot retrace the effects of time and reproduce inter- mediate types, yet among some of the lower forms we find it difficult to assign any line of specific demarcation ; thus as a result of the very elabo- rate and careful investigations of Dr. Carpenter on Foraminifera, he states, " It baa been shown that a very wide range of variation exists among Orbito- lites, not merely as regards external form, but also as to plan of development ; and not merely as to the shape and aspect of the entire organism, but also with respect to the size and configuration of its component parts. It would have been easy, by selecting only the most divergent types from amongst the whole series of specimens which I have examined, to prefer an apparently substantial claim on behalf of these to be accounted as so many distinct species. But after having classified the specimens which could be arranged around these types, a large proportion would yet have remained, either pre- senting characters intermediate between those of two or more of them, of actually combining those characters in different parts of their fabric ; thus showing that no lines of demarcation can be drawn across any part of the series that shall definitely separate it into any number of groups, each cha- racterised by features entirely peculiar to itself." At the conclusion of his inquiry he states, —
I. The range of variation is so great among Foraminifera as to include not merely the differential characters which systematic proceeding upon the ordinary methods have accounted specific, but also thoso upon which the greater part of the genera of this group have been founded, and even in some instances those of its orders.
II. The ordinary notion of species as assemblages of individuals marked out from each other by definite characters that have been genetically trans- mitted from original proto-types similarly distinguished, is quite inapplicable to this group ; since even if the limits of such assemblages were extended so as to include what elsewhere would be accounted genera, they would still be found so intimately connected by gradational links, that definite lines could not be drawn between them.
III. The only natural classification of the vast aggregate of diversified forma which this group contains will be one which ranges them according to their direction and degree of divergence from a small number of principal family types; and any subordinate grouping of genera and species which may be adopted for the convenience of description and nomenclature must be regarded merely as assemblages of forms characterized by the nature and degree of the modifications of the original type, which they may have respec- tively acquired in the course of genetic descent from a common ancestry.
IV. Even in regard to these family types it may fairly bo questioned whether analogical evidence does not rather favour the idea of their deriva- tion from a common original than that of their primitive distinctness.
Mr. H. Bates, when investigating " The Lcpidoptera of the Amazon Valley," may almost be said to have witnessed the origin of some species of Butterflies, so close have been his observations on the habits of theso animals that have led to their variation and segregation, so closely do the residts follow his observations, and so great is the difficulty of otherwise accounting for any of the observed facts.
Ixxiv REPORT— 1866.
In the numerous localities of the Amazon region certain gregarious species of Butterfly (Heliconidea) swarm in incredible numbers, almost outnumbering all the other butterflies in the neighbourhood ; the species in the different localities being different, though often to be distinguished by a very alight shade.
In these swarms are to be found, in small numbers, other species of batter* flies belonging to as many as ten different genera, and even some moths ; and these intruders, though they structurally differ in toto from the swarms they mingle with, and from one another, mimic the Heliconides so closely in colours, habits, mode of flight, &c, that it is almost impossible to distinguish the intruders from those they mingle with. The obvious benefit of this mimicry is safety, the intruders hence escaping detection by predatory animals,
Mr. Bates has extended his observations to the habits of life, food, varia- tions, and geographical range of the species concerned in these mimetic phe- nomena, and finds in every case corroborative evidence of every variety and species being derivative, the species being modified from place to place to suit the peculiar form of Heliconidea stationed there.
Mr. Wallace has done similar service to the derivative theory by his obser- vations and writings on the Butterflies and Birds of the Malay Archipelago, adducing instances of mimetic resemblances strictly analogous to the above ; and adding in further illustration a beautiful series of instances where the form of the wing of the same butterfly is so modified in various islets as to produce changes in their mode of flight that tend to the conservation of the variety by aiding its escape when chased by birds or predacious insects.
He has also adduced a multitude of examples of geographical and repre- sentative species, races, and varieties, forming so graduated a series as to render it obvious that they have had a common origin.
The effect of food in the formation and segregation of races and of certain groups of insects has been admirably demonstrated by Mr. B. D. Walsh, of North America.
Dr. M c Donnell has been led to the discovery of a new organ in electric fishes from the application of the theory of descent, and Dr. Fritz Midler has published numerous observations showing that organs of very different struoture may, through the operation of natural selection, acquire very similar and even identical functions. Sir John Lubbock's diving hymeno- pterous insect affords a remarkable illustration of analogous phenomena ; it dives by the aid of its wings, and is the only insect of the vast order it belongs to that is at all aquatic.
The discovery of the Eozoon is of the highest importance in reference to the derivative hypothesis, occurring as it does in strata that were formed at a period inconceivably antecedent to the presupposed introduction of life upon the globe, and displacing the argument derived from the supposition that at the dawn of life a multitude of beings of high organisation were simultaneously developed (in the Silurian and Cambrian strata).
Professor A. De Gandolle, one of the most distinguished continental bota- nists, has, to some extent, abandoned the tenets held in his ' Geographic Botanique,' and favours the derivative hypothesis in his paper on the varia- tion of oaks ; following up a paper, by Dr. Hooker, on the oaks of Palestine, showing that some sixteen of them are derivative, he avows his belief that two-thirds of the 300 species of this genus, which he himself describes, are provisional only.
~X Hooker, who had only partially accepted the derivative hypothesis mded before the publication of ' The Origin of Species through Natural
ADDRESS. lxXV
Peleetion, 9 at the same time declining the doctrine of special creation, has since then cordially adopted the former, and illustrated its principles by applying them to the solution of various botanical questions : first, in refer- ence to the flora of Australia, the anomalies of which he appears to explain satisfactorily by the application of these principles ; and, latterly, in reference to the Arctic flora.
In the case of the Arctic flora, he believes that originally Scandinavian types were spread over the high northern latitudes, that these were driven southwards during the glacial period, when many of them changed their forms in the struggle that ensued with the displaced temperate plants ; that on the returning warmth, the Scandinavian plants, whether changed or not, were driven again northwards and up to the mountains of the temperate latitudes, followed, in both cases, by series of preexisting plants of the tern-' perate Alps. The result is tho present mixed Arctic flora, consisting of a basis of more or less changed and unchanged Scandinavian plants, associated in each longitude with representatives of the mountain flora of the more tem- perate regions to the south of them.
The publication of a previously totally unknown flora, that of the Alps of tropical Africa, by Dr. Hooker, has afforded a multitude of facts that have been applied in confirmation of the derivative hypothesis. This flora is found to have relationships with those of temperate Europe and North Africa, of the Cape of Good Hope, and of the mountains of tropical Madagascar and Abyssinia, that can be accounted for on no other hypothesis, but that there has been ancient climatal connexion and some coincident or subsequent slight changes of specific character.
The doctrine of Cuvier, every day more and more borne out by observation, that each organ bears a definite relation to the whole of the individual, seems to support the view of indefinite variation. If an animal seeks its food or safety by climbing trees, its claws will become more prehensile, the muscles which act upon those claws must become more developed, the body will become agile by the very exercise which is necessary to it, and each portion of the frame will mould itself to the wants of the animal by the effect on it of the habits of the animal.
Another series of facts whioh present an argument in favour of gradual succession, are the phases of resemblance to inferior orders which the embryo passes through in its development, and the relations shown in what is termed the metamorphosis of plants ; facts difficult to acoount for on the theory of fre- quent separate creations, but almost inevitable on that of gradual succession. So also, the existence of rudimentary and effete organs, which must either be referred to a lumts nature* or to some mode of continuous succession.
The doctrine of typical nuclei seems only a mode of evading the difficulty ; experience does not give us the types of theory, and, after all, what are these types ? It must be admitted there are none such in reality j how are we led to the theory of them ? simply by a process of abstraction from classified exist- ences. Having grouped from natural similitudes certain forms into a class, we select attributes common to each member of the class, and call the assem- blage of such attributes a type of the class. This process gives us an abstract idea, and we then transfer this idea to the Creator, and make Him start with that which our own imperfect generalization has derived. It seems to me that the doctrine of types is, in fact, a concession to the theory of continuity or indefinite variability ; for the admission that large groups have common eharsoters shews, necessarily, a blending of forms within the seope of the group, which supports the view of each member bein£ derive*} from some
lxxvi BEPOBT — 1866,
other member of it : can it bo asserted that the assigned limits of such groups have a definite line of demarcation ?
The condition of the earth's surface or, at least, of largo portions of it, has for long periods remained substantially the same ; this would involve a greater degree of fixity in the organisms which have existed during' such periods of little change than in those which have como into being daring periods of more rapid transition ; for, though rejecting catastrophes as the general modus agendi of nature, I am far from saying that the march of physical changes has been always perfectly uniform.
There have been doubtless what may be termed secular seasons, and there have been local changes of varying degrees of extent and permanence ; from such causes organized beings would be more concentrated in certain direc- tions than in others, the fixity of character being in the ratio of the fixity of condition. This would throw natural forms into certain groups which would be more prominent than others, like the colours of the rainbow, which present certain predominant tints though they merge into each other by insensible gradations.
While the ovidenco seems daily becoming stronger in favour of a derivative hypothesis as applied to tho succession of organic beings, we aro far removed from anything like a sufficient number of facts to show that, at all events within tho existing geological periods capable of being investigated, there has been any great progression from a simpler or more embryonic to a more complex type.
Prof. Huxley, though inclined to the derivative hypothesis, shows, in the concluding portion of his address to the Geological Society, 1862, a great number of cases in which, though there is abundant evidence of variation, there is none of progression. There are, however, several groups of Vertebrata in which tho endoskeleton of the older presents a less ossified condition than that of tho younger genera. He cites the Devonian Ganoids, the Meso- zoic Lcpidostcidte, tho Palaeozoic Sharks, and the more ancient Crocodilia and Lacertilia, and particularly tho Pycnodonts and Labyrinthodonts, as instances of this when compared with their more recent representatives.
Tho records of life on the globe may have been destroyed by the fusion of the rocks, which would otherwise have preserved them, or by crystallisation after hydrothermal action. The earlier forms may have existed at a period when this planet was in course of formation, or being segregated or ddtached from other worlds or systems. We have not evidence enough to speculate on tho subject, but by time and patience we may acquire it
Were all tho forms which have existed embalmed in reck, the question would be solved ; but what a small proportion of extinct forms is so preserved, and must be, if we consider the circumstances necessary to fossilise organic remains. On the dry land, unwashed by rivers and seas, when an animal or plant dies, it undergoes chemical decomposition which changes its form ; it is consumed by insects, its skeleton is oxidized and crumbles into dust. Of tho myriads of animals and vegetables which annually perish, we find hardly an instance of a relio so preserved as to be likely to become a permanent fossil. So again in the deeper ports of the ocean, or of the larger lakes, the few fish there ore perish and their remains sink to the bottom, and are there fre- quently consumed by other marine or lacustrine organisms or chemically de- composed. As a general rule, it is only when the remains are silted up by marine, fluviutilo or lacustrine sediments that the remains are preserved. Geology therefore might be expected to keep for us mainly such organic retains as inhabited deltas or the margins of seas, lakes, or rivers; here
ADDRESS. lxxvii
and there an exception may occur, bat the mass of preserved relics would be those of creatures so situated : and so we find it, the bulk of fossil remains consists of fish and amphibia, shell-fish form the major part of the geological museum, limestone and chalk rocks frequently consisting of little else than a congeries of fossil shells. Plants of reed or rush-like character, fish which arc capable of inhabiting shallow waters, and saurian animals form another large portion of geological remains.
Compare the shell-fish and amphibia of existing organisms with the other forms, and what a small proportion they supply ; compare the shell-fish and amphibia of Paleontology with the other forms, and what an overwhelming majority they yield.
There is nothing, as Prof. Huxley has remarked, like an extinct order of Birds or Mammals, only a few isolated instances. It may be said the ancient world possessed a larger proportion of fish and amphibia, and was more suited to their existence. 1 see no reason for believing this, at least to any- thing like the extent contended for ; the fauna and flora now in course of being preserved for future ages would give the same idea to our successors.
Crowded as Europe is with cattle, birds, insects, &c, how few are geologi- cally preserved ! while the muddy or sandy margins of the ocean, the estuaries, and deltas are yearly accumulating numerous Crustacea and mol- luscs, with some fishes and reptiles, for the study of future palaeontologists.
If this position be right, then, notwithstanding the immense number of pre- served fossils, there must have lived an immeasurably larger number of unpre- served organic beings, so that the chance of filling up the missing links, except in occasional instances, is very slight. Yet where circumstances have remained suitable for their preservation, many closely connected species are preserved — • in other words, while the intermediate types in certain eases are lost, in others they exist. The opponents of continuity lay all stress on the lost and none on the existing links.
But there is another difficulty in the way of tracing a given organism to its parent form, which, from our conventional mode of tracing genealogies, is never looked upon in its proper light.
Where are we to look for the remote ancestor of a given form ? Each of us, supposing none of our progenitors to have intermarried with relatives, would havo had at or about the period of the Norman Conquest upwards of a hundred million direct ancestors of that generation, and if we add the intermediate ancestors, double that number. As each individual has a male and female parent, we have only to multiply by two for each thirty years, the average duration of a generation, and it will give the abovo result.
Let any one assume that one of his ancestors at the time of the Norman Conquest was a Moor, another a Celt, and a third a Laplander, and that these three were preserved while all the others were lost, he would never recognize either of them as his ancestor, he would only have the one-hundred millionth of the blood of each of them, and as far as they were concerned there would be no perceptible sign of identity of race.
But the problem is more complex than that which I have stated ; at the time of the Conquest there were hardly a hundred million people in Europe, it follows that a great number of the ancestors of the propositus must have intermarried with relations, and then the pedigree, going back to the timo of the Conquest, instead of being represented by diverging lines, would form a network so tangled that no skill could unravel it ; the law of probabilities would indicate that any two people in the same country, taken at hazard, would not havo many generations to go back before they would find a
kxviii report — 1866.
common ancestor, who probably, could they have seen him or her in the life, had no traceable resemblance to either of them. Thus two animals of a very different form, and of what would be termed very different species, might have a common geological ancestor, and yet the skill of no comparative anatomist could trace the descent.
From the long continued conventional habit of tracing pedigrees through the male ancestor, we forget in talking of progenitors that each individual has a mother as well as a father, and there is no reason to suppose that he has in him less of the blood of the one than of the other.
The recent discoveries in paleontology show us that Man existed on this planet at an epoch far anterior to that commonly assigned to him. The instruments connected with human remains, and indisputably the work of human hands, show that to these remote periods the term civilisation could hardly be applied — chipped flints of the rudest construction, probably, in the earlier cases, fabricated by holding an amorphous flint in the hand and chipping off portions of it by striking it against a larger stone or rock ; then, as time suggested improvements, it would be more carefully shaped, and another stone used as a tool ; then (at what interval we can hardly guess) it would be ground, then roughly polished, and so on, — subsequently bronse weapons, and, nearly the last before we come to historical periods, iron. Such an apparently simple invention as a wheel must, in all probability, have been far subsequent to the rudo hunting-tools or weapons of war to which I have alluded.
A little step-by-step reasoning will convince the unprejudiced that what we call civilization must have been a gradual process ; can it be supposed that the inhabitants of Central America or of Egypt suddenly and what is called instinctively built their cities, carved and ornamented their monuments ? if not, if they must have learned to construct such erections, did it not take time to acquire such learning, to invent tools as occasion required, contrivances to raise weights, rules or laws by which men acted in concert to effect the design ? Did not all this require time ? and if, as the evidence of historical times shows, invention marches with a geometrical progression, how slow must have been the earlier steps ! If even now habit, and prejudice resulting therefrom, vested interests, &c., retard for some time the general application of a new invention, what must have been the degree of retardation among the comparatively un- educated beings which then existed ?
I have of course been able to indicate only a few of the broad arguments on this most interesting subject ; for detailed results the works of Darwin, Hooker, Huxley, Carpenter, Lyell, and others must be examined. If I appear to lean to the view that the successive changes in organic beings do not take place by sudden leaps, it is, I believe, from no want of an impartial feeling ; but if the facts are stronger in favour of one theory than another, it would bo an affectation of impartiality to make the balance appear equipoised.
The prejudices of education and associations with the past arc against this as against all now views ; and while on the one hand a theory is not to bo accepted because it is new and primd facie plausible, still to this assembly I need not say that its running counter to existing opinions is not necesBarily a reason for its rejection ; the onus probandi should rest on those who advance a new view, but the degree of proof must differ with the nature of the subject. The fair question is, Does the newly proposed view remove more difficulties, Mtquire fewer assumptions, and present more consistency with observed facts n that which it seeks to supersede ? if so, the philosopher will adopt it, the world will follow the philosopher— after many days.
ADD&S88. lxXlX
It must be borne in mind that even if we are satisfied from a persevering and impartial inquiry that organic forms have varied indefinitely in time, the causa eausans of these changes is not explained by our researches ; if it be admitted that we find no evidence of amorphous matter suddenly changed into complex structure, still why matter should be endowed with the plasticity by -which it slowly acquires modified structure is unexplained. If we assume thai natural selection, or the struggle for existence,, coupled with the tendency of like to reproduce like, gives rise to various organic changes, still our re- searches are at present uninstruotive as to why like should produce like, why acquired characteristics in the parent should be reproduced in the offspring. Reproduction itself is still an enigma, and this great question may involve deeper thoughts than it would be suitable to enter upon now.
Perhaps the most convincing argument in favour of continuity which could be presented to a doubting mind would be the difficulty it would feel in repr e sen ting to itself any per saUum act of nature. Who would not be astonished at beholding an oak tree spring up in a day, and not from seed or shoot? We are forced by experience, though often unconsciously, to believe in continuity as to all effects now taking place ; if any one of them be ano- malous we endeavour, by tracing its history and concomitant circumstances, to find its cause, t. e. to relate it to antecedent phenomena ; are we then to reject similar inquiries as to the past? is it laudable to seek an explanation of present changes by observation, experiment, and analogy, and yet repre- hensible to apply the same mode of investigation to the past history of the earth and of the organic remains embalmed in it ?
If we disbelieve in sudden creations of matter or force, in the sudden formations of complex organisms now, if we now assign to the heat of the son an action enabling vegetables to live by assimilating gases and amor- phous earths into growing structures, why should such effects not have taken place in earlier periods of the world's history, when the sun shone as now, and when the same materials existed for his rays to fall upon ?
If we are satisfied that continuity is a law of nature, the true expression of the action of Almighty Power, then, though we may humbly confess our inability to explain why matter is impressed with this tendency to gradual structural formation, we should cease to look for special interventions of creative power in changes which are difficult to understand, because, being removed from us in time, their concomitants are lost; we should* endeavour from the relics to evoke their history, and when we find a gap not try to bridge it over with a miracle.
If it be true that continuity pervades all physical phenomena, the doctrine applied by Cuvier to the relations of the different parts of an animal to each other might be capable of great extension. All the phenomena of inorganic and organized matter might be expected to be so inter-related that the study of an isolated phenomenon would lead to a knowledge of numerous other phe- nomena with which it is connected* As the antiquary deduces from a monolith the tools, the arts, the habits, and epoch of those by whom it is wrought, so the student of science may deduce from a spark of electricity or a ray of light the source whence it is generated ; and by similar processes of reasoning oilier phenomena hitherto unknown may be deduced from their probable relation with the known. But, as with heat, light, magnetism, and electricity, though we may study the phenomena to which these names have been given, and their mutual relations, we know nothing of what they are ; so, whether we adopt the view of natural selection, of effort, of plasticity, &c, we know not why organisms should have this nitus formativus, or why the acquired habit or exceptional quality of the individual should reappear in the offspring.
lxxx EEPORT 1866.
Philosophy ought to have no likes or dislikes, truth is her only aim ; but if a glow of admiration he permitted to a physical inquirer, to my mind a far more exquisite sense of the beautiful is conveyed by the orderly development, by the necessary inter-relation and inter-action of each element of the cosmos, and by the conviction that a bullet falling to the ground changes the dyna- mical conditions of the universe, than can be conveyed by mysteries, by con- vulsions, or by cataclysms.
The sense of understanding is to the educated more gratifying than the love of the marvellous, though the latter need never be wanting to the nature- seeker.
But the doctrine of continuity is not solely applicable to physical inquiries.
The same modes of thought which lead us to see continuity in the field of the microscope as in the universe, in infinity downwards as in infinity up- wards, will lead us to see it in the history of our own race ; the revolu- tionary ideas of the so-called natural rights of man, and d priori reason- ing from what are termed first principles, are far more unsound and give us far less ground for improvement of the race than the study of the gradual progressive changes arising from changed circumstances, changed wants, changed habits. Our language, our social institutions, our laws, the constitution of which we are proud, are the growth of time, the product of slow adaptations, resulting from continuous struggles. Happily in this country, practical experience has taught us to improve rather than to remo- del ; we follow the law of nature and avoid cataclysms.
The superiority of Man over other animals inhabiting this planet, of civi- lized over savage man, and of the more civilized over the less civilized, ia proportioned to the extent which his thought can grasp of the past and of the future. His memory reaches further back, his capability of prediction reaches further forward in proportion as his knowledge increases. He has not only personal memory which brings to his mind at will the events of his indivi- dual life, — he has history, the memory of the race ; he has geology, the his- tory of the planet ; he has astronomy, the geology of other worlds. Whence does the conviction to which I have alluded, that each material form bears in itself the records of its past history, arise ? Is it not from the belief in continuity? Does not the worn hollow on the rock record the action of the tide, its stratified layers the slow deposition by which it was formed, the organic remains imbedded in it the beings living at the times these layers were deposited, so that from a fragment of stone we can get the history of a period myriads of years ago ? From a fragment of bronze we may get the history of our race at a period antecedent to tradition. As science advances our power of reading this history improves and is extended. Saturn's ring may help us to a knowledge of how our solar system developed itself, for it as surely contains that history as the rock contains tho record of its own formation.
By this patient investigation how much have we already learned, which the most civilized of ancient human races ignored ! While in ethics, in politics, in poetry, in sculpture, in painting, we have scarcely, if at all, advanced beyond the highest intellects of ancient Greece or Italy, how great are the steps wo have made in physical science and its applications !
But how much more may we not expeet to know ?
We, this evening assembled, Ephemera as we arc, have learned by trans- mitted labour, to weigh, as in a balance, other worlds larger and heavier than our own, to know the length of their days and years, to measure their enor- mous distance from us and from each other, to detect and accurately ascertain
ADDRESS. lxxxi
the influence they have on the movements of our world and on each other, and to discover the substances of which they are composed ; may we not fairly hope that similar methods of research to those which have taught us so much may give our race further information, until problems relating not only to remote worlds, but possibly to organic and sentient beings which may inhabit them, problems which it might now seem wildly visionary to enunciate, may be solved by progressive improvements in the modes of applying obser- vation and experiment, induction and deduction ?
NOTES AND REFERENCES.
Ivi. Hkrschel, Sir J. Astronomical Observations at the Cape of Good Hope.
1847. Rosas, Earl of Observations on the Nebula, Phil. Trans. 1850, p. 499. Brayley. Report of the Meteor Committee of the British Association,
1865, p. 140, and Proceedings of the Royal Society, March 23, 1865. Sorby. Ibidem, and Proceedings of the Royal Society, June 16, 1864. Ivii. Olxsxbd. Silliman's Journal, July 1884, p. 138. The first suggestion of
a perspective vanishing-point for meteors seems to be due to Prof. Thom- son oi Nashville. Hbbschbl, Axbxakdbb. Reports of the Meteor Committee of the British
Association. Lbvbbbibb. Intramercurial Planets. Comptes Rendus, Paris, 1861, p.
1109. Daubbbb. Comptes Rendus, Paris, 1866. Bulletin de la Soci^te* Geolo-
gique de France, Mars 1866. lviii pLftcuB. Variation oi Spectrum Lines with Temperature, Phil. Trans.
1865, p. 6.
lix. HuGGDfs and Miller, Spectra of Fixed Stars, Phil Trans. 1864, p. 413. Spectrum of Temporary Star, Proc. Roy. Soc. No. 84, 1866. Huooi>8. Spectrum of Comet I., 1866, Proc. Roy. Soc. No. 80, 1866. Ix Chacobxac on the Moon. Comptes Rendus, Paris, June 1866, p. 1406, &c. lxii. Rumpobd. Heat of Friction, Phil. Trans. 1798, p. 80. Davy. Ibidem. West of England Contributions, p. 18. Joulb. Phil Mag. 1843 ; PM1. Trans. 1860. Uiii. Sabine. Magnetism and Solar Spots, Proc. Roy. Soc. 1865, p. 491. Aiby. On Solar Magnetism, Phil. Trans. 1863, pp. 313 & 646. Chambers. Idem, Phil. Trans. 1863, pp. 614-616. Maybb. Friction of Tidal Wave. See his papers collected and translated
by Youman, New York, 1866. Dblaunay. Acceleration of Moon's Motion, Comptes Rendus, Paris,
December 1866, January 1866. Aiby. Idem. Notices Roy. Ast Soc. April 13, 1866. Cabrington. Observations on Spots on the Sun, 1863. Dx la Rub, Stewart, and Lobwy. Idem, 1866. Fayb. On the Dynamic Theory of Solar neat, Comptes Rendus, Paris, October 1862, p. 664. Constitution of Sun, Motion of Sun Spots, &c, Comptes Rendus. Paris, January 1866, &c. lxiv. Stbuvb. Etudes <r Astronomic Stellaire, 1847. The uassage in the text is so brief as to be obscure. See the idea elaborated, Correlation of Phy- sical Forces, 1867, p. 187. See Corr. Phys. Forces, p. 84.
Bbbthblot. Formate of Potash. Institut, 1864, p. 332. lxv. Tyndall. On Radiant Heat, Phil. Mag. November 1864 : Phil. Trans.
1866. *
Gbahait. Dialysis of Air, Phil. Trans. 1866, p. 399. Wilde. Increase of Magneto-electric Force, Proc Roy. Soc. April 1866, -p. 107. 1866. /
lxxxii report — 1866.
Page. Ixv. IIolz. New Electrical Machine, Pogg. Annalen, 1805, pt. 1. p. 157. lxvi. Carpenter. Food and Force. Physiology, Treatise on. Bence Jones. Idem, Proc. Roy. Inst. March 28, 18(56. Playfaih, Idem, Proc. Roy. Instit. April 28, 1805. E. Smith. Idem, Phil. Trans. 1861, p. 747. Frankland. Idem, Proc Roy. Instit 1866. Traube. . Idem, Virchow's Archiv, vol. xxiii. p. 196, &c Fick and Wislicenus. Idem, Phil. Mag. June 1866, Supplement, lxvii. Lavoisier. (Euvrea, vol. ii. p. 040.
Ansted. Intellectual Ohserver, August 1804. lzviii. Ramsay. Addresses to the Geological Society, 1863 and 1864.
Herschel, Sir J. Geological effects of Variation in Earth's Orbit, Traa Geol. Soc. 2nd Series, vol. iii. p. 295. Outlines of Astronomy, 186 pp. 233-235. Croll. Idem, Phil. Mag. August 1864, and April 1866. J
lxx. Pasteur and Pouchet. On Spontaneous Generation, Comptes Renda Paris, 1863 to 1865. |
lxxi. Child. Proc. Roy. Soc 1865, p. 178. lxxiii. Carpenter. On Foraminifera, Phil. Trans. 1856, p. 227 ; 1860, p. 684| H. Bates. Butterflies of South America, Trans. Linn. Soc. vol. xxiii n. 496. j
lzxiv. Wallace. Butterflies of the Malay Archipelago, Trans. Linn. Soc. vol xxv. p. 1. Walsh. Proc Entom. Soc Philadelphia, 1864, p. 403. Fritz Mullbr. Fur Darwin, Leipzig, 1864 ; Annals and Magazine of Na- tural History, 1865. Lubbock. Diving Hymenoptera, Trans. linn. Soc vol. xxiv. p. 135. Logan. Eocoon. Communication to the British Association at Bath,
1864 A. Db Candolle. Variability in Oaks, &c, Bibl. Univ. de Geneve, No- vember 1862. Hooker. On Oaks, Trans. Linn. Soc. vol. xxiii. p. 881. On Arctic Flora, Trans. Linn. Soc. vol. xxiii. p. 251. lxxviii. Darwin. Origin of Species through Natural Selection, 1866, in which see also Dr. M'Donnell's results. Huxley. Address to the Geological Society, 21st February, 1862. Lyell. Antiquity of Man, 1868.
Mr. GROVE's inaugural address as President of the British Association exhibits in a triumphant light the progress of science, the subtlety of its observations, the grandeur of its discoveries, and the wide view which they open out into the realms of nature and her laws, their harmonious operation, their marvellous unity and system, the prodigious scale of the forces they engender, and the mode in which the greatest variety of effects results from the simplest principles. The material universe thus becomes, as the man of science unfolds and discloses it to our view, a theatre of power such as appeals to the poetry as well as the philosophy of man, and Mr. GROVE's language rise to an imaginative vigour and loftiness as he exhibits the vastness of the area on which one and the same set of laws are working, and the chymical and magnetic homogeneity of all the parts of the universe. It is all one composition, one organization. "the evidence of continuity as pervading the universe does not stop at telescopic observation; chymistry and physical optics furnish us with new proofs of it Those meteoric bodies which have from time to time come so far witin reach of the earth's attraction as to fall upon its surface give, upon analysis, metals and oxides similar to those which belong to the structure of the earth." Mr. DAUBRÉE, indeed, has made a meteorite, and synthetic chymistry can number among its miraculous feats the actual manufacture of one of these mysterious visitants. Nor is the universe of infinite spaceso empty as men used to imagine it. First, it is inhabited by an infinity of worlds; but, more than that, we now discover that the intermediate spaces between those great heavenly bodies have more occupants than we imagined, that besides the planets and besides the asteroids there are meteorites.The meteorites are but liliputian planets, and could we apply the necessay scrutiny we should find "that our solar system is filled with planetary bodies, varying in size from that of Jupiter — 1,240 times larger involume than the earth — to that of a cannon-ball or even a pistol bullet." And when we go from chymical analysis "to those attributes of matter which are now recognized as forces or modes of action, we find the evidence of continuity still stronger. What are magnetism and electricity? Forces so universal and so apparently connected with matter as to be regarded as two of its invariable attributes." And so with light, heat, and chymical affinity. Heat and motion "are modifications of each other," and heat is motion, and motion heat, dynamically, or in the productive energy of force. Our scientific orator shows how this discovery tends to connect all the part of the universe together, and to exhibit them as mutually borrowers and lendrs, or rather as dependenton a great stock of productive force, which supplies the vacuum in each as it arises. It was the staartling suggestion of MAYER "that tbe drag upon the earth's rotatory motion in the friction of the tidal waves, the velocity of the earth's rotation must be gradually diminished, and that thus this rotation must ultimately cease altogether, unless some compensatory action from some other quarter existed" to remedy the defect. What is this compensatory action? "We know," says Mr. GROVE, "of no problem in celestial dynamics more deeply interesting." He suggests, however, "a solution of this problem in the enormous force of heat radiated from sun, earth, and planets into space," and after radiation not consumed. What becomes of this vast and ever-multiplying stock of force? "Does it not move, or contribute to move, suns and planets?" Thus, the very rotation of our earth would depend upon a common fund of productive force which is gathered from every part, to return thither when wanted.
We shall not follow the President of the British Society further uon this sublime track of inquiry. The triumphs of synthetical chymistry, and the prospect of the practical and profitable results to be expected from them, are then discussed, and the President promises an inexhaustible stock of heat for our railways from the creative powers of science when our coalfields give way. His address exhibits with striking vigour and effect the victories of physical science upon the field of observation and experiment. He approaches, however, in the latter part of his address, a subject upon which science has not been, and is not capable of being, so successful. Science discovers facts, and it discovers immediate causes which are simply facts, but when it comes to ultimate causes and the origination of things, then science has to take a more halting step. Mr. Grove, however, courageously ventures into these unfathomable waters; he makes a transition from the experimental field of science to the speculative, and enters upon the much-debated question of the Origin of Species.
Upton this question, then, the President states his views modesty, and with an admission of the great difficulties which attach to it. He decides in favour of the hypothesis of a gradual growth of every species by a natural law out of some pre-existent organism, or in favour of the Darwinian theory. He arrives at this conclusion upon the ground of facility of conception and apparent probability, accompanied wiht mino evidences from the rudimental features occasionally shown in embryos and from the metamorphosis of plants. He asks the question,— Which is more easy to conceive, an elephant being produced without a previous organism or with one? "The first elephant must in some way or other have physically arrived on this earth. Whence did he come? Did he fall from the sky? Did he rise moulded out of a mass of amorphous earth or rock? Did he appear out of the cleft of a tree?" Mr. Grove decides that it is difficult to imagine this, and that facility of coneption is on the side of the first elephant having arisen from a previous organism. There can be no doubt that Mr. Grove is right upon the fact of the greater facility; the question, however, is sure to be raised on the other side whether facility of conception is a perfectly infallible test of truth. Some will say that it is not, especially when what we are dealing with is the entirely mysterious and incomprehensible subject of causation. It is so impossible to conceive the beginning of anything that, unless we deny a beginning of things in toto, that impossibility cannot, argumentatively, count for much. The beginning of the smallest and most rudimental organism is as difficult to conceive as the beginning of an elephant. Such an argument, therefore, to be logical involves the rejection of any beginning of things at all, and this rejection implicates us immediately in the most insoluble metaphysical and religious difficulties. It must be remembered, also, that to put the proof of an hypothesis upon the ground of facility of conception is so far to abandon even the very profession of having proof of it from fact, because nobody could suppose that, were there solid proofs from fact forthcoming, such an intangible test as that of conception would be adopted. Mr. Grove, indeed, very fairly and candidly admits the inadequacy of all proof from facts for the Darwinian theory. "The physical breaks in the stratification render it next to impossible to fairly trace the order of succession of organisms by the evidence afforded by these fossil remains." In other words, the proof of the alleged or supposed facts from history is not forthcoming, and never will be. History, however, is the natural evidence of past facts, and in the want of this natural evidence the recourse to the test of conception is very inconclusive and uncertain. The conclusion appears to be that science must submit to incompleteness and defect as soon as she approaches questions which lie beyond her, and which are concerned with the origin of things. She can observe facts, but the origin is out of her reach. As soon as men approach that question they have to tell us of "breaks" &mdash: breaks in the chain of the progress of species. If it were not for these "breaks," they say, we should know everything about it. Undoubtedly, "breaks" are very awkward, especiallly when they contain just the intervening matter which is wanted. But this should be a hint to us not to speculate too confidently. We cannot have things quite our own way, facts will leave us in the lurch when we most want them, a prop gives way, there is a stoppage somewhere, a hitch. One man will say that this is quite an accident, and ought not to affect the argument; but another will see that, whether accident or not, the link is missing. Philosophy, in fact, has her trials,like other magnates, which will not fail to profit her in the end.
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it brings, is praised in verse. From the chrysanthemums in autumn, the camellias and plum blossoms of the winter months, the cherry and peach blossoms and wistaria during early spring, the peony in May, and the great lotus flowers during the summer months, so every season has its typical flower, and every flower is loved and praised in song and sonnet by the people. There is room for flowers in the humblest abode, and even the crests of the thatch-roofed huts of the farmers are transformed into miniature gardens of hyacinths and tulips.
So we have pushed aside the latticed doors and glanced in at the Japanese home. True, our stay has been short, and much must be left unnoticed; yet, as we take our reluctant leave, above the soft melody of the koto strings, we can clearly hear the lusty chirp of the "cricket on the hearth."
THE INADEQUACY OF "NATURAL SELECTION." |
By HERBERT SPENCER.
ALONG with that inadequacy of natural section to explain changes of structure which do not aid life in important ways, alleged in §166 of The Principles of Biology, a further inadequacy was alleged. It was contended that the relative powers of co-operative parts can not be adjusted solely by survival of the fittest; and especially where the parts are numerous and the cooperation complex. In illustration it was pointed out that immensely developed horns, such as those of the extinct Irish elk, weighing over a hundredweight, could not, with the massive skull bearing them, be carried at the extremity of the outstretched neck without many and great modifications of adjacent bones and muscles of the neck and thorax; and that without strengthening of the fore-legs, too, there would be failure alike in fighting and in locomotion. And it was argued that while we can not assume spontaneous increase of all these parts proportionate to the additional strains, we can not suppose them to increase by variation one at once, without supposing the creature to be disadvantaged by the weight and nutrition of parts that were for the time useless—parts, moreover, which would revert to their original sizes before the other needful variations occurred.
When, in reply to me, it was contended that co-operative parts vary together, I named facts conflicting with this assertion—the fact that the blind crabs of the Kentucky caves have lost their eyes but not the foot-stalks carrying them; the fact that the normal proportion between tongue and beak in certain selected varieties of pigeons is lost; the fact that lack of concomitance in increase of jaws and teeth in sundry kinds of pet dogs, has caused great crowding of the teeth (The Factors of Organic Evolution, pp. 12, 13). And I then argued that if co-operative parts, small in number and so closely associated as these are, do not vary together, it is unwarrantable to allege that co-operative parts which are very numerous and remote from one another vary together. After making this rejoinder I enforced my argument by a further example—that of the giraffe. Tacitly recognizing the truth that the unusual structure of this creature must have been, in its more conspicuous traits, the result of survival of the fittest (since it is absurd to suppose that efforts to reach a high branch could lengthen the legs), I illustrated afresh the obstacles to co-adaptation. Not dwelling on the objection that increase of any components of the fore-quarters out of adjustment to the others would cause evil rather than good, I went on to argue that the co-adaptation of parts required to make the giraffe's structure useful, is much greater than at first appears. This animal has a grotesque gallop, necessitated by the great difference in length between the fore and the hind limbs. I pointed out that the mode of action of the hind limbs shows that the bones and muscles have all been changed in their proportions and adjustments; and I contended that, difficult as it is to believe that all parts of the fore-quarters have been co-adapted by the appropriate variations now of this part, now of that, it becomes impossible to believe that all the parts in the hind-quarters have been simultaneously co-adapted to one another and to all the parts of the fore-quarters: adding that want of co-adaptation, even in a single muscle, would cause fatal results when high speed had to be maintained while escaping from an enemy.
Since this argument, repeated with this fresh illustration, was published in 1886, I have met with nothing to be called a reply; and might, I think, if convictions usually followed proofs, leave the matter as it stands. It is true that, in his Darwinism, Mr. Wallace has adverted to my renewed objection and, as already said, contended that changes such as those instanced can be effected by natural selection, since such changes can be effected by artificial selection: a contention which, as I have pointed out, assumes a parallelism that does not exist. But now, instead of pursuing the argument further along the same line, let me take a somewhat different line.
If there occurs some change in an organ, say, by increase of its size, which adapts it better to the creature's needs, it is admitted that when, as commonly happens, the use of the organ demands the co-operation of other organs, the change in it will generally be of no service unless the co-operative organs are changed. If, for instance, there takes place such a modification of a rodent's tail as that which, by successive increases, produces the trowel-shaped tail of the beaver, no advantage will be derived unless there also take place certain modifications in the bulks and shapes of the adjacent vertebrae and their attached muscles, as well, probably, as in the hind limbs, enabling them to withstand the reactions of the blows given by the tail. And the question is, by what process these many parts, changed in different degrees, are co-adapted to the new requirements—whether variation and natural selection alone can effect the readjustment. There are three conceivable ways in which the parts may simultaneously change: (1) they may all increase or decrease together in like degrees; (2) they may all simultaneously increase or decrease independently, so as not to maintain their previous proportions or assume any other special proportions; (3) they may vary in such ways and degrees as to make them jointly serviceable for the new end. Let us consider closely these several conceivabilities.
And first of all, what are we to understand by co-operative parts? In a general sense, all the organs of the body are co-operative parts, and are respectively liable to be more or less changed by change in any one. In a narrower sense, more directly relevant to the argument, we may, if we choose to multiply difficulties, take the entire framework of bones and muscles as formed of co-operative parts; for these are so related that any considerable change in the actions of some entails change in the actions of most others. It needs only to observe how, when putting out an effort, there goes, along with a deep breath, an expansion of the chest and a bracing up of the abdomen, to see that various muscles beyond those directly concerned are strained along with them. Or, when suffering from lumbago, an effort to lift a chair will cause an acute consciousness that not the arms only are brought into action, but also the muscles of the back. These cases show how the motor organs are so tied together that altered actions of some implicate others quite remote from them.
But without using the advantage which this interpretation of the words would give, let us take as co-operative organs those which are obviously such—the organs of locomotion. What, then, shall we say of the fore and hind limbs of terrestrial mammals, which co-operate closely and perpetually? Do they vary together? If so, how have there been produced such contrasted structures as that of the kangaroo, with its large hind limbs and small fore limbs, and that of the giraffe, in which the hind limbs are small and the fore limbs large—how does it happen that, descending from the same primitive mammal, these creatures have diverged in the proportions of their limbs in opposite directions? Take, again, the articulate animals. Compare one of the lower types, with its rows of almost equal-sized limbs, and one of the higher types, as a crab or a lobster, with limbs some very small and some very large. How came this contrast to arise in the course of evolution, if there was the equality of variation supposed?
But now let us narrow the meaning of the phrase still further; giving it a more favorable interpretation. Instead of considering separate limbs as co-operative, let us consider the component parts of the same limb as co-operative, and ask what would result from varying together. It would in that case happen that, though the fore and hind limbs of a mammal might become different in their sizes, they would not become different in their structures. If so, how have there arisen the unlikeness between the hind legs of the kangaroo and those of the elephant? Or if this comparison is objected to, because the creatures belong to the widely different divisions of implacental and placental mammals, take the cases of the rabbit and the elephant, both belonging to the last division. On the hypothesis of evolution these are both derived from the same original form, but the proportions of the parts have become so widely unlike that the corresponding joints are scarcely recognized as such by the unobservant: at what seem corresponding places the legs bend in opposite ways. Equally marked, or more marked, is the parallel fact among the Articulata. Take that limb of the lobster which bears the claw and compare it with the corresponding limb in an inferior articulate animal, or the corresponding limb of its near ally, the crayfish, and it becomes obvious that the component segments of the limb have come to bear to one another in the one case proportions immensely different from those they bear in the other case. Undeniably, then, on contemplating the general facts of organic structure, we see that the concomitant variations in the parts of limbs have not been of a kind to produce equal amounts of change in them, but quite the opposite—have been everywhere producing inequalities. Moreover, we are reminded that this production of inequalities among co-operative parts, is an essential principle of development. Had it not been so, there could not have been that progress from homogeneity of structure to heterogeneity of structure which constitutes evolution.
We pass now to the second supposition:—that the variations in co-operative parts occur irregularly, or in such independent ways that they bear no definite relations to one another—miscellaneously, let us say. This is the supposition which best corresponds with the facts. Glances at the faces around yield conspicuous proofs. Many of the muscles of the face and some of the bones, are distinctly co-operative; and these respectively vary in such ways as to produce in each person a different combination. What we see in the face we have reason to believe holds in the limbs as in all other parts. Indeed, it needs but to compare people whose arms are of the same lengths, and observe how stumpy are the fingers of one and how slender those of another; or it needs but to note the unlikeness of gait of passers-by, implying small unlikenesses of structure; to be convinced that the relations among the variations of co-operative parts are anything but fixed. And now, confining our attention to limbs, let us consider what must happen if, by variations taking place miscellaneously, limbs have to be partially changed from fitness for one function to fitness for another function—have to be re-adapted. That the reader may fully comprehend the argument, he must here have patience while a good many anatomical details are set down.
Let us suppose a species of quadruped of which the members have for long past periods been accustomed to locomotion over a relatively even surface, as, for instance, the "prairie dogs" of North America; and let us suppose that increase of numbers has driven part of them into a region full of obstacles to easy locomotion—covered, say, by the decaying stems of fallen trees, such as one sees in portions of primeval forest. Ability to leap must become a useful trait; and, according to the hypothesis we are considering, this ability will be produced by the selection of favorable variations. What are the variations required? A leap is effected chiefly by the bending of the hind limbs so as to make sharp angles at the joints, and then suddenly straightening them; as any one may see on watching a cat leap on to the table. The first required change, then, is increase of the large extensor muscles, by which the hind limbs are straightened. Their increases must be duly proportioned, for if those which straighten one joint become much stronger than those which straighten the other joint, the result must be collapse of the other joint when the muscles are contracted together. But let us make a large admission, and suppose these muscles to vary together; what further muscular change is next required? In a plantigrade mammal the metatarsal bones chiefly bear the reaction of the leap, though the toes may have a share. In a digitigrade mammal, however, the toes form almost exclusively the fulcrum, and if they are to bear the reaction of a higher leap, the flexor muscles which depress and bend them must be proportionately enlarged; if not, the leap will fail from want of a firm point d'appui. Tendons as well as muscles must be modified; and, among others, the many tendons which go to the digits and their phalanges. Stronger muscles and tendons imply greater strains on the joints; and unless these are strengthened, one or other dislocation will be caused by a more powerful spring. Not only the articulations themselves must be so modified as to bear greater stress, but also the numerous ligaments which hold the parts of each in place. Nor can the bodies of the bones remain unstrengthened; for if they have no more than the strengths needed for previous movements they will fail to bear more violent movements. Thus, saying nothing of the required changes in the pelvis as well as in the nerves and blood-vessels, there are, counting bones, muscles, tendons, ligaments, at least fifty different parts in each hind leg which have to be enlarged. Moreover, they have to be enlarged in unlike degrees. The muscles and tendons of the outer toes, for example, need not be added to so much as those of the median toes. Now, throughout their successive stages of growth, all these parts have to be kept fairly well balanced; as any one may infer on remembering sundry of the accidents he has known. Among my own friends I could name one who, when playing lawn-tennis, snapped the Achilles tendon; another who, while swinging his children, tore some of the muscular fibers in the calf of his leg; another who, in getting over a fence, tore a ligament of one knee. Such facts, joined with every one's experience of sprains, show that during the extreme exertions to which limbs are now and then subject, there is a giving way of parts not quite up to the required level of strength. How, then, is this balance to be maintained? Suppose the extensor muscles have all varied appropriately; their variations are useless unless the other co-operative parts have also varied appropriately. Worse than this. Saying nothing of the disadvantage caused by extra weight and cost of nutrition, they will be causes of mischief—causes of derangement to the rest by contracting with undue force. And then, how long will it take for the rest to be brought into adjustment? As Mr. Darwin says concerning domestic animals: "Any particular variation would generally be lost by crossing, reversions etc., . . . unless carefully preserved by man." In a state of nature, then, favorable variations of these muscles would disappear again long before one or a few of the co-operative parts could be appropriately varied, much more before all of them could.
With this insurmountable difficulty goes a difficulty still more insurmountable—if the expression may be allowed. It is not a question of increased sizes of parts only, but of altered shapes of parts, too. A glance at the skeletons of mammals shows how unlike are the forms of the corresponding bones of their limbs; and shows that they have been severally remolded in each species to the different requirements entailed by its different habits. The change from the structures of hind limbs fitted only for walking and trotting to hind limbs fitted also for leaping, implies, therefore, that along with strengthenings of bones there must go alterations in their forms. Now the spontaneous alterations of form which may take place in any bone are countless. How long, then, will it be before there takes place that particular alteration which will make the bone fitter for its new action? And what is the probability that the many required changes of shape, as well as of size, in bones will each of them be effected before all the others are lost again? If the probabilities against success are incalculable, when we take account only of changes in the size of parts, what shall we say of their incalculableness when differences of form also are taken into account?
"Surely this piling up of difficulties has gone far enough"; the reader will be inclined to say. By no means. There is a difficulty immeasurably transcending those named. We have thus far omitted the second half of the leap, and the provisions to be made for it. After ascent of the animal's body comes descent; and the greater the force with which it is projected up, the greater is the force with which it comes down. Hence, if the supposed creature has undergone such changes in the hind limbs as will enable them to propel it to a greater height, without having undergone any changes in the fore limbs, the result will be that on its descent the fore limbs will give way, and it will come down on its nose. The fore limbs, then, have to be changed simultaneously with the hind. How changed? Contrast the markedly bent hind limbs of a cat with its almost straight fore limbs, or contrast the silence of the upward spring on to the table with the thud which the fore paws make as it jumps off the table. See how unlike the actions of the hind and fore limbs are, and how unlike their structures. In what way, then, is the required co-adaptation to be effected? Even were it a question of relative sizes only, there would be no answer; for facts already given show that we may not assume simultaneous increases of size to take place in the hind and fore limbs; and, indeed, a glance at the various human races, which differ considerably in the ratios of their legs to their arms, shows us this. But it is not simply a question of sizes. To bear the increased shock of descent the fore limbs must be changed throughout in their structures. Like those in the hind limb, the changes must be of many parts in many proportions; and they must be both in sizes and in shapes. More than this. The scapular arch and its attached muscles must also be strengthened and remolded. See, then, the total requirements. We must suppose that by natural selection of miscellaneous variations, the parts of the hind limbs shall be co-adapted to one another, in sizes, shapes, and ratios; that those of the fore limbs shall undergo co-adaptations similar in their complexity, but dissimilar in their kinds; and that the two sets of co-adaptations shall be effected pari passu. If, as may be held, the probabilities are millions to one against the first set of changes being achieved, then it may be held that the probabilities are billions to one against the second being simultaneously achieved, in progressive adjustment to the first.
There remains only to notice the third conceivable mode of adjustment. It may be imagined that though, by the natural selection of miscellaneous variations, these adjustments can not be effected, they may nevertheless be made to take place appropriately. How made? To suppose them so made is to suppose that the prescribed end is somewhere recognized; and that the changes are step by step simultaneously proportioned for achieving it—is to suppose a designed production of these changes. In such case, then, we have to fall back in part upon the primitive hypothesis; and if we do this in part, we may as well do it wholly—may as well avowedly return to the doctrine of special creation.
What, then, is the only defensible interpretation? If such modifications of structure produced by modifications of function as we see take place in each individual, are in any measure transmissible to descendants, then all these co-adaptations, from the simplest up to the most complex, are accounted for. In some cases this inheritance of acquired characters suffices by itself to explain the facts; and in other cases it suffices when taken in combination with the selection of favorable variations. An example of the first class is furnished by the change just considered; and an example of the second class is furnished by the case before named of development in a deer's horns. If, by some extra massiveness spontaneously arising, or by formation of an additional "point," an advantage is gained either for attack or defense, then, if the increased muscularity and strengthened structure of the neck and thorax, which wielding of these somewhat heavier horns produces, are in a greater or less degree inherited, and in several successive generations, are by this process brought up to the required extra strength, it becomes possible and advantageous for a further increase of the horns to take place, and a further increase in the apparatus for wielding them, and so on continuously. By such processes only, in which each part gains strength in proportion to function, can co-operative parts be kept in adjustment, and be readjusted to meet new requirements. Close contemplation of the facts impresses me more strongly than ever with the two alternatives—either there has been inheritance of acquired characters, or there has been no evolution.—Contemporary Review.
[To be concluded.]
irrigation in these all-important years of the beginnings of new commonwealths based upon new industries? Millions of acres of land are forever worthless without water. Who shall own the streams and reservoirs—a few far-sighted men, or the people themselves? Irrigation journals and conventions of irrigators discuss the matter from the standpoint of the present, and endeavor to shape legislation to profitable ends. The slow, dumb masses have not yet recognized the magnitude of the problems involved. An effort is being made to have the United States give all the arid lands to the several States and Territories in which they lie, but the plan is dangerous. Only the Federal Government can protect the sources of water supply; utilize, reservoir, and distribute that supply, and unite water and land in an indissoluble marriage bond.
THE INADEQUACY OF "NATURAL SELECTION." |
By HERBERT SPENCER.
[Concluded.]
THIS very pronounced opinion will be met on the part of some by a no less pronounced demurrer, which involves a denial of possibility. It has been of late asserted, and by many believed, that inheritance of acquired characters can not occur. Weismann, they say, has shown that there is early established in the evolution of each organism, such a distinctness between those component units which carry on the individual life and those which are devoted to maintenance of the species, that changes in the one can not affect the other. We will look closely into his doctrine.
Basing his argument on the principle of the physiological division of labor, and assuming that the primary division of labor is that between such part of an organism as carries on individual life and such part as is reserved for the production of other lives, Weismann, starting with "the first multicellular organism," says that—"Hence the single group would come to be divided into two groups of cells, which may be called somatic and reproductive—the cells of the body as opposed to those which are concerned with reproduction" (Essays upon Heredity, p. 27).
Though he admits that this differentiation "was not at first absolute, and indeed is not always so to-day," yet he holds that the differentiation eventually becomes absolute in the sense that the somatic cells, or those which compose the body at large, come to have only a limited power of cell-division, instead of an unlimited power which the reproductive cells have; and also in the sense that eventually there ceases to be any communication between the two, further than that implied by the supplying of nutriment to the reproductive cells by the somatic cells. The outcome of this argument is that, in the absence of communication, changes induced in the somatic cells, constituting the individual, can not influence the natures of the reproductive cells, and can not therefore be transmitted to posterity. Such is the theory. Now let us look at a few facts—some familiar, some unfamiliar.
His investigations led Pasteur to the positive conclusion that the silkworm diseases are inherited. The transmission from parent to offspring resulted, not through any contamination of the surface of the egg by the body of the parent while being deposited, but resulted from infection of the egg itself—intrusion of the parasitic organism. Generalized observations concerning the disease called pébrine enabled him to decide by inspection of the eggs which were infected and which were not: certain modifications of form distinguishing the diseased ones. More than this, the infection was proved by microscopical examination of the contents of the egg; in proof of which he quotes as follows from Dr. Carlo Vittadini:
Thus, then, the substance of the egg, and even its innermost vital part, is permeable by a parasite sufficiently large to be microscopically visible. It is also of course permeable by the invisible molecules of protein, out of which its living tissues are formed, and by absorption of which they subsequently grow. But, according to Weismann, it is not permeable by those invisible units of protoplasm out of which the vitally active tissues of the parent are constituted: units composed, as we must assume, of variously arranged molecules of protein. So that the big thing may pass, and the little thing may pass, but the intermediate thing may not pass!
A fact of kindred nature, unhappily more familiar, may be next brought in evidence. It concerns the transmission of a disease not unfrequent among those of unregulated lives. The highest authority concerning this disease, in its inherited form, is Mr. Jonathan Hutchinson; and the following are extracts from a letter I have received from him, and which I publish with his assent:
See, then, to what we are committed if we accept Weismann's hypothesis. We must conclude that, whereas the reproductive cell may be effectually invaded by an abnormal living element in the parental organism, those normal living elements which constitute the vital protoplasm of the parental organism, can not evade it. Or if it be admitted that both intrude, then the implication is that, whereas the abnormal element can so modify the development as to cause changes of structure (as of the teeth), the normal element can cause no changes of structure![2]
We pass now to evidence not much known in the world at large, but widely known in the biological world, though known in so incomplete a manner as to be undervalued in it. Indeed, when I name it probably many will vent a mental pooh-pooh. The fact to which I refer is one of which record is preserved in the museum of the College of Surgeons, in the shape of paintings of a foal borne by a mare not quite thoroughbred, to a sire which was thoroughbred—a foal which bears the markings of the quagga. The history of this remarkable foal is given by the Earl of Morton, F. R. S., in a letter to the President of the Royal Society (read November 23, 1820). In it he states that wishing to domesticate the quagga, and having obtained a male, but not a female, he made an experiment.
Lord Morton then names sundry further correspondences. Dr. Wollaston, at that time President of the Royal Society, who had seen the animals, testified to the correctness of his description, and, as shown by his remarks, entertained no doubt about the alleged facts. But good reason for doubt may be assigned. There naturally arises the question—How does it happen that parallel results are not observed in other cases? If in any progeny certain traits not belonging to the sire, but belonging to a sire of preceding progeny, are reproduced, how is it that such anomalously-inherited traits are not observed in domestic animals, and indeed in mankind? How is it that the children of a widow by a second husband do not bear traceable resemblances of the first husband? To these questions nothing like satisfactory replies seem forthcoming; and, in the absence of replies, skepticism, if not disbelief, may be held reasonable.
There is an explanation, however. Forty years ago I made acquaintance with a fact which impressed me by its significant implications; and has for this reason, I suppose, remained in my memory. It is set forth in the Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society, vol. xiv (1853), pp. 214 et seq., and concerns certain results of crossing English and French breeds of sheep. The writer of the translated paper, M. Malingid-Nouel, Director of the Agricultural School of La Charmoise, states that when the French breeds of sheep (in which were included "the mongrel Merinos") were crossed with an English breed, "the lambs present the following results. Most of them resemble the mother more than the father; some show no trace of the father." Joining the admission respecting the mongrels with the facts subsequently stated, it is tolerably clear that the cases in which the lambs bore no traces of the father were cases in which the mother was of pure breed. Speaking of the results of these crossings in the second generation "having 75 per cent of English blood," M, Nouel says: "The lambs thrive, wear a beautiful appearance, and complete the joy of the breeder. . . . No sooner are the lambs weaned than their strength, their vigor, and their beauty begin to decay. . . . At last the constitution gives way. . . . he remains stunted for life," the constitution being thus proved unstable or unadapted to the requirements. How, then, did M. Nouel succeed in obtaining a desirable combination of a fine English breed with the relatively poor French breeds?
"He took an animal from 'flocks originally sprung from a mixture of the two distinct races that are established in these two provinces [Berry and La Sologne],' and these he 'united with animals of another mixed breed. . . . which blended the Tourangelle and native Merino blood of' La Beauce and Touraine, and obtained a mixture of all four races 'without decided character, without fixity. . . . but possessing the advantage of being used to our climate and management.'
"Putting one of these 'mixed-blood ewes to a pure New-Kent ram. . . . one obtains a lamb containing fifty-hundredths of the purest and most ancient English blood, with twelve and a half hundredths of four different French races, which are individually lost in the preponderance of English blood, and disappear almost entirely, leaving the improving type in the ascendant. . . . All the lambs produced strikingly resembled each other, and even Englishmen took them for animals of their own country.'"
M. Nouel goes on to remark that when this derived breed was bred with itself, the marks of the French breeds were lost. "Some slight traces could be detected by experts, but these soon disappeared."
Thus, we get proof that relatively pure constitutions predominate in progeny over much mixed constitutions. The reason is not difficult to see. Every organism tends to become adapted to its conditions of life; and all the structures of a species, accustomed through multitudinous generations to the climate, food, and various influences of its locality, are molded into harmonious co-operation favorable to life in that locality: the result being that in the development of each young individual, the tendencies conspire to produce the fit organization. It is otherwise when the species is removed to a habitat of different character, or when it is of mixed breed. In the one case its organs, partially out of harmony with the requirements of its new life, become partially out of harmony with one another; since, while one influence, say of climate, is but little changed, another influence, say of food, is much changed; and consequently, the perturbed relations of the organs interfere with their original stable equilibrium. Still more in the other case is there a disturbance of equilibrium. In a mongrel the constitution derived from each source repeats itself as far as possible. Hence a conflict of tendencies to evolve two structures more or less unlike. The tendencies do not harmoniously conspire; but produce partially incongruous sets of organs. And evidently where the breed is one in which there are united the traits of various lines of ancestry, there results an organization so full of small incongruities of structure and action, that it has a much-diminished power of maintaining its balance; and while it can not withstand so well adverse influences, it can not so well hold its own in the offspring. Concerning parents of pure and mixed breeds respectively, severally tending to reproduce their own structures in progeny, we may, therefore, say figuratively that the house divided against itself can not withstand the house, of which the members are in concord.
Now if this is shown to be the case with breeds the purest of which have been adapted to their habitats and modes of life during some few hundred years only, what shall we say when the question is of a breed which has had a constant mode of life in the same locality for ten thousand years or more, like the quagga? In this the stability of constitution must be such as no domestic animal can approach. Relatively stable as may have been the constitutions of Lord Morton's horses, as compared with the constitutions of ordinary horses, yet, since Arab horses, even in their native country, have probably in the course of successive conquests and migrations of tribes become more or less mixed, and since they have been subject to the conditions of domestic life, differing much from the conditions of their original wild life, and since the English breed has undergone the perturbing effects of change from the climate and food of the East to the climate and food of the West, the organizations of the horse and mare in question could have had nothing like that perfect balance produced in the quagga by a hundred centuries of harmonious co-operation. Hence the result. And hence at the same time the interpretation of the fact that analogous phenomena are not perceived among domestic animals, or among ourselves; since both have relatively mixed, and generally extremely mixed, constitutions, which, as we see in ourselves, have been made generation after generation, not by the formation of a mean between two parents, but by the jumbling of traits of the one with traits of the other, until there exist no such conspiring tendencies among the parts as cause repetition of combined details of structure in posterity.
Expectation that skepticism might be felt respecting this alleged anomaly presented by the quagga-marked foal, had led me to think over the matter; and I had reached this interpretation before sending to the College of Surgeons Museum (being unable to go myself) to obtain the particulars and refer to the records. When there was brought to me a copy of the account as set forth in the Philosophical Transactions, it was joined with the information that there existed an appended account of pigs, in which a parallel fact had been observed. To my immediate inquiry—"Was the male a wild pig?"—there came the reply: "I did not observe." Of course I forthwith obtained the volume, and there found what I expected. It was contained in a paper communicated by Dr. Wollaston from Daniel Giles, Esq., concerning his "sow and her produce," which said that
"she was one of a well-known black and white breed of Mr. Western, the Member for Essex. About ten years since I put her to a boar of the wild breed, and of a deep chestnut color, which I had just received from Hatfield House, and which was soon afterward drowned by accident. The pigs produced (which were her first litter) partook in appearance of both boar and sow, but in some the chestnut color of the boar strongly prevailed.
"The sow was afterward put to a boar of Mr. Western's breed (the wild boar having been long dead). The produce was a litter of pigs, some of which, we observed with much surprise, to be stained and clearly marked with the chestnut color which had prevailed in the former litter."
Mr. Giles adds that in a second litter of pigs, the father of which was of Mr. Western's breed, he and his bailiff believe there was a recurrence, in some, of the chestnut color, but admits that their "recollection is much less perfect than I wish it to be." He also adds that, in the course of many years' experience, he had never known the least appearance of the chestnut color in Mr. Western's breed.
What are the probabilities that these two anomalous results should have arisen, under these exceptional conditions, as a matter of chance? Evidently the probabilities against such a coincidence are enormous. The testimony is in both cases so good that, even apart from the coincidence, it would be unreasonable to reject it; but the coincidence makes acceptance of it imperative. There is mutual verification, at the same time that there is a joint interpretation yielded of the strange phenomenon, and of its nonoccurrence under ordinary circumstances.
And now, in the presence of these facts, what are we to say? Simply that they are fatal to Weismann's hypothesis. They show that there is none of the alleged independence of the reproductive cells; but that the two sets of cells are in close communion. They prove that while the reproductive cells multiply and arrange themselves during the evolution of the embryo, some of their germplasm passes into the mass of somatic cells constituting the parental body, and becomes a permanent component of it. Further, they necessitate the inference that this introduced germplasm, everywhere diffused, is some of it included in the reproductive cells subsequently formed. And if we thus get a demonstration that the somewhat different units of a foreign germ-plasm permeating the organism, permeate also the subsequently-formed reproductive cells, and affect the structures of the individuals arising from them, the implication is that the like happens with those native units which have been made somewhat different by modified functions: there must be a tendency to inheritance of acquired characters.
One more step only has to be taken. It remains to ask what is the flaw in the assumption with which Weismann's theory sets out. If, as we see, the conclusions drawn from it do not correspond to the facts, then, either the reasoning is invalid, or the original postulate is untrue. Leaving aside all questions concerning the reasoning, it will suffice here to show the untruth of the postulate. Had his work been written during the early years of the cell-doctrine, the supposition that the multiplying cells of which the Metazoa and the Metaphyta are composed, become completely separate, could not have been met by a reasonable skepticism; but now, not only is skepticism justifiable, but denial is called for. Some dozen years ago it was discovered that in many cases vegetal cells are connected with one another by threads of protoplasm—threads which unite the internal protoplasm of one cell with the internal protoplasms of cells around. It is as though the pseudopodia of imprisoned rhizopods were fused with the pseudopodia of adjacent imprisoned rhizopods. We can not reasonably suppose that the continuous network of protoplasm thus constituted has been produced after the cells have become adult. These protoplasmic connections must have survived the process of fission. The implication is that the cells forming the embryo-plant retained their protoplasmic connections while they multiplied, and that such connections continued throughout all subsequent multiplications—an implication which has, I believe, been established by researches upon germinating palm-seeds. But now we come to a verifying series of facts which the cell-structures of animals in their early stages present. In his Monograph of the Development of Peripatus Capensis, Mr. Adam Sedgwick, F. R. S., Reader in Animal Morphology at Cambridge, writes as follows:—
"The continuity of the various cells of the segmenting ovum is primary, and not secondary; i.e., in the cleavage the segments do not completely separate from one another. But are we justified in speaking of cells at all in this case? The fully segmented ovum is a syncytium, and there are not and have not been at any stage cell limits"(p. 41).
"It is becoming more and more clear every day that the cells composing the tissues of animals are not isolated units, but that they are connected with one another. I need only refer to the connection known to exist between connective-tissue cells, cartilage cells, epithelial cells, etc. And not only may the cells of one tissue be continuous with each other, but they may also be continuous with the cells of other tissues" (pp. 47, 48).
"Finally, if the protoplasm of the body is primitively a syncytium, and the ovum until maturity a part of that syncytium, the separation of the generative products does not differ essentially from the internal gemmation of a Protozoon, and the inheritance by the offspring of peculiarities first appearing in the parent, though not explained, is rendered less mysterious; for the protoplasm of the whole body being continuous, change in the molecular constitution of any part of it would naturally be expected to spread, in time, through the whole mass" (p. 49).
Mr. Sedgwick's subsequent investigations confirm these conclusions. In a letter of December 27, 1892, passages, which he allows me to publish, run as follows:
So that the alleged independence of the reproductive cells does not exist. The soma—to use Weismann's name for the aggregate of cells forming the body—is, in the words of Mr. Sedgwick, "a continuous mass of vacuolated protoplasm"; and the reproductive cells are nothing more than portions of it separated some little time before they are required to perform their functions.
Thus the theory of Weismann is doubly disproved. Inductively we are shown that there does take place that communication of characters from the somatic cells to the reproductive cells, which he says can not take place; and deductively we are shown that this communication is a natural sequence of connections between the two which he ignores: his various conclusions are deduced from a postulate which is untrue.
From the title of this essay, and from much of its contents, nine readers out of ten will infer that it is directed against the views of Mr. Darwin. They will be astonished on being told that, contrariwise, it is directed against the views of those who, in a considerable measure, dissent from Mr. Darwin. For the inheritance of acquired characters, which it is now the fashion in the biological world to deny, was, by Mr. Darwin, fully recognized and often insisted on. Such of the foregoing arguments as touch Mr. Darwin's views, simply imply that the cause of evolution which at first he thought unimportant, but the importance of which he increasingly perceived as he grew older, is more important than he admitted even at the last. The neo-Darwinists, however, do not admit this cause at all.
Let it not be supposed that this explanation implies any disapproval of the dissentients, considered as such. Seeing how little regard for authority I have myself usually shown, it would be absurd in me to reflect in any degree upon those who have rejected certain of Mr. Darwin's teachings, for reasons which they have thought sufficient. But while their independence of thought is to be applauded rather than blamed, it is, I think, to be regretted that they have not guarded themselves against a long-standing bias. It is a common trait of human nature to seek some excuse when found in the wrong. Invaded self-esteem sets up a defense, and anything is made to serve. Thus it happened that when geologists and biologists, previously holding that all kinds of organisms arose by special creations, surrendered to the battery opened upon them by The Origin of Species, they sought to minimize their irrationality by pointing to irrationality on the other side. "Well, at any rate, Lamarck was in the wrong." "It is clear that we were right in rejecting his doctrine." And so, by duly emphasizing the fact that he overlooked "Natural Selection" as the chief cause, and by showing how erroneous were some of his interpretations, they succeeded in mitigating the sense of their own error. It is true their creed was that at successive periods in the Earth's history, old Floras and Faunas had been abolished and others introduced; just as though, to use Prof. Huxley's figure, the table had been now and again kicked over and a new pack of cards brought out. And it is true that Lamarck, while he rejected this absurd creed, assigned for the facts reasons some of which are absurd. But in consequence of the feeling described, his defensible belief was forgotten and only his indefensible ones remembered. This one-sided estimate has become traditional; so that there is now often shown a subdued contempt for those who suppose that there can be any truth in the conclusions of a man whose general conception was partly sense, at a time when the general conceptions of his contemporaries were wholly nonsense. Hence results unfair treatment—hence result the different dealings with the views of Lamarck and of Weismann.
"Where are the facts proving the inheritance of acquired characters"? ask those who deny it. Well, in the first place, there might be asked the counter-question—Where are the facts which disprove it? Surely if not only the general structures of organisms, but also many of the modifications arising in them, are inheritable, the natural implication is that all modifications are inheritable; and if any say that the inheritableness is limited to those arising in a certain way, the onus lies on them of proving that those otherwise arising are not inheritable. Leaving this counter-question aside, however, it will suffice if we ask another counter-question. It is asserted that the dwindling of organs from disuse is due to the successive survivals in posterity of individuals in which the organs had varied in the direction of decrease. Where now are the facts supporting this assertion? Not one has been assigned or can be assigned. Not a single case can be named in which panmixia is a proved cause of diminution. Even had the deductive argument for 'panmixia been as valid as we have found it to be invalid, there would still have been required, in pursuance of scientific method, some verifying inductive evidence. Yet though not a shred of such evidence has been given, the doctrine is accepted with acclamation, and adopted as part of current biological theory. Articles are written and letters published in which it is assumed that this mere speculation, justified by not a tittle of proof, displaces large conclusions previously drawn. And then, passing into the outer world, this unsupported belief affects opinion there too; so that we have recently had a Right Honorable lecturer who, taking for granted its truth, represents the inheritance of acquired characters as an exploded hypothesis, and thereupon proceeds to give revised views of human affairs.
Finally, there comes the reply that there are facts proving the inheritance of acquired characters. All those assigned by Mr. Darwin, together with others such, remain outstanding when we find that the interpretation by panmixia is untenable. Indeed, even had that hypothesis been tenable, it would have been inapplicable to these cases; since in domestic animals, artificially fed and often overfed, the supposed advantage from economy can not be shown to tell; and since, in these cases, individuals are not naturally selected during the struggle for life in which certain traits are advantageous, but are artificially selected by man without regard to such traits. Should it be urged that the assigned facts are not numerous, it may be replied that there are no persons whose occupations and amusements incidentally bring out such facts; and that they are probably as numerous as those which would have been available for Mr. Darwin's hypothesis, had there been no breeders and fanciers and gardeners who, in pursuit of their profits and hobbies, furnished him with evidence. It may be added that the required facts are not likely to be numerous, if biologists refuse to seek for them.
See, then, how the case stands. Natural selection, or survival of the fittest, is almost exclusively operative throughout the vegetal world and throughout the lower animal world, characterized by relative passivity. But with the ascent to higher types of animals, its effects are in increasing degrees involved with those produced by inheritance of acquired characters; until, in animals of complex structures, inheritance of acquired characters becomes an important, if not the chief, cause of evolution. We have seen that natural selection can not work any changes in organisms save such as conduce in considerable degrees, directly or indirectly, to the multiplication of the stirp; whence failure to account for various changes ascribed to it. And we have seen that it yields no explanation of the co-adaptation of co-operative parts, even when the co-operation is relatively simple, and still less when it is complex. On the other hand, we see that if, along with the transmission of generic and specific structures, there tend to be transmitted modifications arising in a certain way, there is a strong a priori probability that there tend to be transmitted modifications arising in all ways. We have a number of facts confirming this inference, and showing that acquired characters are inherited—as large a number as can be expected, considering the difficulty of observing them and the absence of search. And then to these facts may be added the facts with which this essay set out, concerning the distribution of tactual discriminativeness. While we saw that these are inexplicable by survival of the fittest, we saw that they are clearly explicable as resulting from the inheritance of acquired characters. And here let it be added that this conclusion is conspicuously warranted by one of the methods of inductive logic, known as the method of concomitant variations. For throughout the whole series of gradations in perceptive power, we saw that the amount of the effect is proportionate to the amount of the alleged cause.—Contemporary Review.
THE CEREMONIAL USE OF TOBACCO. |
By JOHN HAWKINS.
COMPARING the stone age of the New World with that of the Old, an important point of difference comes at once into view. The American race is distinguished in culture from all other savages by the possession and use of an implement to which nothing analogous is found among the prehistoric relics of the Eastern hemisphere. That implement is the tobacco pipe.
Among the aborigines of America the use of tobacco was widely prevalent. The practice of cigar-smoking was observed by the companions of Columbus on his first voyage; and m the brilliant series of discoveries which followed the great admiral s achievement, as well as in the slower process of exploration and colonization, the pipe, the cigar, and the snuff mortar revealed
- ↑ Les Maladies des Vers à Soie, par L. Pasteur, i, 39.
- ↑ Curiously enough, Weismann refers to, and recognizes, syphilitic infection of the reproductive cells. Dealing with Brown-Séquard's cases of inherited epilepsy (concerning which, let me say, that I do not commit myself to any derived conclusions), he says: "In the case of epilepsy, at any rate, it is easy to imagine [many of Weismann's arguments are based on things 'it is easy to imagine'] that the passage of some specific organism through the reproductive cells may take place, as in the case of syphilis" (p. 82). Here is a sample of his reasoning. It is well known that epilepsy is frequently caused by some peripheral irritation (even by the lodging of a small foreign body under the skin), and that, among peripheral irritations causing it, imperfect healing is one. Yet though, in Brown-Séquard's cases, a peripheral irritation caused in the parent by local injury was the apparent origin, Weismann chooses gratuitously to assume that the progeny were infected by "some specific organism," which produced the epilepsy! And then, though the epileptic virus, like the syphilitic virus, makes itself at home in the egg, the parental protoplasm is not admitted!
- ↑ Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society for the Year 1821, Part I, pp. 20-24.