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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ A History of Science, Vol. II by Henry Smith Williams
+ </title>
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+
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A History of Science, Volume 2(of 5), by
+Henry Smith Williams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A History of Science, Volume 2(of 5)
+
+Author: Henry Smith Williams
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2009 [EBook #1706]
+Last Updated: January 26, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF SCIENCE, V2 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Keller, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ A HISTORY OF SCIENCE
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ BY HENRY SMITH WILLIAMS, M.D., LL.D. <br /> <br /> <br /> ASSISTED BY EDWARD
+ H. WILLIAMS, M.D. <br /> <br /> <br /> IN FIVE VOLUMES <br /> <br /> VOLUME II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>A HISTORY OF SCIENCE</b> </a><br />
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>BOOK II. THE BEGINNINGS OF MODERN
+ SCIENCE</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> I. SCIENCE IN THE DARK AGE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> II. MEDIAEVAL SCIENCE AMONG THE ARABIANS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> III. MEDIAEVAL SCIENCE IN THE WEST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> IV. THE NEW COSMOLOGY&mdash;COPERNICUS TO
+ KEPLER AND GALILEO </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> V. GALILEO AND THE NEW PHYSICS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> VI. TWO PSEUDO-SCIENCES&mdash;ALCHEMY AND
+ ASTROLOGY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> VII. FROM PARACELSUS TO HARVEY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> VIII. MEDICINE IN THE SIXTEENTH AND
+ SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> IX. PHILOSOPHER-SCIENTISTS AND NEW
+ INSTITUTIONS OF LEARNING </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> X. THE SUCCESSORS OF GALILEO IN PHYSICAL
+ SCIENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> XI. NEWTON AND THE COMPOSITION OF LIGHT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> XII. NEWTON AND THE LAW OF GRAVITATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XIII. INSTRUMENTS OF PRECISION IN THE AGE OF
+ NEWTON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XIV. PROGRESS IN ELECTRICITY FROM GILBERT AND
+ VON GUERICKE TO FRANKLIN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> XV. NATURAL HISTORY TO THE TIME OF LINNAEUS
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_APPE"> APPENDIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER IV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER V </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER VI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER IX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER X </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER XI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ A HISTORY OF SCIENCE
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK II. THE BEGINNINGS OF MODERN SCIENCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The studies of the present book cover the progress of science from the
+ close of the Roman period in the fifth century A.D. to about the middle of
+ the eighteenth century. In tracing the course of events through so long a
+ period, a difficulty becomes prominent which everywhere besets the
+ historian in less degree&mdash;a difficulty due to the conflict between
+ the strictly chronological and the topical method of treatment. We must
+ hold as closely as possible to the actual sequence of events, since, as
+ already pointed out, one discovery leads on to another. But, on the other
+ hand, progressive steps are taken contemporaneously in the various fields
+ of science, and if we were to attempt to introduce these in strict
+ chronological order we should lose all sense of topical continuity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our method has been to adopt a compromise, following the course of a
+ single science in each great epoch to a convenient stopping-point, and
+ then turning back to bring forward the story of another science. Thus, for
+ example, we tell the story of Copernicus and Galileo, bringing the record
+ of cosmical and mechanical progress down to about the middle of the
+ seventeenth century, before turning back to take up the physiological
+ progress of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Once the latter stream
+ is entered, however, we follow it without interruption to the time of
+ Harvey and his contemporaries in the middle of the seventeenth century,
+ where we leave it to return to the field of mechanics as exploited by the
+ successors of Galileo, who were also the predecessors and contemporaries
+ of Newton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In general, it will aid the reader to recall that, so far as possible, we
+ hold always to the same sequences of topical treatment of contemporary
+ events; as a rule we treat first the cosmical, then the physical, then the
+ biological sciences. The same order of treatment will be held to in
+ succeeding volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several of the very greatest of scientific generalizations are developed
+ in the period covered by the present book: for example, the Copernican
+ theory of the solar system, the true doctrine of planetary motions, the
+ laws of motion, the theory of the circulation of the blood, and the
+ Newtonian theory of gravitation. The labors of the investigators of the
+ early decades of the eighteenth century, terminating with Franklin's
+ discovery of the nature of lightning and with the Linnaean classification
+ of plants and animals, bring us to the close of our second great epoch;
+ or, to put it otherwise, to the threshold of the modern period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. SCIENCE IN THE DARK AGE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ An obvious distinction between the classical and mediaeval epochs may be
+ found in the fact that the former produced, whereas the latter failed to
+ produce, a few great thinkers in each generation who were imbued with that
+ scepticism which is the foundation of the investigating spirit; who
+ thought for themselves and supplied more or less rational explanations of
+ observed phenomena. Could we eliminate the work of some score or so of
+ classical observers and thinkers, the classical epoch would seem as much a
+ dark age as does the epoch that succeeded it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But immediately we are met with the question: Why do no great original
+ investigators appear during all these later centuries? We have already
+ offered a part explanation in the fact that the borders of civilization,
+ where racial mingling naturally took place, were peopled with
+ semi-barbarians. But we must not forget that in the centres of
+ civilization all along there were many men of powerful intellect. Indeed,
+ it would violate the principle of historical continuity to suppose that
+ there was any sudden change in the level of mentality of the Roman world
+ at the close of the classical period. We must assume, then, that the
+ direction in which the great minds turned was for some reason changed.
+ Newton is said to have alleged that he made his discoveries by "intending"
+ his mind in a certain direction continuously. It is probable that the same
+ explanation may be given of almost every great scientific discovery.
+ Anaxagoras could not have thought out the theory of the moon's phases;
+ Aristarchus could not have found out the true mechanism of the solar
+ system; Eratosthenes could not have developed his plan for measuring the
+ earth, had not each of these investigators "intended" his mind
+ persistently towards the problems in question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor can we doubt that men lived in every generation of the dark age who
+ were capable of creative thought in the field of science, bad they chosen
+ similarly to "intend" their minds in the right direction. The difficulty
+ was that they did not so choose. Their minds had a quite different bent.
+ They were under the spell of different ideals; all their mental efforts
+ were directed into different channels. What these different channels were
+ cannot be in doubt&mdash;they were the channels of oriental
+ ecclesiasticism. One all-significant fact speaks volumes here. It is the
+ fact that, as Professor Robinson(1) points out, from the time of Boethius
+ (died 524 or 525 A.D.) to that of Dante (1265-1321 A.D.) there was not a
+ single writer of renown in western Europe who was not a professional
+ churchman. All the learning of the time, then, centred in the priesthood.
+ We know that the same condition of things pertained in Egypt, when science
+ became static there. But, contrariwise, we have seen that in Greece and
+ early Rome the scientific workers were largely physicians or professional
+ teachers; there was scarcely a professional theologian among them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Similarly, as we shall see in the Arabic world, where alone there was
+ progress in the mediaeval epoch, the learned men were, for the most part,
+ physicians. Now the meaning of this must be self-evident. The physician
+ naturally "intends" his mind towards the practicalities. His professional
+ studies tend to make him an investigator of the operations of nature. He
+ is usually a sceptic, with a spontaneous interest in practical science.
+ But the theologian "intends" his mind away from practicalities and towards
+ mysticism. He is a professional believer in the supernatural; he discounts
+ the value of merely "natural" phenomena. His whole attitude of mind is
+ unscientific; the fundamental tenets of his faith are based on alleged
+ occurrences which inductive science cannot admit&mdash;namely, miracles.
+ And so the minds "intended" towards the supernatural achieved only the
+ hazy mysticism of mediaeval thought. Instead of investigating natural
+ laws, they paid heed (as, for example, Thomas Aquinas does in his Summa
+ Theologia) to the "acts of angels," the "speaking of angels," the
+ "subordination of angels," the "deeds of guardian angels," and the like.
+ They disputed such important questions as, How many angels can stand upon
+ the point of a needle? They argued pro and con as to whether Christ were
+ coeval with God, or whether he had been merely created "in the beginning,"
+ perhaps ages before the creation of the world. How could it be expected
+ that science should flourish when the greatest minds of the age could
+ concern themselves with problems such as these?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Despite our preconceptions or prejudices, there can be but one answer to
+ that question. Oriental superstition cast its blight upon the fair field
+ of science, whatever compensation it may or may not have brought in other
+ fields. But we must be on our guard lest we overestimate or incorrectly
+ estimate this influence. Posterity, in glancing backward, is always prone
+ to stamp any given age of the past with one idea, and to desire to
+ characterize it with a single phrase; whereas in reality all ages are
+ diversified, and any generalization regarding an epoch is sure to do that
+ epoch something less or something more than justice. We may be sure, then,
+ that the ideal of ecclesiasticism is not solely responsible for the
+ scientific stasis of the dark age. Indeed, there was another influence of
+ a totally different character that is too patent to be overlooked&mdash;the
+ influence, namely, of the economic condition of western Europe during this
+ period. As I have elsewhere pointed out,(2) Italy, the centre of western
+ civilization, was at this time impoverished, and hence could not provide
+ the monetary stimulus so essential to artistic and scientific no less than
+ to material progress. There were no patrons of science and literature such
+ as the Ptolemies of that elder Alexandrian day. There were no great
+ libraries; no colleges to supply opportunities and afford stimuli to the
+ rising generation. Worst of all, it became increasingly difficult to
+ secure books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This phase of the subject is often overlooked. Yet a moment's
+ consideration will show its importance. How should we fare to-day if no
+ new scientific books were being produced, and if the records of former
+ generations were destroyed? That is what actually happened in Europe
+ during the Middle Ages. At an earlier day books were made and distributed
+ much more abundantly than is sometimes supposed. Bookmaking had, indeed,
+ been an important profession in Rome, the actual makers of books being
+ slaves who worked under the direction of a publisher. It was through the
+ efforts of these workers that the classical works in Greek and Latin were
+ multiplied and disseminated. Unfortunately the climate of Europe does not
+ conduce to the indefinite preservation of a book; hence very few remnants
+ of classical works have come down to us in the original from a remote
+ period. The rare exceptions are certain papyrus fragments, found in Egypt,
+ some of which are Greek manuscripts dating from the third century B.C.
+ Even from these sources the output is meagre; and the only other
+ repository of classical books is a single room in the buried city of
+ Herculaneum, which contained several hundred manuscripts, mostly in a
+ charred condition, a considerable number of which, however, have been
+ unrolled and found more or less legible. This library in the buried city
+ was chiefly made up of philosophical works, some of which were quite
+ unknown to the modern world until discovered there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this find, interesting as it was from an archaeological stand-point,
+ had no very important bearing on our knowledge of the literature of
+ antiquity. Our chief dependence for our knowledge of that literature must
+ still be placed in such copies of books as were made in the successive
+ generations. Comparatively few of the extant manuscripts are older than
+ the tenth century of our era. It requires but a momentary consideration of
+ the conditions under which ancient books were produced to realize how slow
+ and difficult the process was before the invention of printing. The taste
+ of the book-buying public demanded a clearly written text, and in the
+ Middle Ages it became customary to produce a richly ornamented text as
+ well. The script employed being the prototype of the modern printed text,
+ it will be obvious that a scribe could produce but a few pages at best in
+ a day. A large work would therefore require the labor of a scribe for many
+ months or even for several years. We may assume, then, that it would be a
+ very flourishing publisher who could produce a hundred volumes all told
+ per annum; and probably there were not many publishers at any given time,
+ even in the period of Rome's greatest glory, who had anything like this
+ output.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As there was a large number of authors in every generation of the
+ classical period, it follows that most of these authors must have been
+ obliged to content themselves with editions numbering very few copies; and
+ it goes without saying that the greater number of books were never
+ reproduced in what might be called a second edition. Even books that
+ retained their popularity for several generations would presently fail to
+ arouse sufficient interest to be copied; and in due course such works
+ would pass out of existence altogether. Doubtless many hundreds of books
+ were thus lost before the close of the classical period, the names of
+ their authors being quite forgotten, or preserved only through a chance
+ reference; and of course the work of elimination went on much more rapidly
+ during the Middle Ages, when the interest in classical literature sank to
+ so low an ebb in the West. Such collections of references and quotations
+ as the Greek Anthology and the famous anthologies of Stobaeus and
+ Athanasius and Eusebius give us glimpses of a host of writers&mdash;more
+ than seven hundred are quoted by Stobaeus&mdash;a very large proportion of
+ whom are quite unknown except through these brief excerpts from their lost
+ works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quite naturally the scientific works suffered at least as largely as any
+ others in an age given over to ecclesiastical dreamings. Yet in some
+ regards there is matter for surprise as to the works preserved. Thus, as
+ we have seen, the very extensive works of Aristotle on natural history,
+ and the equally extensive natural history of Pliny, which were preserved
+ throughout this period, and are still extant, make up relatively bulky
+ volumes. These works seem to have interested the monks of the Middle Ages,
+ while many much more important scientific books were allowed to perish. A
+ considerable bulk of scientific literature was also preserved through the
+ curious channels of Arabic and Armenian translations. Reference has
+ already been made to the Almagest of Ptolemy, which, as we have seen, was
+ translated into Arabic, and which was at a later day brought by the Arabs
+ into western Europe and (at the instance of Frederick II of Sicily)
+ translated out of their language into mediaeval Latin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It remains to inquire, however, through what channels the Greek works
+ reached the Arabs themselves. To gain an answer to this question we must
+ follow the stream of history from its Roman course eastward to the new
+ seat of the Roman empire in Byzantium. Here civilization centred from
+ about the fifth century A.D., and here the European came in contact with
+ the civilization of the Syrians, the Persians, the Armenians, and finally
+ of the Arabs. The Byzantines themselves, unlike the inhabitants of western
+ Europe, did not ignore the literature of old Greece; the Greek language
+ became the regular speech of the Byzantine people, and their writers made
+ a strenuous effort to perpetuate the idiom and style of the classical
+ period. Naturally they also made transcriptions of the classical authors,
+ and thus a great mass of literature was preserved, while the corresponding
+ works were quite forgotten in western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime many of these works were translated into Syriac, Armenian, and
+ Persian, and when later on the Byzantine civilization degenerated, many
+ works that were no longer to be had in the Greek originals continued to be
+ widely circulated in Syriac, Persian, Armenian, and, ultimately, in Arabic
+ translations. When the Arabs started out in their conquests, which carried
+ them through Egypt and along the southern coast of the Mediterranean,
+ until they finally invaded Europe from the west by way of Gibraltar, they
+ carried with them their translations of many a Greek classical author, who
+ was introduced anew to the western world through this strange channel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told, for example, that Averrhoes, the famous commentator of
+ Aristotle, who lived in Spain in the twelfth century, did not know a word
+ of Greek and was obliged to gain his knowledge of the master through a
+ Syriac translation; or, as others alleged (denying that he knew even
+ Syriac), through an Arabic version translated from the Syriac. We know,
+ too, that the famous chronology of Eusebius was preserved through an
+ Armenian translation; and reference has more than once been made to the
+ Arabic translation of Ptolemy's great work, to which we still apply its
+ Arabic title of Almagest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The familiar story that when the Arabs invaded Egypt they burned the
+ Alexandrian library is now regarded as an invention of later times. It
+ seems much more probable that the library bad been largely scattered
+ before the coming of the Moslems. Indeed, it has even been suggested that
+ the Christians of an earlier day removed the records of pagan thought. Be
+ that as it may, the famous Alexandrian library had disappeared long before
+ the revival of interest in classical learning. Meanwhile, as we have said,
+ the Arabs, far from destroying the western literature, were its chief
+ preservers. Partly at least because of their regard for the records of the
+ creative work of earlier generations of alien peoples, the Arabs were
+ enabled to outstrip their contemporaries. For it cannot be in doubt that,
+ during that long stretch of time when the western world was ignoring
+ science altogether or at most contenting itself with the casual reading of
+ Aristotle and Pliny, the Arabs had the unique distinction of attempting
+ original investigations in science. To them were due all important
+ progressive steps which were made in any scientific field whatever for
+ about a thousand years after the time of Ptolemy and Galen. The progress
+ made even by the Arabs during this long period seems meagre enough, yet it
+ has some significant features. These will now demand our attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. MEDIAEVAL SCIENCE AMONG THE ARABIANS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The successors of Mohammed showed themselves curiously receptive of the
+ ideas of the western people whom they conquered. They came in contact with
+ the Greeks in western Asia and in Egypt, and, as has been said, became
+ their virtual successors in carrying forward the torch of learning. It
+ must not be inferred, however, that the Arabian scholars, as a class, were
+ comparable to their predecessors in creative genius. On the contrary, they
+ retained much of the conservative oriental spirit. They were under the
+ spell of tradition, and, in the main, what they accepted from the Greeks
+ they regarded as almost final in its teaching. There were, however, a few
+ notable exceptions among their men of science, and to these must be
+ ascribed several discoveries of some importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief subjects that excited the interest and exercised the ingenuity
+ of the Arabian scholars were astronomy, mathematics, and medicine. The
+ practical phases of all these subjects were given particular attention.
+ Thus it is well known that our so-called Arabian numerals date from this
+ period. The revolutionary effect of these characters, as applied to
+ practical mathematics, can hardly be overestimated; but it is generally
+ considered, and in fact was admitted by the Arabs themselves, that these
+ numerals were really borrowed from the Hindoos, with whom the Arabs came
+ in contact on the east. Certain of the Hindoo alphabets, notably that of
+ the Battaks of Sumatra, give us clews to the originals of the numerals. It
+ does not seem certain, however, that the Hindoos employed these characters
+ according to the decimal system, which is the prime element of their
+ importance. Knowledge is not forthcoming as to just when or by whom such
+ application was made. If this was an Arabic innovation, it was perhaps the
+ most important one with which that nation is to be credited. Another
+ mathematical improvement was the introduction into trigonometry of the
+ sine&mdash;the half-chord of the double arc&mdash;instead of the chord of
+ the arc itself which the Greek astronomers had employed. This improvement
+ was due to the famous Albategnius, whose work in other fields we shall
+ examine in a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another evidence of practicality was shown in the Arabian method of
+ attempting to advance upon Eratosthenes' measurement of the earth. Instead
+ of trusting to the measurement of angles, the Arabs decided to measure
+ directly a degree of the earth's surface&mdash;or rather two degrees.
+ Selecting a level plain in Mesopotamia for the experiment, one party of
+ the surveyors progressed northward, another party southward, from a given
+ point to the distance of one degree of arc, as determined by astronomical
+ observations. The result found was fifty-six miles for the northern
+ degree, and fifty-six and two-third miles for the southern. Unfortunately,
+ we do not know the precise length of the mile in question, and therefore
+ cannot be assured as to the accuracy of the measurement. It is interesting
+ to note, however, that the two degrees were found of unequal lengths,
+ suggesting that the earth is not a perfect sphere&mdash;a suggestion the
+ validity of which was not to be put to the test of conclusive measurements
+ until about the close of the eighteenth century. The Arab measurement was
+ made in the time of Caliph Abdallah al-Mamun, the son of the famous
+ Harun-al-Rashid. Both father and son were famous for their interest in
+ science. Harun-al-Rashid was, it will be recalled, the friend of
+ Charlemagne. It is said that he sent that ruler, as a token of friendship,
+ a marvellous clock which let fall a metal ball to mark the hours. This
+ mechanism, which is alleged to have excited great wonder in the West,
+ furnishes yet another instance of Arabian practicality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the greatest of the Arabian astronomers was Mohammed ben Jabir
+ Albategnius, or El-batani, who was born at Batan, in Mesopotamia, about
+ the year 850 A.D., and died in 929. Albategnius was a student of the
+ Ptolemaic astronomy, but he was also a practical observer. He made the
+ important discovery of the motion of the solar apogee. That is to say, he
+ found that the position of the sun among the stars, at the time of its
+ greatest distance from the earth, was not what it had been in the time of
+ Ptolemy. The Greek astronomer placed the sun in longitude 65 degrees, but
+ Albategnius found it in longitude 82 degrees, a distance too great to be
+ accounted for by inaccuracy of measurement. The modern inference from this
+ observation is that the solar system is moving through space; but of
+ course this inference could not well be drawn while the earth was regarded
+ as the fixed centre of the universe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the eleventh century another Arabian discoverer, Arzachel, observing
+ the sun to be less advanced than Albategnius had found it, inferred
+ incorrectly that the sun had receded in the mean time. The modern
+ explanation of this observation is that the measurement of Albategnius was
+ somewhat in error, since we know that the sun's motion is steadily
+ progressive. Arzachel, however, accepting the measurement of his
+ predecessor, drew the false inference of an oscillatory motion of the
+ stars, the idea of the motion of the solar system not being permissible.
+ This assumed phenomenon, which really has no existence in point of fact,
+ was named the "trepidation of the fixed stars," and was for centuries
+ accepted as an actual phenomenon. Arzachel explained this supposed
+ phenomenon by assuming that the equinoctial points, or the points of
+ intersection of the equator and the ecliptic, revolve in circles of eight
+ degrees' radius. The first points of Aries and Libra were supposed to
+ describe the circumference of these circles in about eight hundred years.
+ All of which illustrates how a difficult and false explanation may take
+ the place of a simple and correct one. The observations of later
+ generations have shown conclusively that the sun's shift of position is
+ regularly progressive, hence that there is no "trepidation" of the stars
+ and no revolution of the equinoctial points.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Arabs were wrong as regards this supposed motion of the fixed
+ stars, they made at least one correct observation as to the inequality of
+ motion of the moon. Two inequalities of the motion of this body were
+ already known. A third, called the moon's variation, was discovered by an
+ Arabian astronomer who lived at Cairo and observed at Bagdad in 975, and
+ who bore the formidable name of Mohammed Aboul Wefaal-Bouzdjani. The
+ inequality of motion in question, in virtue of which the moon moves
+ quickest when she is at new or full, and slowest at the first and third
+ quarter, was rediscovered by Tycho Brahe six centuries later; a fact which
+ in itself evidences the neglect of the Arabian astronomer's discovery by
+ his immediate successors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the ninth and tenth centuries the Arabian city of Cordova, in Spain,
+ was another important centre of scientific influence. There was a library
+ of several hundred thousand volumes here, and a college where mathematics
+ and astronomy were taught. Granada, Toledo, and Salamanca were also
+ important centres, to which students flocked from western Europe. It was
+ the proximity of these Arabian centres that stimulated the scientific
+ interests of Alfonso X. of Castile, at whose instance the celebrated
+ Alfonsine tables were constructed. A familiar story records that Alfonso,
+ pondering the complications of the Ptolemaic cycles and epicycles, was led
+ to remark that, had he been consulted at the time of creation, he could
+ have suggested a much better and simpler plan for the universe. Some
+ centuries were to elapse before Copernicus was to show that it was not the
+ plan of the universe, but man's interpretation of it, that was at fault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another royal personage who came under Arabian influence was Frederick II.
+ of Sicily&mdash;the "Wonder of the World," as he was called by his
+ contemporaries. The Almagest of Ptolemy was translated into Latin at his
+ instance, being introduced to the Western world through this curious
+ channel. At this time it became quite usual for the Italian and Spanish
+ scholars to understand Arabic although they were totally ignorant of
+ Greek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the field of physical science one of the most important of the Arabian
+ scientists was Alhazen. His work, published about the year 1100 A.D., had
+ great celebrity throughout the mediaeval period. The original
+ investigations of Alhazen had to do largely with optics. He made
+ particular studies of the eye itself, and the names given by him to
+ various parts of the eye, as the vitreous humor, the cornea, and the
+ retina, are still retained by anatomists. It is known that Ptolemy had
+ studied the refraction of light, and that he, in common with his immediate
+ predecessors, was aware that atmospheric refraction affects the apparent
+ position of stars near the horizon. Alhazen carried forward these studies,
+ and was led through them to make the first recorded scientific estimate of
+ the phenomena of twilight and of the height of the atmosphere. The
+ persistence of a glow in the atmosphere after the sun has disappeared
+ beneath the horizon is so familiar a phenomenon that the ancient
+ philosophers seem not to have thought of it as requiring an explanation.
+ Yet a moment's consideration makes it clear that, if light travels in
+ straight lines and the rays of the sun were in no wise deflected, the
+ complete darkness of night should instantly succeed to day when the sun
+ passes below the horizon. That this sudden change does not occur, Alhazen
+ explained as due to the reflection of light by the earth's atmosphere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alhazen appears to have conceived the atmosphere as a sharply defined
+ layer, and, assuming that twilight continues only so long as rays of the
+ sun reflected from the outer surface of this layer can reach the spectator
+ at any given point, he hit upon a means of measurement that seemed to
+ solve the hitherto inscrutable problem as to the atmospheric depth. Like
+ the measurements of Aristarchus and Eratosthenes, this calculation of
+ Alhazen is simple enough in theory. Its defect consists largely in the
+ difficulty of fixing its terms with precision, combined with the further
+ fact that the rays of the sun, in taking the slanting course through the
+ earth's atmosphere, are really deflected from a straight line in virtue of
+ the constantly increasing density of the air near the earth's surface.
+ Alhazen must have been aware of this latter fact, since it was known to
+ the later Alexandrian astronomers, but he takes no account of it in the
+ present measurement. The diagram will make the method of Alhazen clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His important premises are two: first, the well-recognized fact that, when
+ light is reflected from any surface, the angle of incidence is equal to
+ the angle of reflection; and, second, the much more doubtful observation
+ that twilight continues until such time as the sun, according to a simple
+ calculation, is nineteen degrees below the horizon. Referring to the
+ diagram, let the inner circle represent the earth's surface, the outer
+ circle the limits of the atmosphere, C being the earth's centre, and RR
+ radii of the earth. Then the observer at the point A will continue to
+ receive the reflected rays of the sun until that body reaches the point S,
+ which is, according to the hypothesis, nineteen degrees below the horizon
+ line of the observer at A. This horizon line, being represented by AH, and
+ the sun's ray by SM, the angle HMS is an angle of nineteen degrees. The
+ complementary angle SMA is, obviously, an angle of (180-19) one hundred
+ and sixty-one degrees. But since M is the reflecting surface and the angle
+ of incidence equals the angle of reflection, the angle AMC is an angle of
+ one-half of one hundred and sixty-one degrees, or eighty degrees and
+ thirty minutes. Now this angle AMC, being known, the right-angled triangle
+ MAC is easily resolved, since the side AC of that triangle, being the
+ radius of the earth, is a known dimension. Resolution of this triangle
+ gives us the length of the hypotenuse MC, and the difference between this
+ and the radius (AC), or CD, is obviously the height of the atmosphere (h),
+ which was the measurement desired. According to the calculation of
+ Alhazen, this h, or the height of the atmosphere, represents from twenty
+ to thirty miles. The modern computation extends this to about fifty miles.
+ But, considering the various ambiguities that necessarily attended the
+ experiment, the result was a remarkably close approximation to the truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning from physics to chemistry, we find as perhaps the greatest Arabian
+ name that of Geber, who taught in the College of Seville in the first half
+ of the eighth century. The most important researches of this really
+ remarkable experimenter had to do with the acids. The ancient world had
+ had no knowledge of any acid more powerful than acetic. Geber, however,
+ vastly increased the possibilities of chemical experiment by the discovery
+ of sulphuric, nitric, and nitromuriatic acids. He made use also of the
+ processes of sublimation and filtration, and his works describe the water
+ bath and the chemical oven. Among the important chemicals which he first
+ differentiated is oxide of mercury, and his studies of sulphur in its
+ various compounds have peculiar interest. In particular is this true of
+ his observation that, tinder certain conditions of oxidation, the weight
+ of a metal was lessened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the record of these studies in the fields of astronomy, physics, and
+ chemistry, we turn to a somewhat extended survey of the Arabian advances
+ in the field of medicine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ARABIAN MEDICINE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The influence of Arabian physicians rested chiefly upon their use of drugs
+ rather than upon anatomical knowledge. Like the mediaeval Christians, they
+ looked with horror on dissection of the human body; yet there were always
+ among them investigators who turned constantly to nature herself for
+ hidden truths, and were ready to uphold the superiority of actual
+ observation to mere reading. Thus the physician Abd el-Letif, while in
+ Egypt, made careful studies of a mound of bones containing more than
+ twenty thousand skeletons. While examining these bones he discovered that
+ the lower jaw consists of a single bone, not of two, as had been taught by
+ Galen. He also discovered several other important mistakes in Galenic
+ anatomy, and was so impressed with his discoveries that he contemplated
+ writing a work on anatomy which should correct the great classical
+ authority's mistakes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the Arabs who invented the apothecary, and their pharmacopoeia,
+ issued from the hospital at Gondisapor, and elaborated from time to time,
+ formed the basis for Western pharmacopoeias. Just how many drugs
+ originated with them, and how many were borrowed from the Hindoos, Jews,
+ Syrians, and Persians, cannot be determined. It is certain, however, that
+ through them various new and useful drugs, such as senna, aconite,
+ rhubarb, camphor, and mercury, were handed down through the Middle Ages,
+ and that they are responsible for the introduction of alcohol in the field
+ of therapeutics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In mediaeval Europe, Arabian science came to be regarded with
+ superstitious awe, and the works of certain Arabian physicians were
+ exalted to a position above all the ancient writers. In modern times,
+ however, there has been a reaction and a tendency to depreciation of their
+ work. By some they are held to be mere copyists or translators of Greek
+ books, and in no sense original investigators in medicine. Yet there can
+ be little doubt that while the Arabians did copy and translate freely,
+ they also originated and added considerably to medical knowledge. It is
+ certain that in the time when Christian monarchs in western Europe were
+ paying little attention to science or education, the caliphs and vizirs
+ were encouraging physicians and philosophers, building schools, and
+ erecting libraries and hospitals. They made at least a creditable effort
+ to uphold and advance upon the scientific standards of an earlier age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first distinguished Arabian physician was Harets ben Kaladah, who
+ received his education in the Nestonian school at Gondisapor, about the
+ beginning of the seventh century. Notwithstanding the fact that Harets was
+ a Christian, he was chosen by Mohammed as his chief medical adviser, and
+ recommended as such to his successor, the Caliph Abu Bekr. Thus, at the
+ very outset, the science of medicine was divorced from religion among the
+ Arabians; for if the prophet himself could employ the services of an
+ unbeliever, surely others might follow his example. And that this example
+ was followed is shown in the fact that many Christian physicians were
+ raised to honorable positions by succeeding generations of Arabian
+ monarchs. This broad-minded view of medicine taken by the Arabs
+ undoubtedly assisted as much as any one single factor in upbuilding the
+ science, just as the narrow and superstitious view taken by Western
+ nations helped to destroy it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The education of the Arabians made it natural for them to associate
+ medicine with the natural sciences, rather than with religion. An Arabian
+ savant was supposed to be equally well educated in philosophy,
+ jurisprudence, theology, mathematics, and medicine, and to practise law,
+ theology, and medicine with equal skill upon occasion. It is easy to
+ understand, therefore, why these religious fanatics were willing to employ
+ unbelieving physicians, and their physicians themselves to turn to the
+ scientific works of Hippocrates and Galen for medical instruction, rather
+ than to religious works. Even Mohammed himself professed some knowledge of
+ medicine, and often relied upon this knowledge in treating ailments rather
+ than upon prayers or incantations. He is said, for example, to have
+ recommended and applied the cautery in the case of a friend who, when
+ suffering from angina, had sought his aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The list of eminent Arabian physicians is too long to be given here, but
+ some of them are of such importance in their influence upon later medicine
+ that they cannot be entirely ignored. One of the first of these was Honain
+ ben Isaac (809-873 A.D.), a Christian Arab of Bagdad. He made translations
+ of the works of Hippocrates, and practised the art along the lines
+ indicated by his teachings and those of Galen. He is considered the
+ greatest translator of the ninth century and one of the greatest
+ philosophers of that period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another great Arabian physician, whose work was just beginning as Honain's
+ was drawing to a close, was Rhazes (850-923 A.D.), who during his life was
+ no less noted as a philosopher and musician than as a physician. He
+ continued the work of Honain, and advanced therapeutics by introducing
+ more extensive use of chemical remedies, such as mercurial ointments,
+ sulphuric acid, and aqua vitae. He is also credited with being the first
+ physician to describe small-pox and measles accurately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Rhazes was still alive another Arabian, Haly Abbas (died about 994),
+ was writing his famous encyclopaedia of medicine, called The Royal Book.
+ But the names of all these great physicians have been considerably
+ obscured by the reputation of Avicenna (980-1037), the Arabian "Prince of
+ Physicians," the greatest name in Arabic medicine, and one of the most
+ remarkable men in history. Leclerc says that "he was perhaps never
+ surpassed by any man in brilliancy of intellect and indefatigable
+ activity." His career was a most varied one. He was at all times a
+ boisterous reveller, but whether flaunting gayly among the guests of an
+ emir or biding in some obscure apothecary cellar, his work of
+ philosophical writing was carried on steadily. When a friendly emir was in
+ power, he taught and wrote and caroused at court; but between times, when
+ some unfriendly ruler was supreme, he was hiding away obscurely, still
+ pouring out his great mass of manuscripts. In this way his entire life was
+ spent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By his extensive writings he revived and kept alive the best of the
+ teachings of the Greek physicians, adding to them such observations as he
+ had made in anatomy, physiology, and materia medica. Among his discoveries
+ is that of the contagiousness of pulmonary tuberculosis. His works for
+ several centuries continued to be looked upon as the highest standard by
+ physicians, and he should undoubtedly be credited with having at least
+ retarded the decline of mediaeval medicine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not the Eastern Arabs alone who were active in the field of
+ medicine. Cordova, the capital of the western caliphate, became also a
+ great centre of learning and produced several great physicians. One of
+ these, Albucasis (died in 1013 A.D.), is credited with having published
+ the first illustrated work on surgery, this book being remarkable in still
+ another way, in that it was also the first book, since classical times,
+ written from the practical experience of the physician, and not a mere
+ compilation of ancient authors. A century after Albucasis came the great
+ physician Avenzoar (1113-1196), with whom he divides about equally the
+ medical honors of the western caliphate. Among Avenzoar's discoveries was
+ that of the cause of "itch"&mdash;a little parasite, "so small that he is
+ hardly visible." The discovery of the cause of this common disease seems
+ of minor importance now, but it is of interest in medical history because,
+ had Avenzoar's discovery been remembered a hundred years ago, "itch struck
+ in" could hardly have been considered the cause of three-fourths of all
+ diseases, as it was by the famous Hahnemann.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The illustrious pupil of Avenzoar, Averrhoes, who died in 1198 A.D., was
+ the last of the great Arabian physicians who, by rational conception of
+ medicine, attempted to stem the flood of superstition that was
+ overwhelming medicine. For a time he succeeded; but at last the Moslem
+ theologians prevailed, and he was degraded and banished to a town
+ inhabited only by the despised Jews.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ARABIAN HOSPITALS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To early Christians belong the credit of having established the first
+ charitable institutions for caring for the sick; but their efforts were
+ soon eclipsed by both Eastern and Western Mohammedans. As early as the
+ eighth century the Arabs had begun building hospitals, but the flourishing
+ time of hospital building seems to have begun early in the tenth century.
+ Lady Seidel, in 918 A.D., opened a hospital at Bagdad, endowed with an
+ amount corresponding to about three hundred pounds sterling a month. Other
+ similar hospitals were erected in the years immediately following, and in
+ 977 the Emir Adad-adaula established an enormous institution with a staff
+ of twenty-four medical officers. The great physician Rhazes is said to
+ have selected the site for one of these hospitals by hanging pieces of
+ meat in various places about the city, selecting the site near the place
+ at which putrefaction was slowest in making its appearance. By the middle
+ of the twelfth century there were something like sixty medical
+ institutions in Bagdad alone, and these institutions were free to all
+ patients and supported by official charity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emir Nureddin, about the year 1160, founded a great hospital at
+ Damascus, as a thank-offering for his victories over the Crusaders. This
+ great institution completely overshadowed all the earlier Moslem hospitals
+ in size and in the completeness of its equipment. It was furnished with
+ facilities for teaching, and was conducted for several centuries in a
+ lavish manner, regardless of expense. But little over a century after its
+ foundation the fame of its methods of treatment led to the establishment
+ of a larger and still more luxurious institution&mdash;the Mansuri
+ hospital at Cairo. It seems that a certain sultan, having been cured by
+ medicines from the Damascene hospital, determined to build one of his own
+ at Cairo which should eclipse even the great Damascene institution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a single year (1283-1284) this hospital was begun and completed. No
+ efforts were spared in hurrying on the good work, and no one was exempt
+ from performing labor on the building if he chanced to pass one of the
+ adjoining streets. It was the order of the sultan that any person passing
+ near could be impressed into the work, and this order was carried out to
+ the letter, noblemen and beggars alike being forced to lend a hand. Very
+ naturally, the adjacent thoroughfares became unpopular and practically
+ deserted, but still the holy work progressed rapidly and was shortly
+ completed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This immense structure is said to have contained four courts, each having
+ a fountain in the centre; lecture-halls, wards for isolating certain
+ diseases, and a department that corresponded to the modern hospital's
+ "out-patient" department. The yearly endowment amounted to something like
+ the equivalent of one hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars. A novel
+ feature was a hall where musicians played day and night, and another where
+ story-tellers were employed, so that persons troubled with insomnia were
+ amused and melancholiacs cheered. Those of a religious turn of mind could
+ listen to readings of the Koran, conducted continuously by a staff of some
+ fifty chaplains. Each patient on leaving the hospital received some gold
+ pieces, that he need not be obliged to attempt hard labor at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In considering the astonishing tales of these sumptuous Arabian
+ institutions, it should be borne in mind that our accounts of them are,
+ for the most part, from Mohammedan sources. Nevertheless, there can be
+ little question that they were enormous institutions, far surpassing any
+ similar institutions in western Europe. The so-called hospitals in the
+ West were, at this time, branches of monasteries under supervision of the
+ monks, and did not compare favorably with the Arabian hospitals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while the medical science of the Mohammedans greatly overshadowed that
+ of the Christians during this period, it did not completely obliterate it.
+ About the year 1000 A.D. came into prominence the Christian medical school
+ at Salerno, situated on the Italian coast, some thirty miles southeast of
+ Naples. Just how long this school had been in existence, or by whom it was
+ founded, cannot be determined, but its period of greatest influence was
+ the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries. The members of this
+ school gradually adopted Arabic medicine, making use of many drugs from
+ the Arabic pharmacopoeia, and this formed one of the stepping-stones to
+ the introduction of Arabian medicine all through western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not the adoption of Arabian medicines, however, that has made the
+ school at Salerno famous both in rhyme and prose, but rather the fact that
+ women there practised the healing art. Greatest among them was Trotula,
+ who lived in the eleventh century, and whose learning is reputed to have
+ equalled that of the greatest physicians of the day. She is accredited
+ with a work on Diseases of Women, still extant, and many of her writings
+ on general medical subjects were quoted through two succeeding centuries.
+ If we may judge from these writings, she seemed to have had many excellent
+ ideas as to the proper methods of treating diseases, but it is difficult
+ to determine just which of the writings credited to her are in reality
+ hers. Indeed, the uncertainty is even greater than this implies, for,
+ according to some writers, "Trotula" is merely the title of a book. Such
+ an authority as Malgaigne, however, believed that such a woman existed,
+ and that the works accredited to her are authentic. The truth of the
+ matter may perhaps never be fully established, but this at least is
+ certain&mdash;the tradition in regard to Trotula could never have arisen
+ had not women held a far different position among the Arabians of this
+ period from that accorded them in contemporary Christendom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. MEDIAEVAL SCIENCE IN THE WEST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We have previously referred to the influence of the Byzantine civilization
+ in transmitting the learning of antiquity across the abysm of the dark
+ age. It must be admitted, however, that the importance of that
+ civilization did not extend much beyond the task of the common carrier.
+ There were no great creative scientists in the later Roman empire of the
+ East any more than in the corresponding empire of the West. There was,
+ however, one field in which the Byzantine made respectable progress and
+ regarding which their efforts require a few words of special comment. This
+ was the field of medicine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Byzantines of this time could boast of two great medical men, Aetius
+ of Amida (about 502-575 A.D.) and Paul of Aegina (about 620-690). The
+ works of Aetius were of value largely because they recorded the teachings
+ of many of his eminent predecessors, but he was not entirely lacking in
+ originality, and was perhaps the first physician to mention diphtheria,
+ with an allusion to some observations of the paralysis of the palate which
+ sometimes follows this disease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul of Aegina, who came from the Alexandrian school about a century
+ later, was one of those remarkable men whose ideas are centuries ahead of
+ their time. This was particularly true of Paul in regard to surgery, and
+ his attitude towards the supernatural in the causation and treatment of
+ diseases. He was essentially a surgeon, being particularly familiar with
+ military surgery, and some of his descriptions of complicated and
+ difficult operations have been little improved upon even in modern times.
+ In his books he describes such operations as the removal of foreign bodies
+ from the nose, ear, and esophagus; and he recognizes foreign growths such
+ as polypi in the air-passages, and gives the method of their removal. Such
+ operations as tracheotomy, tonsillotomy, bronchotomy, staphylotomy, etc.,
+ were performed by him, and he even advocated and described puncture of the
+ abdominal cavity, giving careful directions as to the location in which
+ such punctures should be made. He advocated amputation of the breast for
+ the cure of cancer, and described extirpation of the uterus. Just how
+ successful this last operation may have been as performed by him does not
+ appear; but he would hardly have recommended it if it had not been
+ sometimes, at least, successful. That he mentions it at all, however, is
+ significant, as this difficult operation is considered one of the great
+ triumphs of modern surgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Paul of Aegina is a striking exception to the rule among Byzantine
+ surgeons, and as he was their greatest, so he was also their last
+ important surgeon. The energies of all Byzantium were so expended in
+ religious controversies that medicine, like the other sciences, was soon
+ relegated to a place among the other superstitions, and the influence of
+ the Byzantine school was presently replaced by that of the conquering
+ Arabians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THIRTEENTH-CENTURY MEDICINE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thirteenth century marks the beginning of a gradual change in
+ medicine, and a tendency to leave the time-worn rut of superstitious
+ dogmas that so long retarded the progress of science. It is thought that
+ the great epidemics which raged during the Middle Ages acted powerfully in
+ diverting the medical thought of the times into new and entirely different
+ channels. It will be remembered that the teachings of Galen were handed
+ through mediaeval times as the highest and best authority on the subject
+ of all diseases. When, however, the great epidemics made their appearance,
+ the medical men appealed to the works of Galen in vain for enlightenment,
+ as these works, having been written several centuries before the time of
+ the plagues, naturally contained no information concerning them. It was
+ evident, therefore, that on this subject, at least, Galen was not
+ infallible; and it would naturally follow that, one fallible point having
+ been revealed, others would be sought for. In other words, scepticism in
+ regard to accepted methods would be aroused, and would lead naturally, as
+ such scepticism usually does, to progress. The devastating effects of
+ these plagues, despite prayers and incantations, would arouse doubt in the
+ minds of many as to the efficacy of superstitious rites and ceremonies in
+ curing diseases. They had seen thousands and tens of thousands of their
+ fellow-beings swept away by these awful scourges. They had seen the
+ ravages of these epidemics continue for months or even years,
+ notwithstanding the fact that multitudes of God-fearing people prayed
+ hourly that such ravages might be checked. And they must have observed
+ also that when even very simple rules of cleanliness and hygiene were
+ followed there was a diminution in the ravages of the plague, even without
+ the aid of incantations. Such observations as these would have a tendency
+ to awaken a suspicion in the minds of many of the physicians that disease
+ was not a manifestation of the supernatural, but a natural phenomenon, to
+ be treated by natural methods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, be the causes what they may, it is a fact that the thirteenth century
+ marks a turning-point, or the beginning of an attitude of mind which
+ resulted in bringing medicine to a much more rational position. Among the
+ thirteenth-century physicians, two men are deserving of special mention.
+ These are Arnald of Villanova (1235-1312) and Peter of Abano (1250-1315).
+ Both these men suffered persecution for expressing their belief in
+ natural, as against the supernatural, causes of disease, and at one time
+ Arnald was obliged to flee from Barcelona for declaring that the "bulls"
+ of popes were human works, and that "acts of charity were dearer to God
+ than hecatombs." He was also accused of alchemy. Fleeing from persecution,
+ he finally perished by shipwreck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arnald was the first great representative of the school of Montpellier. He
+ devoted much time to the study of chemicals, and was active in attempting
+ to re-establish the teachings of Hippocrates and Galen. He was one of the
+ first of a long line of alchemists who, for several succeeding centuries,
+ expended so much time and energy in attempting to find the "elixir of
+ life." The Arab discovery of alcohol first deluded him into the belief
+ that the "elixir" had at last been found; but later he discarded it and
+ made extensive experiments with brandy, employing it in the treatment of
+ certain diseases&mdash;the first record of the administration of this
+ liquor as a medicine. Arnald also revived the search for some anaesthetic
+ that would produce insensibility to pain in surgical operations. This idea
+ was not original with him, for since very early times physicians had
+ attempted to discover such an anaesthetic, and even so early a writer as
+ Herodotus tells how the Scythians, by inhalation of the vapors of some
+ kind of hemp, produced complete insensibility. It may have been these
+ writings that stimulated Arnald to search for such an anaesthetic. In a
+ book usually credited to him, medicines are named and methods of
+ administration described which will make the patient insensible to pain,
+ so that "he may be cut and feel nothing, as though he were dead." For this
+ purpose a mixture of opium, mandragora, and henbane is to be used. This
+ mixture was held at the patient's nostrils much as ether and chloroform
+ are administered by the modern surgeon. The method was modified by Hugo of
+ Lucca (died in 1252 or 1268), who added certain other narcotics, such as
+ hemlock, to the mixture, and boiled a new sponge in this decoction. After
+ boiling for a certain time, this sponge was dried, and when wanted for use
+ was dipped in hot water and applied to the nostrils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just how frequently patients recovered from the administration of such a
+ combination of powerful poisons does not appear, but the percentage of
+ deaths must have been very high, as the practice was generally condemned.
+ Insensibility could have been produced only by swallowing large quantities
+ of the liquid, which dripped into the nose and mouth when the sponge was
+ applied, and a lethal quantity might thus be swallowed. The method was
+ revived, with various modifications, from time to time, but as often fell
+ into disuse. As late as 1782 it was sometimes attempted, and in that year
+ the King of Poland is said to have been completely anaesthetized and to
+ have recovered, after a painless amputation had been performed by the
+ surgeons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter of Abano was one of the first great men produced by the University
+ of Padua. His fate would have been even more tragic than that of the
+ shipwrecked Arnald had he not cheated the purifying fagots of the church
+ by dying opportunely on the eve of his execution for heresy. But if his
+ spirit had cheated the fanatics, his body could not, and his bones were
+ burned for his heresy. He had dared to deny the existence of a devil, and
+ had suggested that the case of a patient who lay in a trance for three
+ days might help to explain some miracles, like the raising of Lazarus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His great work was Conciliator Differentiarum, an attempt to reconcile
+ physicians and philosophers. But his researches were not confined to
+ medicine, for he seems to have had an inkling of the hitherto unknown fact
+ that air possesses weight, and his calculation of the length of the year
+ at three hundred and sixty-five days, six hours, and four minutes, is
+ exceptionally accurate for the age in which he lived. He was probably the
+ first of the Western writers to teach that the brain is the source of the
+ nerves, and the heart the source of the vessels. From this it is seen that
+ he was groping in the direction of an explanation of the circulation of
+ the blood, as demonstrated by Harvey three centuries later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work of Arnald and Peter of Abano in "reviving" medicine was continued
+ actively by Mondino (1276-1326) of Bologna, the "restorer of anatomy," and
+ by Guy of Chauliac: (born about 1300), the "restorer of surgery." All
+ through the early Middle Ages dissections of human bodies had been
+ forbidden, and even dissection of the lower animals gradually fell into
+ disrepute because physicians detected in such practices were sometimes
+ accused of sorcery. Before the close of the thirteenth century, however, a
+ reaction had begun, physicians were protected, and dissections were
+ occasionally sanctioned by the ruling monarch. Thus Emperor Frederick H.
+ (1194-1250 A.D.)&mdash;whose services to science we have already had
+ occasion to mention&mdash;ordered that at least one human body should be
+ dissected by physicians in his kingdom every five years. By the time of
+ Mondino dissections were becoming more frequent, and he himself is known
+ to have dissected and demonstrated several bodies. His writings on anatomy
+ have been called merely plagiarisms of Galen, but in all probability be
+ made many discoveries independently, and on the whole, his work may be
+ taken as more advanced than Galen's. His description of the heart is
+ particularly accurate, and he seems to have come nearer to determining the
+ course of the blood in its circulation than any of his predecessors. In
+ this quest he was greatly handicapped by the prevailing belief in the idea
+ that blood-vessels must contain air as well as blood, and this led him to
+ assume that one of the cavities of the heart contained "spirits," or air.
+ It is probable, however, that his accurate observations, so far as they
+ went, were helpful stepping-stones to Harvey in his discovery of the
+ circulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Guy of Chauliac, whose innovations in surgery reestablished that science
+ on a firm basis, was not only one of the most cultured, but also the most
+ practical surgeon of his time. He had great reverence for the works of
+ Galen, Albucasis, and others of his noted predecessors; but this reverence
+ did not blind him to their mistakes nor prevent him from using rational
+ methods of treatment far in advance of theirs. His practicality is shown
+ in some of his simple but useful inventions for the sick-room, such as the
+ device of a rope, suspended from the ceiling over the bed, by which a
+ patient may move himself about more easily; and in some of his
+ improvements in surgical dressings, such as stiffening bandages by dipping
+ them in the white of an egg so that they are held firmly. He treated
+ broken limbs in the suspended cradle still in use, and introduced the
+ method of making "traction" on a broken limb by means of a weight and
+ pulley, to prevent deformity through shortening of the member. He was one
+ of the first physicians to recognize the utility of spectacles, and
+ recommended them in cases not amenable to treatment with lotions and
+ eye-waters. In some of his surgical operations, such as trephining for
+ fracture of the skull, his technique has been little improved upon even in
+ modern times. In one of these operations he successfully removed a portion
+ of a man's brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surgery was undoubtedly stimulated greatly at this period by the constant
+ wars. Lay physicians, as a class, had been looked down upon during the
+ Dark Ages; but with the beginning of the return to rationalism, the
+ services of surgeons on the battle-field, to remove missiles from wounds,
+ and to care for wounds and apply dressings, came to be more fully
+ appreciated. In return for his labors the surgeon was thus afforded better
+ opportunities for observing wounds and diseases, which led naturally to a
+ gradual improvement in surgical methods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FIFTEENTH-CENTURY MEDICINE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thirteenth and fourteenth centuries had seen some slight advancement
+ in the science of medicine; at least, certain surgeons and physicians, if
+ not the generality, had made advances; but it was not until the fifteenth
+ century that the general revival of medical learning became assured. In
+ this movement, naturally, the printing-press played an all-important part.
+ Medical books, hitherto practically inaccessible to the great mass of
+ physicians, now became common, and this output of reprints of Greek and
+ Arabic treatises revealed the fact that many of the supposed true copies
+ were spurious. These discoveries very naturally aroused all manner of
+ doubt and criticism, which in turn helped in the development of
+ independent thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain manuscript of the great Cornelius Celsus, the De Medicine, which
+ had been lost for many centuries, was found in the church of St. Ambrose,
+ at Milan, in 1443, and was at once put into print. The effect of the
+ publication of this book, which had lain in hiding for so many centuries,
+ was a revelation, showing the medical profession how far most of their
+ supposed true copies of Celsus had drifted away from the original. The
+ indisputable authenticity of this manuscript, discovered and vouched for
+ by the man who shortly after became Pope Nicholas V., made its publication
+ the more impressive. The output in book form of other authorities followed
+ rapidly, and the manifest discrepancies between such teachers as Celsus,
+ Hippocrates, Galen, and Pliny heightened still more the growing spirit of
+ criticism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These doubts resulted in great controversies as to the proper treatment of
+ certain diseases, some physicians following Hippocrates, others Galen or
+ Celsus, still others the Arabian masters. One of the most bitter of these
+ contests was over the question of "revulsion," and "derivation"&mdash;that
+ is, whether in cases of pleurisy treated by bleeding, the venesection
+ should be made at a point distant from the seat of the disease, as held by
+ the "revulsionists," or at a point nearer and on the same side of the
+ body, as practised by the "derivationists." That any great point for
+ discussion could be raised in the fifteenth or sixteenth centuries on so
+ simple a matter as it seems to-day shows how necessary to the progress of
+ medicine was the discovery of the circulation of the blood made by Harvey
+ two centuries later. After Harvey's discovery no such discussion could
+ have been possible, because this discovery made it evident that as far as
+ the general effect upon the circulation is concerned, it made little
+ difference whether the bleeding was done near a diseased part or remote
+ from it. But in the sixteenth century this question was the all-absorbing
+ one among the doctors. At one time the faculty of Paris condemned
+ "derivation"; but the supporters of this method carried the war still
+ higher, and Emperor Charles V. himself was appealed to. He reversed the
+ decision of the Paris faculty, and decided in favor of "derivation." His
+ decision was further supported by Pope Clement VII., although the
+ discussion dragged on until cut short by Harvey's discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a new form of injury now claimed the attention of the surgeons,
+ something that could be decided by neither Greek nor Arabian authors, as
+ the treatment of gun-shot wounds was, for obvious reasons, not given in
+ their writings. About this time, also, came the great epidemics, "the
+ sweating sickness" and scurvy; and upon these subjects, also, the Greeks
+ and Arabians were silent. John of Vigo, in his book, the Practica Copiosa,
+ published in 1514, and repeated in many editions, became the standard
+ authority on all these subjects, and thus supplanted the works of the
+ ancient writers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Vigo, gun-shot wounds differed from the wounds made by
+ ordinary weapons&mdash;that is, spear, arrow, sword, or axe&mdash;in that
+ the bullet, being round, bruised rather than cut its way through the
+ tissues; it burned the flesh; and, worst of all, it poisoned it. Vigo laid
+ especial stress upon treating this last condition, recommending the use of
+ the cautery or the oil of elder, boiling hot. It is little wonder that
+ gun-shot wounds were so likely to prove fatal. Yet, after all, here was
+ the germ of the idea of antisepsis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NEW BEGINNINGS IN GENERAL SCIENCE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have dwelt thus at length on the subject of medical science, because it
+ was chiefly in this field that progress was made in the Western world
+ during the mediaeval period, and because these studies furnished the point
+ of departure for the revival all along the line. It will be understood,
+ however, from what was stated in the preceding chapter, that the Arabian
+ influences in particular were to some extent making themselves felt along
+ other lines. The opportunity afforded a portion of the Western world&mdash;notably
+ Spain and Sicily&mdash;to gain access to the scientific ideas of antiquity
+ through Arabic translations could not fail of influence. Of like
+ character, and perhaps even more pronounced in degree, was the influence
+ wrought by the Byzantine refugees, who, when Constantinople began to be
+ threatened by the Turks, migrated to the West in considerable numbers,
+ bringing with them a knowledge of Greek literature and a large number of
+ precious works which for centuries had been quite forgotten or absolutely
+ ignored in Italy. Now Western scholars began to take an interest in the
+ Greek language, which had been utterly neglected since the beginning of
+ the Middle Ages. Interesting stories are told of the efforts made by such
+ men as Cosmo de' Medici to gain possession of classical manuscripts. The
+ revival of learning thus brought about had its first permanent influence
+ in the fields of literature and art, but its effect on science could not
+ be long delayed. Quite independently of the Byzantine influence, however,
+ the striving for better intellectual things had manifested itself in many
+ ways before the close of the thirteenth century. An illustration of this
+ is found in the almost simultaneous development of centres of teaching,
+ which developed into the universities of Italy, France, England, and, a
+ little later, of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The regular list of studies that came to be adopted everywhere comprised
+ seven nominal branches, divided into two groups&mdash;the so-called
+ quadrivium, comprising music, arithmetic, geometry, and astronomy; and the
+ trivium comprising grammar, rhetoric, and logic. The vagueness of
+ implication of some of these branches gave opportunity to the teacher for
+ the promulgation of almost any knowledge of which he might be possessed,
+ but there can be no doubt that, in general, science had but meagre share
+ in the curriculum. In so far as it was given representation, its chief
+ field must have been Ptolemaic astronomy. The utter lack of scientific
+ thought and scientific method is illustrated most vividly in the works of
+ the greatest men of that period&mdash;such men as Albertus Magnus, Thomas
+ Aquinas, Bonaventura, and the hosts of other scholastics of lesser rank.
+ Yet the mental awakening implied in their efforts was sure to extend to
+ other fields, and in point of fact there was at least one contemporary of
+ these great scholastics whose mind was intended towards scientific
+ subjects, and who produced writings strangely at variance in tone and in
+ content with the others. This anachronistic thinker was the English monk,
+ Roger Bacon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROGER BACON
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bacon was born in 1214 and died in 1292. By some it is held that he was
+ not appreciated in his own time because he was really a modern scientist
+ living in an age two centuries before modern science or methods of modern
+ scientific thinking were known. Such an estimate, however, is a manifest
+ exaggeration of the facts, although there is probably a grain of truth in
+ it withal. His learning certainly brought him into contact with the great
+ thinkers of the time, and his writings caused him to be imprisoned by his
+ fellow-churchmen at different times, from which circumstances we may
+ gather that he was advanced thinker, even if not a modern scientist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although Bacon was at various times in durance, or under surveillance, and
+ forbidden to write, he was nevertheless a marvellously prolific writer, as
+ is shown by the numerous books and unpublished manuscripts of his still
+ extant. His master-production was the Opus Majus. In Part IV. of this work
+ he attempts to show that all sciences rest ultimately on mathematics; but
+ Part V., which treats of perspective, is of particular interest to modern
+ scientists, because in this he discusses reflection and refraction, and
+ the properties of mirrors and lenses. In this part, also, it is evident
+ that he is making use of such Arabian writers as Alkindi and Alhazen, and
+ this is of especial interest, since it has been used by his detractors,
+ who accuse him of lack of originality, to prove that his seeming
+ inventions and discoveries were in reality adaptations of the Arab
+ scientists. It is difficult to determine just how fully such criticisms
+ are justified. It is certain, however, that in this part he describes the
+ anatomy of the eye with great accuracy, and discusses mirrors and lenses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magnifying power of the segment of a glass sphere had been noted by
+ Alhazen, who had observed also that the magnification was increased by
+ increasing the size of the segment used. Bacon took up the discussion of
+ the comparative advantages of segments, and in this discussion seems to
+ show that he understood how to trace the progress of the rays of light
+ through a spherical transparent body, and how to determine the place of
+ the image. He also described a method of constructing a telescope, but it
+ is by no means clear that he had ever actually constructed such an
+ instrument. It is also a mooted question as to whether his instructions as
+ to the construction of such an instrument would have enabled any one to
+ construct one. The vagaries of the names of terms as he uses them allow
+ such latitude in interpretation that modern scientists are not agreed as
+ to the practicability of Bacon's suggestions. For example, he constantly
+ refers to force under such names as virtus, species, imago, agentis, and a
+ score of other names, and this naturally gives rise to the great
+ differences in the interpretations of his writings, with corresponding
+ differences in estimates of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The claim that Bacon originated the use of lenses, in the form of
+ spectacles, cannot be proven. Smith has determined that as early as the
+ opening years of the fourteenth century such lenses were in use, but this
+ proves nothing as regards Bacon's connection with their invention. The
+ knowledge of lenses seems to be very ancient, if we may judge from the
+ convex lens of rock crystal found by Layard in his excavations at Nimrud.
+ There is nothing to show, however, that the ancients ever thought of using
+ them to correct defects of vision. Neither, apparently, is it feasible to
+ determine whether the idea of such an application originated with Bacon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another mechanical discovery about which there has been a great deal of
+ discussion is Bacon's supposed invention of gunpowder. It appears that in
+ a certain passage of his work he describes the process of making a
+ substance that is, in effect, ordinary gunpowder; but it is more than
+ doubtful whether he understood the properties of the substance he
+ describes. It is fairly well established, however, that in Bacon's time
+ gunpowder was known to the Arabs, so that it should not be surprising to
+ find references made to it in Bacon's work, since there is reason to
+ believe that he constantly consulted Arabian writings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great merit of Bacon's work, however, depends on the principles taught
+ as regards experiment and the observation of nature, rather than on any
+ single invention. He had the all-important idea of breaking with
+ tradition. He championed unfettered inquiry in every field of thought. He
+ had the instinct of a scientific worker&mdash;a rare instinct indeed in
+ that age. Nor need we doubt that to the best of his opportunities he was
+ himself an original investigator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEONARDO DA VINCI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The relative infertility of Bacon's thought is shown by the fact that he
+ founded no school and left no trace of discipleship. The entire century
+ after his death shows no single European name that need claim the
+ attention of the historian of science. In the latter part of the fifteenth
+ century, however, there is evidence of a renaissance of science no less
+ than of art. The German Muller became famous under the latinized named of
+ Regio Montanus (1437-1472), although his actual scientific attainments
+ would appear to have been important only in comparison with the utter
+ ignorance of his contemporaries. The most distinguished worker of the new
+ era was the famous Italian Leonardo da Vinci&mdash;a man who has been
+ called by Hamerton the most universal genius that ever lived. Leonardo's
+ position in the history of art is known to every one. With that, of
+ course, we have no present concern; but it is worth our while to inquire
+ at some length as to the famous painter's accomplishments as a scientist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a passage in the works of Leonardo, first brought to light by
+ Venturi,(1) it would seem that the great painter anticipated Copernicus in
+ determining the movement of the earth. He made mathematical calculations
+ to prove this, and appears to have reached the definite conclusion that
+ the earth does move&mdash;or what amounts to the same thing, that the sun
+ does not move. Muntz is authority for the statement that in one of his
+ writings he declares, "Il sole non si mouve"&mdash;the sun does not
+ move.(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among his inventions is a dynamometer for determining the traction power
+ of machines and animals, and his experiments with steam have led some of
+ his enthusiastic partisans to claim for him priority to Watt in the
+ invention of the steam-engine. In these experiments, however, Leonardo
+ seems to have advanced little beyond Hero of Alexandria and his steam toy.
+ Hero's steam-engine did nothing but rotate itself by virtue of escaping
+ jets of steam forced from the bent tubes, while Leonardo's "steam-engine"
+ "drove a ball weighing one talent over a distance of six stadia." In a
+ manuscript now in the library of the Institut de France, Da Vinci
+ describes this engine minutely. The action of this machine was due to the
+ sudden conversion of small quantities of water into steam ("smoke," as he
+ called it) by coming suddenly in contact with a heated surface in a proper
+ receptacle, the rapidly formed steam acting as a propulsive force after
+ the manner of an explosive. It is really a steam-gun, rather than a
+ steam-engine, and it is not unlikely that the study of the action of
+ gunpowder may have suggested it to Leonardo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is believed that Leonardo is the true discoverer of the camera-obscura,
+ although the Neapolitan philosopher, Giambattista Porta, who was not born
+ until some twenty years after the death of Leonardo, is usually credited
+ with first describing this device. There is little doubt, however, that Da
+ Vinci understood the principle of this mechanism, for he describes how
+ such a camera can be made by cutting a small, round hole through the
+ shutter of a darkened room, the reversed image of objects outside being
+ shown on the opposite wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like other philosophers in all ages, he had observed a great number of
+ facts which he was unable to explain correctly. But such accumulations of
+ scientific observations are always interesting, as showing how many
+ centuries of observation frequently precede correct explanation. He
+ observed many facts about sounds, among others that blows struck upon a
+ bell produced sympathetic sounds in a bell of the same kind; and that
+ striking the string of a lute produced vibration in corresponding strings
+ of lutes strung to the same pitch. He knew, also, that sounds could be
+ heard at a distance at sea by listening at one end of a tube, the other
+ end of which was placed in the water; and that the same expedient worked
+ successfully on land, the end of the tube being placed against the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knowledge of this great number of unexplained facts is often
+ interpreted by the admirers of Da Vinci, as showing an almost occult
+ insight into science many centuries in advance of his time. Such
+ interpretations, however, are illusive. The observation, for example, that
+ a tube placed against the ground enables one to hear movements on the
+ earth at a distance, is not in itself evidence of anything more than acute
+ scientific observation, as a similar method is in use among almost every
+ race of savages, notably the American Indians. On the other hand, one is
+ inclined to give credence to almost any story of the breadth of knowledge
+ of the man who came so near anticipating Hutton, Lyell, and Darwin in his
+ interpretation of the geological records as he found them written on the
+ rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is in this field of geology that Leonardo is entitled to the greatest
+ admiration by modern scientists. He had observed the deposit of fossil
+ shells in various strata of rocks, even on the tops of mountains, and he
+ rejected once for all the theory that they had been deposited there by the
+ Deluge. He rightly interpreted their presence as evidence that they had
+ once been deposited at the bottom of the sea. This process he assumed bad
+ taken hundreds and thousands of centuries, thus tacitly rejecting the
+ biblical tradition as to the date of the creation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the obvious interest that attaches to the investigations
+ of Leonardo, it must be admitted that his work in science remained almost
+ as infertile as that of his great precursor, Bacon. The really stimulative
+ work of this generation was done by a man of affairs, who knew little of
+ theoretical science except in one line, but who pursued that one practical
+ line until he achieved a wonderful result. This man was Christopher
+ Columbus. It is not necessary here to tell the trite story of his
+ accomplishment. Suffice it that his practical demonstration of the
+ rotundity of the earth is regarded by most modern writers as marking an
+ epoch in history. With the year of his voyage the epoch of the Middle Ages
+ is usually regarded as coming to an end. It must not be supposed that any
+ very sudden change came over the aspect of scholarship of the time, but
+ the preliminaries of great things had been achieved, and when Columbus
+ made his famous voyage in 1492, the man was already alive who was to bring
+ forward the first great vitalizing thought in the field of pure science
+ that the Western world had originated for more than a thousand years. This
+ man bore the name of Kopernik, or in its familiar Anglicized form,
+ Copernicus. His life work and that of his disciples will claim our
+ attention in the succeeding chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE NEW COSMOLOGY&mdash;COPERNICUS TO KEPLER AND GALILEO
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We have seen that the Ptolemaic astronomy, which was the accepted doctrine
+ throughout the Middle Ages, taught that the earth is round. Doubtless
+ there was a popular opinion current which regarded the earth as flat, but
+ it must be understood that this opinion had no champions among men of
+ science during the Middle Ages. When, in the year 1492, Columbus sailed
+ out to the west on his memorable voyage, his expectation of reaching India
+ had full scientific warrant, however much it may have been scouted by
+ certain ecclesiastics and by the average man of the period. Nevertheless,
+ we may well suppose that the successful voyage of Columbus, and the still
+ more demonstrative one made about thirty years later by Magellan, gave the
+ theory of the earth's rotundity a certainty it could never previously have
+ had. Alexandrian geographers had measured the size of the earth, and had
+ not hesitated to assert that by sailing westward one might reach India.
+ But there is a wide gap between theory and practice, and it required the
+ voyages of Columbus and his successors to bridge that gap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the companions of Magellan completed the circumnavigation of the
+ globe, the general shape of our earth would, obviously, never again be
+ called in question. But demonstration of the sphericity of the earth had,
+ of course, no direct bearing upon the question of the earth's position in
+ the universe. Therefore the voyage of Magellan served to fortify, rather
+ than to dispute, the Ptolemaic theory. According to that theory, as we
+ have seen, the earth was supposed to lie immovable at the centre of the
+ universe; the various heavenly bodies, including the sun, revolving about
+ it in eccentric circles. We have seen that several of the ancient Greeks,
+ notably Aristarchus, disputed this conception, declaring for the central
+ position of the sun in the universe, and the motion of the earth and other
+ planets about that body. But this revolutionary theory seemed so opposed
+ to the ordinary observation that, having been discountenanced by
+ Hipparchus and Ptolemy, it did not find a single important champion for
+ more than a thousand years after the time of the last great Alexandrian
+ astronomer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first man, seemingly, to hark back to the Aristarchian conception in
+ the new scientific era that was now dawning was the noted cardinal,
+ Nikolaus of Cusa, who lived in the first half of the fifteenth century,
+ and was distinguished as a philosophical writer and mathematician. His De
+ Docta Ignorantia expressly propounds the doctrine of the earth's motion.
+ No one, however, paid the slightest attention to his suggestion, which,
+ therefore, merely serves to furnish us with another interesting
+ illustration of the futility of propounding even a correct hypothesis
+ before the time is ripe to receive it&mdash;particularly if the hypothesis
+ is not fully fortified by reasoning based on experiment or observation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man who was destined to put forward the theory of the earth's motion
+ in a way to command attention was born in 1473, at the village of Thorn,
+ in eastern Prussia. His name was Nicholas Copernicus. There is no more
+ famous name in the entire annals of science than this, yet posterity has
+ never been able fully to establish the lineage of the famous expositor of
+ the true doctrine of the solar system. The city of Thorn lies in a
+ province of that border territory which was then under control of Poland,
+ but which subsequently became a part of Prussia. It is claimed that the
+ aspects of the city were essentially German, and it is admitted that the
+ mother of Copernicus belonged to that race. The nationality of the father
+ is more in doubt, but it is urged that Copernicus used German as his
+ mother-tongue. His great work was, of course, written in Latin, according
+ to the custom of the time; but it is said that, when not employing that
+ language, he always wrote in German. The disputed nationality of
+ Copernicus strongly suggests that he came of a mixed racial lineage, and
+ we are reminded again of the influences of those ethnical minglings to
+ which we have previously more than once referred. The acknowledged centres
+ of civilization towards the close of the fifteenth century were Italy and
+ Spain. Therefore, the birthplace of Copernicus lay almost at the confines
+ of civilization, reminding us of that earlier period when Greece was the
+ centre of culture, but when the great Greek thinkers were born in Asia
+ Minor and in Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a young man, Copernicus made his way to Vienna to study medicine, and
+ subsequently he journeyed into Italy and remained there many years, About
+ the year 1500 he held the chair of mathematics in a college at Rome.
+ Subsequently he returned to his native land and passed his remaining years
+ there, dying at Domkerr, in Frauenburg, East Prussia, in the year 1543.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would appear that Copernicus conceived the idea of the heliocentric
+ system of the universe while he was a comparatively young man, since in
+ the introduction to his great work, which he addressed to Pope Paul III.,
+ he states that he has pondered his system not merely nine years, in
+ accordance with the maxim of Horace, but well into the fourth period of
+ nine years. Throughout a considerable portion of this period the great
+ work of Copernicus was in manuscript, but it was not published until the
+ year of his death. The reasons for the delay are not very fully
+ established. Copernicus undoubtedly taught his system throughout the later
+ decades of his life. He himself tells us that he had even questioned
+ whether it were not better for him to confine himself to such verbal
+ teaching, following thus the example of Pythagoras. Just as his life was
+ drawing to a close, he decided to pursue the opposite course, and the
+ first copy of his work is said to have been placed in his hands as he lay
+ on his deathbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The violent opposition which the new system met from ecclesiastical
+ sources led subsequent commentators to suppose that Copernicus had delayed
+ publication of his work through fear of the church authorities. There
+ seems, however, to be no direct evidence for this opinion. It has been
+ thought significant that Copernicus addressed his work to the pope. It is,
+ of course, quite conceivable that the aged astronomer might wish by this
+ means to demonstrate that he wrote in no spirit of hostility to the
+ church. His address to the pope might have been considered as a desirable
+ shield precisely because the author recognized that his work must needs
+ meet with ecclesiastical criticism. Be that as it may, Copernicus was
+ removed by death from the danger of attack, and it remained for his
+ disciples of a later generation to run the gauntlet of criticism and
+ suffer the charges of heresy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work of Copernicus, published thus in the year 1543 at Nuremberg,
+ bears the title De Orbium Coelestium Revolutionibus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not necessary to go into details as to the cosmological system which
+ Copernicus advocated, since it is familiar to every one. In a word, he
+ supposed the sun to be the centre of all the planetary motions, the earth
+ taking its place among the other planets, the list of which, as known at
+ that time, comprised Mercury, Venus, the Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.
+ The fixed stars were alleged to be stationary, and it was necessary to
+ suppose that they are almost infinitely distant, inasmuch as they showed
+ to the observers of that time no parallax; that is to say, they preserved
+ the same apparent position when viewed from the opposite points of the
+ earth's orbit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us allow Copernicus to speak for himself regarding his system, His
+ exposition is full of interest. We quote first the introduction just
+ referred to, in which appeal is made directly to the pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can well believe, most holy father, that certain people, when they hear
+ of my attributing motion to the earth in these books of mine, will at once
+ declare that such an opinion ought to be rejected. Now, my own theories do
+ not please me so much as not to consider what others may judge of them.
+ Accordingly, when I began to reflect upon what those persons who accept
+ the stability of the earth, as confirmed by the opinion of many centuries,
+ would say when I claimed that the earth moves, I hesitated for a long time
+ as to whether I should publish that which I have written to demonstrate
+ its motion, or whether it would not be better to follow the example of the
+ Pythagoreans, who used to hand down the secrets of philosophy to their
+ relatives and friends only in oral form. As I well considered all this, I
+ was almost impelled to put the finished work wholly aside, through the
+ scorn I had reason to anticipate on account of the newness and apparent
+ contrariness to reason of my theory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My friends, however, dissuaded me from such a course and admonished me
+ that I ought to publish my book, which had lain concealed in my possession
+ not only nine years, but already into four times the ninth year. Not a few
+ other distinguished and very learned men asked me to do the same thing,
+ and told me that I ought not, on account of my anxiety, to delay any
+ longer in consecrating my work to the general service of mathematicians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But your holiness will perhaps not so much wonder that I have dared to
+ bring the results of my night labors to the light of day, after having
+ taken so much care in elaborating them, but is waiting instead to hear how
+ it entered my mind to imagine that the earth moved, contrary to the
+ accepted opinion of mathematicians&mdash;nay, almost contrary to ordinary
+ human understanding. Therefore I will not conceal from your holiness that
+ what moved me to consider another way of reckoning the motions of the
+ heavenly bodies was nothing else than the fact that the mathematicians do
+ not agree with one another in their investigations. In the first place,
+ they are so uncertain about the motions of the sun and moon that they
+ cannot find out the length of a full year. In the second place, they apply
+ neither the same laws of cause and effect, in determining the motions of
+ the sun and moon and of the five planets, nor the same proofs. Some employ
+ only concentric circles, others use eccentric and epicyclic ones, with
+ which, however, they do not fully attain the desired end. They could not
+ even discover nor compute the main thing&mdash;namely, the form of the
+ universe and the symmetry of its parts. It was with them as if some
+ should, from different places, take hands, feet, head, and other parts of
+ the body, which, although very beautiful, were not drawn in their proper
+ relations, and, without making them in any way correspond, should
+ construct a monster instead of a human being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Accordingly, when I had long reflected on this uncertainty of
+ mathematical tradition, I took the trouble to read again the books of all
+ the philosophers I could get hold of, to see if some one of them had not
+ once believed that there were other motions of the heavenly bodies. First
+ I found in Cicero that Niceties had believed in the motion of the earth.
+ Afterwards I found in Plutarch, likewise, that some others had held the
+ same opinion. This induced me also to begin to consider the movability of
+ the earth, and, although the theory appeared contrary to reason, I did so
+ because I knew that others before me had been allowed to assume rotary
+ movements at will, in order to explain the phenomena of these celestial
+ bodies. I was of the opinion that I, too, might be permitted to see
+ whether, by presupposing motion in the earth, more reliable conclusions
+ than hitherto reached could not be discovered for the rotary motions of
+ the spheres. And thus, acting on the hypothesis of the motion which, in
+ the following book, I ascribe to the earth, and by long and continued
+ observations, I have finally discovered that if the motion of the other
+ planets be carried over to the relation of the earth and this is made the
+ basis for the rotation of every star, not only will the phenomena of the
+ planets be explained thereby, but also the laws and the size of the stars;
+ all their spheres and the heavens themselves will appear so harmoniously
+ connected that nothing could be changed in any part of them without
+ confusion in the remaining parts and in the whole universe. I do not doubt
+ that clever and learned men will agree with me if they are willing fully
+ to comprehend and to consider the proofs which I advance in the book
+ before us. In order, however, that both the learned and the unlearned may
+ see that I fear no man's judgment, I wanted to dedicate these, my night
+ labors, to your holiness, rather than to any one else, because you, even
+ in this remote corner of the earth where I live, are held to be the
+ greatest in dignity of station and in love for all sciences and for
+ mathematics, so that you, through your position and judgment, can easily
+ suppress the bites of slanderers, although the proverb says that there is
+ no remedy against the bite of calumny."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In chapter X. of book I., "On the Order of the Spheres," occurs a more
+ detailed presentation of the system, as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That which Martianus Capella, and a few other Latins, very well knew,
+ appears to me extremely noteworthy. He believed that Venus and Mercury
+ revolve about the sun as their centre and that they cannot go farther away
+ from it than the circles of their orbits permit, since they do not revolve
+ about the earth like the other planets. According to this theory, then,
+ Mercury's orbit would be included within that of Venus, which is more than
+ twice as great, and would find room enough within it for its revolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If, acting upon this supposition, we connect Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars
+ with the same centre, keeping in mind the greater extent of their orbits,
+ which include the earth's sphere besides those of Mercury and Venus, we
+ cannot fail to see the explanation of the regular order of their motions.
+ He is certain that Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars are always nearest the earth
+ when they rise in the evening&mdash;that is, when they appear over against
+ the sun, or the earth stands between them and the sun&mdash;but that they
+ are farthest from the earth when they set in the evening&mdash;that is,
+ when we have the sun between them and the earth. This proves sufficiently
+ that their centre belongs to the sun and is the same about which the
+ orbits of Venus and Mercury circle. Since, however, all have one centre,
+ it is necessary for the space intervening between the orbits of Venus and
+ Mars to include the earth with her accompanying moon and all that is
+ beneath the moon; for the moon, which stands unquestionably nearest the
+ earth, can in no way be separated from her, especially as there is
+ sufficient room for the moon in the aforesaid space. Hence we do not
+ hesitate to claim that the whole system, which includes the moon with the
+ earth for its centre, makes the round of that great circle between the
+ planets, in yearly motion about the sun, and revolves about the centre of
+ the universe, in which the sun rests motionless, and that all which looks
+ like motion in the sun is explained by the motion of the earth. The extent
+ of the universe, however, is so great that, whereas the distance of the
+ earth from the sun is considerable in comparison with the size of the
+ other planetary orbits, it disappears when compared with the sphere of the
+ fixed stars. I hold this to be more easily comprehensible than when the
+ mind is confused by an almost endless number of circles, which is
+ necessarily the case with those who keep the earth in the middle of the
+ universe. Although this may appear incomprehensible and contrary to the
+ opinion of many, I shall, if God wills, make it clearer than the sun, at
+ least to those who are not ignorant of mathematics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The order of the spheres is as follows: The first and lightest of all the
+ spheres is that of the fixed stars, which includes itself and all others,
+ and hence is motionless as the place in the universe to which the motion
+ and position of all other stars is referred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then follows the outermost planet, Saturn, which completes its revolution
+ around the sun in thirty years; next comes Jupiter with a twelve years'
+ revolution; then Mars, which completes its course in two years. The fourth
+ one in order is the yearly revolution which includes the earth with the
+ moon's orbit as an epicycle. In the fifth place is Venus with a revolution
+ of nine months. The sixth place is taken by Mercury, which completes its
+ course in eighty days. In the middle of all stands the sun, and who could
+ wish to place the lamp of this most beautiful temple in another or better
+ place. Thus, in fact, the sun, seated upon the royal throne, controls the
+ family of the stars which circle around him. We find in their order a
+ harmonious connection which cannot be found elsewhere. Here the attentive
+ observer can see why the waxing and waning of Jupiter seems greater than
+ with Saturn and smaller than with Mars, and again greater with Venus than
+ with Mercury. Also, why Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars are nearer to the earth
+ when they rise in the evening than when they disappear in the rays of the
+ sun. More prominently, however, is it seen in the case of Mars, which when
+ it appears in the heavens at night, seems to equal Jupiter in size, but
+ soon afterwards is found among the stars of second magnitude. All of this
+ results from the same cause&mdash;namely, from the earth's motion. The
+ fact that nothing of this is to be seen in the case of the fixed stars is
+ a proof of their immeasurable distance, which makes even the orbit of
+ yearly motion or its counterpart invisible to us."(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that the stars show no parallax had been regarded as an important
+ argument against the motion of the earth, and it was still so considered
+ by the opponents of the system of Copernicus. It had, indeed, been
+ necessary for Aristarchus to explain the fact as due to the extreme
+ distance of the stars; a perfectly correct explanation, but one that
+ implies distances that are altogether inconceivable. It remained for
+ nineteenth-century astronomers to show, with the aid of instruments of
+ greater precision, that certain of the stars have a parallax. But long
+ before this demonstration had been brought forward, the system of
+ Copernicus had been accepted as a part of common knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Copernicus postulated a cosmical scheme that was correct as to its
+ main features, he did not altogether break away from certain defects of
+ the Ptolemaic hypothesis. Indeed, he seems to have retained as much of
+ this as practicable, in deference to the prejudice of his time. Thus he
+ records the planetary orbits as circular, and explains their
+ eccentricities by resorting to the theory of epicycles, quite after the
+ Ptolemaic method. But now, of course, a much more simple mechanism
+ sufficed to explain the planetary motions, since the orbits were correctly
+ referred to the central sun and not to the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Needless to say, the revolutionary conception of Copernicus did not meet
+ with immediate acceptance. A number of prominent astronomers, however,
+ took it up almost at once, among these being Rhaeticus, who wrote a
+ commentary on the evolutions; Erasmus Reinhold, the author of the Prutenic
+ tables; Rothmann, astronomer to the Landgrave of Hesse, and Maestlin, the
+ instructor of Kepler. The Prutenic tables, just referred to, so called
+ because of their Prussian origin, were considered an improvement on the
+ tables of Copernicus, and were highly esteemed by the astronomers of the
+ time. The commentary of Rhaeticus gives us the interesting information
+ that it was the observation of the orbit of Mars and of the very great
+ difference between his apparent diameters at different times which first
+ led Copernicus to conceive the heliocentric idea. Of Reinhold it is
+ recorded that he considered the orbit of Mercury elliptical, and that he
+ advocated a theory of the moon, according to which her epicycle revolved
+ on an elliptical orbit, thus in a measure anticipating one of the great
+ discoveries of Kepler to which we shall refer presently. The Landgrave of
+ Hesse was a practical astronomer, who produced a catalogue of fixed stars
+ which has been compared with that of Tycho Brahe. He was assisted by
+ Rothmann and by Justus Byrgius. Maestlin, the preceptor of Kepler, is
+ reputed to have been the first modern observer to give a correct
+ explanation of the light seen on portions of the moon not directly
+ illumined by the sun. He explained this as not due to any proper light of
+ the moon itself, but as light reflected from the earth. Certain of the
+ Greek philosophers, however, are said to have given the same explanation,
+ and it is alleged also that Leonardo da Vinci anticipated Maestlin in this
+ regard.(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While, various astronomers of some eminence thus gave support to the
+ Copernican system, almost from the beginning, it unfortunately chanced
+ that by far the most famous of the immediate successors of Copernicus
+ declined to accept the theory of the earth's motion. This was Tycho Brahe,
+ one of the greatest observing astronomers of any age. Tycho Brahe was a
+ Dane, born at Knudstrup in the year 1546. He died in 1601 at Prague, in
+ Bohemia. During a considerable portion of his life he found a patron in
+ Frederick, King of Denmark, who assisted him to build a splendid
+ observatory on the Island of Huene. On the death of his patron Tycho moved
+ to Germany, where, as good luck would have it, he came in contact with the
+ youthful Kepler, and thus, no doubt, was instrumental in stimulating the
+ ambitions of one who in later years was to be known as a far greater
+ theorist than himself. As has been said, Tycho rejected the Copernican
+ theory of the earth's motion. It should be added, however, that he
+ accepted that part of the Copernican theory which makes the sun the centre
+ of all the planetary motions, the earth being excepted. He thus developed
+ a system of his own, which was in some sort a compromise between the
+ Ptolemaic and the Copernican systems. As Tycho conceived it, the sun
+ revolves about the earth, carrying with it the planets-Mercury, Venus,
+ Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn, which planets have the sun and not the earth as
+ the centre of their orbits. This cosmical scheme, it should be added, may
+ be made to explain the observed motions of the heavenly bodies, but it
+ involves a much more complex mechanism than is postulated by the
+ Copernican theory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Various explanations have been offered of the conservatism which held the
+ great Danish astronomer back from full acceptance of the relatively simple
+ and, as we now know, correct Copernican doctrine. From our latter-day
+ point of view, it seems so much more natural to accept than to reject the
+ Copernican system, that we find it difficult to put ourselves in the place
+ of a sixteenth-century observer. Yet if we recall that the traditional
+ view, having warrant of acceptance by nearly all thinkers of every age,
+ recorded the earth as a fixed, immovable body, we shall see that our
+ surprise should be excited rather by the thinker who can break away from
+ this view than by the one who still tends to cling to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, it is useless to attempt to disguise the fact that something
+ more than a mere vague tradition was supposed to support the idea of the
+ earth's overshadowing importance in the cosmical scheme. The
+ sixteenth-century mind was overmastered by the tenets of ecclesiasticism,
+ and it was a dangerous heresy to doubt that the Hebrew writings, upon
+ which ecclesiasticism based its claim, contained the last word regarding
+ matters of science. But the writers of the Hebrew text had been under the
+ influence of that Babylonian conception of the universe which accepted the
+ earth as unqualifiedly central&mdash;which, indeed, had never so much as
+ conceived a contradictory hypothesis; and so the Western world, which had
+ come to accept these writings as actually supernatural in origin, lay
+ under the spell of Oriental ideas of a pre-scientific era. In our own day,
+ no one speaking with authority thinks of these Hebrew writings as having
+ any scientific weight whatever. Their interest in this regard is purely
+ antiquarian; hence from our changed point of view it seems scarcely
+ credible that Tycho Brahe can have been in earnest when he quotes the
+ Hebrew traditions as proof that the sun revolves about the earth. Yet we
+ shall see that for almost three centuries after the time of Tycho, these
+ same dreamings continued to be cited in opposition to those scientific
+ advances which new observations made necessary; and this notwithstanding
+ the fact that the Oriental phrasing is, for the most part, poetically
+ ambiguous and susceptible of shifting interpretations, as the criticism of
+ successive generations has amply testified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we have said, Tycho Brahe, great observer as he was, could not shake
+ himself free from the Oriental incubus. He began his objections, then, to
+ the Copernican system by quoting the adverse testimony of a Hebrew prophet
+ who lived more than a thousand years B.C. All of this shows sufficiently
+ that Tycho Brahe was not a great theorist. He was essentially an observer,
+ but in this regard he won a secure place in the very first rank. Indeed,
+ he was easily the greatest observing astronomer since Hipparchus, between
+ whom and himself there were many points of resemblance. Hipparchus, it
+ will be recalled, rejected the Aristarchian conception of the universe
+ just as Tycho rejected the conception of Copernicus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if Tycho propounded no great generalizations, the list of specific
+ advances due to him is a long one, and some of these were to prove
+ important aids in the hands of later workers to the secure demonstration
+ of the Copernican idea. One of his most important series of studies had to
+ do with comets. Regarding these bodies there had been the greatest
+ uncertainty in the minds of astronomers. The greatest variety of opinions
+ regarding them prevailed; they were thought on the one hand to be divine
+ messengers, and on the other to be merely igneous phenomena of the earth's
+ atmosphere. Tycho Brahe declared that a comet which he observed in the
+ year 1577 had no parallax, proving its extreme distance. The observed
+ course of the comet intersected the planetary orbits, which fact gave a
+ quietus to the long-mooted question as to whether the Ptolemaic spheres
+ were transparent solids or merely imaginary; since the comet was seen to
+ intersect these alleged spheres, it was obvious that they could not be the
+ solid substance that they were commonly imagined to be, and this fact in
+ itself went far towards discrediting the Ptolemaic system. It should be
+ recalled, however, that this supposition of tangible spheres for the
+ various planetary and stellar orbits was a mediaeval interpretation of
+ Ptolemy's theory rather than an interpretation of Ptolemy himself, there
+ being nothing to show that the Alexandrian astronomer regarded his cycles
+ and epicycles as other than theoretical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An interesting practical discovery made by Tycho was his method of
+ determining the latitude of a place by means of two observations made at
+ an interval of twelve hours. Hitherto it had been necessary to observe the
+ sun's angle on the equinoctial days, a period of six months being
+ therefore required. Tycho measured the angle of elevation of some star
+ situated near the pole, when on the meridian, and then, twelve hours
+ later, measured the angle of elevation of the same star when it again came
+ to the meridian at the opposite point of its apparent circle about the
+ polestar. Half the sum of these angles gives the latitude of the place of
+ observation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As illustrating the accuracy of Tycho's observations, it may be noted that
+ he rediscovered a third inequality of the moon's motion at its variation,
+ he, in common with other European astronomers, being then quite unaware
+ that this inequality had been observed by an Arabian astronomer. Tycho
+ proved also that the angle of inclination of the moon's orbit to the
+ ecliptic is subject to slight variation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very brilliant new star which shone forth suddenly in the
+ constellation of Cassiopeia in the year 1572, was made the object of
+ special studies by Tycho, who proved that the star had no sensible
+ parallax and consequently was far beyond the planetary regions. The
+ appearance of a new star was a phenomenon not unknown to the ancients,
+ since Pliny records that Hipparchus was led by such an appearance to make
+ his catalogue of the fixed stars. But the phenomenon is sufficiently
+ uncommon to attract unusual attention. A similar phenomenon occurred in
+ the year 1604, when the new star&mdash;in this case appearing in the
+ constellation of Serpentarius&mdash;was explained by Kepler as probably
+ proceeding from a vast combustion. This explanation&mdash;in which Kepler
+ is said to have followed. Tycho&mdash;is fully in accord with the most
+ recent theories on the subject, as we shall see in due course. It is
+ surprising to hear Tycho credited with so startling a theory, but, on the
+ other hand, such an explanation is precisely what should be expected from
+ the other astronomer named. For Johann Kepler, or, as he was originally
+ named, Johann von Kappel, was one of the most speculative astronomers of
+ any age. He was forever theorizing, but such was the peculiar quality of
+ his mind that his theories never satisfied him for long unless he could
+ put them to the test of observation. Thanks to this happy combination of
+ qualities, Kepler became the discoverer of three famous laws of planetary
+ motion which lie at the very foundation of modern astronomy, and which
+ were to be largely instrumental in guiding Newton to his still greater
+ generalization. These laws of planetary motion were vastly important as
+ corroborating the Copernican theory of the universe, though their position
+ in this regard was not immediately recognized by contemporary thinkers.
+ Let us examine with some detail into their discovery, meantime catching a
+ glimpse of the life history of the remarkable man whose name they bear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOHANN KEPLER AND THE LAWS OF PLANETARY MOTION
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johann Kepler was born the 27th of December, 1571, in the little town of
+ Weil, in Wurtemburg. He was a weak, sickly child, further enfeebled by a
+ severe attack of small-pox. It would seem paradoxical to assert that the
+ parents of such a genius were mismated, but their home was not a happy
+ one, the mother being of a nervous temperament, which perhaps in some
+ measure accounted for the genius of the child. The father led the life of
+ a soldier, and finally perished in the campaign against the Turks. Young
+ Kepler's studies were directed with an eye to the ministry. After a
+ preliminary training he attended the university at Tubingen, where he came
+ under the influence of the celebrated Maestlin and became his life-long
+ friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Curiously enough, it is recorded that at first Kepler had no taste for
+ astronomy or for mathematics. But the doors of the ministry being
+ presently barred to him, he turned with enthusiasm to the study of
+ astronomy, being from the first an ardent advocate of the Copernican
+ system. His teacher, Maestlin, accepted the same doctrine, though he was
+ obliged, for theological reasons, to teach the Ptolemaic system, as also
+ to oppose the Gregorian reform of the calendar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Gregorian calendar, it should be explained, is so called because it
+ was instituted by Pope Gregory XIII., who put it into effect in the year
+ 1582, up to which time the so-called Julian calendar, as introduced by
+ Julius Caesar, had been everywhere accepted in Christendom. This Julian
+ calendar, as we have seen, was a great improvement on preceding ones, but
+ still lacked something of perfection inasmuch as its theoretical day
+ differed appreciably from the actual day. In the course of fifteen hundred
+ years, since the time of Caesar, this defect amounted to a discrepancy of
+ about eleven days. Pope Gregory proposed to correct this by omitting ten
+ days from the calendar, which was done in September, 1582. To prevent
+ similar inaccuracies in the future, the Gregorian calendar provided that
+ once in four centuries the additional day to make a leap-year should be
+ omitted, the date selected for such omission being the last year of every
+ fourth century. Thus the years 1500, 1900, and 2300, A.D., would not be
+ leap-years. By this arrangement an approximate rectification of the
+ calendar was effected, though even this does not make it absolutely exact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a rectification as this was obviously desirable, but there was really
+ no necessity for the omission of the ten days from the calendar. The
+ equinoctial day had shifted so that in the year 1582 it fell on the 10th
+ of March and September. There was no reason why it should not have
+ remained there. It would greatly have simplified the task of future
+ historians had Gregory contented himself with providing for the future
+ stability of the calendar without making the needless shift in question.
+ We are so accustomed to think of the 21st of March and 21st of September
+ as the natural periods of the equinox, that we are likely to forget that
+ these are purely arbitrary dates for which the 10th might have been
+ substituted without any inconvenience or inconsistency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the opposition to the new calendar, to which reference has been made,
+ was not based on any such considerations as these. It was due, largely at
+ any rate, to the fact that Germany at this time was under sway of the
+ Lutheran revolt against the papacy. So effective was the opposition that
+ the Gregorian calendar did not come into vogue in Germany until the year
+ 1699. It may be added that England, under stress of the same manner of
+ prejudice, held out against the new reckoning until the year 1751, while
+ Russia does not accept it even now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Protestant leaders thus opposed the papal attitude in a matter of
+ so practical a character as the calendar, it might perhaps have been
+ expected that the Lutherans would have had a leaning towards the
+ Copernican theory of the universe, since this theory was opposed by the
+ papacy. Such, however, was not the case. Luther himself pointed out with
+ great strenuousness, as a final and demonstrative argument, the fact that
+ Joshua commanded the sun and not the earth to stand still; and his
+ followers were quite as intolerant towards the new teaching as were their
+ ultramontane opponents. Kepler himself was, at various times, to feel the
+ restraint of ecclesiastical opposition, though he was never subjected to
+ direct persecution, as was his friend and contemporary, Galileo. At the
+ very outset of Kepler's career there was, indeed, question as to the
+ publication of a work he had written, because that work took for granted
+ the truth of the Copernican doctrine. This work appeared, however, in the
+ year 1596. It bore the title Mysterium Cosmographium, and it attempted to
+ explain the positions of the various planetary bodies. Copernicus had
+ devoted much time to observation of the planets with reference to
+ measuring their distance, and his efforts had been attended with
+ considerable success. He did not, indeed, know the actual distance of the
+ sun, and, therefore, was quite unable to fix the distance of any planet;
+ but, on the other hand, he determined the relative distance of all the
+ planets then known, as measured in terms of the sun's distance, with
+ remarkable accuracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these measurements as a guide, Kepler was led to a very fanciful
+ theory, according to which the orbits of the five principal planets
+ sustain a peculiar relation to the five regular solids of geometry. His
+ theory was this: "Around the orbit of the earth describe a dodecahedron&mdash;the
+ circle comprising it will be that of Mars; around Mars describe a
+ tetrahedron&mdash;the circle comprising it will be that of Jupiter; around
+ Jupiter describe a cube&mdash;the circle comprising it will be that of
+ Saturn; now within the earth's orbit inscribe an icosahedron&mdash;the
+ inscribed circle will be that of Venus; in the orbit of Venus inscribe an
+ octahedron&mdash;the circle inscribed will be that of Mercury."(3)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though this arrangement was a fanciful one, which no one would now recall
+ had not the theorizer obtained subsequent fame on more substantial
+ grounds, yet it evidenced a philosophical spirit on the part of the
+ astronomer which, misdirected as it was in this instance, promised well
+ for the future. Tycho Brahe, to whom a copy of the work was sent, had the
+ acumen to recognize it as a work of genius. He summoned the young
+ astronomer to be his assistant at Prague, and no doubt the association
+ thus begun was instrumental in determining the character of Kepler's
+ future work. It was precisely the training in minute observation that
+ could avail most for a mind which, like Kepler's, tended instinctively to
+ the formulation of theories. When Tycho Brahe died, in 1601, Kepler became
+ his successor. In due time he secured access to all the unpublished
+ observations of his great predecessor, and these were of inestimable value
+ to him in the progress of his own studies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kepler was not only an ardent worker and an enthusiastic theorizer, but he
+ was an indefatigable writer, and it pleased him to take the public fully
+ into his confidence, not merely as to his successes, but as to his
+ failures. Thus his works elaborate false theories as well as correct ones,
+ and detail the observations through which the incorrect guesses were
+ refuted by their originator. Some of these accounts are highly
+ interesting, but they must not detain us here. For our present purpose it
+ must suffice to point out the three important theories, which, as culled
+ from among a score or so of incorrect ones, Kepler was able to demonstrate
+ to his own satisfaction and to that of subsequent observers. Stated in a
+ few words, these theories, which have come to bear the name of Kepler's
+ Laws, are the following:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. That the planetary orbits are not circular, but elliptical, the sun
+ occupying one focus of the ellipses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. That the speed of planetary motion varies in different parts of the
+ orbit in such a way that an imaginary line drawn from the sun to the
+ planet&mdash;that is to say, the radius vector of the planet's orbit&mdash;always
+ sweeps the same area in a given time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two laws Kepler published as early as 1609. Many years more of
+ patient investigation were required before he found out the secret of the
+ relation between planetary distances and times of revolution which his
+ third law expresses. In 1618, however, he was able to formulate this
+ relation also, as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The squares of the distance of the various planets from the sun are
+ proportional to the cubes of their periods of revolution about the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these laws, it will be observed, take for granted the fact that the
+ sun is the centre of the planetary orbits. It must be understood, too,
+ that the earth is constantly regarded, in accordance with the Copernican
+ system, as being itself a member of the planetary system, subject to
+ precisely the same laws as the other planets. Long familiarity has made
+ these wonderful laws of Kepler seem such a matter of course that it is
+ difficult now to appreciate them at their full value. Yet, as has been
+ already pointed out, it was the knowledge of these marvellously simple
+ relations between the planetary orbits that laid the foundation for the
+ Newtonian law of universal gravitation. Contemporary judgment could not,
+ of course, anticipate this culmination of a later generation. What it
+ could understand was that the first law of Kepler attacked one of the most
+ time-honored of metaphysical conceptions&mdash;namely, the Aristotelian
+ idea that the circle is the perfect figure, and hence that the planetary
+ orbits must be circular. Not even Copernicus had doubted the validity of
+ this assumption. That Kepler dared dispute so firmly fixed a belief, and
+ one that seemingly had so sound a philosophical basis, evidenced the
+ iconoclastic nature of his genius. That he did not rest content until he
+ had demonstrated the validity of his revolutionary assumption shows how
+ truly this great theorizer made his hypotheses subservient to the most
+ rigid inductions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GALILEO GALILEI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Kepler was solving these riddles of planetary motion, there was an
+ even more famous man in Italy whose championship of the Copernican
+ doctrine was destined to give the greatest possible publicity to the new
+ ideas. This was Galileo Galilei, one of the most extraordinary scientific
+ observers of any age. Galileo was born at Pisa, on the 18th of February
+ (old style), 1564. The day of his birth is doubly memorable, since on the
+ same day the greatest Italian of the preceding epoch, Michael Angelo,
+ breathed his last. Persons fond of symbolism have found in the coincidence
+ a forecast of the transit from the artistic to the scientific epoch of the
+ later Renaissance. Galileo came of an impoverished noble family. He was
+ educated for the profession of medicine, but did not progress far before
+ his natural proclivities directed him towards the physical sciences.
+ Meeting with opposition in Pisa, he early accepted a call to the chair of
+ natural philosophy in the University of Padua, and later in life he made
+ his home at Florence. The mechanical and physical discoveries of Galileo
+ will claim our attention in another chapter. Our present concern is with
+ his contribution to the Copernican theory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galileo himself records in a letter to Kepler that he became a convert to
+ this theory at an early day. He was not enabled, however, to make any
+ marked contribution to the subject, beyond the influence of his general
+ teachings, until about the year 1610. The brilliant contributions which he
+ made were due largely to a single discovery&mdash;namely, that of the
+ telescope. Hitherto the astronomical observations had been made with the
+ unaided eye. Glass lenses had been known since the thirteenth century,
+ but, until now, no one had thought of their possible use as aids to
+ distant vision. The question of priority of discovery has never been
+ settled. It is admitted, however, that the chief honors belong to the
+ opticians of the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As early as the year 1590 the Dutch optician Zacharias Jensen placed a
+ concave and a convex lens respectively at the ends of a tube about
+ eighteen inches long, and used this instrument for the purpose of
+ magnifying small objects&mdash;producing, in short, a crude microscope.
+ Some years later, Johannes Lippershey, of whom not much is known except
+ that he died in 1619, experimented with a somewhat similar combination of
+ lenses, and made the startling observation that the weather-vane on a
+ distant church-steeple seemed to be brought much nearer when viewed
+ through the lens. The combination of lenses he employed is that still used
+ in the construction of opera-glasses; the Germans still call such a
+ combination a Dutch telescope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doubtless a large number of experimenters took the matter up and the fame
+ of the new instrument spread rapidly abroad. Galileo, down in Italy, heard
+ rumors of this remarkable contrivance, through the use of which it was
+ said "distant objects might be seen as clearly as those near at hand." He
+ at once set to work to construct for himself a similar instrument, and his
+ efforts were so far successful that at first he "saw objects three times
+ as near and nine times enlarged." Continuing his efforts, he presently so
+ improved his glass that objects were enlarged almost a thousand times and
+ made to appear thirty times nearer than when seen with the naked eye.
+ Naturally enough, Galileo turned this fascinating instrument towards the
+ skies, and he was almost immediately rewarded by several startling
+ discoveries. At the very outset, his magnifying-glass brought to view a
+ vast number of stars that are invisible to the naked eye, and enabled the
+ observer to reach the conclusion that the hazy light of the Milky Way is
+ merely due to the aggregation of a vast number of tiny stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning his telescope towards the moon, Galileo found that body rough and
+ earth-like in contour, its surface covered with mountains, whose height
+ could be approximately measured through study of their shadows. This was
+ disquieting, because the current Aristotelian doctrine supposed the moon,
+ in common with the planets, to be a perfectly spherical, smooth body. The
+ metaphysical idea of a perfect universe was sure to be disturbed by this
+ seemingly rough workmanship of the moon. Thus far, however, there was
+ nothing in the observations of Galileo to bear directly upon the
+ Copernican theory; but when an inspection was made of the planets the case
+ was quite different. With the aid of his telescope, Galileo saw that
+ Venus, for example, passes through phases precisely similar to those of
+ the moon, due, of course, to the same cause. Here, then, was demonstrative
+ evidence that the planets are dark bodies reflecting the light of the sun,
+ and an explanation was given of the fact, hitherto urged in opposition to
+ the Copernican theory, that the inferior planets do not seem many times
+ brighter when nearer the earth than when in the most distant parts of
+ their orbits; the explanation being, of course, that when the planets are
+ between the earth and the sun only a small portion of their illumined
+ surfaces is visible from the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On inspecting the planet Jupiter, a still more striking revelation was
+ made, as four tiny stars were observed to occupy an equatorial position
+ near that planet, and were seen, when watched night after night, to be
+ circling about the planet, precisely as the moon circles about the earth.
+ Here, obviously, was a miniature solar system&mdash;a tangible
+ object-lesson in the Copernican theory. In honor of the ruling Florentine
+ house of the period, Galileo named these moons of Jupiter, Medicean stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning attention to the sun itself, Galileo observed on the surface of
+ that luminary a spot or blemish which gradually changed its shape,
+ suggesting that changes were taking place in the substance of the sun&mdash;changes
+ obviously incompatible with the perfect condition demanded by the
+ metaphysical theorists. But however disquieting for the conservative, the
+ sun's spots served a most useful purpose in enabling Galileo to
+ demonstrate that the sun itself revolves on its axis, since a given spot
+ was seen to pass across the disk and after disappearing to reappear in due
+ course. The period of rotation was found to be about twenty-four days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be added that various observers disputed priority of discovery of
+ the sun's spots with Galileo. Unquestionably a sun-spot had been seen by
+ earlier observers, and by them mistaken for the transit of an inferior
+ planet. Kepler himself had made this mistake. Before the day of the
+ telescope, he had viewed the image of the sun as thrown on a screen in a
+ camera-obscura, and had observed a spot on the disk which be interpreted
+ as representing the planet Mercury, but which, as is now known, must have
+ been a sun-spot, since the planetary disk is too small to have been
+ revealed by this method. Such observations as these, however interesting,
+ cannot be claimed as discoveries of the sun-spots. It is probable,
+ however, that several discoverers (notably Johann Fabricius) made the
+ telescopic observation of the spots, and recognized them as having to do
+ with the sun's surface, almost simultaneously with Galileo. One of these
+ claimants was a Jesuit named Scheiner, and the jealousy of this man is
+ said to have had a share in bringing about that persecution to which we
+ must now refer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no more famous incident in the history of science than the heresy
+ trial through which Galileo was led to the nominal renunciation of his
+ cherished doctrines. There is scarcely another incident that has been
+ commented upon so variously. Each succeeding generation has put its own
+ interpretation on it. The facts, however, have been but little questioned.
+ It appears that in the year 1616 the church became at last aroused to the
+ implications of the heliocentric doctrine of the universe. Apparently it
+ seemed clear to the church authorities that the authors of the Bible
+ believed the world to be immovably fixed at the centre of the universe.
+ Such, indeed, would seem to be the natural inference from various familiar
+ phrases of the Hebrew text, and what we now know of the status of Oriental
+ science in antiquity gives full warrant to this interpretation. There is
+ no reason to suppose that the conception of the subordinate place of the
+ world in the solar system had ever so much as occurred, even as a vague
+ speculation, to the authors of Genesis. In common with their
+ contemporaries, they believed the earth to be the all-important body in
+ the universe, and the sun a luminary placed in the sky for the sole
+ purpose of giving light to the earth. There is nothing strange, nothing
+ anomalous, in this view; it merely reflects the current notions of
+ Oriental peoples in antiquity. What is strange and anomalous is the fact
+ that the Oriental dreamings thus expressed could have been supposed to
+ represent the acme of scientific knowledge. Yet such a hold had these
+ writings taken upon the Western world that not even a Galileo dared
+ contradict them openly; and when the church fathers gravely declared the
+ heliocentric theory necessarily false, because contradictory to Scripture,
+ there were probably few people in Christendom whose mental attitude would
+ permit them justly to appreciate the humor of such a pronouncement. And,
+ indeed, if here and there a man might have risen to such an appreciation,
+ there were abundant reasons for the repression of the impulse, for there
+ was nothing humorous about the response with which the authorities of the
+ time were wont to meet the expression of iconoclastic opinions. The
+ burning at the stake of Giordano Bruno, in the year 1600, was, for
+ example, an object-lesson well calculated to restrain the enthusiasm of
+ other similarly minded teachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doubtless it was such considerations that explained the relative silence
+ of the champions of the Copernican theory, accounting for the otherwise
+ inexplicable fact that about eighty years elapsed after the death of
+ Copernicus himself before a single text-book expounded his theory. The
+ text-book which then appeared, under date of 1622, was written by the
+ famous Kepler, who perhaps was shielded in a measure from the papal
+ consequences of such hardihood by the fact of residence in a Protestant
+ country. Not that the Protestants of the time favored the heliocentric
+ doctrine&mdash;we have already quoted Luther in an adverse sense&mdash;but
+ of course it was characteristic of the Reformation temper to oppose any
+ papal pronouncement, hence the ultramontane declaration of 1616 may
+ indirectly have aided the doctrine which it attacked, by making that
+ doctrine less obnoxious to Lutheran eyes. Be that as it may, the work of
+ Kepler brought its author into no direct conflict with the authorities.
+ But the result was quite different when, in 1632, Galileo at last broke
+ silence and gave the world, under cover of the form of dialogue, an
+ elaborate exposition of the Copernican theory. Galileo, it must be
+ explained, had previously been warned to keep silent on the subject, hence
+ his publication doubly offended the authorities. To be sure, he could
+ reply that his dialogue introduced a champion of the Ptolemaic system to
+ dispute with the upholder of the opposite view, and that, both views being
+ presented with full array of argument, the reader was left to reach a
+ verdict for himself, the author having nowhere pointedly expressed an
+ opinion. But such an argument, of course, was specious, for no one who
+ read the dialogue could be in doubt as to the opinion of the author.
+ Moreover, it was hinted that Simplicio, the character who upheld the
+ Ptolemaic doctrine and who was everywhere worsted in the argument, was
+ intended to represent the pope himself&mdash;a suggestion which probably
+ did no good to Galileo's cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The character of Galileo's artistic presentation may best be judged from
+ an example, illustrating the vigorous assault of Salviati, the champion of
+ the new theory, and the feeble retorts of his conservative antagonist:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Salviati. Let us then begin our discussion with the consideration that,
+ whatever motion may be attributed to the earth, yet we, as dwellers upon
+ it, and hence as participators in its motion, cannot possibly perceive
+ anything of it, presupposing that we are to consider only earthly things.
+ On the other hand, it is just as necessary that this same motion belong
+ apparently to all other bodies and visible objects, which, being separated
+ from the earth, do not take part in its motion. The correct method to
+ discover whether one can ascribe motion to the earth, and what kind of
+ motion, is, therefore, to investigate and observe whether in bodies
+ outside the earth a perceptible motion may be discovered which belongs to
+ all alike. Because a movement which is perceptible only in the moon, for
+ instance, and has nothing to do with Venus or Jupiter or other stars,
+ cannot possibly be peculiar to the earth, nor can its seat be anywhere
+ else than in the moon. Now there is one such universal movement which
+ controls all others&mdash;namely, that which the sun, moon, the other
+ planets, the fixed stars&mdash;in short, the whole universe, with the
+ single exception of the earth&mdash;appears to execute from east to west
+ in the space of twenty-four hours. This now, as it appears at the first
+ glance anyway, might just as well be a motion of the earth alone as of all
+ the rest of the universe with the exception of the earth, for the same
+ phenomena would result from either hypothesis. Beginning with the most
+ general, I will enumerate the reasons which seem to speak in favor of the
+ earth's motion. When we merely consider the immensity of the starry sphere
+ in comparison with the smallness of the terrestrial ball, which is
+ contained many million times in the former, and then think of the rapidity
+ of the motion which completes a whole rotation in one day and night, I
+ cannot persuade myself how any one can hold it to be more reasonable and
+ credible that it is the heavenly sphere which rotates, while the earth
+ stands still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Simplicio. I do not well understand how that powerful motion may be said
+ to as good as not exist for the sun, the moon, the other planets, and the
+ innumerable host of fixed stars. Do you call that nothing when the sun
+ goes from one meridian to another, rises up over this horizon and sinks
+ behind that one, brings now day, and now night; when the moon goes through
+ similar changes, and the other planets and fixed stars in the same way?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Salviati. All the changes you mention are such only in respect to the
+ earth. To convince yourself of it, only imagine the earth out of
+ existence. There would then be no rising and setting of the sun or of the
+ moon, no horizon, no meridian, no day, no night&mdash;in short, the said
+ motion causes no change of any sort in the relation of the sun to the moon
+ or to any of the other heavenly bodies, be they planets or fixed stars.
+ All changes are rather in respect to the earth; they may all be reduced to
+ the simple fact that the sun is first visible in China, then in Persia,
+ afterwards in Egypt, Greece, France, Spain, America, etc., and that the
+ same thing happens with the moon and the other heavenly bodies. Exactly
+ the same thing happens and in exactly the same way if, instead of
+ disturbing so large a part of the universe, you let the earth revolve
+ about itself. The difficulty is, however, doubled, inasmuch as a second
+ very important problem presents itself. If, namely, that powerful motion
+ is ascribed to the heavens, it is absolutely necessary to regard it as
+ opposed to the individual motion of all the planets, every one of which
+ indubitably has its own very leisurely and moderate movement from west to
+ east. If, on the other hand, you let the earth move about itself, this
+ opposition of motion disappears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The improbability is tripled by the complete overthrow of that order
+ which rules all the heavenly bodies in which the revolving motion is
+ definitely established. The greater the sphere is in such a case, so much
+ longer is the time required for its revolution; the smaller the sphere the
+ shorter the time. Saturn, whose orbit surpasses those of all the planets
+ in size, traverses it in thirty years. Jupiter(4) completes its smaller
+ course in twelve years, Mars in two; the moon performs its much smaller
+ revolution within a month. Just as clearly in the Medicean stars, we see
+ that the one nearest Jupiter completes its revolution in a very short time&mdash;about
+ forty-two hours; the next in about three and one-half days, the third in
+ seven, and the most distant one in sixteen days. This rule, which is
+ followed throughout, will still remain if we ascribe the
+ twenty-four-hourly motion to a rotation of the earth. If, however, the
+ earth is left motionless, we must go first from the very short rule of the
+ moon to ever greater ones&mdash;to the two-yearly rule of Mars, from that
+ to the twelve-yearly one of Jupiter, from here to the thirty-yearly one of
+ Saturn, and then suddenly to an incomparably greater sphere, to which also
+ we must ascribe a complete rotation in twenty-four hours. If, however, we
+ assume a motion of the earth, the rapidity of the periods is very well
+ preserved; from the slowest sphere of Saturn we come to the wholly
+ motionless fixed stars. We also escape thereby a fourth difficulty, which
+ arises as soon as we assume that there is motion in the sphere of the
+ stars. I mean the great unevenness in the movement of these very stars,
+ some of which would have to revolve with extraordinary rapidity in immense
+ circles, while others moved very slowly in small circles, since some of
+ them are at a greater, others at a less, distance from the pole. That is
+ likewise an inconvenience, for, on the one hand, we see all those stars,
+ the motion of which is indubitable, revolve in great circles, while, on
+ the other hand, there seems to be little object in placing bodies, which
+ are to move in circles, at an enormous distance from the centre and then
+ let them move in very small circles. And not only are the size of the
+ different circles and therewith the rapidity of the movement very
+ different in the different fixed stars, but the same stars also change
+ their orbits and their rapidity of motion. Therein consists the fifth
+ inconvenience. Those stars, namely, which were at the equator two thousand
+ years ago, and hence described great circles in their revolutions, must
+ to-day move more slowly and in smaller circles, because they are many
+ degrees removed from it. It will even happen, after not so very long a
+ time, that one of those which have hitherto been continually in motion
+ will finally coincide with the pole and stand still, but after a period of
+ repose will again begin to move. The other stars in the mean while, which
+ unquestionably move, all have, as was said, a great circle for an orbit
+ and keep this unchangeably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The improbability is further increased&mdash;this may be considered the
+ sixth inconvenience&mdash;by the fact that it is impossible to conceive
+ what degree of solidity those immense spheres must have, in the depths of
+ which so many stars are fixed so enduringly that they are kept revolving
+ evenly in spite of such difference of motion without changing their
+ respective positions. Or if, according to the much more probable theory,
+ the heavens are fluid, and every star describes an orbit of its own,
+ according to what law then, or for what reason, are their orbits so
+ arranged that, when looked at from the earth, they appear to be contained
+ in one single sphere? To attain this it seems to me much easier and more
+ convenient to make them motionless instead of moving, just as the
+ paving-stones on the market-place, for instance, remain in order more
+ easily than the swarms of children running about on them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Finally, the seventh difficulty: If we attribute the daily rotation to
+ the higher region of the heavens, we should have to endow it with force
+ and power sufficient to carry with it the innumerable host of the fixed
+ stars&mdash;every one a body of very great compass and much larger than
+ the earth&mdash;and all the planets, although the latter, like the earth,
+ move naturally in an opposite direction. In the midst of all this the
+ little earth, single and alone, would obstinately and wilfully withstand
+ such force&mdash;a supposition which, it appears to me, has much against
+ it. I could also not explain why the earth, a freely poised body,
+ balancing itself about its centre, and surrounded on all sides by a fluid
+ medium, should not be affected by the universal rotation. Such
+ difficulties, however, do not confront us if we attribute motion to the
+ earth&mdash;such a small, insignificant body in comparison with the whole
+ universe, and which for that very reason cannot exercise any power over
+ the latter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Simplicio. You support your arguments throughout, it seems to me, on the
+ greater ease and simplicity with which the said effects are produced. You
+ mean that as a cause the motion of the earth alone is just as satisfactory
+ as the motion of all the rest of the universe with the exception of the
+ earth; you hold the actual event to be much easier in the former case than
+ in the latter. For the ruler of the universe, however, whose might is
+ infinite, it is no less easy to move the universe than the earth or a
+ straw balm. But if his power is infinite, why should not a greater, rather
+ than a very small, part of it be revealed to me?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Salviati. If I had said that the universe does not move on account of the
+ impotence of its ruler, I should have been wrong and your rebuke would
+ have been in order. I admit that it is just as easy for an infinite power
+ to move a hundred thousand as to move one. What I said, however, does not
+ refer to him who causes the motion, but to that which is moved. In answer
+ to your remark that it is more fitting for an infinite power to reveal a
+ large part of itself rather than a little, I answer that, in relation to
+ the infinite, one part is not greater than another, if both are finite.
+ Hence it is unallowable to say that a hundred thousand is a larger part of
+ an infinite number than two, although the former is fifty thousand times
+ greater than the latter. If, therefore, we consider the moving bodies, we
+ must unquestionably regard the motion of the earth as a much simpler
+ process than that of the universe; if, furthermore, we direct our
+ attention to so many other simplifications which may be reached only by
+ this theory, the daily movement of the earth must appear much more
+ probable than the motion of the universe without the earth, for, according
+ to Aristotle's just axiom, 'Frustra fit per plura, quod potest fieri per p
+ auciora' (It is vain to expend many means where a few are sufficient)."(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work was widely circulated, and it was received with an interest which
+ bespeaks a wide-spread undercurrent of belief in the Copernican doctrine.
+ Naturally enough, it attracted immediate attention from the church
+ authorities. Galileo was summoned to appear at Rome to defend his conduct.
+ The philosopher, who was now in his seventieth year, pleaded age and
+ infirmity. He had no desire for personal experience of the tribunal of the
+ Inquisition; but the mandate was repeated, and Galileo went to Rome.
+ There, as every one knows, he disavowed any intention to oppose the
+ teachings of Scripture, and formally renounced the heretical doctrine of
+ the earth's motion. According to a tale which so long passed current that
+ every historian must still repeat it though no one now believes it
+ authentic, Galileo qualified his renunciation by muttering to himself, "E
+ pur si muove" (It does move, none the less), as he rose to his feet and
+ retired from the presence of his persecutors. The tale is one of those
+ fictions which the dramatic sense of humanity is wont to impose upon
+ history, but, like most such fictions, it expresses the spirit if not the
+ letter of truth; for just as no one believes that Galileo's lips uttered
+ the phrase, so no one doubts that the rebellious words were in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After his formal renunciation, Galileo was allowed to depart, but with the
+ injunction that he abstain in future from heretical teaching. The
+ remaining ten years of his life were devoted chiefly to mechanics, where
+ his experiments fortunately opposed the Aristotelian rather than the
+ Hebrew teachings. Galileo's death occurred in 1642, a hundred years after
+ the death of Copernicus. Kepler had died thirteen years before, and there
+ remained no astronomer in the field who is conspicuous in the history of
+ science as a champion of the Copernican doctrine. But in truth it might be
+ said that the theory no longer needed a champion. The researches of Kepler
+ and Galileo had produced a mass of evidence for the Copernican theory
+ which amounted to demonstration. A generation or two might be required for
+ this evidence to make itself everywhere known among men of science, and of
+ course the ecclesiastical authorities must be expected to stand by their
+ guns for a somewhat longer period. In point of fact, the ecclesiastical
+ ban was not technically removed by the striking of the Copernican books
+ from the list of the Index Expurgatorius until the year 1822, almost two
+ hundred years after the date of Galileo's dialogue. But this, of course,
+ is in no sense a guide to the state of general opinion regarding the
+ theory. We shall gain a true gauge as to this if we assume that the
+ greater number of important thinkers had accepted the heliocentric
+ doctrine before the middle of the seventeenth century, and that before the
+ close of that century the old Ptolemaic idea had been quite abandoned. A
+ wonderful revolution in man's estimate of the universe had thus been
+ effected within about two centuries after the birth of Copernicus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. GALILEO AND THE NEW PHYSICS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After Galileo had felt the strong hand of the Inquisition, in 1632, he was
+ careful to confine his researches, or at least his publications, to topics
+ that seemed free from theological implications. In doing so he reverted to
+ the field of his earliest studies&mdash;namely, the field of mechanics;
+ and the Dialoghi delle Nuove Scienze, which he finished in 1636, and which
+ was printed two years later, attained a celebrity no less than that of the
+ heretical dialogue that had preceded it. The later work was free from all
+ apparent heresies, yet perhaps it did more towards the establishment of
+ the Copernican doctrine, through the teaching of correct mechanical
+ principles, than the other work had accomplished by a more direct method.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galileo's astronomical discoveries were, as we have seen, in a sense
+ accidental; at least, they received their inception through the inventive
+ genius of another. His mechanical discoveries, on the other hand, were the
+ natural output of his own creative genius. At the very beginning of his
+ career, while yet a very young man, though a professor of mathematics at
+ Pisa, he had begun that onslaught upon the old Aristotelian ideas which he
+ was to continue throughout his life. At the famous leaning tower in Pisa,
+ the young iconoclast performed, in the year 1590, one of the most
+ theatrical demonstrations in the history of science. Assembling a
+ multitude of champions of the old ideas, he proposed to demonstrate the
+ falsity of the Aristotelian doctrine that the velocity of falling bodies
+ is proportionate to their weight. There is perhaps no fact more strongly
+ illustrative of the temper of the Middle Ages than the fact that this
+ doctrine, as taught by the Aristotelian philosopher, should so long have
+ gone unchallenged. Now, however, it was put to the test; Galileo released
+ a half-pound weight and a hundred-pound cannon-ball from near the top of
+ the tower, and, needless to say, they reached the ground together. Of
+ course, the spectators were but little pleased with what they saw. They
+ could not doubt the evidence of their own senses as to the particular
+ experiment in question; they could suggest, however, that the experiment
+ involved a violation of the laws of nature through the practice of magic.
+ To controvert so firmly established an idea savored of heresy. The young
+ man guilty of such iconoclasm was naturally looked at askance by the
+ scholarship of his time. Instead of being applauded, he was hissed, and he
+ found it expedient presently to retire from Pisa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately, however, the new spirit of progress had made itself felt more
+ effectively in some other portions of Italy, and so Galileo found a refuge
+ and a following in Padua, and afterwards in Florence; and while, as we
+ have seen, he was obliged to curb his enthusiasm regarding the subject
+ that was perhaps nearest his heart&mdash;the promulgation of the
+ Copernican theory&mdash;yet he was permitted in the main to carry on his
+ experimental observations unrestrained. These experiments gave him a place
+ of unquestioned authority among his contemporaries, and they have
+ transmitted his name to posterity as that of one of the greatest of
+ experimenters and the virtual founder of modern mechanical science. The
+ experiments in question range over a wide field; but for the most part
+ they have to do with moving bodies and with questions of force, or, as we
+ should now say, of energy. The experiment at the leaning tower showed that
+ the velocity of falling bodies is independent of the weight of the bodies,
+ provided the weight is sufficient to overcome the resistance of the
+ atmosphere. Later experiments with falling bodies led to the discovery of
+ laws regarding the accelerated velocity of fall. Such velocities were
+ found to bear a simple relation to the period of time from the beginning
+ of the fall. Other experiments, in which balls were allowed to roll down
+ inclined planes, corroborated the observation that the pull of gravitation
+ gave a velocity proportionate to the length of fall, whether such fall
+ were direct or in a slanting direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These studies were associated with observations on projectiles, regarding
+ which Galileo was the first to entertain correct notions. According to the
+ current idea, a projectile fired, for example, from a cannon, moved in a
+ straight horizontal line until the propulsive force was exhausted, and
+ then fell to the ground in a perpendicular line. Galileo taught that the
+ projectile begins to fall at once on leaving the mouth of the cannon and
+ traverses a parabolic course. According to his idea, which is now familiar
+ to every one, a cannon-ball dropped from the level of the cannon's muzzle
+ will strike the ground simultaneously with a ball fired horizontally from
+ the cannon. As to the paraboloid course pursued by the projectile, the
+ resistance of the air is a factor which Galileo could not accurately
+ compute, and which interferes with the practical realization of his
+ theory. But this is a minor consideration. The great importance of his
+ idea consists in the recognition that such a force as that of gravitation
+ acts in precisely the same way upon all unsupported bodies, whether or not
+ such bodies be at the same time acted upon by a force of translation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of these studies of moving bodies was gradually developed a correct
+ notion of several important general laws of mechanics&mdash;laws a
+ knowledge of which was absolutely essential to the progress of physical
+ science. The belief in the rotation of the earth made necessary a clear
+ conception that all bodies at the surface of the earth partake of that
+ motion quite independently of their various observed motions in relation
+ to one another. This idea was hard to grasp, as an oft-repeated argument
+ shows. It was asserted again and again that, if the earth rotates, a stone
+ dropped from the top of a tower could not fall at the foot of the tower,
+ since the earth's motion would sweep the tower far away from its original
+ position while the stone is in transit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was one of the stock arguments against the earth's motion, yet it was
+ one that could be refuted with the greatest ease by reasoning from
+ strictly analogous experiments. It might readily be observed, for example,
+ that a stone dropped from a moving cart does not strike the ground
+ directly below the point from which it is dropped, but partakes of the
+ forward motion of the cart. If any one doubt this he has but to jump from
+ a moving cart to be given a practical demonstration of the fact that his
+ entire body was in some way influenced by the motion of translation.
+ Similarly, the simple experiment of tossing a ball from the deck of a
+ moving ship will convince any one that the ball partakes of the motion of
+ the ship, so that it can be manipulated precisely as if the manipulator
+ were standing on the earth. In short, every-day experience gives us
+ illustrations of what might be called compound motion, which makes it seem
+ altogether plausible that, if the earth is in motion, objects at its
+ surface will partake of that motion in a way that does not interfere with
+ any other movements to which they may be subjected. As the Copernican
+ doctrine made its way, this idea of compound motion naturally received
+ more and more attention, and such experiments as those of Galileo prepared
+ the way for a new interpretation of the mechanical principles involved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great difficulty was that the subject of moving bodies had all along
+ been contemplated from a wrong point of view. Since force must be applied
+ to an object to put it in motion, it was perhaps not unnaturally assumed
+ that similar force must continue to be applied to keep the object in
+ motion. When, for example, a stone is thrown from the hand, the direct
+ force applied necessarily ceases as soon as the projectile leaves the
+ hand. The stone, nevertheless, flies on for a certain distance and then
+ falls to the ground. How is this flight of the stone to be explained? The
+ ancient philosophers puzzled more than a little over this problem, and the
+ Aristotelians reached the conclusion that the motion of the hand had
+ imparted a propulsive motion to the air, and that this propulsive motion
+ was transmitted to the stone, pushing it on. Just how the air took on this
+ propulsive property was not explained, and the vagueness of thought that
+ characterized the time did not demand an explanation. Possibly the dying
+ away of ripples in water may have furnished, by analogy, an explanation of
+ the gradual dying out of the impulse which propels the stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All of this was, of course, an unfortunate maladjustment of the point of
+ view. As every one nowadays knows, the air retards the progress of the
+ stone, enabling the pull of gravitation to drag it to the earth earlier
+ than it otherwise could. Were the resistance of the air and the pull of
+ gravitation removed, the stone as projected from the hand would fly on in
+ a straight line, at an unchanged velocity, forever. But this fact, which
+ is expressed in what we now term the first law of motion, was extremely
+ difficult to grasp. The first important step towards it was perhaps
+ implied in Galileo's study of falling bodies. These studies, as we have
+ seen, demonstrated that a half-pound weight and a hundred-pound weight
+ fall with the same velocity. It is, however, matter of common experience
+ that certain bodies, as, for example, feathers, do not fall at the same
+ rate of speed with these heavier bodies. This anomaly demands an
+ explanation, and the explanation is found in the resistance offered the
+ relatively light object by the air. Once the idea that the air may thus
+ act as an impeding force was grasped, the investigator of mechanical
+ principles had entered on a new and promising course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galileo could not demonstrate the retarding influence of air in the way
+ which became familiar a generation or two later; he could not put a
+ feather and a coin in a vacuum tube and prove that the two would there
+ fall with equal velocity, because, in his day, the air-pump had not yet
+ been invented. The experiment was made only a generation after the time of
+ Galileo, as we shall see; but, meantime, the great Italian had fully
+ grasped the idea that atmospheric resistance plays a most important part
+ in regard to the motion of falling and projected bodies. Thanks largely to
+ his own experiments, but partly also to the efforts of others, he had
+ come, before the end of his life, pretty definitely to realize that the
+ motion of a projectile, for example, must be thought of as inherent in the
+ projectile itself, and that the retardation or ultimate cessation of that
+ motion is due to the action of antagonistic forces. In other words, he had
+ come to grasp the meaning of the first law of motion. It remained,
+ however, for the great Frenchman Descartes to give precise expression to
+ this law two years after Galileo's death. As Descartes expressed it in his
+ Principia Philosophiae, published in 1644, any body once in motion tends
+ to go on in a straight line, at a uniform rate of speed, forever.
+ Contrariwise, a stationary body will remain forever at rest unless acted
+ on by some disturbing force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This all-important law, which lies at the very foundation of all true
+ conceptions of mechanics, was thus worked out during the first half of the
+ seventeenth century, as the outcome of numberless experiments for which
+ Galileo's experiments with failing bodies furnished the foundation. So
+ numerous and so gradual were the steps by which the reversal of view
+ regarding moving bodies was effected that it is impossible to trace them
+ in detail. We must be content to reflect that at the beginning of the
+ Galilean epoch utterly false notions regarding the subject were
+ entertained by the very greatest philosophers&mdash;by Galileo himself,
+ for example, and by Kepler&mdash;whereas at the close of that epoch the
+ correct and highly illuminative view had been attained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must now consider some other experiments of Galileo which led to
+ scarcely less-important results. The experiments in question had to do
+ with the movements of bodies passing down an inclined plane, and with the
+ allied subject of the motion of a pendulum. The elaborate experiments of
+ Galileo regarding the former subject were made by measuring the velocity
+ of a ball rolling down a plane inclined at various angles. He found that
+ the velocity acquired by a ball was proportional to the height from which
+ the ball descended regardless of the steepness of the incline. Experiments
+ were made also with a ball rolling down a curved gutter, the curve
+ representing the are of a circle. These experiments led to the study of
+ the curvilinear motions of a weight suspended by a cord; in other words,
+ of the pendulum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Regarding the motion of the pendulum, some very curious facts were soon
+ ascertained. Galileo found, for example, that a pendulum of a given length
+ performs its oscillations with the same frequency though the arc described
+ by the pendulum be varied greatly.(1) He found, also, that the rate of
+ oscillation for pendulums of different lengths varies according to a
+ simple law. In order that one pendulum shall oscillate one-half as fast as
+ another, the length of the pendulums must be as four to one. Similarly, by
+ lengthening the pendulums nine times, the oscillation is reduced to
+ one-third, In other words, the rate of oscillation of pendulums varies
+ inversely as the square of their length. Here, then, is a simple relation
+ between the motions of swinging bodies which suggests the relation which
+ Kepler bad discovered between the relative motions of the planets. Every
+ such discovery coming in this age of the rejuvenation of experimental
+ science had a peculiar force in teaching men the all-important lesson that
+ simple laws lie back of most of the diverse phenomena of nature, if only
+ these laws can be discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galileo further observed that his pendulum might be constructed of any
+ weight sufficiently heavy readily to overcome the atmospheric resistance,
+ and that, with this qualification, neither the weight nor the material had
+ any influence upon the time of oscillation, this being solely determined
+ by the length of the cord. Naturally, the practical utility of these
+ discoveries was not overlooked by Galileo. Since a pendulum of a given
+ length oscillates with unvarying rapidity, here is an obvious means of
+ measuring time. Galileo, however, appears not to have met with any great
+ measure of success in putting this idea into practice. It remained for the
+ mechanical ingenuity of Huyghens to construct a satisfactory pendulum
+ clock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a theoretical result of the studies of rolling and oscillating bodies,
+ there was developed what is usually spoken of as the third law of motion&mdash;namely,
+ the law that a given force operates upon a moving body with an effect
+ proportionate to its effect upon the same body when at rest. Or, as
+ Whewell states the law: "The dynamical effect of force is as the statical
+ effect; that is, the velocity which any force generates in a given time,
+ when it puts the body in motion, is proportional to the pressure which
+ this same force produces in a body at rest."(2) According to the second
+ law of motion, each one of the different forces, operating at the same
+ time upon a moving body, produces the same effect as if it operated upon
+ the body while at rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STEVINUS AND THE LAW OF EQUILIBRIUM
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears, then, that the mechanical studies of Galileo, taken as a
+ whole, were nothing less than revolutionary. They constituted the first
+ great advance upon the dynamic studies of Archimedes, and then led to the
+ secure foundation for one of the most important of modern sciences. We
+ shall see that an important company of students entered the field
+ immediately after the time of Galileo, and carried forward the work he had
+ so well begun. But before passing on to the consideration of their labors,
+ we must consider work in allied fields of two men who were contemporaries
+ of Galileo and whose original labors were in some respects scarcely less
+ important than his own. These men are the Dutchman Stevinus, who must
+ always be remembered as a co-laborer with Galileo in the foundation of the
+ science of dynamics, and the Englishman Gilbert, to whom is due the
+ unqualified praise of first subjecting the phenomenon of magnetism to a
+ strictly scientific investigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stevinus was born in the year 1548, and died in 1620. He was a man of a
+ practical genius, and he attracted the attention of his non-scientific
+ contemporaries, among other ways, by the construction of a curious
+ land-craft, which, mounted on wheels, was to be propelled by sails like a
+ boat. Not only did he write a book on this curious horseless carriage, but
+ he put his idea into practical application, producing a vehicle which
+ actually traversed the distance between Scheveningen and Petton, with no
+ fewer than twenty-seven passengers, one of them being Prince Maurice of
+ Orange. This demonstration was made about the year 1600. It does not
+ appear, however, that any important use was made of the strange vehicle;
+ but the man who invented it put his mechanical ingenuity to other use with
+ better effect. It was he who solved the problem of oblique forces, and who
+ discovered the important hydrostatic principle that the pressure of fluids
+ is proportionate to their depth, without regard to the shape of the
+ including vessel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The study of oblique forces was made by Stevinus with the aid of inclined
+ planes. His most demonstrative experiment was a very simple one, in which
+ a chain of balls of equal weight was hung from a triangle; the triangle
+ being so constructed as to rest on a horizontal base, the oblique sides
+ bearing the relation to each other of two to one. Stevinus found that his
+ chain of balls just balanced when four balls were on the longer side and
+ two on the shorter and steeper side. The balancing of force thus brought
+ about constituted a stable equilibrium, Stevinus being the first to
+ discriminate between such a condition and the unbalanced condition called
+ unstable equilibrium. By this simple experiment was laid the foundation of
+ the science of statics. Stevinus had a full grasp of the principle which
+ his experiment involved, and he applied it to the solution of oblique
+ forces in all directions. Earlier investigations of Stevinus were
+ published in 1608. His collected works were published at Leyden in 1634.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This study of the equilibrium of pressure of bodies at rest led Stevinus,
+ not unnaturally, to consider the allied subject of the pressure of
+ liquids. He is to be credited with the explanation of the so-called
+ hydrostatic paradox. The familiar modern experiment which illustrates this
+ paradox is made by inserting a long perpendicular tube of small caliber
+ into the top of a tight barrel. On filling the barrel and tube with water,
+ it is possible to produce a pressure which will burst the barrel, though
+ it be a strong one, and though the actual weight of water in the tube is
+ comparatively insignificant. This illustrates the fact that the pressure
+ at the bottom of a column of liquid is proportionate to the height of the
+ column, and not to its bulk, this being the hydrostatic paradox in
+ question. The explanation is that an enclosed fluid under pressure exerts
+ an equal force upon all parts of the circumscribing wall; the aggregate
+ pressure may, therefore, be increased indefinitely by increasing the
+ surface. It is this principle, of course, which is utilized in the
+ familiar hydrostatic press. Theoretical explanations of the pressure of
+ liquids were supplied a generation or two later by numerous investigators,
+ including Newton, but the practical refoundation of the science of
+ hydrostatics in modern times dates from the experiments of Stevinus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GALILEO AND THE EQUILIBRIUM OF FLUIDS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Experiments of an allied character, having to do with the equilibrium of
+ fluids, exercised the ingenuity of Galileo. Some of his most interesting
+ experiments have to do with the subject of floating bodies. It will be
+ recalled that Archimedes, away back in the Alexandrian epoch, had solved
+ the most important problems of hydrostatic equilibrium. Now, however, his
+ experiments were overlooked or forgotten, and Galileo was obliged to make
+ experiments anew, and to combat fallacious views that ought long since to
+ have been abandoned. Perhaps the most illuminative view of the spirit of
+ the times can be gained by quoting at length a paper of Galileo's, in
+ which he details his own experiments with floating bodies and controverts
+ the views of his opponents. The paper has further value as illustrating
+ Galileo's methods both as experimenter and as speculative reasoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The current view, which Galileo here undertakes to refute, asserts that
+ water offers resistance to penetration, and that this resistance is
+ instrumental in determining whether a body placed in water will float or
+ sink. Galileo contends that water is non-resistant, and that bodies float
+ or sink in virtue of their respective weights. This, of course, is merely
+ a restatement of the law of Archimedes. But it remains to explain the fact
+ that bodies of a certain shape will float, while bodies of the same
+ material and weight, but of a different shape, will sink. We shall see
+ what explanation Galileo finds of this anomaly as we proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first place, Galileo makes a cone of wood or of wax, and shows that
+ when it floats with either its point or its base in the water, it
+ displaces exactly the same amount of fluid, although the apex is by its
+ shape better adapted to overcome the resistance of the water, if that were
+ the cause of buoyancy. Again, the experiment may be varied by tempering
+ the wax with filings of lead till it sinks in the water, when it will be
+ found that in any figure the same quantity of cork must be added to it to
+ raise the surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But," says Galileo, "this silences not my antagonists; they say that all
+ the discourse hitherto made by me imports little to them, and that it
+ serves their turn; that they have demonstrated in one instance, and in
+ such manner and figure as pleases them best&mdash;namely, in a board and
+ in a ball of ebony&mdash;that one when put into the water sinks to the
+ bottom, and that the other stays to swim on the top; and the matter being
+ the same, and the two bodies differing in nothing but in figure, they
+ affirm that with all perspicuity they have demonstrated and sensibly
+ manifested what they undertook. Nevertheless, I believe, and think I can
+ prove, that this very experiment proves nothing against my theory. And
+ first, it is false that the ball sinks and the board not; for the board
+ will sink, too, if you do to both the figures as the words of our question
+ require; that is, if you put them both in the water; for to be in the
+ water implies to be placed in the water, and by Aristotle's own definition
+ of place, to be placed imports to be environed by the surface of the
+ ambient body; but when my antagonists show the floating board of ebony,
+ they put it not into the water, but upon the water; where, being detained
+ by a certain impediment (of which more anon), it is surrounded, partly
+ with water, partly with air, which is contrary to our agreement, for that
+ was that bodies should be in the water, and not part in the water, part in
+ the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will not omit another reason, founded also upon experience, and, if I
+ deceive not myself, conclusive against the notion that figure, and the
+ resistance of the water to penetration, have anything to do with the
+ buoyancy of bodies. Choose a piece of wood or other matter, as, for
+ instance, walnut-wood, of which a ball rises from the bottom of the water
+ to the surface more slowly than a ball of ebony of the same size sinks, so
+ that, clearly, the ball of ebony divides the water more readily in sinking
+ than the ball of wood does in rising. Then take a board of walnut-tree
+ equal to and like the floating one of my antagonists; and if it be true
+ that this latter floats by reason of the figure being unable to penetrate
+ the water, the other of walnut-tree, without a question, if thrust to the
+ bottom, ought to stay there, as having the same impeding figure, and being
+ less apt to overcome the said resistance of the water. But if we find by
+ experience that not only the thin board, but every other figure of the
+ same walnut-tree, will return to float, as unquestionably we shall, then I
+ must desire my opponents to forbear to attribute the floating of the ebony
+ to the figure of the board, since the resistance of the water is the same
+ in rising as in sinking, and the force of ascension of the walnut-tree is
+ less than the ebony's force for going to the bottom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now let us return to the thin plate of gold or silver, or the thin board
+ of ebony, and let us lay it lightly upon the water, so that it may stay
+ there without sinking, and carefully observe the effect. It will appear
+ clearly that the plates are a considerable matter lower than the surface
+ of the water, which rises up and makes a kind of rampart round them on
+ every side. But if it has already penetrated and overcome the continuity
+ of the water, and is of its own nature heavier than the water, why does it
+ not continue to sink, but stop and suspend itself in that little dimple
+ that its weight has made in the water? My answer is, because in sinking
+ till its surface is below the water, which rises up in a bank round it, it
+ draws after and carries along with it the air above it, so that that
+ which, in this case, descends in the water is not only the board of ebony
+ or the plate of iron, but a compound of ebony and air, from which
+ composition results a solid no longer specifically heavier than the water,
+ as was the ebony or gold alone. But, gentlemen, we want the same matter;
+ you are to alter nothing but the shape, and, therefore, have the goodness
+ to remove this air, which may be done simply by washing the surface of the
+ board, for the water having once got between the board and the air will
+ run together, and the ebony will go to the bottom; and if it does not, you
+ have won the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But methinks I hear some of my antagonists cunningly opposing this, and
+ telling me that they will not on any account allow their boards to be
+ wetted, because the weight of the water so added, by making it heavier
+ than it was before, draws it to the bottom, and that the addition of new
+ weight is contrary to our agreement, which was that the matter should be
+ the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To this I answer, first, that nobody can suppose bodies to be put into
+ the water without their being wet, nor do I wish to do more to the board
+ than you may do to the ball. Moreover, it is not true that the board sinks
+ on account of the weight of the water added in the washing; for I will put
+ ten or twenty drops on the floating board, and so long as they stand
+ separate it shall not sink; but if the board be taken out and all that
+ water wiped off, and the whole surface bathed with one single drop, and
+ put it again upon the water, there is no question but it will sink, the
+ other water running to cover it, being no longer hindered by the air. In
+ the next place, it is altogether false that water can in any way increase
+ the weight of bodies immersed in it, for water has no weight in water,
+ since it does not sink. Now just as he who should say that brass by its
+ own nature sinks, but that when formed into the shape of a kettle it
+ acquires from that figure the virtue of lying in water without sinking,
+ would say what is false, because that is not purely brass which then is
+ put into the water, but a compound of brass and air; so is it neither more
+ nor less false that a thin plate of brass or ebony swims by virtue of its
+ dilated and broad figure. Also, I cannot omit to tell my opponents that
+ this conceit of refusing to bathe the surface of the board might beget an
+ opinion in a third person of a poverty of argument on their side,
+ especially as the conversation began about flakes of ice, in which it
+ would be simple to require that the surfaces should be kept dry; not to
+ mention that such pieces of ice, whether wet or dry, always float, and so
+ my antagonists say, because of their shape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some may wonder that I affirm this power to be in the air of keeping
+ plate of brass or silver above water, as if in a certain sense I would
+ attribute to the air a kind of magnetic virtue for sustaining heavy bodies
+ with which it is in contact. To satisfy all these doubts I have contrived
+ the following experiment to demonstrate how truly the air does support
+ these bodies; for I have found, when one of these bodies which floats when
+ placed lightly on the water is thoroughly bathed and sunk to the bottom,
+ that by carrying down to it a little air without otherwise touching it in
+ the least, I am able to raise and carry it back to the top, where it
+ floats as before. To this effect, I take a ball of wax, and with a little
+ lead make it just heavy enough to sink very slowly to the bottom, taking
+ care that its surface be quite smooth and even. This, if put gently into
+ the water, submerges almost entirely, there remaining visible only a
+ little of the very top, which, so long as it is joined to the air, keeps
+ the ball afloat; but if we take away the contact of the air by wetting
+ this top, the ball sinks to the bottom and remains there. Now to make it
+ return to the surface by virtue of the air which before sustained it,
+ thrust into the water a glass with the mouth downward, which will carry
+ with it the air it contains, and move this down towards the ball until you
+ see, by the transparency of the glass, that the air has reached the top of
+ it; then gently draw the glass upward, and you will see the ball rise, and
+ afterwards stay on the top of the water, if you carefully part the glass
+ and water without too much disturbing it."(3)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be seen that Galileo, while holding in the main to a correct
+ thesis, yet mingles with it some false ideas. At the very outset, of
+ course, it is not true that water has no resistance to penetration; it is
+ true, however, in the sense in which Galileo uses the term&mdash;that is
+ to say, the resistance of the water to penetration is not the determining
+ factor ordinarily in deciding whether a body sinks or floats. Yet in the
+ case of the flat body it is not altogether inappropriate to say that the
+ water resists penetration and thus supports the body. The modern physicist
+ explains the phenomenon as due to surface-tension of the fluid. Of course,
+ Galileo's disquisition on the mixing of air with the floating body is
+ utterly fanciful. His experiments were beautifully exact; his theorizing
+ from them was, in this instance, altogether fallacious. Thus, as already
+ intimated, his paper is admirably adapted to convey a double lesson to the
+ student of science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILLIAM GILBERT AND THE STUDY OF MAGNETISM
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be observed that the studies of Galileo and Stevinus were chiefly
+ concerned with the force of gravitation. Meanwhile, there was an English
+ philosopher of corresponding genius, whose attention was directed towards
+ investigation of the equally mysterious force of terrestrial magnetism.
+ With the doubtful exception of Bacon, Gilbert was the most distinguished
+ man of science in England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth. He was for
+ many years court physician, and Queen Elizabeth ultimately settled upon
+ him a pension that enabled him to continue his researches in pure science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His investigations in chemistry, although supposed to be of great
+ importance, are mostly lost; but his great work, De Magnete, on which he
+ labored for upwards of eighteen years, is a work of sufficient importance,
+ as Hallam says, "to raise a lasting reputation for its author." From its
+ first appearance it created a profound impression upon the learned men of
+ the continent, although in England Gilbert's theories seem to have been
+ somewhat less favorably received. Galileo freely expressed his admiration
+ for the work and its author; Bacon, who admired the author, did not
+ express the same admiration for his theories; but Dr. Priestley, later,
+ declared him to be "the father of modern electricity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strangely enough, Gilbert's book had never been translated into English,
+ or apparently into any other language, until recent years, although at the
+ time of its publication certain learned men, unable to read the book in
+ the original, had asked that it should be. By this neglect, or oversight,
+ a great number of general readers as well as many scientists, through
+ succeeding centuries, have been deprived of the benefit of writings that
+ contained a good share of the fundamental facts about magnetism as known
+ to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gilbert was the first to discover that the earth is a great magnet, and he
+ not only gave the name of "pole" to the extremities of the magnetic
+ needle, but also spoke of these "poles" as north and south pole, although
+ he used these names in the opposite sense from that in which we now use
+ them, his south pole being the extremity which pointed towards the north,
+ and vice versa. He was also first to make use of the terms "electric
+ force," "electric emanations," and "electric attractions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is hardly necessary to say that some of the views taken by Gilbert,
+ many of his theories, and the accuracy of some of his experiments have in
+ recent times been found to be erroneous. As a pioneer in an unexplored
+ field of science, however, his work is remarkably accurate. "On the
+ whole," says Dr. John Robinson, "this performance contains more real
+ information than any writing of the age in which he lived, and is scarcely
+ exceeded by any that has appeared since."(4)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the preface to his work Gilbert says: "Since in the discovery of secret
+ things, and in the investigation of hidden causes, stronger reasons are
+ obtained from sure experiments and demonstrated arguments than from
+ probable conjectures and the opinions of philosophical speculators of the
+ common sort, therefore, to the end of that noble substance of that great
+ loadstone, our common mother (the earth), still quite unknown, and also
+ that the forces extraordinary and exalted of this globe may the better be
+ understood, we have decided, first, to begin with the common stony and
+ ferruginous matter, and magnetic bodies, and the part of the earth that we
+ may handle and may perceive with senses, and then to proceed with plain
+ magnetic experiments, and to penetrate to the inner parts of the
+ earth."(5)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before taking up the demonstration that the earth is simply a giant
+ loadstone, Gilbert demonstrated in an ingenious way that every loadstone,
+ of whatever size, has definite and fixed poles. He did this by placing the
+ stone in a metal lathe and converting it into a sphere, and upon this
+ sphere demonstrated how the poles can be found. To this round loadstone he
+ gave the name of terrella&mdash;that is, little earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To find, then, poles answering to the earth," he says, "take in your hand
+ the round stone, and lay on it a needle or a piece of iron wire: the ends
+ of the wire move round their middle point, and suddenly come to a
+ standstill. Now, with ochre or with chalk, mark where the wire lies still
+ and sticks. Then move the middle or centre of the wire to another spot,
+ and so to a third and fourth, always marking the stone along the length of
+ the wire where it stands still; the lines so marked will exhibit meridian
+ circles, or circles like meridians, on the stone or terrella; and
+ manifestly they will all come together at the poles of the stone. The
+ circle being continued in this way, the poles appear, both the north and
+ the south, and betwixt these, midway, we may draw a large circle for an
+ equator, as is done by the astronomer in the heavens and on his spheres,
+ and by the geographer on the terrestrial globe."(6)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gilbert had tried the familiar experiment of placing the loadstone on a
+ float in water, and observed that the poles always revolved until they
+ pointed north and south, which he explained as due to the earth's magnetic
+ attraction. In this same connection he noticed that a piece of wrought
+ iron mounted on a cork float was attracted by other metals to a slight
+ degree, and he observed also that an ordinary iron bar, if suspended
+ horizontally by a thread, assumes invariably a north and south direction.
+ These, with many other experiments of a similar nature, convinced him that
+ the earth "is a magnet and a loadstone," which he says is a "new and till
+ now unheard-of view of the earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fully to appreciate Gilbert's revolutionary views concerning the earth as
+ a magnet, it should be remembered that numberless theories to explain the
+ action of the electric needle had been advanced. Columbus and Paracelsus,
+ for example, believed that the magnet was attracted by some point in the
+ heavens, such as a magnetic star. Gilbert himself tells of some of the
+ beliefs that had been held by his predecessors, many of whom he declares
+ "wilfully falsify." One of his first steps was to refute by experiment
+ such assertions as that of Cardan, that "a wound by a magnetized needle
+ was painless"; and also the assertion of Fracastoni that loadstone
+ attracts silver; or that of Scalinger, that the diamond will attract iron;
+ and the statement of Matthiolus that "iron rubbed with garlic is no longer
+ attracted to the loadstone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gilbert made extensive experiments to explain the dipping of the needle,
+ which had been first noticed by William Norman. His deduction as to this
+ phenomenon led him to believe that this was also explained by the magnetic
+ attraction of the earth, and to predict where the vertical dip would be
+ found. These deductions seem the more wonderful because at the time he
+ made them the dip had just been discovered, and had not been studied
+ except at London. His theory of the dip was, therefore, a scientific
+ prediction, based on a preconceived hypothesis. Gilbert found the dip to
+ be 72 degrees at London; eight years later Hudson found the dip at 75
+ degrees 22' north latitude to be 89 degrees 30'; but it was not until over
+ two hundred years later, in 1831, that the vertical dip was first observed
+ by Sir James Ross at about 70 degrees 5' north latitude, and 96 degrees
+ 43' west longitude. This was not the exact point assumed by Gilbert, and
+ his scientific predictions, therefore, were not quite correct; but such
+ comparatively slight and excusable errors mar but little the excellence of
+ his work as a whole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A brief epitome of some of his other important discoveries suffices to
+ show that the exalted position in science accorded him by contemporaries,
+ as well as succeeding generations of scientists, was well merited. He was
+ first to distinguish between magnetism and electricity, giving the latter
+ its name. He discovered also the "electrical charge," and pointed the way
+ to the discovery of insulation by showing that the charge could be
+ retained some time in the excited body by covering it with some
+ non-conducting substance, such as silk; although, of course, electrical
+ conduction can hardly be said to have been more than vaguely surmised, if
+ understood at all by him. The first electrical instrument ever made, and
+ known as such, was invented by him, as was also the first magnetometer,
+ and the first electrical indicating device. Although three centuries have
+ elapsed since his death, the method of magnetizing iron first introduced
+ by him is in common use to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made exhaustive experiments with a needle balanced on a pivot to see
+ how many substances he could find which, like amber, on being rubbed
+ affected the needle. In this way he discovered that light substances were
+ attracted by alum, mica, arsenic, sealing-wax, lac sulphur, slags, beryl,
+ amethyst, rock-crystal, sapphire, jet, carbuncle, diamond, opal, Bristol
+ stone, glass, glass of antimony, gum-mastic, hard resin, rock-salt, and,
+ of course, amber. He discovered also that atmospheric conditions affected
+ the production of electricity, dryness being unfavorable and moisture
+ favorable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galileo's estimate of this first electrician is the verdict of succeeding
+ generations. "I extremely admire and envy this author," he said. "I think
+ him worthy of the greatest praise for the many new and true observations
+ which he has made, to the disgrace of so many vain and fabling authors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STUDIES OF LIGHT, HEAT, AND ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have seen that Gilbert was by no means lacking in versatility, yet the
+ investigations upon which his fame is founded were all pursued along one
+ line, so that the father of magnetism may be considered one of the
+ earliest of specialists in physical science. Most workers of the time, on
+ the other band, extended their investigations in many directions. The sum
+ total of scientific knowledge of that day had not bulked so large as to
+ exclude the possibility that one man might master it all. So we find a
+ Galileo, for example, making revolutionary discoveries in astronomy, and
+ performing fundamental experiments in various fields of physics. Galileo's
+ great contemporary, Kepler, was almost equally versatile, though his
+ astronomical studies were of such pre-eminent importance that his other
+ investigations sink into relative insignificance. Yet he performed some
+ notable experiments in at least one department of physics. These
+ experiments had to do with the refraction of light, a subject which Kepler
+ was led to investigate, in part at least, through his interest in the
+ telescope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have seen that Ptolemy in the Alexandrian time, and Alhazen, the Arab,
+ made studies of refraction. Kepler repeated their experiments, and,
+ striving as always to generalize his observations, he attempted to find
+ the law that governed the observed change of direction which a ray of
+ light assumes in passing from one medium to another. Kepler measured the
+ angle of refraction by means of a simple yet ingenious trough-like
+ apparatus which enabled him to compare readily the direct and refracted
+ rays. He discovered that when a ray of light passes through a glass plate,
+ if it strikes the farther surface of the glass at an angle greater than 45
+ degrees it will be totally refracted instead of passing through into the
+ air. He could not well fail to know that different mediums refract light
+ differently, and that for the same medium the amount of light valies with
+ the change in the angle of incidence. He was not able, however, to
+ generalize his observations as he desired, and to the last the law that
+ governs refraction escaped him. It remained for Willebrord Snell, a
+ Dutchman, about the year 1621, to discover the law in question, and for
+ Descartes, a little later, to formulate it. Descartes, indeed, has
+ sometimes been supposed to be the discoverer of the law. There is reason
+ to believe that he based his generalizations on the experiment of Snell,
+ though he did not openly acknowledge his indebtedness. The law, as
+ Descartes expressed it, states that the sine of the angle of incidence
+ bears a fixed ratio to the sine of the angle of refraction for any given
+ medium. Here, then, was another illustration of the fact that almost
+ infinitely varied phenomena may be brought within the scope of a simple
+ law. Once the law had been expressed, it could be tested and verified with
+ the greatest ease; and, as usual, the discovery being made, it seems
+ surprising that earlier investigators&mdash;in particular so sagacious a
+ guesser as Kepler&mdash;should have missed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galileo himself must have been to some extent a student of light, since,
+ as we have seen, he made such notable contributions to practical optics
+ through perfecting the telescope; but he seems not to have added anything
+ to the theory of light. The subject of heat, however, attracted his
+ attention in a somewhat different way, and he was led to the invention of
+ the first contrivance for measuring temperatures. His thermometer was
+ based on the afterwards familiar principle of the expansion of a liquid
+ under the influence of heat; but as a practical means of measuring
+ temperature it was a very crude affair, because the tube that contained
+ the measuring liquid was exposed to the air, hence barometric changes of
+ pressure vitiated the experiment. It remained for Galileo's Italian
+ successors of the Accademia del Cimento of Florence to improve upon the
+ apparatus, after the experiments of Torricelli&mdash;to which we shall
+ refer in a moment&mdash;had thrown new light on the question of
+ atmospheric pressure. Still later the celebrated Huygens hit upon the idea
+ of using the melting and the boiling point of water as fixed points in a
+ scale of measurements, which first gave definiteness to thermometric
+ tests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TORRICELLI
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the closing years of his life Galileo took into his family, as his
+ adopted disciple in science, a young man, Evangelista Torricelli
+ (1608-1647), who proved himself, during his short lifetime, to be a worthy
+ follower of his great master. Not only worthy on account of his great
+ scientific discoveries, but grateful as well, for when he had made the
+ great discovery that the "suction" made by a vacuum was really nothing but
+ air pressure, and not suction at all, he regretted that so important a
+ step in science might not have been made by his great teacher, Galileo,
+ instead of by himself. "This generosity of Torricelli," says Playfair,
+ "was, perhaps, rarer than his genius: there are more who might have
+ discovered the suspension of mercury in the barometer than who would have
+ been willing to part with the honor of the discovery to a master or a
+ friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torricelli's discovery was made in 1643, less than two years after the
+ death of his master. Galileo had observed that water will not rise in an
+ exhausted tube, such as a pump, to a height greater than thirty-three
+ feet, but he was never able to offer a satisfactory explanation of the
+ principle. Torricelli was able to demonstrate that the height at which the
+ water stood depended upon nothing but its weight as compared with the
+ weight of air. If this be true, it is evident that any fluid will be
+ supported at a definite height, according to its relative weight as
+ compared with air. Thus mercury, which is about thirteen times more dense
+ than water, should only rise to one-thirteenth the height of a column of
+ water&mdash;that is, about thirty inches. Reasoning in this way,
+ Torricelli proceeded to prove that his theory was correct. Filling a long
+ tube, closed at one end, with mercury, he inverted the tube with its open
+ orifice in a vessel of mercury. The column of mercury fell at once, but at
+ a height of about thirty inches it stopped and remained stationary, the
+ pressure of the air on the mercury in the vessel maintaining it at that
+ height. This discovery was a shattering blow to the old theory that had
+ dominated that field of physics for so many centuries. It was completely
+ revolutionary to prove that, instead of a mysterious something within the
+ tube being responsible for the suspension of liquids at certain heights,
+ it was simply the ordinary atmospheric pressure mysterious enough, it is
+ true&mdash;pushing upon them from without. The pressure exerted by the
+ atmosphere was but little understood at that time, but Torricelli's
+ discovery aided materially in solving the mystery. The whole class of
+ similar phenomena of air pressure, which had been held in the trammel of
+ long-established but false doctrines, was now reduced to one simple law,
+ and the door to a solution of a host of unsolved problems thrown open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had long been suspected and believed that the density of the atmosphere
+ varies at certain times. That the air is sometimes "heavy" and at other
+ times "light" is apparent to the senses without scientific apparatus for
+ demonstration. It is evident, then, that Torricelli's column of mercury
+ should rise and fall just in proportion to the lightness or heaviness of
+ the air. A short series of observations proved that it did so, and with
+ those observations went naturally the observations as to changes in the
+ weather. It was only necessary, therefore, to scratch a scale on the glass
+ tube, indicating relative atmospheric pressures, and the Torricellian
+ barometer was complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a revolutionary theory and such an important discovery were, of
+ course, not to be accepted without controversy, but the feeble arguments
+ of the opponents showed how untenable the old theory had become. In 1648
+ Pascal suggested that if the theory of the pressure of air upon the
+ mercury was correct, it could be demonstrated by ascending a mountain with
+ the mercury tube. As the air was known to get progressively lighter from
+ base to summit, the height of the column should be progressively lessened
+ as the ascent was made, and increase again on the descent into the denser
+ air. The experiment was made on the mountain called the Puy-de-Dome, in
+ Auvergne, and the column of mercury fell and rose progressively through a
+ space of about three inches as the ascent and descent were made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This experiment practically sealed the verdict on the new theory, but it
+ also suggested something more. If the mercury descended to a certain mark
+ on the scale on a mountain-top whose height was known, why was not this a
+ means of measuring the heights of all other elevations? And so the
+ beginning was made which, with certain modifications and corrections in
+ details, is now the basis of barometrical measurements of heights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In hydraulics, also, Torricelli seems to have taken one of the first
+ steps. He did this by showing that the water which issues from a hole in
+ the side or bottom of a vessel does so at the same velocity as that which
+ a body would acquire by falling from the level of the surface of the water
+ to that of the orifice. This discovery was of the greatest importance to a
+ correct understanding of the science of the motions of fluids. He also
+ discovered the valuable mechanical principle that if any number of bodies
+ be connected so that by their motion there is neither ascent nor descent
+ of their centre of gravity, these bodies are in equilibrium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides making these discoveries, he greatly improved the microscope and
+ the telescope, and invented a simple microscope made of a globule of
+ glass. In 1644 he published a tract on the properties of the cycloid in
+ which he suggested a solution of the problem of its quadrature. As soon as
+ this pamphlet appeared its author was accused by Gilles Roberval
+ (1602-1675) of having appropriated a solution already offered by him. This
+ led to a long debate, during which Torricelli was seized with a fever,
+ from the effects of which he died, in Florence, October 25, 1647. There is
+ reason to believe, however, that while Roberval's discovery was made
+ before Torricelli's, the latter reached his conclusions independently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. TWO PSEUDO-SCIENCES&mdash;ALCHEMY AND ASTROLOGY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In recent chapters we have seen science come forward with tremendous
+ strides. A new era is obviously at hand. But we shall misconceive the
+ spirit of the times if we fail to understand that in the midst of all this
+ progress there was still room for mediaeval superstition and for the
+ pursuit of fallacious ideals. Two forms of pseudo-science were peculiarly
+ prevalent&mdash;alchemy and astrology. Neither of these can with full
+ propriety be called a science, yet both were pursued by many of the
+ greatest scientific workers of the period. Moreover, the studies of the
+ alchemist may with some propriety be said to have laid the foundation for
+ the latter-day science of chemistry; while astrology was closely allied to
+ astronomy, though its relations to that science are not as intimate as has
+ sometimes been supposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just when the study of alchemy began is undetermined. It was certainly of
+ very ancient origin, perhaps Egyptian, but its most flourishing time was
+ from about the eighth century A.D. to the eighteenth century. The stories
+ of the Old Testament formed a basis for some of the strange beliefs
+ regarding the properties of the magic "elixir," or "philosopher's stone."
+ Alchemists believed that most of the antediluvians, perhaps all of them,
+ possessed a knowledge of this stone. How, otherwise, could they have
+ prolonged their lives to nine and a half centuries? And Moses was surely a
+ first-rate alchemist, as is proved by the story of the Golden Calf.(1)
+ After Aaron had made the calf of gold, Moses performed the much more
+ difficult task of grinding it to powder and "strewing it upon the waters,"
+ thus showing that he had transmuted it into some lighter substance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But antediluvians and Biblical characters were not the only persons who
+ were thought to have discovered the coveted "elixir." Hundreds of aged
+ mediaeval chemists were credited with having made the discovery, and were
+ thought to be living on through the centuries by its means. Alaies de
+ Lisle, for example, who died in 1298, at the age of 110, was alleged to
+ have been at the point of death at the age of fifty, but just at this time
+ he made the fortunate discovery of the magic stone, and so continued to
+ live in health and affluence for sixty years more. And De Lisle was but
+ one case among hundreds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An aged and wealthy alchemist could claim with seeming plausibility that
+ he was prolonging his life by his magic; whereas a younger man might
+ assert that, knowing the great secret, he was keeping himself young
+ through the centuries. In either case such a statement, or rumor, about a
+ learned and wealthy alchemist was likely to be believed, particularly
+ among strangers; and as such a man would, of course, be the object of much
+ attention, the claim was frequently made by persons seeking notoriety. One
+ of the most celebrated of these impostors was a certain Count de
+ Saint-Germain, who was connected with the court of Louis XV. His
+ statements carried the more weight because, having apparently no means of
+ maintenance, he continued to live in affluence year after year&mdash;for
+ two thousand years, as he himself admitted&mdash;by means of the magic
+ stone. If at any time his statements were doubted, he was in the habit of
+ referring to his valet for confirmation, this valet being also under the
+ influence of the elixir of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon one occasion his master was telling a party of ladies and gentlemen,
+ at dinner, some conversation he had had in Palestine, with King Richard
+ I., of England, whom he described as a very particular friend of his.
+ Signs of astonishment and incredulity were visible on the faces of the
+ company, upon which Saint-Germain very coolly turned to his servant, who
+ stood behind his chair, and asked him if he had not spoken the truth. 'I
+ really cannot say,' replied the man, without moving a muscle; 'you forget,
+ sir, I have been only five hundred years in your service.' 'Ah, true,'
+ said his master, 'I remember now; it was a little before your time!'"(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the time of Saint-Germain, only a little over a century ago, belief in
+ alchemy had almost disappeared, and his extraordinary tales were probably
+ regarded in the light of amusing stories. Still there was undoubtedly a
+ lingering suspicion in the minds of many that this man possessed some
+ peculiar secret. A few centuries earlier his tales would hardly have been
+ questioned, for at that time the belief in the existence of this magic
+ something was so strong that the search for it became almost a form of
+ mania; and once a man was seized with it, lie gambled away health,
+ position, and life itself in pursuing the coveted stake. An example of
+ this is seen in Albertus Magnus, one of the most learned men of his time,
+ who it is said resigned his position as bishop of Ratisbon in order that
+ he might pursue his researches in alchemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If self-sacrifice was not sufficient to secure the prize, crime would
+ naturally follow, for there could be no limit to the price of the stakes
+ in this game. The notorious Marechal de Reys, failing to find the coveted
+ stone by ordinary methods of laboratory research, was persuaded by an
+ impostor that if he would propitiate the friendship of the devil the
+ secret would be revealed. To this end De Reys began secretly capturing
+ young children as they passed his castle and murdering them. When he was
+ at last brought to justice it was proved that he had murdered something
+ like a hundred children within a period of three years. So, at least, runs
+ one version of the story of this perverted being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naturally monarchs, constantly in need of funds, were interested in these
+ alchemists. Even sober England did not escape, and Raymond Lully, one of
+ the most famous of the thirteenth and fourteenth century alchemists, is
+ said to have been secretly invited by King Edward I. (or II.) to leave
+ Milan and settle in England. According to some accounts, apartments were
+ assigned to his use in the Tower of London, where he is alleged to have
+ made some six million pounds sterling for the monarch, out of iron,
+ mercury, lead, and pewter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pope John XXII., a friend and pupil of the alchemist Arnold de Villeneuve,
+ is reported to have learned the secrets of alchemy from his master. Later
+ he issued two bulls against "pretenders" in the art, which, far from
+ showing his disbelief, were cited by alchemists as proving that he
+ recognized pretenders as distinct from true masters of magic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To moderns the attitude of mind of the alchemist is difficult to
+ comprehend. It is, perhaps, possible to conceive of animals or plants
+ possessing souls, but the early alchemist attributed the same thing&mdash;or
+ something kin to it&mdash;to metals also. Furthermore, just as plants
+ germinated from seeds, so metals were supposed to germinate also, and
+ hence a constant growth of metals in the ground. To prove this the
+ alchemist cited cases where previously exhausted gold-mines were found,
+ after a lapse of time, to contain fresh quantities of gold. The "seed" of
+ the remaining particles of gold had multiplied and increased. But this
+ germinating process could only take place under favorable conditions, just
+ as the seed of a plant must have its proper surroundings before
+ germinating; and it was believed that the action of the philosopher's
+ stone was to hasten this process, as man may hasten the growth of plants
+ by artificial means. Gold was looked upon as the most perfect metal, and
+ all other metals imperfect, because not yet "purified." By some alchemists
+ they were regarded as lepers, who, when cured of their leprosy, would
+ become gold. And since nature intended that all things should be perfect,
+ it was the aim of the alchemist to assist her in this purifying process,
+ and incidentally to gain wealth and prolong his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By other alchemists the process of transition from baser metals into gold
+ was conceived to be like a process of ripening fruit. The ripened product
+ was gold, while the green fruit, in various stages of maturity, was
+ represented by the base metals. Silver, for example, was more nearly ripe
+ than lead; but the difference was only one of "digestion," and it was
+ thought that by further "digestion" lead might first become silver and
+ eventually gold. In other words, Nature had not completed her work, and
+ was wofully slow at it at best; but man, with his superior faculties, was
+ to hasten the process in his laboratories&mdash;if he could but hit upon
+ the right method of doing so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It should not be inferred that the alchemist set about his task of
+ assisting nature in a haphazard way, and without training in the various
+ alchemic laboratory methods. On the contrary, he usually served a long
+ apprenticeship in the rudiments of his calling. He was obliged to learn,
+ in a general way, many of the same things that must be understood in
+ either chemical or alchemical laboratories. The general knowledge that
+ certain liquids vaporize at lower temperatures than others, and that the
+ melting-points of metals differ greatly, for example, was just as
+ necessary to alchemy as to chemistry. The knowledge of the gross
+ structure, or nature, of materials was much the same to the alchemist as
+ to the chemist, and, for that matter, many of the experiments in
+ calcining, distilling, etc., were practically identical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the alchemist there were three principles&mdash;salt, sulphur, and
+ mercury&mdash;and the sources of these principles were the four elements&mdash;earth,
+ water, fire, and air. These four elements were accountable for every
+ substance in nature. Some of the experiments to prove this were so
+ illusive, and yet apparently so simple, that one is not surprised that it
+ took centuries to disprove them. That water was composed of earth and air
+ seemed easily proven by the simple process of boiling it in a tea-kettle,
+ for the residue left was obviously an earthy substance, whereas the steam
+ driven off was supposed to be air. The fact that pure water leaves no
+ residue was not demonstrated until after alchemy had practically ceased to
+ exist. It was possible also to demonstrate that water could be turned into
+ fire by thrusting a red-hot poker under a bellglass containing a dish of
+ water. Not only did the quantity of water diminish, but, if a lighted
+ candle was thrust under the glass, the contents ignited and burned,
+ proving, apparently, that water had been converted into fire. These, and
+ scores of other similar experiments, seemed so easily explained, and to
+ accord so well with the "four elements" theory, that they were seldom
+ questioned until a later age of inductive science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was one experiment to which the alchemist pinned his faith in
+ showing that metals could be "killed" and "revived," when proper means
+ were employed. It had been known for many centuries that if any metal,
+ other than gold or silver, were calcined in an open crucible, it turned,
+ after a time, into a peculiar kind of ash. This ash was thought by the
+ alchemist to represent the death of the metal. But if to this same ash a
+ few grains of wheat were added and heat again applied to the crucible, the
+ metal was seen to "rise from its ashes" and resume its original form&mdash;a
+ well-known phenomenon of reducing metals from oxides by the use of carbon,
+ in the form of wheat, or, for that matter, any other carbonaceous
+ substance. Wheat was, therefore, made the symbol of the resurrection of
+ the life eternal. Oats, corn, or a piece of charcoal would have "revived"
+ the metals from the ashes equally well, but the mediaeval alchemist seems
+ not to have known this. However, in this experiment the metal seemed
+ actually to be destroyed and revivified, and, as science had not as yet
+ explained this striking phenomenon, it is little wonder that it deceived
+ the alchemist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the alchemists pursued their search of the magic stone in such a
+ methodical way, it would seem that they must have some idea of the
+ appearance of the substance they sought. Probably they did, each according
+ to his own mental bias; but, if so, they seldom committed themselves to
+ writing, confining their discourses largely to speculations as to the
+ properties of this illusive substance. Furthermore, the desire for secrecy
+ would prevent them from expressing so important a piece of information.
+ But on the subject of the properties, if not on the appearance of the
+ "essence," they were voluminous writers. It was supposed to be the only
+ perfect substance in existence, and to be confined in various substances,
+ in quantities proportionate to the state of perfection of the substance.
+ Thus, gold being most nearly perfect would contain more, silver less, lead
+ still less, and so on. The "essence" contained in the more nearly perfect
+ metals was thought to be more potent, a very small quantity of it being
+ capable of creating large quantities of gold and of prolonging life
+ indefinitely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would appear from many of the writings of the alchemists that their
+ conception of nature and the supernatural was so confused and entangled in
+ an inexplicable philosophy that they themselves did not really understand
+ the meaning of what they were attempting to convey. But it should not be
+ forgotten that alchemy was kept as much as possible from the ignorant
+ general public, and the alchemists themselves had knowledge of secret
+ words and expressions which conveyed a definite meaning to one of their
+ number, but which would appear a meaningless jumble to an outsider. Some
+ of these writers declared openly that their writings were intended to
+ convey an entirely erroneous impression, and were sent out only for that
+ purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, while it may have been true that the vagaries of their writings
+ were made purposely, the case is probably more correctly explained by
+ saying that the very nature of the art made definite statements
+ impossible. They were dealing with something that did not exist&mdash;could
+ not exist. Their attempted descriptions became, therefore, the language of
+ romance rather than the language of science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if the alchemists themselves were usually silent as to the appearance
+ of the actual substance of the philosopher's stone, there were numberless
+ other writers who were less reticent. By some it was supposed to be a
+ stone, by others a liquid or elixir, but more commonly it was described as
+ a black powder. It also possessed different degrees of efficiency
+ according to its degrees of purity, certain forms only possessing the
+ power of turning base metals into gold, while others gave eternal youth
+ and life or different degrees of health. Thus an alchemist, who had made a
+ partial discovery of this substance, could prolong life a certain number
+ of years only, or, possessing only a small and inadequate amount of the
+ magic powder, he was obliged to give up the ghost when the effect of this
+ small quantity had passed away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This belief in the supernatural power of the philosopher's stone to
+ prolong life and heal diseases was probably a later phase of alchemy,
+ possibly developed by attempts to connect the power of the mysterious
+ essence with Biblical teachings. The early Roman alchemists, who claimed
+ to be able to transmute metals, seem not to have made other claims for
+ their magic stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the fifteenth century the belief in the philosopher's stone had become
+ so fixed that governments began to be alarmed lest some lucky possessor of
+ the secret should flood the country with gold, thus rendering the existing
+ coin of little value. Some little consolation was found in the thought
+ that in case all the baser metals were converted into gold iron would then
+ become the "precious metal," and would remain so until some new
+ philosopher's stone was found to convert gold back into iron&mdash;a much
+ more difficult feat, it was thought. However, to be on the safe side, the
+ English Parliament, in 1404, saw fit to pass an act declaring the making
+ of gold and silver to be a felony. Nevertheless, in 1455, King Henry VI.
+ granted permission to several "knights, citizens of London, chemists, and
+ monks" to find the philosopher's stone, or elixir, that the crown might
+ thus be enabled to pay off its debts. The monks and ecclesiastics were
+ supposed to be most likely to discover the secret process, since "they
+ were such good artists in transubstantiating bread and wine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Germany the emperors Maximilian I., Rudolf II., and Frederick II. gave
+ considerable attention to the search, and the example they set was
+ followed by thousands of their subjects. It is said that some noblemen
+ developed the unpleasant custom of inviting to their courts men who were
+ reputed to have found the stone, and then imprisoning the poor alchemists
+ until they had made a certain quantity of gold, stimulating their activity
+ with tortures of the most atrocious kinds. Thus this danger of being
+ imprisoned and held for ransom until some fabulous amount of gold should
+ be made became the constant menace of the alchemist. It was useless for an
+ alchemist to plead poverty once it was noised about that he had learned
+ the secret. For how could such a man be poor when, with a piece of metal
+ and a few grains of magic powder, he was able to provide himself with
+ gold? It was, therefore, a reckless alchemist indeed who dared boast that
+ he had made the coveted discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fate of a certain indiscreet alchemist, supposed by many to have been
+ Seton, a Scotchman, was not an uncommon one. Word having been brought to
+ the elector of Saxony that this alchemist was in Dresden and boasting of
+ his powers, the elector caused him to be arrested and imprisoned. Forty
+ guards were stationed to see that he did not escape and that no one
+ visited him save the elector himself. For some time the elector tried by
+ argument and persuasion to penetrate his secret or to induce him to make a
+ certain quantity of gold; but as Seton steadily refused, the rack was
+ tried, and for several months he suffered torture, until finally, reduced
+ to a mere skeleton, he was rescued by a rival candidate of the elector, a
+ Pole named Michael Sendivogins, who drugged the guards. However, before
+ Seton could be "persuaded" by his new captor, he died of his injuries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sendivogins was also ambitious in alchemy, and, since Seton was beyond
+ his reach, he took the next best step and married his widow. From her, as
+ the story goes, he received an ounce of black powder&mdash;the veritable
+ philosopher's stone. With this he manufactured great quantities of gold,
+ even inviting Emperor Rudolf II. to see him work the miracle. That monarch
+ was so impressed that he caused a tablet to be inserted in the wall of the
+ room in which he had seen the gold made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sendivogins had learned discretion from the misfortune of Seton, so that
+ he took the precaution of concealing most of the precious powder in a
+ secret chamber of his carriage when he travelled, having only a small
+ quantity carried by his steward in a gold box. In particularly dangerous
+ places, he is said to have exchanged clothes with his coachman, making the
+ servant take his place in the carriage while he mounted the box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the middle of the seventeenth century alchemy took such firm root in
+ the religious field that it became the basis of the sect known as the
+ Rosicrucians. The name was derived from the teaching of a German
+ philosopher, Rosenkreutz, who, having been healed of a dangerous illness
+ by an Arabian supposed to possess the philosopher's stone, returned home
+ and gathered about him a chosen band of friends, to whom he imparted the
+ secret. This sect came rapidly into prominence, and for a short time at
+ least created a sensation in Europe, and at the time were credited with
+ having "refined and spiritualized" alchemy. But by the end of the
+ seventeenth century their number had dwindled to a mere handful, and
+ henceforth they exerted little influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another and earlier religious sect was the Aureacrucians, founded by Jacob
+ Bohme, a shoemaker, born in Prussia in 1575. According to his teachings
+ the philosopher's stone could be discovered by a diligent search of the
+ Old and the New Testaments, and more particularly the Apocalypse, which
+ contained all the secrets of alchemy. This sect found quite a number of
+ followers during the life of Bohme, but gradually died out after his
+ death; not, however, until many of its members had been tortured for
+ heresy, and one at least, Kuhlmann, of Moscow, burned as a sorcerer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The names of the different substances that at various times were thought
+ to contain the large quantities of the "essence" during the many centuries
+ of searching for it, form a list of practically all substances that were
+ known, discovered, or invented during the period. Some believed that acids
+ contained the substance; others sought it in minerals or in animal or
+ vegetable products; while still others looked to find it among the
+ distilled "spirits"&mdash;the alcoholic liquors and distilled products. On
+ the introduction of alcohol by the Arabs that substance became of
+ all-absorbing interest, and for a long time allured the alchemist into
+ believing that through it they were soon to be rewarded. They rectified
+ and refined it until "sometimes it was so strong that it broke the vessels
+ containing it," but still it failed in its magic power. Later, brandy was
+ substituted for it, and this in turn discarded for more recent
+ discoveries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were always, of course, two classes of alchemists: serious
+ investigators whose honesty could not be questioned, and clever impostors
+ whose legerdemain was probably largely responsible for the extended belief
+ in the existence of the philosopher's stone. Sometimes an alchemist
+ practised both, using the profits of his sleight-of-hand to procure the
+ means of carrying on his serious alchemical researches. The impostures of
+ some of these jugglers deceived even the most intelligent and learned men
+ of the time, and so kept the flame of hope constantly burning. The age of
+ cold investigation had not arrived, and it is easy to understand how an
+ unscrupulous mediaeval Hermann or Kellar might completely deceive even the
+ most intelligent and thoughtful scholars. In scoffing at the credulity of
+ such an age, it should not be forgotten that the "Keely motor" was a late
+ nineteenth-century illusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But long before the belief in the philosopher's stone had died out, the
+ methods of the legerdemain alchemist had been investigated and reported
+ upon officially by bodies of men appointed to make such investigations,
+ although it took several generations completely to overthrow a
+ superstition that had been handed down through several thousand years. In
+ April of 1772 Monsieur Geoffroy made a report to the Royal Academy of
+ Sciences, at Paris, on the alchemic cheats principally of the sixteenth
+ and seventeenth centuries. In this report he explains many of the
+ seemingly marvellous feats of the unscrupulous alchemists. A very common
+ form of deception was the use of a double-bottomed crucible. A copper or
+ brass crucible was covered on the inside with a layer of wax, cleverly
+ painted so as to resemble the ordinary metal. Between this layer of wax
+ and the bottom of the crucible, however, was a layer of gold dust or
+ silver. When the alchemist wished to demonstrate his power, he had but to
+ place some mercury or whatever substance he chose in the crucible, heat
+ it, throw in a grain or two of some mysterious powder, pronounce a few
+ equally mysterious phrases to impress his audience, and, behold, a lump of
+ precious metal would be found in the bottom of his pot. This was the
+ favorite method of mediocre performers, but was, of course, easily
+ detected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An equally successful but more difficult way was to insert surreptitiously
+ a lump of metal into the mixture, using an ordinary crucible. This
+ required great dexterity, but was facilitated by the use of many
+ mysterious ceremonies on the part of the operator while performing, just
+ as the modern vaudeville performer diverts the attention of the audience
+ to his right hand while his left is engaged in the trick. Such ceremonies
+ were not questioned, for it was the common belief that the whole process
+ "lay in the spirit as much as in the substance," many, as we have seen,
+ regarding the whole process as a divine manifestation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes a hollow rod was used for stirring the mixture in the crucible,
+ this rod containing gold dust, and having the end plugged either with wax
+ or soft metal that was easily melted. Again, pieces of lead were used
+ which had been plugged with lumps of gold carefully covered over; and a
+ very simple and impressive demonstration was making use of a nugget of
+ gold that had been coated over with quicksilver and tarnished so as to
+ resemble lead or some base metal. When this was thrown into acid the
+ coating was removed by chemical action, leaving the shining metal in the
+ bottom of the vessel. In order to perform some of these tricks, it is
+ obvious that the alchemist must have been well supplied with gold, as some
+ of them, when performing before a royal audience, gave the products to
+ their visitors. But it was always a paying investment, for once his
+ reputation was established the gold-maker found an endless variety of ways
+ of turning his alleged knowledge to account, frequently amassing great
+ wealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the cleverest of the charlatans often invited royal or other
+ distinguished guests to bring with them iron nails to be turned into gold
+ ones. They were transmuted in the alchemist's crucible before the eyes of
+ the visitors, the juggler adroitly extracting the iron nail and inserting
+ a gold one without detection. It mattered little if the converted gold
+ nail differed in size and shape from the original, for this change in
+ shape could be laid to the process of transmutation; and even the very
+ critical were hardly likely to find fault with the exchange thus made.
+ Furthermore, it was believed that gold possessed the property of changing
+ its bulk under certain conditions, some of the more conservative
+ alchemists maintaining that gold was only increased in bulk, not
+ necessarily created, by certain forms of the magic stone. Thus a very
+ proficient operator was thought to be able to increase a grain of gold
+ into a pound of pure metal, while one less expert could only double, or
+ possibly treble, its original weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The actual number of useful discoveries resulting from the efforts of the
+ alchemists is considerable, some of them of incalculable value. Roger
+ Bacon, who lived in the thirteenth century, while devoting much of his
+ time to alchemy, made such valuable discoveries as the theory, at least,
+ of the telescope, and probably gunpowder. Of this latter we cannot be sure
+ that the discovery was his own and that he had not learned of it through
+ the source of old manuscripts. But it is not impossible nor improbable
+ that he may have hit upon the mixture that makes the explosives while
+ searching for the philosopher's stone in his laboratory. "Von Helmont, in
+ the same pursuit, discovered the properties of gas," says Mackay; "Geber
+ made discoveries in chemistry, which were equally important; and
+ Paracelsus, amid his perpetual visions of the transmutation of metals,
+ found that mercury was a remedy for one of the most odious and
+ excruciating of all the diseases that afflict humanity."' As we shall see
+ a little farther on, alchemy finally evolved into modern chemistry, but
+ not until it had passed through several important transitional stages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ASTROLOGY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a general way modern astronomy may be considered as the outgrowth of
+ astrology, just as modern chemistry is the result of alchemy. It is quite
+ possible, however, that astronomy is the older of the two; but astrology
+ must have developed very shortly after. The primitive astronomer, having
+ acquired enough knowledge from his observations of the heavenly bodies to
+ make correct predictions, such as the time of the coming of the new moon,
+ would be led, naturally, to believe that certain predictions other than
+ purely astronomical ones could be made by studying the heavens. Even if
+ the astronomer himself did not believe this, some of his superstitious
+ admirers would; for to the unscientific mind predictions of earthly events
+ would surely seem no more miraculous than correct predictions as to the
+ future movements of the sun, moon, and stars. When astronomy had reached a
+ stage of development so that such things as eclipses could be predicted
+ with anything like accuracy, the occult knowledge of the astronomer would
+ be unquestioned. Turning this apparently occult knowledge to account in a
+ mercenary way would then be the inevitable result, although it cannot be
+ doubted that many of the astrologers, in all ages, were sincere in their
+ beliefs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later, as the business of astrology became a profitable one, sincere
+ astronomers would find it expedient to practise astrology as a means of
+ gaining a livelihood. Such a philosopher as Kepler freely admitted that he
+ practised astrology "to keep from starving," although he confessed no
+ faith in such predictions. "Ye otherwise philosophers," he said, "ye
+ censure this daughter of astronomy beyond her deserts; know ye not that
+ she must support her mother by her charms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once astrology had become an established practice, any considerable
+ knowledge of astronomy was unnecessary, for as it was at best but a system
+ of good guessing as to future events, clever impostors could thrive
+ equally well without troubling to study astronomy. The celebrated
+ astrologers, however, were usually astronomers as well, and undoubtedly
+ based many of their predictions on the position and movements of the
+ heavenly bodies. Thus, the casting of a horoscope that is, the methods by
+ which the astrologers ascertained the relative position of the heavenly
+ bodies at the time of a birth&mdash;was a simple but fairly exact
+ procedure. Its basis was the zodiac, or the path traced by the sun in his
+ yearly course through certain constellations. At the moment of the birth
+ of a child, the first care of the astrologer was to note the particular
+ part of the zodiac that appeared on the horizon. The zodiac was then
+ divided into "houses"&mdash;that is, into twelve spaces&mdash;on a chart.
+ In these houses were inserted the places of the planets, sun, and moon,
+ with reference to the zodiac. When this chart was completed it made a
+ fairly correct diagram of the heavens and the position of the heavenly
+ bodies as they would appear to a person standing at the place of birth at
+ a certain time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to this point the process was a simple one of astronomy. But the next
+ step&mdash;the really important one&mdash;that of interpreting this chart,
+ was the one which called forth the skill and imagination of the
+ astrologer. In this interpretation, not in his mere observations, lay the
+ secret of his success. Nor did his task cease with simply foretelling
+ future events that were to happen in the life of the newly born infant. He
+ must not only point out the dangers, but show the means whereby they could
+ be averted, and his prophylactic measures, like his predictions, were
+ alleged to be based on his reading of the stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But casting a horoscope at the time of births was, of course, only a small
+ part of the astrologer's duty. His offices were sought by persons of all
+ ages for predictions as to their futures, the movements of an enemy, where
+ to find stolen goods, and a host of everyday occurrences. In such cases it
+ is more than probable that the astrologers did very little consulting of
+ the stars in making their predictions. They became expert physiognomists
+ and excellent judges of human nature, and were thus able to foretell
+ futures with the same shrewdness and by the same methods as the modern
+ "mediums," palmists, and fortune-tellers. To strengthen belief in their
+ powers, it became a common thing for some supposedly lost document of the
+ astrologer to be mysteriously discovered after an important event, this
+ document purporting to foretell this very event. It was also a common
+ practice with astrologers to retain, or have access to, their original
+ charts, cleverly altering them from time to time to fit conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dangers attendant upon astrology were of such a nature that the lot of
+ the astrologer was likely to prove anything but an enviable one. As in the
+ case of the alchemist, the greater the reputation of an astrologer the
+ greater dangers he was likely to fall into. If he became so famous that he
+ was employed by kings or noblemen, his too true or too false prophecies
+ were likely to bring him into disrepute&mdash;even to endanger his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout the dark age the astrologers flourished, but the sixteenth and
+ seventeenth centuries were the golden age of these impostors. A skilful
+ astrologer was as much an essential to the government as the highest
+ official, and it would have been a bold monarch, indeed, who would
+ undertake any expedition of importance unless sanctioned by the governing
+ stars as interpreted by these officials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It should not be understood, however, that belief in astrology died with
+ the advent of the Copernican doctrine. It did become separated from
+ astronomy very shortly after, to be sure, and undoubtedly among the
+ scientists it lost much of its prestige. But it cannot be considered as
+ entirely passed away, even to-day, and even if we leave out of
+ consideration street-corner "astrologers" and fortune-tellers, whose signs
+ may be seen in every large city, there still remains quite a large class
+ of relatively intelligent people who believe in what they call "the
+ science of astrology." Needless to say, such people are not found among
+ the scientific thinkers; but it is significant that scarcely a year passes
+ that some book or pamphlet is not published by some ardent believer in
+ astrology, attempting to prove by the illogical dogmas characteristic of
+ unscientific thinkers that astrology is a science. The arguments contained
+ in these pamphlets are very much the same as those of the astrologers
+ three hundred years ago, except that they lack the quaint form of wording
+ which is one of the features that lends interest to the older documents.
+ These pamphlets need not be taken seriously, but they are interesting as
+ exemplifying how difficult it is, even in an age of science, to entirely
+ stamp out firmly established superstitions. Here are some of the arguments
+ advanced in defence of astrology, taken from a little brochure entitled
+ "Astrology Vindicated," published in 1898: "It will be found that a person
+ born when the Sun is in twenty degrees Scorpio has the left ear as his
+ exceptional feature and the nose (Sagittarius) bent towards the left ear.
+ A person born when the Sun is in any of the latter degrees of Taurus, say
+ the twenty-fifth degree, will have a small, sharp, weak chin, curved up
+ towards Gemini, the two vertical lines on the upper lip."(4) The time was
+ when science went out of its way to prove that such statements were
+ untrue; but that time is past, and such writers are usually classed among
+ those energetic but misguided persons who are unable to distinguish
+ between logic and sophistry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England, from the time of Elizabeth to the reign of William and Mary,
+ judicial astrology was at its height. After the great London fire, in
+ 1666, a committee of the House of Commons publicly summoned the famous
+ astrologer, Lilly, to come before Parliament and report to them on his
+ alleged prediction of the calamity that had befallen the city. Lilly, for
+ some reason best known to himself, denied having made such a prediction,
+ being, as he explained, "more interested in determining affairs of much
+ more importance to the future welfare of the country." Some of the
+ explanations of his interpretations will suffice to show their
+ absurdities, which, however, were by no means regarded as absurdities at
+ that time, for Lilly was one of the greatest astrologers of his day. He
+ said that in 1588 a prophecy had been printed in Greek characters which
+ foretold exactly the troubles of England between the years 1641. and 1660.
+ "And after him shall come a dreadful dead man," ran the prophecy, "and
+ with him a royal G of the best blood in the world, and he shall have the
+ crown and shall set England on the right way and put out all heresies."
+ His interpretation of this was that, "Monkery being extinguished above
+ eighty or ninety years, and the Lord General's name being Monk, is the
+ dead man. The royal G or C (it is gamma in the Greek, intending C in the
+ Latin, being the third letter in the alphabet) is Charles II., who, for
+ his extraction, may be said to be of the best blood of the world."(5)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This may be taken as a fair sample of Lilly's interpretations of
+ astrological prophesies, but many of his own writings, while somewhat more
+ definite and direct, are still left sufficiently vague to allow his
+ skilful interpretations to set right an apparent mistake. One of his
+ famous documents was "The Starry Messenger," a little pamphlet purporting
+ to explain the phenomenon of a "strange apparition of three suns" that
+ were seen in London on November 19, 1644&mdash;-the anniversary of the
+ birth of Charles I., then the reigning monarch. This phenomenon caused a
+ great stir among the English astrologers, coming, as it did, at a time of
+ great political disturbance. Prophecies were numerous, and Lilly's
+ brochure is only one of many that appeared at that time, most of which,
+ however, have been lost. Lilly, in his preface, says: "If there be any of
+ so prevaricate a judgment as to think that the apparition of these three
+ Suns doth intimate no Novelle thing to happen in our own Climate, where
+ they were manifestly visible, I shall lament their indisposition, and
+ conceive their brains to be shallow, and voyde of understanding humanity,
+ or notice of common History."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus forgiven his few doubting readers, who were by no means in the
+ majority in his day, he takes up in review the records of the various
+ appearances of three suns as they have occurred during the Christian era,
+ showing how such phenomena have governed certain human events in a very
+ definite manner. Some of these are worth recording.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Anno 66. A comet was seen, and also three Suns: In which yeer, Florus
+ President of the Jews was by them slain. Paul writes to Timothy. The
+ Christians are warned by a divine Oracle, and depart out of Jerusalem.
+ Boadice a British Queen, killeth seventy thousand Romans. The Nazareni, a
+ scurvie Sect, begun, that boasted much of Revelations and Visions. About a
+ year after Nero was proclaimed enemy to the State of Rome."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, "Anno 1157, in September, there were seen three Suns together, in
+ as clear weather as could be: And a few days after, in the same month,
+ three Moons, and, in the Moon that stood in the middle, a white Crosse.
+ Sueno, King of Denmark, at a great Feast, killeth Canutus: Sueno is
+ himself slain, in pursuit of Waldemar. The Order of Eremites, according to
+ the rule of Saint Augustine, begun this year; and in the next, the Pope
+ submits to the Emperour: (was not this miraculous?) Lombardy was also
+ adjudged to the Emperour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Continuing this list of peculiar phenomena he comes down to within a few
+ years of his own time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Anno 1622, three Suns appeared at Heidelberg. The woful Calamities that
+ have ever since fallen upon the Palatinate, we are all sensible of, and of
+ the loss of it, for any thing I see, for ever, from the right Heir. Osman
+ the great Turk is strangled that year; and Spinola besiegeth Bergen up
+ Zoom, etc."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortified by the enumeration of these past events, he then proceeds to
+ make his deductions. "Only this I must tell thee," he writes, "that the
+ interpretation I write is, I conceive, grounded upon probable foundations;
+ and who lives to see a few years over his head, will easily perceive I
+ have unfolded as much as was fit to discover, and that my judgment was not
+ a mile and a half from truth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a great significance in this "as much as was fit to discover"&mdash;a
+ mysterious something that Lilly thinks it expedient not to divulge. But,
+ nevertheless, one would imagine that he was about to make some definite
+ prediction about Charles I., since these three suns appeared upon his
+ birthday and surely must portend something concerning him. But after
+ rambling on through many pages of dissertations upon planets and
+ prophecies, he finally makes his own indefinite prediction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O all you Emperors, Kings, Princes, Rulers and Magistrates of Europe,
+ this unaccustomed Apparition is like the Handwriting in Daniel to some of
+ you; it premonisheth you, above all other people, to make your peace with
+ God in time. You shall every one of you smart, and every one of you taste
+ (none excepted) the heavie hand of God, who will strengthen your subjects
+ with invincible courage to suppress your misgovernments and Oppressions in
+ Church or Common-wealth;... Those words are general: a word for my own
+ country of England.... Look to yourselves; here's some monstrous death
+ towards you. But to whom? wilt thou say. Herein we consider the Signe,
+ Lord thereof, and the House; The Sun signifies in that Royal Signe, great
+ ones; the House signifies captivity, poison, Treachery: From which is
+ derived thus much, That some very great man, what King, Prince, Duke, or
+ the like, I really affirm I perfectly know not, shall, I say, come to some
+ such untimely end."(6)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is shown a typical example of astrological prophecy, which seems to
+ tell something or nothing, according to the point of view of the reader.
+ According to a believer in astrology, after the execution of Charles I.,
+ five years later, this could be made to seem a direct and exact prophecy.
+ For example, he says: "You Kings, Princes, etc.,... it premonisheth you...
+ to make your peace with God.... Look to yourselves; here's some monstrous
+ death towards you.... That some very great man, what King, Prince,. shall,
+ I say, come to such untimely end."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But by the doubter the complete prophecy could be shown to be absolutely
+ indefinite, and applicable as much to the king of France or Spain as to
+ Charles I., or to any king in the future, since no definite time is
+ stated. Furthermore, Lilly distinctly states, "What King, Prince, Duke, or
+ the like, I really affirm I perfectly know not"&mdash;which last, at
+ least, was a most truthful statement. The same ingenuity that made "Gen.
+ Monk" the "dreadful dead man," could easily make such a prediction apply
+ to the execution of Charles I. Such a definite statement that, on such and
+ such a day a certain number of years in the future, the monarch of England
+ would be beheaded&mdash;such an exact statement can scarcely be found in
+ any of the works on astrology. It should be borne in mind, also, that
+ Lilly was of the Cromwell party and opposed to the king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the death of Charles I., Lilly admitted that the monarch had given
+ him a thousand pounds to cast his horoscope. "I advised him," says Lilly,
+ "to proceed eastwards; he went west, and all the world knows the result."
+ It is an unfortunate thing for the cause of astrology that Lilly failed to
+ mention this until after the downfall of the monarch. In fact, the sudden
+ death, or decline in power, of any monarch, even to-day, brings out the
+ perennial post-mortem predictions of astrologers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see how Lilly, an opponent of the king, made his so-called prophecy of
+ the disaster of the king and his army. At the same time another celebrated
+ astrologer and rival of Lilly, George Wharton, also made some predictions
+ about the outcome of the eventful march from Oxford. Wharton, unlike
+ Lilly, was a follower of the king's party, but that, of course, should
+ have had no influence in his "scientific" reading of the stars. Wharton's
+ predictions are much less verbose than Lilly's, much more explicit, and,
+ incidentally, much more incorrect in this particular instance. "The Moon
+ Lady of the 12," he wrote, "and moving betwixt the 8 degree, 34 min., and
+ 21 degree, 26 min. of Aquarius, gives us to understand that His Majesty
+ shall receive much contentment by certain Messages brought him from
+ foreign parts; and that he shall receive some sudden and unexpected supply
+ of... by the means of some that assimilate the condition of his Enemies:
+ And withal this comfort; that His Majesty shall be exceeding successful in
+ Besieging Towns, Castles, or Forts, and in persuing the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mars his Sextile to the Sun, Lord of the Ascendant (which happeneth the
+ 18 day of May) will encourage our Soldiers to advance with much alacrity
+ and cheerfulness of spirit; to show themselves gallant in the most
+ dangerous attempt.... And now to sum up all: It is most apparent to every
+ impartial and ingenuous judgment; That although His Majesty cannot expect
+ to be secured from every trivial disaster that may befall his army, either
+ by the too much Presumption, Ignorance, or Negligence of some particular
+ Persons (which is frequently incident and unavoidable in the best of
+ Armies), yet the several positions of the Heavens duly considered and
+ compared among themselves, as well in the prefixed Scheme as at the
+ Quarterly Ingresses, do generally render His Majesty and his whole Army
+ unexpectedly victorious and successful in all his designs; Believe it
+ (London), thy Miseries approach, they are like to be many, great, and
+ grievous, and not to be diverted, unless thou seasonably crave Pardon of
+ God for being Nurse to this present Rebellion, and speedily submit to thy
+ Prince's Mercy; Which shall be the daily Prayer of Geo. Wharton."(7)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the light of after events, it is probable that Wharton's stock as an
+ astrologer was not greatly enhanced by this document, at least among
+ members of the Royal family. Lilly's book, on the other hand, became a
+ favorite with the Parliamentary army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the downfall and death of Napoleon there were unearthed many alleged
+ authentic astrological documents foretelling his ruin. And on the death of
+ George IV., in 1830, there appeared a document (unknown, as usual, until
+ that time) purporting to foretell the death of the monarch to the day, and
+ this without the astrologer knowing that his horoscope was being cast for
+ a monarch. A full account of this prophecy is told, with full belief, by
+ Roback, a nineteenth-century astrologer. He says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the year 1828, a stranger of noble mien, advanced in life, but
+ possessing the most bland manners, arrived at the abode of a celebrated
+ astrologer in London," asking that the learned man foretell his future.
+ "The astrologer complied with the request of the mysterious visitor, drew
+ forth his tables, consulted his ephemeris, and cast the horoscope or
+ celestial map for the hour and the moment of the inquiry, according to the
+ established rules of his art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The elements of his calculation were adverse, and a feeling of gloom cast
+ a shade of serious thought, if not dejection, over his countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'You are of high rank,' said the astrologer, as he calculated and looked
+ on the stranger, 'and of illustrious title.' The stranger made a graceful
+ inclination of the head in token of acknowledgment of the complimentary
+ remarks, and the astrologer proceeded with his mission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The celestial signs were ominous of calamity to the stranger, who,
+ probably observing a sudden change in the countenance of the astrologer,
+ eagerly inquired what evil or good fortune had been assigned him by the
+ celestial orbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'To the first part of your inquiry,' said the astrologer, 'I can readily
+ reply. You have been a favorite of fortune; her smiles on you have been
+ abundant, her frowns but few; you have had, perhaps now possess, wealth
+ and power; the impossibility of their accomplishment is the only limit to
+ the fulfilment of your desires.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'You have spoken truly of the past,' said the stranger. 'I have full
+ faith in your revelations of the future: what say you of my pilgrimage in
+ this life&mdash;is it short or long?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I regret,' replied the astrologer, in answer to this inquiry, 'to be the
+ herald of ill, though TRUE, fortune; your sojourn on earth will be short.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'How short?' eagerly inquired the excited and anxious stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Give me a momentary truce,' said the astrologer; 'I will consult the
+ horoscope, and may possibly find some mitigating circumstances.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having cast his eyes over the celestial map, and paused for some moments,
+ he surveyed the countenance of the stranger with great sympathy, and said,
+ 'I am sorry that I can find no planetary influences that oppose your
+ destiny&mdash;your death will take place in two years.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The event justified the astrologic prediction: George IV. died on May 18,
+ 1830, exactly two years from the day on which he had visited the
+ astrologer."(8)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This makes a very pretty story, but it hardly seems like occult insight
+ that an astrologer should have been able to predict an early death of a
+ man nearly seventy years old, or to have guessed that his well-groomed
+ visitor "had, perhaps now possesses, wealth and power." Here again,
+ however, the point of view of each individual plays the governing part in
+ determining the importance of such a document. To the scientist it proves
+ nothing; to the believer in astrology, everything. The significant thing
+ is that it appeared shortly AFTER the death of the monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the Continent astrologers were even more in favor than in England.
+ Charlemagne, and some of his immediate successors, to be sure, attempted
+ to exterminate them, but such rulers as Louis XI. and Catherine de' Medici
+ patronized and encouraged them, and it was many years after the time of
+ Copernicus before their influence was entirely stamped out even in
+ official life. There can be no question that what gave the color of truth
+ to many of the predictions was the fact that so many of the prophecies of
+ sudden deaths and great conflagrations were known to have come true&mdash;in
+ many instances were made to come true by the astrologer himself. And so it
+ happened that when the prediction of a great conflagration at a certain
+ time culminated in such a conflagration, many times a second but
+ less-important burning took place, in which the ambitious astrologer, or
+ his followers, took a central part about a stake, being convicted of
+ incendiarism, which they had committed in order that their prophecies
+ might be fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, on the other hand, these predictions were sometimes turned to account
+ by interested friends to warn certain persons of approaching dangers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For example, a certain astrologer foretold the death of Prince Alexander
+ de' Medici. He not only foretold the death, but described so minutely the
+ circumstances that would attend it, and gave such a correct description of
+ the assassin who should murder the prince, that he was at once suspected
+ of having a hand in the assassination. It developed later, however, that
+ such was probably not the case; but that some friend of Prince Alexander,
+ knowing of the plot to take his life, had induced the astrologer to
+ foretell the event in order that the prince might have timely warning and
+ so elude the conspirators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cause of the decline of astrology was the growing prevalence of the
+ new spirit of experimental science. Doubtless the most direct blow was
+ dealt by the Copernican theory. So soon as this was established, the
+ recognition of the earth's subordinate place in the universe must have
+ made it difficult for astronomers to be longer deceived by such
+ coincidences as had sufficed to convince the observers of a more credulous
+ generation. Tycho Brahe was, perhaps, the last astronomer of prominence
+ who was a conscientious practiser of the art of the astrologer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. FROM PARACELSUS TO HARVEY
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ PARACELSUS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1526 there appeared a new lecturer on the platform at the
+ University at Basel&mdash;a small, beardless, effeminate-looking person&mdash;who
+ had already inflamed all Christendom with his peculiar philosophy, his
+ revolutionary methods of treating diseases, and his unparalleled success
+ in curing them. A man who was to be remembered in after-time by some as
+ the father of modern chemistry and the founder of modern medicine; by
+ others as madman, charlatan, impostor; and by still others as a
+ combination of all these. This soft-cheeked, effeminate, woman-hating man,
+ whose very sex has been questioned, was Theophrastus von Hohenheim, better
+ known as Paracelsus (1493-1541).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To appreciate his work, something must be known of the life of the man. He
+ was born near Maria-Einsiedeln, in Switzerland, the son of a poor
+ physician of the place. He began the study of medicine under the
+ instruction of his father, and later on came under the instruction of
+ several learned churchmen. At the age of sixteen he entered the University
+ of Basel, but, soon becoming disgusted with the philosophical teachings of
+ the time, he quitted the scholarly world of dogmas and theories and went
+ to live among the miners in the Tyrol, in order that he might study nature
+ and men at first hand. Ordinary methods of study were thrown aside, and he
+ devoted his time to personal observation&mdash;the only true means of
+ gaining useful knowledge, as he preached and practised ever after. Here he
+ became familiar with the art of mining, learned the physical properties of
+ minerals, ores, and metals, and acquired some knowledge of mineral waters.
+ More important still, he came in contact with such diseases, wounds, and
+ injuries as miners are subject to, and he tried his hand at the practical
+ treatment of these conditions, untrammelled by the traditions of a
+ profession in which his training had been so scant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having acquired some empirical skill in treating diseases, Paracelsus set
+ out wandering from place to place all over Europe, gathering practical
+ information as he went, and learning more and more of the medicinal
+ virtues of plants and minerals. His wanderings covered a period of about
+ ten years, at the end of which time he returned to Basel, where he was
+ soon invited to give a course of lectures in the university.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These lectures were revolutionary in two respects&mdash;they were given in
+ German instead of time-honored Latin, and they were based upon personal
+ experience rather than upon the works of such writers as Galen and
+ Avicenna. Indeed, the iconoclastic teacher spoke with open disparagement
+ of these revered masters, and openly upbraided his fellow-practitioners
+ for following their tenets. Naturally such teaching raised a storm of
+ opposition among the older physicians, but for a time the unparalleled
+ success of Paracelsus in curing diseases more than offset his
+ unpopularity. Gradually, however, his bitter tongue and his coarse
+ personality rendered him so unpopular, even among his patients, that,
+ finally, his liberty and life being jeopardized, he was obliged to flee
+ from Basel, and became a wanderer. He lived for brief periods in Colmar,
+ Nuremberg, Appenzell, Zurich, Pfeffers, Augsburg, and several other
+ cities, until finally at Salzburg his eventful life came to a close in
+ 1541. His enemies said that he had died in a tavern from the effects of a
+ protracted debauch; his supporters maintained that he had been murdered at
+ the instigation of rival physicians and apothecaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the effects of his teachings had taken firm root, and continued to
+ spread after his death. He had shown the fallibility of many of the
+ teachings of the hitherto standard methods of treating diseases, and had
+ demonstrated the advantages of independent reasoning based on observation.
+ In his Magicum he gives his reasons for breaking with tradition. "I did,"
+ he says, "embrace at the beginning these doctrines, as my adversaries
+ (followers of Galen) have done, but since I saw that from their procedures
+ nothing resulted but death, murder, stranglings, anchylosed limbs,
+ paralysis, and so forth, that they held most diseases incurable....
+ therefore have I quitted this wretched art, and sought for truth in any
+ other direction. I asked myself if there were no such thing as a teacher
+ in medicine, where could I learn this art best? Nowhere better than the
+ open book of nature, written with God's own finger." We shall see,
+ however, that this "book of nature" taught Paracelsus some very strange
+ lessons. Modesty was not one of these. "Now at this time," he declares,
+ "I, Theophrastus Paracelsus, Bombast, Monarch of the Arcana, was endowed
+ by God with special gifts for this end, that every searcher after this
+ supreme philosopher's work may be forced to imitate and to follow me, be
+ he Italian, Pole, Gaul, German, or whatsoever or whosoever he be. Come
+ hither after me, all ye philosophers, astronomers, and spagirists.... I
+ will show and open to you... this corporeal regeneration."(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paracelsus based his medical teachings on four "pillars"&mdash;philosophy,
+ astronomy, alchemy, and virtue of the physician&mdash;a strange-enough
+ equipment surely, and yet, properly interpreted, not quite so anomalous as
+ it seems at first blush. Philosophy was the "gate of medicine," whereby
+ the physician entered rightly upon the true course of learning; astronomy,
+ the study of the stars, was all-important because "they (the stars) caused
+ disease by their exhalations, as, for instance, the sun by excessive
+ heat"; alchemy, as he interpreted it, meant the improvement of natural
+ substances for man's benefit; while virtue in the physician was necessary
+ since "only the virtuous are permitted to penetrate into the innermost
+ nature of man and the universe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All his writings aim to promote progress in medicine, and to hold before
+ the physician a grand ideal of his profession. In this his views are wide
+ and far-reaching, based on the relationship which man bears to nature as a
+ whole; but in his sweeping condemnations he not only rejected Galenic
+ therapeutics and Galenic anatomy, but condemned dissections of any kind.
+ He laid the cause of all diseases at the door of the three mystic elements&mdash;salt,
+ sulphur, and mercury. In health he supposed these to be mingled in the
+ body so as to be indistinguishable; a slight separation of them produced
+ disease; and death he supposed to be the result of their complete
+ separation. The spiritual agencies of diseases, he said, had nothing to do
+ with either angels or devils, but were the spirits of human beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He believed that all food contained poisons, and that the function of
+ digestion was to separate the poisonous from the nutritious. In the
+ stomach was an archaeus, or alchemist, whose duty was to make this
+ separation. In digestive disorders the archaeus failed to do this, and the
+ poisons thus gaining access to the system were "coagulated" and deposited
+ in the joints and various other parts of the body. Thus the deposits in
+ the kidneys and tartar on the teeth were formed; and the stony deposits of
+ gout were particularly familiar examples of this. All this is visionary
+ enough, yet it shows at least a groping after rational explanations of
+ vital phenomena.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like most others of his time, Paracelsus believed firmly in the doctrine
+ of "signatures"&mdash;a belief that every organ and part of the body had a
+ corresponding form in nature, whose function was to heal diseases of the
+ organ it resembled. The vagaries of this peculiar doctrine are too
+ numerous and complicated for lengthy discussion, and varied greatly from
+ generation to generation. In general, however, the theory may be summed up
+ in the words of Paracelsus: "As a woman is known by her shape, so are the
+ medicines." Hence the physicians were constantly searching for some object
+ of corresponding shape to an organ of the body. The most natural
+ application of this doctrine would be the use of the organs of the lower
+ animals for the treatment of the corresponding diseased organs in man.
+ Thus diseases of the heart were to be treated with the hearts of animals,
+ liver disorders with livers, and so on. But this apparently simple form of
+ treatment had endless modifications and restrictions, for not all animals
+ were useful. For example, it was useless to give the stomach of an ox in
+ gastric diseases when the indication in such cases was really for the
+ stomach of a rat. Nor were the organs of animals the only "signatures" in
+ nature. Plants also played a very important role, and the herb-doctors
+ devoted endless labor to searching for such plants. Thus the blood-root,
+ with its red juice, was supposed to be useful in blood diseases, in
+ stopping hemorrhage, or in subduing the redness of an inflammation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paracelsus's system of signatures, however, was so complicated by his
+ theories of astronomy and alchemy that it is practically beyond
+ comprehension. It is possible that he himself may have understood it, but
+ it is improbable that any one else did&mdash;as shown by the endless
+ discussions that have taken place about it. But with all the vagaries of
+ his theories he was still rational in his applications, and he attacked to
+ good purpose the complicated "shot-gun" prescriptions of his
+ contemporaries, advocating more simple methods of treatment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ever-fascinating subject of electricity, or, more specifically,
+ "magnetism," found great favor with him, and with properly adjusted
+ magnets he claimed to be able to cure many diseases. In epilepsy and
+ lockjaw, for example, one had but to fasten magnets to the four
+ extremities of the body, and then, "when the proper medicines were given,"
+ the cure would be effected. The easy loop-hole for excusing failure on the
+ ground of improper medicines is obvious, but Paracelsus declares that this
+ one prescription is of more value than "all the humoralists have ever
+ written or taught."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since Paracelsus condemned the study of anatomy as useless, he quite
+ naturally regarded surgery in the same light. In this he would have done
+ far better to have studied some of his predecessors, such as Galen, Paul
+ of Aegina, and Avicenna. But instead of "cutting men to pieces," he taught
+ that surgeons would gain more by devoting their time to searching for the
+ universal panacea which would cure all diseases, surgical as well as
+ medical. In this we detect a taint of the popular belief in the
+ philosopher's stone and the magic elixir of life, his belief in which have
+ been stoutly denied by some of his followers. He did admit, however, that
+ one operation alone was perhaps permissible&mdash;lithotomy, or the
+ "cutting for stone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His influence upon medicine rests undoubtedly upon his revolutionary
+ attitude, rather than on any great or new discoveries made by him. It is
+ claimed by many that he brought prominently into use opium and mercury,
+ and if this were indisputably proven his services to medicine could hardly
+ be overestimated. Unfortunately, however, there are good grounds for
+ doubting that he was particularly influential in reintroducing these
+ medicines. His chief influence may perhaps be summed up in a single phrase&mdash;he
+ overthrew old traditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Paracelsus's endeavors, however, if not to the actual products of his
+ work, is due the credit of setting in motion the chain of thought that
+ developed finally into scientific chemistry. Nor can the ultimate aim of
+ the modern chemist seek a higher object than that of this
+ sixteenth-century alchemist, who taught that "true alchemy has but one aim
+ and object, to extract the quintessence of things, and to prepare arcana,
+ tinctures, and elixirs which may restore to man the health and soundness
+ he has lost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE GREAT ANATOMISTS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the beginning of the sixteenth century, while Paracelsus was
+ scoffing at the study of anatomy as useless, and using his influence
+ against it, there had already come upon the scene the first of the great
+ anatomists whose work was to make the century conspicuous in that branch
+ of medicine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young anatomist Charles etienne (1503-1564) made one of the first
+ noteworthy discoveries, pointing out for the first time that the spinal
+ cord contains a canal, continuous throughout its length. He also made
+ other minor discoveries of some importance, but his researches were
+ completely overshadowed and obscured by the work of a young Fleming who
+ came upon the scene a few years later, and who shone with such brilliancy
+ in the medical world that he obscured completely the work of his
+ contemporary until many years later. This young physician, who was
+ destined to lead such an eventful career and meet such an untimely end as
+ a martyr to science, was Andrew Vesalius (1514-1564), who is called the
+ "greatest of anatomists." At the time he came into the field medicine was
+ struggling against the dominating Galenic teachings and the theories of
+ Paracelsus, but perhaps most of all against the superstitions of the time.
+ In France human dissections were attended with such dangers that the young
+ Vesalius transferred his field of labors to Italy, where such
+ investigations were covertly permitted, if not openly countenanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the very start the young Fleming looked askance at the accepted
+ teachings of the day, and began a series of independent investigations
+ based upon his own observations. The results of these investigations he
+ gave in a treatise on the subject which is regarded as the first
+ comprehensive and systematic work on human anatomy. This remarkable work
+ was published in the author's twenty-eighth or twenty-ninth year. Soon
+ after this Vesalius was invited as imperial physician to the court of
+ Emperor Charles V. He continued to act in the same capacity at the court
+ of Philip II., after the abdication of his patron. But in spite of this
+ royal favor there was at work a factor more powerful than the influence of
+ the monarch himself&mdash;an instrument that did so much to retard
+ scientific progress, and by which so many lives were brought to a
+ premature close.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vesalius had received permission from the kinsmen of a certain grandee to
+ perform an autopsy. While making his observations the heart of the
+ outraged body was seen to palpitate&mdash;so at least it was reported.
+ This was brought immediately to the attention of the Inquisition, and it
+ was only by the intervention of the king himself that the anatomist
+ escaped the usual fate of those accused by that tribunal. As it was, he
+ was obliged to perform a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. While returning from
+ this he was shipwrecked, and perished from hunger and exposure on the
+ island of Zante.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the very time when the anatomical writings of Vesalius were startling
+ the medical world, there was living and working contemporaneously another
+ great anatomist, Eustachius (died 1574), whose records of his anatomical
+ investigations were ready for publication only nine years after the
+ publication of the work of Vesalius. Owing to the unfortunate
+ circumstances of the anatomist, however, they were never published during
+ his lifetime&mdash;not, in fact, until 1714. When at last they were given
+ to the world as Anatomical Engravings, they showed conclusively that
+ Eustachius was equal, if not superior to Vesalius in his knowledge of
+ anatomy. It has been said of this remarkable collection of engravings that
+ if they had been published when they were made in the sixteenth century,
+ anatomy would have been advanced by at least two centuries. But be this as
+ it may, they certainly show that their author was a most careful dissector
+ and observer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eustachius described accurately for the first time certain structures of
+ the middle ear, and rediscovered the tube leading from the ear to the
+ throat that bears his name. He also made careful studies of the teeth and
+ the phenomena of first and second dentition. He was not baffled by the
+ minuteness of structures and where he was unable to study them with the
+ naked eye he used glasses for the purpose, and resorted to macerations and
+ injections for the study of certain complicated structures. But while the
+ fruit of his pen and pencil were lost for more than a century after his
+ death, the effects of his teachings were not; and his two pupils,
+ Fallopius and Columbus, are almost as well known to-day as their
+ illustrious teacher. Columbus (1490-1559) did much in correcting the
+ mistakes made in the anatomy of the bones as described by Vesalius. He
+ also added much to the science by giving correct accounts of the shape and
+ cavities of the heart, and made many other discoveries of minor
+ importance. Fallopius (1523-1562) added considerably to the general
+ knowledge of anatomy, made several discoveries in the anatomy of the ear,
+ and also several organs in the abdominal cavity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this time a most vitally important controversy was in progress as to
+ whether or not the veins of the bodies were supplied with valves, many
+ anatomists being unable to find them. Etienne had first described these
+ structures, and Vesalius had confirmed his observations. It would seem as
+ if there could be no difficulty in settling the question as to the fact of
+ such valves being present in the vessels, for the demonstration is so
+ simple that it is now made daily by medical students in all physiological
+ laboratories and dissecting-rooms. But many of the great anatomists of the
+ sixteenth century were unable to make this demonstration, even when it had
+ been brought to their attention by such an authority as Vesalius.
+ Fallopius, writing to Vesalius on the subject in 1562, declared that he
+ was unable to find such valves. Others, however, such as Eustachius and
+ Fabricius (1537-1619), were more successful, and found and described these
+ structures. But the purpose served by these valves was entirely
+ misinterpreted. That they act in preventing the backward flow of the blood
+ in the veins on its way to the heart, just as the valves of the heart
+ itself prevent regurgitation, has been known since the time of Harvey; but
+ the best interpretation that could be given at that time, even by such a
+ man as Fabricius, was that they acted in retarding the flow of the blood
+ as it comes from the heart, and thus prevent its too rapid distribution
+ throughout the body. The fact that the blood might have been going towards
+ the heart, instead of coming from it, seems never to have been considered
+ seriously until demonstrated so conclusively by Harvey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of this important and remarkable controversy over the valves in veins,
+ Withington has this to say: "This is truly a marvellous story. A great
+ Galenic anatomist is first to give a full and correct description of the
+ valves and their function, but fails to see that any modification of the
+ old view as to the motion of the blood is required. Two able dissectors
+ carefully test their action by experiment, and come to a result, the exact
+ reverse of the truth. Urged by them, the two foremost anatomists of the
+ age make a special search for valves and fail to find them. Finally,
+ passing over lesser peculiarities, an aged and honorable professor, who
+ has lived through all this, calmly asserts that no anatomist, ancient or
+ modern, has ever mentioned valves in veins till he discovered them in
+ 1574!"(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the anatomists who probably discovered these valves was Michael
+ Servetus (1511-1553); but if this is somewhat in doubt, it is certain that
+ he discovered and described the pulmonary circulation, and had a very
+ clear idea of the process of respiration as carried on in the lungs. The
+ description was contained in a famous document sent to Calvin in 1545&mdash;a
+ document which the reformer carefully kept for seven years in order that
+ he might make use of some of the heretical statements it contained to
+ accomplish his desire of bringing its writer to the stake. The awful fate
+ of Servetus, the interesting character of the man, and the fact that he
+ came so near to anticipating the discoveries of Harvey make him one of the
+ most interesting figures in medical history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this document which was sent to Calvin, Servetus rejected the doctrine
+ of natural, vital, and animal spirits, as contained in the veins,
+ arteries, and nerves respectively, and made the all-important statement
+ that the fluids contained in veins and arteries are the same. He showed
+ also that the blood is "purged from fume" and purified by respiration in
+ the lungs, and declared that there is a new vessel in the lungs, "formed
+ out of vein and artery." Even at the present day there is little to add to
+ or change in this description of Servetus's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By keeping this document, pregnant with advanced scientific views, from
+ the world, and in the end only using it as a means of destroying its
+ author, the great reformer showed the same jealousy in retarding
+ scientific progress as had his arch-enemies of the Inquisition, at whose
+ dictates Vesalius became a martyr to science, and in whose dungeons
+ etienne perished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE COMING OF HARVEY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time was ripe for the culminating discovery of the circulation of the
+ blood; but as yet no one had determined the all-important fact that there
+ are two currents of blood in the body, one going to the heart, one coming
+ from it. The valves in the veins would seem to show conclusively that the
+ venous current did not come from the heart, and surgeons must have
+ observed thousands of times the every-day phenomenon of congested veins at
+ the distal extremity of a limb around which a ligature or constriction of
+ any kind had been placed, and the simultaneous depletion of the vessels at
+ the proximal points above the ligature. But it should be remembered that
+ inductive science was in its infancy. This was the sixteenth, not the
+ nineteenth century, and few men had learned to put implicit confidence in
+ their observations and convictions when opposed to existing doctrines. The
+ time was at hand, however, when such a man was to make his appearance,
+ and, as in the case of so many revolutionary doctrines in science, this
+ man was an Englishman. It remained for William Harvey (1578-1657) to solve
+ the great mystery which had puzzled the medical world since the beginning
+ of history; not only to solve it, but to prove his case so conclusively
+ and so simply that for all time his little booklet must he handed down as
+ one of the great masterpieces of lucid and almost faultless demonstration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey, the son of a prosperous Kentish yeoman, was born at Folkestone.
+ His education was begun at the grammar-school of Canterbury, and later he
+ became a pensioner of Caius College, Cambridge. Soon after taking his
+ degree of B.A., at the age of nineteen, he decided upon the profession of
+ medicine, and went to Padua as a pupil of Fabricius and Casserius.
+ Returning to England at the age of twenty-four, he soon after (1609)
+ obtained the reversion of the post of physician to St. Bartholomew's
+ Hospital, his application being supported by James I. himself. Even at
+ this time he was a popular physician, counting among his patients such men
+ as Francis Bacon. In 1618 he was appointed physician extraordinary to the
+ king, and, a little later, physician in ordinary. He was in attendance
+ upon Charles I. at the battle of Edgehill, in 1642, where, with the young
+ Prince of Wales and the Duke of York, after seeking shelter under a hedge,
+ he drew a book out of his pocket and, forgetful of the battle, became
+ absorbed in study, until finally the cannon-balls from the enemy's
+ artillery made him seek a more sheltered position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the fall of Charles I. he retired from practice, and lived in
+ retirement with his brother. He was then well along in years, but still
+ pursued his scientific researches with the same vigor as before, directing
+ his attention chiefly to the study of embryology. On June 3, 1657, he was
+ attacked by paralysis and died, in his eightieth year. He had lived to see
+ his theory of the circulation accepted, several years before, by all the
+ eminent anatomists of the civilized world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A keenness in the observation of facts, characteristic of the mind of the
+ man, had led Harvey to doubt the truth of existing doctrines as to the
+ phenomena of the circulation. Galen had taught that "the arteries are
+ filled, like bellows, because they are expanded," but Harvey thought that
+ the action of spurting blood from a severed vessel disproved this. For the
+ spurting was remittant, "now with greater, now with less impetus," and its
+ greater force always corresponded to the expansion (diastole), not the
+ contraction (systole) of the vessel. Furthermore, it was evident that
+ contraction of the heart and the arteries was not simultaneous, as was
+ commonly taught, because in that case there would be no marked propulsion
+ of the blood in any direction; and there was no gainsaying the fact that
+ the blood was forcibly propelled in a definite direction, and that
+ direction away from the heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey's investigations led him to doubt also the accepted theory that
+ there was a porosity in the septum of tissue that divides the two
+ ventricles of the heart. It seemed unreasonable to suppose that a thick
+ fluid like the blood could find its way through pores so small that they
+ could not be demonstrated by any means devised by man. In evidence that
+ there could be no such openings he pointed out that, since the two
+ ventricles contract at the same time, this process would impede rather
+ than facilitate such an intra-ventricular passage of blood. But what
+ seemed the most conclusive proof of all was the fact that in the foetus
+ there existed a demonstrable opening between the two ventricles, and yet
+ this is closed in the fully developed heart. Why should Nature, if she
+ intended that blood should pass between the two cavities, choose to close
+ this opening and substitute microscopic openings in place of it? It would
+ surely seem more reasonable to have the small perforations in the thin,
+ easily permeable membrane of the foetus, and the opening in the adult
+ heart, rather than the reverse. From all this Harvey drew his correct
+ conclusions, declaring earnestly, "By Hercules, there ARE no such
+ porosities, and they cannot be demonstrated."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having convinced himself that no intra-ventricular opening existed, he
+ proceeded to study the action of the heart itself, untrammelled by too
+ much faith in established theories, and, as yet, with no theory of his
+ own. He soon discovered that the commonly accepted theory of the heart
+ striking against the chest-wall during the period of relaxation was
+ entirely wrong, and that its action was exactly the reverse of this, the
+ heart striking the chest-wall during contraction. Having thus disproved
+ the accepted theory concerning the heart's action, he took up the subject
+ of the action of arteries, and soon was able to demonstrate by vivisection
+ that the contraction of the arteries was not simultaneous with
+ contractions of the heart. His experiments demonstrated that these vessels
+ were simply elastic tubes whose pulsations were "nothing else than the
+ impulse of the blood within them." The reason that the arterial pulsation
+ was not simultaneous with the heart-beat he found to be because of the
+ time required to carry the impulse along the tube.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By a series of further careful examinations and experiments, which are too
+ extended to be given here, he was soon able further to demonstrate the
+ action and course of the blood during the contractions of the heart. His
+ explanations were practically the same as those given to-day&mdash;first
+ the contraction of the auricle, sending blood into the ventricle; then
+ ventricular contraction, making the pulse, and sending the blood into the
+ arteries. He had thus demonstrated what had not been generally accepted
+ before, that the heart was an organ for the propulsion of blood. To make
+ such a statement to-day seems not unlike the sober announcement that the
+ earth is round or that the sun does not revolve about it. Before Harvey's
+ time, however, it was considered as an organ that was "in some mysterious
+ way the source of vitality and warmth, as an animated crucible for the
+ concoction of blood and the generation of vital spirits."(3)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In watching the rapid and ceaseless contractions of the heart, Harvey was
+ impressed with the fact that, even if a very small amount of blood was
+ sent out at each pulsation, an enormous quantity must pass through the
+ organ in a day, or even in an hour. Estimating the size of the cavities of
+ the heart, and noting that at least a drachm must be sent out with each
+ pulsation, it was evident that the two thousand beats given by a very slow
+ human heart in an hour must send out some forty pounds of blood&mdash;more
+ than twice the amount in the entire body. The question was, what became of
+ it all? For it should be remembered that the return of the blood by the
+ veins was unknown, and nothing like a "circulation" more than vaguely
+ conceived even by Harvey himself. Once it could be shown that the veins
+ were constantly returning blood to the heart, the discovery that the blood
+ in some way passes from the arteries to the veins was only a short step.
+ Harvey, by resorting to vivisections of lower animals and reptiles, soon
+ demonstrated beyond question the fact that the veins do carry the return
+ blood. "But this, in particular, can be shown clearer than daylight," says
+ Harvey. "The vena cava enters the heart at an inferior portion, while the
+ artery passes out above. Now if the vena cava be taken up with forceps or
+ the thumb and finger, and the course of the blood intercepted for some
+ distance below the heart, you will at once see it almost emptied between
+ the fingers and the heart, the blood being exhausted by the heart's
+ pulsation, the heart at the same time becoming much paler even in its
+ dilatation, smaller in size, owing to the deficiency of blood, and at
+ length languid in pulsation, as if about to die. On the other hand, when
+ you release the vein the heart immediately regains its color and
+ dimensions. After that, if you leave the vein free and tie and compress
+ the arteries at some distance from the heart, you will see, on the
+ contrary, their included portion grow excessively turgid, the heart
+ becoming so beyond measure, assuming a dark-red color, even to lividity,
+ and at length so overloaded with blood as to seem in danger of
+ suffocation; but when the obstruction is removed it returns to its normal
+ condition, in size, color, and movement."(4)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This conclusive demonstration that the veins return the blood to the heart
+ must have been most impressive to Harvey, who had been taught to believe
+ that the blood current in the veins pursued an opposite course, and must
+ have tended to shake his faith in all existing doctrines of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His next step was the natural one of demonstrating that the blood passes
+ from the arteries to the veins. He demonstrated conclusively that this did
+ occur, but for once his rejection of the ancient writers and one modern
+ one was a mistake. For Galen had taught, and had attempted to demonstrate,
+ that there are sets of minute vessels connecting the arteries and the
+ veins; and Servetus had shown that there must be such vessels, at least in
+ the lungs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, the little flaw in the otherwise complete demonstration of Harvey
+ detracts nothing from the main issue at stake. It was for others who
+ followed to show just how these small vessels acted in effecting the
+ transfer of the blood from artery to vein, and the grand general statement
+ that such a transfer does take place was, after all, the all-important
+ one, and the exact method of how it takes place a detail. Harvey's
+ experiments to demonstrate that the blood passes from the arteries to the
+ veins are so simply and concisely stated that they may best be given in
+ his own words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have here to cite certain experiments," he wrote, "from which it seems
+ obvious that the blood enters a limb by the arteries, and returns from it
+ by the veins; that the arteries are the vessels carrying the blood from
+ the heart, and the veins the returning channels of the blood to the heart;
+ that in the limbs and extreme parts of the body the blood passes either by
+ anastomosis from the arteries into the veins, or immediately by the pores
+ of the flesh, or in both ways, as has already been said in speaking of the
+ passage of the blood through the lungs; whence it appears manifest that in
+ the circuit the blood moves from thence hither, and hence thither; from
+ the centre to the extremities, to wit, and from the extreme parts back
+ again to the centre. Finally, upon grounds of circulation, with the same
+ elements as before, it will be obvious that the quantity can neither be
+ accounted for by the ingesta, nor yet be held necessary to nutrition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now let any one make an experiment on the arm of a man, either using such
+ a fillet as is employed in blood-letting or grasping the limb tightly with
+ his hand, the best subject for it being one who is lean, and who has large
+ veins, and the best time after exercise, when the body is warm, the pulse
+ is full, and the blood carried in large quantities to the extremities, for
+ all then is more conspicuous; under such circumstances let a ligature be
+ thrown about the extremity and drawn as tightly as can be borne: it will
+ first be perceived that beyond the ligature neither in the wrist nor
+ anywhere else do the arteries pulsate, that at the same time immediately
+ above the ligature the artery begins to rise higher at each diastole, to
+ throb more violently, and to swell in its vicinity with a kind of tide, as
+ if it strove to break through and overcome the obstacle to its current;
+ the artery here, in short, appears as if it were permanently full. The
+ hand under such circumstances retains its natural color and appearances;
+ in the course of time it begins to fall somewhat in temperature, indeed,
+ but nothing is DRAWN into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After the bandage has been kept on some short time in this way, let it be
+ slackened a little, brought to the state or term of middling tightness
+ which is used in bleeding, and it will be seen that the whole hand and arm
+ will instantly become deeply suffused and distended, injected, gorged with
+ blood, DRAWN, as it is said, by this middling ligature, without pain, or
+ heat, or any horror of a vacuum, or any other cause yet indicated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As we have noted, in connection with the tight ligature, that the artery
+ above the bandage was distended and pulsated, not below it, so, in the
+ case of the moderately tight bandage, on the contrary, do we find that the
+ veins below, never above, the fillet swell and become dilated, while the
+ arteries shrink; and such is the degree of distention of the veins here
+ that it is only very strong pressure that will force the blood beyond the
+ fillet and cause any of the veins in the upper part of the arm to rise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From these facts it is easy for any careful observer to learn that the
+ blood enters an extremity by the arteries; for when they are effectively
+ compressed nothing is DRAWN to the member; the hand preserves its color;
+ nothing flows into it, neither is it distended; but when the pressure is
+ diminished, as it is with the bleeding fillet, it is manifest that the
+ blood is instantly thrown in with force, for then the hand begins to
+ swell; which is as much as to say that when the arteries pulsate the blood
+ is flowing through them, as it is when the moderately tight ligature is
+ applied; but when they do not pulsate, or when a tight ligature is used,
+ they cease from transmitting anything; they are only distended above the
+ part where the ligature is applied. The veins again being compressed,
+ nothing can flow through them; the certain indication of which is that
+ below the ligature they are much more tumid than above it, and than they
+ usually appear when there is no bandage upon the arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It therefore plainly appears that the ligature prevents the return of the
+ blood through the veins to the parts above it, and maintains those beneath
+ it in a state of permanent distention. But the arteries, in spite of the
+ pressure, and under the force and impulse of the heart, send on the blood
+ from the internal parts of the body to the parts beyond the bandage."(5)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This use of ligatures is very significant, because, as shown, a very tight
+ ligature stops circulation in both arteries and veins, while a loose one,
+ while checking the circulation in the veins, which lie nearer the surface
+ and are not so directly influenced by the force of the heart, does not
+ stop the passage of blood in the arteries, which are usually deeply
+ imbedded in the tissues, and not so easily influenced by pressure from
+ without.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last step of Harvey's demonstration was to prove that the blood does
+ flow along the veins to the heart, aided by the valves that had been the
+ cause of so much discussion and dispute between the great
+ sixteenth-century anatomists. Harvey not only demonstrated the presence of
+ these valves, but showed conclusively, by simple experiments, what their
+ function was, thus completing his demonstration of the phenomena of the
+ circulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The final ocular demonstration of the passage of the blood from the
+ arteries to the veins was not to be made until four years after Harvey's
+ death. This process, which can be observed easily in the web of a frog's
+ foot by the aid of a low-power lens, was first demonstrated by Marcello
+ Malpighi (1628-1694) in 1661. By the aid of a lens he first saw the small
+ "capillary" vessels connecting the veins and arteries in a piece of dried
+ lung. Taking his cue from this, he examined the lung of a turtle, and was
+ able to see in it the passage of the corpuscles through these minute
+ vessels, making their way along these previously unknown channels from the
+ arteries into the veins on their journey back to the heart. Thus the work
+ of Harvey, all but complete, was made absolutely entire by the great
+ Italian. And all this in a single generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEEUWENHOEK DISCOVERS BACTERIA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seventeenth century was not to close, however, without another
+ discovery in science, which, when applied to the causation of disease
+ almost two centuries later, revolutionized therapeutics more completely
+ than any one discovery. This was the discovery of microbes, by Antonius
+ von Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723), in 1683. Von Leeuwenhoek discovered that "in
+ the white matter between his teeth" there were millions of microscopic
+ "animals"&mdash;more, in fact, than "there were human beings in the united
+ Netherlands," and all "moving in the most delightful manner." There can be
+ no question that he saw them, for we can recognize in his descriptions of
+ these various forms of little "animals" the four principal forms of
+ microbes&mdash;the long and short rods of bacilli and bacteria, the
+ spheres of micrococci, and the corkscrew spirillum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The presence of these microbes in his mouth greatly annoyed Antonius, and
+ he tried various methods of getting rid of them, such as using vinegar and
+ hot coffee. In doing this he little suspected that he was anticipating
+ modern antiseptic surgery by a century and three-quarters, and to be
+ attempting what antiseptic surgery is now able to accomplish. For the
+ fundamental principle of antisepsis is the use of medicines for ridding
+ wounds of similar microscopic organisms. Von Leenwenhoek was only
+ temporarily successful in his attempts, however, and took occasion to
+ communicate his discovery to the Royal Society of England, hoping that
+ they would be "interested in this novelty." Probably they were, but not
+ sufficiently so for any member to pursue any protracted investigations or
+ reach any satisfactory conclusions, and the whole matter was practically
+ forgotten until the middle of the nineteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. MEDICINE IN THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Of the half-dozen surgeons who were prominent in the sixteenth century,
+ Ambroise Pare (1517-1590), called the father of French surgery, is perhaps
+ the most widely known. He rose from the position of a common barber to
+ that of surgeon to three French monarchs, Henry II., Francis II., and
+ Charles IX. Some of his mottoes are still first principles of the medical
+ man. Among others are: "He who becomes a surgeon for the sake of money,
+ and not for the sake of knowledge, will accomplish nothing"; and "A tried
+ remedy is better than a newly invented." On his statue is his modest
+ estimate of his work in caring for the wounded, "Je le pansay, Dieu le
+ guarit"&mdash;I dressed him, God cured him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in this dressing of wounds on the battlefield that he accidentally
+ discovered how useless and harmful was the terribly painful treatment of
+ applying boiling oil to gunshot wounds as advocated by John of Vigo. It
+ happened that after a certain battle, where there was an unusually large
+ number of casualties, Pare found, to his horror, that no more boiling oil
+ was available for the surgeons, and that he should be obliged to dress the
+ wounded by other simpler methods. To his amazement the results proved
+ entirely satisfactory, and from that day he discarded the hot-oil
+ treatment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Pare did not understand Latin he wrote his treatises in French, thus
+ inaugurating a custom in France that was begun by Paracelsus in Germany
+ half a century before. He reintroduced the use of the ligature in
+ controlling hemorrhage, introduced the "figure of eight" suture in the
+ operation for hare-lip, improved many of the medico-legal doctrines, and
+ advanced the practice of surgery generally. He is credited with having
+ successfully performed the operation for strangulated hernia, but he
+ probably borrowed it from Peter Franco (1505-1570), who published an
+ account of this operation in 1556. As this operation is considered by some
+ the most important operation in surgery, its discoverer is entitled to
+ more than passing notice, although he was despised and ignored by the
+ surgeons of his time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Franco was an illiterate travelling lithotomist&mdash;a class of itinerant
+ physicians who were very generally frowned down by the regular
+ practitioners of medicine. But Franco possessed such skill as an operator,
+ and appears to have been so earnest in the pursuit of what he considered a
+ legitimate calling, that he finally overcame the popular prejudice and
+ became one of the salaried surgeons of the republic of Bern. He was the
+ first surgeon to perform the suprapubic lithotomy operation&mdash;the
+ removal of stone through the abdomen instead of through the perineum. His
+ works, while written in an illiterate style, give the clearest
+ descriptions of any of the early modern writers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the fame of Franco rests upon his operation for prolonging human life,
+ so the fame of his Italian contemporary, Gaspar Tagliacozzi (1545-1599),
+ rests upon his operation for increasing human comfort and happiness by
+ restoring amputated noses. At the time in which he lived amputation of the
+ nose was very common, partly from disease, but also because a certain pope
+ had fixed the amputation of that member as the penalty for larceny.
+ Tagliacozzi probably borrowed his operation from the East; but he was the
+ first Western surgeon to perform it and describe it. So great was the fame
+ of his operations that patients flocked to him from all over Europe, and
+ each "went away with as many noses as he liked." Naturally, the man who
+ directed his efforts to restoring structures that bad been removed by
+ order of the Church was regarded in the light of a heretic by many
+ theologians; and though he succeeded in cheating the stake or dungeon, and
+ died a natural death, his body was finally cast out of the church in which
+ it had been buried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the sixteenth century Germany produced a surgeon, Fabricius Hildanes
+ (1560-1639), whose work compares favorably with that of Pare, and whose
+ name would undoubtedly have been much better known had not the
+ circumstances of the time in which he lived tended to obscure his merits.
+ The blind followers of Paracelsus could see nothing outside the pale of
+ their master's teachings, and the disastrous Thirty Years' War tended to
+ obscure and retard all scientific advances in Germany. Unlike many of his
+ fellow-surgeons, Hildanes was well versed in Latin and Greek; and,
+ contrary to the teachings of Paracelsus, he laid particular stress upon
+ the necessity of the surgeon having a thorough knowledge of anatomy. He
+ had a helpmate in his wife, who was also something of a surgeon, and she
+ is credited with having first made use of the magnet in removing particles
+ of metal from the eye. Hildanes tells of a certain man who had been
+ injured by a small piece of steel in the cornea, which resisted all his
+ efforts to remove it. After observing Hildanes' fruitless efforts for a
+ time, it suddenly occurred to his wife to attempt to make the extraction
+ with a piece of loadstone. While the physician held open the two lids, his
+ wife attempted to withdraw the steel with the magnet held close to the
+ cornea, and after several efforts she was successful&mdash;which Hildanes
+ enumerates as one of the advantages of being a married man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hildanes was particularly happy in his inventions of surgical instruments,
+ many of which were designed for locating and removing the various missiles
+ recently introduced in warfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seventeenth century, which was such a flourishing one for anatomy and
+ physiology, was not as productive of great surgeons or advances in surgery
+ as the sixteenth had been or the eighteenth was to be. There was a gradual
+ improvement all along the line, however, and much of the work begun by
+ such surgeons as Pare and Hildanes was perfected or improved. Perhaps the
+ most progressive surgeon of the century was an Englishman, Richard Wiseman
+ (1625-1686), who, like Harvey, enjoyed royal favor, being in the service
+ of all the Stuart kings. He was the first surgeon to advocate primary
+ amputation, in gunshot wounds, of the limbs, and also to introduce the
+ treatment of aneurisms by compression; but he is generally rated as a
+ conservative operator, who favored medication rather than radical
+ operations, where possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Italy, Marcus Aurelius Severinus (1580-1656) and Peter Marchettis
+ (1589-1675) were the leading surgeons of their nation. Like many of his
+ predecessors in Europe, Severinus ran amuck with the Holy Inquisition and
+ fled from Naples. But the waning of the powerful arm of the Church is
+ shown by the fact that he was brought back by the unanimous voice of the
+ grateful citizens, and lived in safety despite the frowns of the
+ theologians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sixteenth century cannot be said to have added much of importance in
+ the field of practical medicine, and, as in the preceding and succeeding
+ centuries, was at best only struggling along in the wake of anatomy,
+ physiology, and surgery. In the seventeenth century, however, at least one
+ discovery in therapeutics was made that has been an inestimable boon to
+ humanity ever since. This was the introduction of cinchona bark (from
+ which quinine is obtained) in 1640. But this century was productive of
+ many medical SYSTEMS, and could boast of many great names among the
+ medical profession, and, on the whole, made considerably more progress
+ than the preceding century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the founders of medical systems, one of the most widely known is Jan
+ Baptista van Helmont (1578-1644), an eccentric genius who constructed a
+ system of medicine of his own and for a time exerted considerable
+ influence. But in the end his system was destined to pass out of
+ existence, not very long after the death of its author. Van Helmont was
+ not only a physician, but was master of all the other branches of learning
+ of the time, taking up the study of medicine and chemistry as an
+ after-thought, but devoting himself to them with the greatest enthusiasm
+ once he had begun his investigations. His attitude towards existing
+ doctrines was as revolutionary as that of Paracelsus, and he rejected the
+ teachings of Galen and all the ancient writers, although retaining some of
+ the views of Paracelsus. He modified the archaeus of Paracelsus, and added
+ many complications to it. He believed the whole body to be controlled by
+ an archaeus influus, the soul by the archaei insiti, and these in turn
+ controlled by the central archeus. His system is too elaborate and
+ complicated for full explanation, but its chief service to medicine was in
+ introducing new chemical methods in the preparation of drugs. In this way
+ he was indirectly connected with the establishment of the Iatrochemical
+ school. It was he who first used the word "gas"&mdash;a word coined by
+ him, along with many others that soon fell into disuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The principles of the Iatrochemical school were the use of chemical
+ medicines, and a theory of pathology different from the prevailing
+ "humoral" pathology. The founder of this school was Sylvius (Franz de le
+ Boe, 1614-1672), professor of medicine at Leyden. He attempted to
+ establish a permanent system of medicine based on the newly discovered
+ theory of the circulation and the new chemistry, but his name is
+ remembered by medical men because of the fissure in the brain (fissure of
+ Sylvius) that bears it. He laid great stress on the cause of fevers and
+ other diseases as originating in the disturbances of the process of
+ fermentation in the stomach. The doctrines of Sylvius spread widely over
+ the continent, but were not generally accepted in England until modified
+ by Thomas Willis (1622-1675), whose name, like that of Sylvius, is
+ perpetuated by a structure in the brain named after him, the circle of
+ Willis. Willis's descriptions of certain nervous diseases, and an account
+ of diabetes, are the first recorded, and added materially to scientific
+ medicine. These schools of medicine lasted until the end of the
+ seventeenth century, when they were finally overthrown by Sydenham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Iatrophysical school (also called iatromathematical, iatromechanical,
+ or physiatric) was founded on theories of physiology, probably by Borelli,
+ of Naples (1608-1679), although Sanctorius; Sanctorius, a professor at
+ Padua, was a precursor, if not directly interested in establishing it.
+ Sanctorius discovered the fact that an "insensible perspiration" is being
+ given off by the body continually, and was amazed to find that loss of
+ weight in this way far exceeded the loss of weight by all other excretions
+ of the body combined. He made this discovery by means of a peculiar
+ weighing-machine to which a chair was attached, and in which he spent most
+ of his time. Very naturally he overestimated the importance of this
+ discovery, but it was, nevertheless, of great value in pointing out the
+ hygienic importance of the care of the skin. He also introduced a
+ thermometer which he advocated as valuable in cases of fever, but the
+ instrument was probably not his own invention, but borrowed from his
+ friend Galileo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey's discovery of the circulation of the blood laid the foundation of
+ the Iatrophysical school by showing that this vital process was comparable
+ to a hydraulic system. In his On the Motive of Animals, Borelli first
+ attempted to account for the phenomena of life and diseases on these
+ principles. The iatromechanics held that the great cause of disease is due
+ to different states of elasticity of the solids of the body interfering
+ with the movements of the fluids, which are themselves subject to changes
+ in density, one or both of these conditions continuing to cause stagnation
+ or congestion. The school thus founded by Borelli was the outcome of the
+ unbounded enthusiasm, with its accompanying exaggeration of certain
+ phenomena with the corresponding belittling of others that naturally
+ follows such a revolutionary discovery as that of Harvey. Having such a
+ founder as the brilliant Italian Borelli, it was given a sufficient
+ impetus by his writings to carry it some distance before it finally
+ collapsed. Some of the exaggerated mathematical calculations of Borelli
+ himself are worth noting. Each heart-beat, as he calculated it, overcomes
+ a resistance equal to one hundred and eighty thousand pounds;&mdash;the
+ modern physiologist estimates its force at from five to nine ounces!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THOMAS SYDENHAM
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while the Continent was struggling with these illusive "systems," and
+ dabbling in mystic theories that were to scarcely outlive the men who
+ conceived them, there appeared in England&mdash;the "land of
+ common-sense," as a German scientist has called it&mdash;"a cool, clear,
+ and unprejudiced spirit," who in the golden age of systems declined "to be
+ like the man who builds the chambers of the upper story of his house
+ before he had laid securely the foundation walls."(1) This man was Thomas
+ Sydenham (1624-1689), who, while the great Harvey was serving the king as
+ surgeon, was fighting as a captain in the parliamentary army. Sydenham
+ took for his guide the teachings of Hippocrates, modified to suit the
+ advances that had been made in scientific knowledge since the days of the
+ great Greek, and established, as a standard, observation and experience.
+ He cared little for theory unless confirmed by practice, but took the
+ Hippocratic view that nature cured diseases, assisted by the physician. He
+ gave due credit, however, to the importance of the part played by the
+ assistant. As he saw it, medicine could be advanced in three ways: (1) "By
+ accurate descriptions or natural histories of diseases; (2) by
+ establishing a fixed principle or method of treatment, founded upon
+ experience; (3) by searching for specific remedies, which he believes must
+ exist in considerable numbers, though he admits that the only one yet
+ discovered is Peruvian bark."(2) As it happened, another equally specific
+ remedy, mercury, when used in certain diseases, was already known to him,
+ but he evidently did not recognize it as such.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The influence on future medicine of Sydenham's teachings was most
+ pronounced, due mostly to his teaching of careful observation. To most
+ physicians, however, he is now remembered chiefly for his introduction of
+ the use of laudanum, still considered one of the most valuable remedies of
+ modern pharmacopoeias. The German gives the honor of introducing this
+ preparation to Paracelsus, but the English-speaking world will always
+ believe that the credit should be given to Sydenham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX. PHILOSOPHER-SCIENTISTS AND NEW INSTITUTIONS OF LEARNING
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We saw that in the old Greek days there was no sharp line of demarcation
+ between the field of the philosopher and that of the scientist. In the
+ Hellenistic epoch, however, knowledge became more specialized, and our
+ recent chapters have shown us scientific investigators whose efforts were
+ far enough removed from the intangibilities of the philosopher. It must
+ not be overlooked, however, that even in the present epoch there were men
+ whose intellectual efforts were primarily directed towards the subtleties
+ of philosophy, yet who had also a penchant for strictly scientific
+ imaginings, if not indeed for practical scientific experiments. At least
+ three of these men were of sufficient importance in the history of the
+ development of science to demand more than passing notice. These three are
+ the Englishman Francis Bacon (1561-1626), the Frenchman Rene Descartes
+ (1596-1650); and the German Gottfried Leibnitz (1646-1716). Bacon, as the
+ earliest path-breaker, showed the way, theoretically at least, in which
+ the sciences should be studied; Descartes, pursuing the methods pointed
+ out by Bacon, carried the same line of abstract reason into practice as
+ well; while Leibnitz, coming some years later, and having the advantage of
+ the wisdom of his two great predecessors, was naturally influenced by both
+ in his views of abstract scientific principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bacon's career as a statesman and his faults and misfortunes as a man do
+ not concern us here. Our interest in him begins with his entrance into
+ Trinity College, Cambridge, where he took up the study of all the sciences
+ taught there at that time. During the three years he became more and more
+ convinced that science was not being studied in a profitable manner, until
+ at last, at the end of his college course, he made ready to renounce the
+ old Aristotelian methods of study and advance his theory of inductive
+ study. For although he was a great admirer of Aristotle's work, he became
+ convinced that his methods of approaching study were entirely wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The opinion of Aristotle," he says, in his De Argumentum Scientiarum,
+ "seemeth to me a negligent opinion, that of those things which exist by
+ nature nothing can be changed by custom; using for example, that if a
+ stone be thrown ten thousand times up it will not learn to ascend; and
+ that by often seeing or hearing we do not learn to see or hear better. For
+ though this principle be true in things wherein nature is peremptory (the
+ reason whereof we cannot now stand to discuss), yet it is otherwise in
+ things wherein nature admitteth a latitude. For he might see that a
+ straight glove will come more easily on with use; and that a wand will by
+ use bend otherwise than it grew; and that by use of the voice we speak
+ louder and stronger; and that by use of enduring heat or cold we endure it
+ the better, and the like; which latter sort have a nearer resemblance unto
+ that subject of manners he handleth than those instances which he
+ allegeth."(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were his opinions, formed while a young man in college, repeated at
+ intervals through his maturer years, and reiterated and emphasized in his
+ old age. Masses of facts were to be obtained by observing nature at first
+ hand, and from such accumulations of facts deductions were to be made. In
+ short, reasoning was to be from the specific to the general, and not vice
+ versa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was by his teachings alone that Bacon thus contributed to the
+ foundation of modern science; and, while he was constantly thinking and
+ writing on scientific subjects, he contributed little in the way of actual
+ discoveries. "I only sound the clarion," he said, "but I enter not the
+ battle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case of Descartes, however, is different. He both sounded the clarion
+ and entered into the fight. He himself freely acknowledges his debt to
+ Bacon for his teachings of inductive methods of study, but modern
+ criticism places his work on the same plane as that of the great
+ Englishman. "If you lay hold of any characteristic product of modern ways
+ of thinking," says Huxley, "either in the region of philosophy or in that
+ of science, you find the spirit of that thought, if not its form, has been
+ present in the mind of the great Frenchman."(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Descartes, the son of a noble family of France, was educated by Jesuit
+ teachers. Like Bacon, he very early conceived the idea that the methods of
+ teaching and studying science were wrong, but be pondered the matter well
+ into middle life before putting into writing his ideas of philosophy and
+ science. Then, in his Discourse Touching the Method of Using One's Reason
+ Rightly and of Seeking Scientific Truth, he pointed out the way of seeking
+ after truth. His central idea in this was to emphasize the importance of
+ DOUBT, and avoidance of accepting as truth anything that does not admit of
+ absolute and unqualified proof. In reaching these conclusions he had
+ before him the striking examples of scientific deductions by Galileo, and
+ more recently the discovery of the circulation of the blood by Harvey.
+ This last came as a revelation to scientists, reducing this seemingly
+ occult process, as it did, to the field of mechanical phenomena. The same
+ mechanical laws that governed the heavenly bodies, as shown by Galileo,
+ governed the action of the human heart, and, for aught any one knew, every
+ part of the body, and even the mind itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having once conceived this idea, Descartes began a series of dissections
+ and experiments upon the lower animals, to find, if possible, further
+ proof of this general law. To him the human body was simply a machine, a
+ complicated mechanism, whose functions were controlled just as any other
+ piece of machinery. He compared the human body to complicated machinery
+ run by water-falls and complicated pipes. "The nerves of the machine which
+ I am describing," he says, "may very well be compared to the pipes of
+ these waterworks; its muscles and its tendons to the other various engines
+ and springs which seem to move them; its animal spirits to the water which
+ impels them, of which the heart is the fountain; while the cavities of the
+ brain are the central office. Moreover, respiration and other such actions
+ as are natural and usual in the body, and which depend on the course of
+ the spirits, are like the movements of a clock, or a mill, which may be
+ kept up by the ordinary flow of water."(3)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In such passages as these Descartes anticipates the ideas of physiology of
+ the present time. He believed that the functions are performed by the
+ various organs of the bodies of animals and men as a mechanism, to which
+ in man was added the soul. This soul he located in the pineal gland, a
+ degenerate and presumably functionless little organ in the brain. For
+ years Descartes's idea of the function of this gland was held by many
+ physiologists, and it was only the introduction of modern high-power
+ microscopy that reduced this also to a mere mechanism, and showed that it
+ is apparently the remains of a Cyclopean eye once common to man's remote
+ ancestors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Descartes was the originator of a theory of the movements of the universe
+ by a mechanical process&mdash;the Cartesian theory of vortices&mdash;which
+ for several decades after its promulgation reigned supreme in science. It
+ is the ingenuity of this theory, not the truth of its assertions, that
+ still excites admiration, for it has long since been supplanted. It was
+ certainly the best hitherto advanced&mdash;the best "that the observations
+ of the age admitted," according to D'Alembert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to this theory the infinite universe is full of matter, there
+ being no such thing as a vacuum. Matter, as Descartes believed, is uniform
+ in character throughout the entire universe, and since motion cannot take
+ place in any part of a space completely filled, without simultaneous
+ movement in all other parts, there are constant more or less circular
+ movements, vortices, or whirlpools of particles, varying, of course, in
+ size and velocity. As a result of this circular movement the particles of
+ matter tend to become globular from contact with one another. Two species
+ of matter are thus formed, one larger and globular, which continue their
+ circular motion with a constant tendency to fly from the centre of the
+ axis of rotation, the other composed of the clippings resulting from the
+ grinding process. These smaller "filings" from the main bodies, becoming
+ smaller and smaller, gradually lose their velocity and accumulate in the
+ centre of the vortex. This collection of the smaller matter in the centre
+ of the vortex constitutes the sun or star, while the spherical particles
+ propelled in straight lines from the centre towards the circumference of
+ the vortex produce the phenomenon of light radiating from the central
+ star. Thus this matter becomes the atmosphere revolving around the
+ accumulation at the centre. But the small particles being constantly worn
+ away from the revolving spherical particles in the vortex, become
+ entangled in their passage, and when they reach the edge of the inner
+ strata of solar dust they settle upon it and form what we call sun-spots.
+ These are constantly dissolved and reformed, until sometimes they form a
+ crust round the central nucleus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the expansive force of the star diminishes in the course of time, it is
+ encroached upon by neighboring vortices. If the part of the encroaching
+ star be of a less velocity than the star which it has swept up, it will
+ presently lose its hold, and the smaller star pass out of range, becoming
+ a comet. But if the velocity of the vortex into which the incrusted star
+ settles be equivalent to that of the surrounded vortex, it will hold it as
+ a captive, still revolving and "wrapt in its own firmament." Thus the
+ several planets of our solar system have been captured and held by the
+ sun-vortex, as have the moon and other satellites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But although these new theories at first created great enthusiasm among
+ all classes of philosophers and scientists, they soon came under the ban
+ of the Church. While no actual harm came to Descartes himself, his
+ writings were condemned by the Catholic and Protestant churches alike. The
+ spirit of philosophical inquiry he had engendered, however, lived on, and
+ is largely responsible for modern philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In many ways the life and works of Leibnitz remind us of Bacon rather than
+ Descartes. His life was spent in filling high political positions, and his
+ philosophical and scientific writings were by-paths of his fertile mind.
+ He was a theoretical rather than a practical scientist, his contributions
+ to science being in the nature of philosophical reasonings rather than
+ practical demonstrations. Had he been able to withdraw from public life
+ and devote himself to science alone, as Descartes did, he would
+ undoubtedly have proved himself equally great as a practical worker. But
+ during the time of his greatest activity in philosophical fields, between
+ the years 1690 and 1716, he was all the time performing extraordinary
+ active duties in entirely foreign fields. His work may be regarded,
+ perhaps, as doing for Germany in particular what Bacon's did for England
+ and the rest of the world in general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a comparatively small part of his philosophical writings concern us
+ here. According to his theory of the ultimate elements of the universe,
+ the entire universe is composed of individual centres, or monads. To these
+ monads he ascribed numberless qualities by which every phase of nature may
+ be accounted. They were supposed by him to be percipient, self-acting
+ beings, not under arbitrary control of the deity, and yet God himself was
+ the original monad from which all the rest are generated. With this
+ conception as a basis, Leibnitz deduced his doctrine of pre-established
+ harmony, whereby the numerous independent substances composing the world
+ are made to form one universe. He believed that by virtue of an inward
+ energy monads develop themselves spontaneously, each being independent of
+ every other. In short, each monad is a kind of deity in itself&mdash;a
+ microcosm representing all the great features of the macrocosm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be impossible clearly to estimate the precise value of the
+ stimulative influence of these philosophers upon the scientific thought of
+ their time. There was one way, however, in which their influence was made
+ very tangible&mdash;namely, in the incentive they gave to the foundation
+ of scientific societies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SCIENTIFIC SOCIETIES
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the present time, when the elements of time and distance are
+ practically eliminated in the propagation of news, and when cheap printing
+ has minimized the difficulties of publishing scientific discoveries, it is
+ difficult to understand the isolated position of the scientific
+ investigation of the ages that preceded steam and electricity. Shut off
+ from the world and completely out of touch with fellow-laborers perhaps
+ only a few miles away, the investigators were naturally seriously
+ handicapped; and inventions and discoveries were not made with the same
+ rapidity that they would undoubtedly have been had the same men been
+ receiving daily, weekly, or monthly communications from fellow-laborers
+ all over the world, as they do to-day. Neither did they have the advantage
+ of public or semi-public laboratories, where they were brought into
+ contact with other men, from whom to gather fresh trains of thought and
+ receive the stimulus of their successes or failures. In the natural course
+ of events, however, neighbors who were interested in somewhat similar
+ pursuits, not of the character of the rivalry of trade or commerce, would
+ meet more or less frequently and discuss their progress. The mutual
+ advantages of such intercourse would be at once appreciated; and it would
+ be but a short step from the casual meeting of two neighborly scientists
+ to the establishment of "societies," meeting at fixed times, and composed
+ of members living within reasonable travelling distance. There would,
+ perhaps, be the weekly or monthly meetings of men in a limited area; and
+ as the natural outgrowth of these little local societies, with frequent
+ meetings, would come the formation of larger societies, meeting less
+ often, where members travelled a considerable distance to attend. And,
+ finally, with increased facilities for communication and travel, the great
+ international societies of to-day would be produced&mdash;the natural
+ outcome of the neighborly meetings of the primitive mediaeval
+ investigators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Italy, at about the time of Galileo, several small societies were
+ formed. One of the most important of these was the Lyncean Society,
+ founded about the year 1611, Galileo himself being a member. This society
+ was succeeded by the Accademia del Cimento, at Florence, in 1657, which
+ for a time flourished, with such a famous scientist as Torricelli as one
+ of its members.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England an impetus seems to have been given by Sir Francis Bacon's
+ writings in criticism and censure of the system of teaching in colleges.
+ It is supposed that his suggestions as to what should be the aims of a
+ scientific society led eventually to the establishment of the Royal
+ Society. He pointed out how little had really been accomplished by the
+ existing institutions of learning in advancing science, and asserted that
+ little good could ever come from them while their methods of teaching
+ remained unchanged. He contended that the system which made the lectures
+ and exercises of such a nature that no deviation from the established
+ routine could be thought of was pernicious. But he showed that if any
+ teacher had the temerity to turn from the traditional paths, the daring
+ pioneer was likely to find insurmountable obstacles placed in the way of
+ his advancement. The studies were "imprisoned" within the limits of a
+ certain set of authors, and originality in thought or teaching was to be
+ neither contemplated nor tolerated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words of Bacon, given in strong and unsparing terms of censure and
+ condemnation, but nevertheless with perfect justification, soon bore
+ fruit. As early as the year 1645 a small company of scientists had been in
+ the habit of meeting at some place in London to discuss philosophical and
+ scientific subjects for mental advancement. In 1648, owing to the
+ political disturbances of the time, some of the members of these meetings
+ removed to Oxford, among them Boyle, Wallis, and Wren, where the meetings
+ were continued, as were also the meetings of those left in London. In
+ 1662, however, when the political situation bad become more settled, these
+ two bodies of men were united under a charter from Charles II., and
+ Bacon's ideas were practically expressed in that learned body, the Royal
+ Society of London. And it matters little that in some respects Bacon's
+ views were not followed in the practical workings of the society, or that
+ the division of labor in the early stages was somewhat different than at
+ present. The aim of the society has always been one for the advancement of
+ learning; and if Bacon himself could look over its records, he would
+ surely have little fault to find with the aid it has given in carrying out
+ his ideas for the promulgation of useful knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten years after the charter was granted to the Royal Society of London,
+ Lord Bacon's words took practical effect in Germany, with the result that
+ the Academia Naturae Curiosorum was founded, under the leadership of
+ Professor J. C. Sturm. The early labors of this society were devoted to a
+ repetition of the most notable experiments of the time, and the work of
+ the embryo society was published in two volumes, in 1672 and 1685
+ respectively, which were practically text-books of the physics of the
+ period. It was not until 1700 that Frederick I. founded the Royal Academy
+ of Sciences at Berlin, after the elaborate plan of Leibnitz, who was
+ himself the first president.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the nearest realization of Bacon's ideal, however, is in the Royal
+ Academy of Sciences at Paris, which was founded in 1666 under the
+ administration of Colbert, during the reign of Louis XIV. This institution
+ not only recognized independent members, but had besides twenty
+ pensionnaires who received salaries from the government. In this way a
+ select body of scientists were enabled to pursue their investigations
+ without being obliged to "give thought to the morrow" for their
+ sustenance. In return they were to furnish the meetings with scientific
+ memoirs, and once a year give an account of the work they were engaged
+ upon. Thus a certain number of the brightest minds were encouraged to
+ devote their entire time to scientific research, "delivered alike from the
+ temptations of wealth or the embarrassments of poverty." That such a plan
+ works well is amply attested by the results emanating from the French
+ academy. Pensionnaires in various branches of science, however, either
+ paid by the state or by learned societies, are no longer confined to
+ France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the other early scientific societies was the Imperial Academy of
+ Sciences at St. Petersburg, projected by Peter the Great, and established
+ by his widow, Catharine I., in 1725; and also the Royal Swedish Academy,
+ incorporated in 1781, and counting among its early members such men as the
+ celebrated Linnaeus. But after the first impulse had resulted in a few
+ learned societies, their manifest advantage was so evident that additional
+ numbers increased rapidly, until at present almost every branch of every
+ science is represented by more or less important bodies; and these are,
+ individually and collectively, adding to knowledge and stimulating
+ interest in the many fields of science, thus vindicating Lord Bacon's
+ asseverations that knowledge could be satisfactorily promulgated in this
+ manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X. THE SUCCESSORS OF GALILEO IN PHYSICAL SCIENCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We have now to witness the diversified efforts of a company of men who,
+ working for the most part independently, greatly added to the data of the
+ physical sciences&mdash;such men as Boyle, Huygens, Von Gericke, and
+ Hooke. It will be found that the studies of these men covered the whole
+ field of physical sciences as then understood&mdash;the field of so-called
+ natural philosophy. We shall best treat these successors of Galileo and
+ precursors of Newton somewhat biographically, pointing out the
+ correspondences and differences between their various accomplishments as
+ we proceed. It will be noted in due course that the work of some of them
+ was anticipatory of great achievements of a later century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBERT BOYLE (1627-1691)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of Robert Boyle's views as to the possible structure of atmospheric
+ air will be considered a little farther on in this chapter, but for the
+ moment we will take up the consideration of some of his experiments upon
+ that as well as other gases. Boyle was always much interested in alchemy,
+ and carried on extensive experiments in attempting to accomplish the
+ transmutation of metals; but he did not confine himself to these
+ experiments, devoting himself to researches in all the fields of natural
+ philosophy. He was associated at Oxford with a company of scientists,
+ including Wallis and Wren, who held meetings and made experiments
+ together, these gatherings being the beginning, as mentioned a moment ago,
+ of what finally became the Royal Society. It was during this residence at
+ Oxford that many of his valuable researches upon air were made, and during
+ this time be invented his air-pump, now exhibited in the Royal Society
+ rooms at Burlington House.(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His experiments to prove the atmospheric pressure are most interesting and
+ conclusive. "Having three small, round glass bubbles, blown at the flame
+ of a lamp, about the size of hazel-nuts," he says, "each of them with a
+ short, slender stem, by means whereof they were so exactly poised in water
+ that a very small change of weight would make them either emerge or sink;
+ at a time when the atmosphere was of convenient weight, I put them into a
+ wide-mouthed glass of common water, and leaving them in a quiet place,
+ where they were frequently in my eye, I observed that sometimes they would
+ be at the top of the water, and remain there for several days, or perhaps
+ weeks, together, and sometimes fall to the bottom, and after having
+ continued there for some time rise again. And sometimes they would rise or
+ fall as the air was hot or cold."(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the course of these experiments that the observations made by
+ Boyle led to the invention of his "statical barometer," the mercurial
+ barometer having been invented, as we have seen, by Torricelli, in 1643.
+ In describing this invention he says: "Making choice of a large, thin, and
+ light glass bubble, blown at the flame of a lamp, I counterpoised it with
+ a metallic weight, in a pair of scales that were suspended in a frame,
+ that would turn with the thirtieth part of a grain. Both the frame and the
+ balance were then placed near a good barometer, whence I might learn the
+ present weight of the atmosphere; when, though the scales were unable to
+ show all the variations that appeared in the mercurial barometer, yet they
+ gave notice of those that altered the height of the mercury half a quarter
+ of an inch."(3) A fairly sensitive barometer, after all. This statical
+ barometer suggested several useful applications to the fertile imagination
+ of its inventor, among others the measuring of mountain-peaks, as with the
+ mercurial barometer, the rarefication of the air at the top giving a
+ definite ratio to the more condensed air in the valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another of his experiments was made to discover the atmospheric pressure
+ to the square inch. After considerable difficulty he determined that the
+ relative weight of a cubic inch of water and mercury was about one to
+ fourteen, and computing from other known weights he determined that "when
+ a column of quicksilver thirty inches high is sustained in the barometer,
+ as it frequently happens, a column of air that presses upon an inch square
+ near the surface of the earth must weigh about fifteen avoirdupois
+ pounds."(4) As the pressure of air at the sea-level is now estimated at
+ 14.7304 pounds to the square inch, it will be seen that Boyle's
+ calculation was not far wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From his numerous experiments upon the air, Boyle was led to believe that
+ there were many "latent qualities" due to substances contained in it that
+ science had as yet been unable to fathom, believing that there is "not a
+ more heterogeneous body in the world." He believed that contagious
+ diseases were carried by the air, and suggested that eruptions of the
+ earth, such as those made by earthquakes, might send up "venomous
+ exhalations" that produced diseases. He suggested also that the air might
+ play an important part in some processes of calcination, which, as we
+ shall see, was proved to be true by Lavoisier late in the eighteenth
+ century. Boyle's notions of the exact chemical action in these phenomena
+ were of course vague and indefinite, but he had observed that some part
+ was played by the air, and he was right in supposing that the air "may
+ have a great share in varying the salts obtainable from calcined
+ vitriol."(5)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although he was himself such a painstaking observer of facts, he had the
+ fault of his age of placing too much faith in hear-say evidence of
+ untrained observers. Thus, from the numerous stories he heard concerning
+ the growth of metals in previously exhausted mines, he believed that the
+ air was responsible for producing this growth&mdash;in which he
+ undoubtedly believed. The story of a tin-miner that, in his own time,
+ after a lapse of only twenty-five years, a heap, of earth previously
+ exhausted of its ore became again even more richly impregnated than before
+ by lying exposed to the air, seems to have been believed by the
+ philosopher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Boyle was an alchemist, and undoubtedly believed in the alchemic theory
+ that metals have "spirits" and various other qualities that do not exist,
+ it is not surprising that he was credulous in the matter of beliefs
+ concerning peculiar phenomena exhibited by them. Furthermore, he
+ undoubtedly fell into the error common to "specialists," or persons
+ working for long periods of time on one subject&mdash;the error of
+ over-enthusiasm in his subject. He had discovered so many remarkable
+ qualities in the air that it is not surprising to find that he attributed
+ to it many more that he could not demonstrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyle's work upon colors, although probably of less importance than his
+ experiments and deductions upon air, show that he was in the van as far as
+ the science of his day was concerned. As he points out, the schools of his
+ time generally taught that "color is a penetrating quality, reaching to
+ the innermost part of the substance," and, as an example of this,
+ sealing-wax was cited, which could be broken into minute bits, each
+ particle retaining the same color as its fellows or the original mass. To
+ refute this theory, and to show instances to the contrary, Boyle, among
+ other things, shows that various colors&mdash;blue, red, yellow&mdash;may
+ be produced upon tempered steel, and yet the metal within "a
+ hair's-breadth of its surface" have none of these colors. Therefore, he
+ was led to believe that color, in opaque bodies at least, is superficial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But before we descend to a more particular consideration of our subject,"
+ he says, "'tis proper to observe that colors may be regarded either as a
+ quality residing in bodies to modify light after a particular manner, or
+ else as light itself so modified as to strike upon the organs of sight,
+ and cause the sensation we call color; and that this latter is the more
+ proper acceptation of the word color will appear hereafter. And indeed it
+ is the light itself, which after a certain manner, either mixed with
+ shades or other-wise, strikes our eyes and immediately produces that
+ motion in the organ which gives us the color of an object."(6)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In examining smooth and rough surfaces to determine the cause of their
+ color, he made use of the microscope, and pointed out the very obvious
+ example of the difference in color of a rough and a polished piece of the
+ same block of stone. He used some striking illustrations of the effect of
+ light and the position of the eye upon colors. "Thus the color of plush or
+ velvet will appear various if you stroke part of it one way and part
+ another, the posture of the particular threads in regard to the light, or
+ the eye, being thereby varied. And 'tis observable that in a field of ripe
+ corn, blown upon by the wind, there will appear waves of a color different
+ from that of the rest of the corn, because the wind, by depressing some of
+ the ears more than others, causes one to reflect more light from the
+ lateral and strawy parts than another."(7) His work upon color, however,
+ as upon light, was entirely overshadowed by the work of his great
+ fellow-countryman Newton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyle's work on electricity was a continuation of Gilbert's, to which he
+ added several new facts. He added several substances to Gilbert's list of
+ "electrics," experimented on smooth and rough surfaces in exciting of
+ electricity, and made the important discovery that amber retained its
+ attractive virtue after the friction that excited it bad ceased. "For the
+ attrition having caused an intestine motion in its parts," he says, "the
+ heat thereby excited ought not to cease as soon as ever the rubbing is
+ over, but to continue capable of emitting effluvia for some time
+ afterwards, longer or shorter according to the goodness of the electric
+ and the degree of the commotion made; all which, joined together, may
+ sometimes make the effect considerable; and by this means, on a warm day,
+ I, with a certain body not bigger than a pea, but very vigorously
+ attractive, moved a steel needle, freely poised, about three minutes after
+ I had left off rubbing it."(8)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MARIOTTE AND VON GUERICKE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Working contemporaneously with Boyle, and a man whose name is usually
+ associated with his as the propounder of the law of density of gases, was
+ Edme Mariotte (died 1684), a native of Burgundy. Mariotte demonstrated
+ that but for the resistance of the atmosphere, all bodies, whether light
+ or heavy, dense or thin, would fall with equal rapidity, and he proved
+ this by the well-known "guinea-and-feather" experiment. Having exhausted
+ the air from a long glass tube in which a guinea piece and a feather had
+ been placed, he showed that in the vacuum thus formed they fell with equal
+ rapidity as often as the tube was reversed. From his various experiments
+ as to the pressure of the atmosphere he deduced the law that the density
+ and elasticity of the atmosphere are precisely proportional to the
+ compressing force (the law of Boyle and Mariotte). He also ascertained
+ that air existed in a state of mechanical mixture with liquids, "existing
+ between their particles in a state of condensation." He made many other
+ experiments, especially on the collision of bodies, but his most important
+ work was upon the atmosphere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But meanwhile another contemporary of Boyle and Mariotte was interesting
+ himself in the study of the atmosphere, and had made a wonderful invention
+ and a most striking demonstration. This was Otto von Guericke (1602-1686),
+ Burgomaster of Magdeburg, and councillor to his "most serene and potent
+ Highness" the elector of that place. When not engrossed with the duties of
+ public office, he devoted his time to the study of the sciences,
+ particularly pneumatics and electricity, both then in their infancy. The
+ discoveries of Galileo, Pascal, and Torricelli incited him to solve the
+ problem of the creation of a vacuum&mdash;a desideratum since before the
+ days of Aristotle. His first experiments were with a wooden pump and a
+ barrel of water, but he soon found that with such porous material as wood
+ a vacuum could not be created or maintained. He therefore made use of a
+ globe of copper, with pump and stop-cock; and with this he was able to
+ pump out air almost as easily as water. Thus, in 1650, the air-pump was
+ invented. Continuing his experiments upon vacuums and atmospheric pressure
+ with his newly discovered pump, he made some startling discoveries as to
+ the enormous pressure exerted by the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not his intention, however, to demonstrate his newly acquired
+ knowledge by words or theories alone, nor by mere laboratory experiments;
+ but he chose instead an open field, to which were invited Emperor
+ Ferdinand III., and all the princes of the Diet at Ratisbon. When they
+ were assembled he produced two hollow brass hemispheres about two feet in
+ diameter, and placing their exactly fitting surfaces together, proceeded
+ to pump out the air from their hollow interior, thus causing them to stick
+ together firmly in a most remarkable way, apparently without anything
+ holding them. This of itself was strange enough; but now the worthy
+ burgomaster produced teams of horses, and harnessing them to either side
+ of the hemispheres, attempted to pull the adhering brasses apart. Five,
+ ten, fifteen teams&mdash;thirty horses, in all&mdash;were attached; but
+ pull and tug as they would they could not separate the firmly clasped
+ hemispheres. The enormous pressure of the atmosphere had been most
+ strikingly demonstrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is one thing to demonstrate, another to convince; and many of the
+ good people of Magdeburg shook their heads over this "devil's
+ contrivance," and predicted that Heaven would punish the Herr Burgomaster,
+ as indeed it had once by striking his house with lightning and injuring
+ some of his infernal contrivances. They predicted his future punishment,
+ but they did not molest him, for to his fellow-citizens, who talked and
+ laughed, drank and smoked with him, and knew him for the honest citizen
+ that he was, he did not seem bewitched at all. And so he lived and worked
+ and added other facts to science, and his brass hemispheres were not
+ destroyed by fanatical Inquisitors, but are still preserved in the royal
+ library at Berlin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his experiments with his air-pump he discovered many things regarding
+ the action of gases, among others, that animals cannot live in a vacuum.
+ He invented the anemoscope and the air-balance, and being thus enabled to
+ weight the air and note the changes that preceded storms and calms, he was
+ able still further to dumfound his wondering fellow-Magde-burgers by more
+ or less accurate predictions about the weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Von Guericke did not accept Gilbert's theory that the earth was a great
+ magnet, but in his experiments along lines similar to those pursued by
+ Gilbert, he not only invented the first electrical machine, but discovered
+ electrical attraction and repulsion. The electrical machine which he
+ invented consisted of a sphere of sulphur mounted on an iron axis to
+ imitate the rotation of the earth, and which, when rubbed, manifested
+ electrical reactions. When this globe was revolved and stroked with the
+ dry hand it was found that it attached to it "all sorts of little
+ fragments, like leaves of gold, silver, paper, etc." "Thus this globe," he
+ says, "when brought rather near drops of water causes them to swell and
+ puff up. It likewise attracts air, smoke, etc."(9) Before the time of
+ Guericke's demonstrations, Cabaeus had noted that chaff leaped back from
+ an "electric," but he did not interpret the phenomenon as electrical
+ repulsion. Von Guericke, however, recognized it as such, and refers to it
+ as what he calls "expulsive virtue." "Even expulsive virtue is seen in
+ this globe," he says, "for it not only attracts, but also REPELS again
+ from itself little bodies of this sort, nor does it receive them until
+ they have touched something else." It will be observed from this that he
+ was very close to discovering the discharge of the electrification of
+ attracted bodies by contact with some other object, after which they are
+ reattracted by the electric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He performed a most interesting experiment with his sulphur globe and a
+ feather, and in doing so came near anticipating Benjamin Franklin in his
+ discovery of the effects of pointed conductors in drawing off the
+ discharge. Having revolved and stroked his globe until it repelled a bit
+ of down, he removed the globe from its rack and advancing it towards the
+ now repellent down, drove it before him about the room. In this chase he
+ observed that the down preferred to alight against "the points of any
+ object whatsoever." He noticed that should the down chance to be driven
+ within a few inches of a lighted candle, its attitude towards the globe
+ suddenly changed, and instead of running away from it, it now "flew to it
+ for protection"&mdash;the charge on the down having been dissipated by the
+ hot air. He also noted that if one face of a feather had been first
+ attracted and then repelled by the sulphur ball, that the surface so
+ affected was always turned towards the globe; so that if the positions of
+ the two were reversed, the sides of the feather reversed also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still another important discovery, that of electrical conduction, was made
+ by Von Guericke. Until his discovery no one had observed the transference
+ of electricity from one body to another, although Gilbert had some time
+ before noted that a rod rendered magnetic at one end became so at the
+ other. Von Guericke's experiments were made upon a linen thread with his
+ sulphur globe, which, he says, "having been previously excited by rubbing,
+ can exercise likewise its virtue through a linen thread an ell or more
+ long, and there attract something." But this discovery, and his equally
+ important one that the sulphur ball becomes luminous when rubbed, were
+ practically forgotten until again brought to notice by the discoveries of
+ Francis Hauksbee and Stephen Gray early in the eighteenth century. From
+ this we may gather that Von Guericke himself did not realize the import of
+ his discoveries, for otherwise he would certainly have carried his
+ investigations still further. But as it was he turned his attention to
+ other fields of research.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBERT HOOKE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A slender, crooked, shrivelled-limbed, cantankerous little man, with
+ dishevelled hair and haggard countenance, bad-tempered and irritable,
+ penurious and dishonest, at least in his claims for priority in
+ discoveries&mdash;this is the picture usually drawn, alike by friends and
+ enemies, of Robert Hooke (1635-1703), a man with an almost unparalleled
+ genius for scientific discoveries in almost all branches of science.
+ History gives few examples so striking of a man whose really great
+ achievements in science would alone have made his name immortal, and yet
+ who had the pusillanimous spirit of a charlatan&mdash;an almost insane
+ mania, as it seems&mdash;for claiming the credit of discoveries made by
+ others. This attitude of mind can hardly be explained except as a mania:
+ it is certainly more charitable so to regard it. For his own discoveries
+ and inventions were so numerous that a few more or less would hardly have
+ added to his fame, as his reputation as a philosopher was well
+ established. Admiration for his ability and his philosophical knowledge
+ must always be marred by the recollection of his arrogant claims to the
+ discoveries of other philosophers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems pretty definitely determined that Hooke should be credited with
+ the invention of the balance-spring for regulating watches; but for a long
+ time a heated controversy was waged between Hooke and Huygens as to who
+ was the real inventor. It appears that Hooke conceived the idea of the
+ balance-spring, while to Huygens belongs the credit of having adapted the
+ COILED spring in a working model. He thus made practical Hooke's
+ conception, which is without value except as applied by the coiled spring;
+ but, nevertheless, the inventor, as well as the perfector, should receive
+ credit. In this controversy, unlike many others, the blame cannot be laid
+ at Hooke's door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hooke was the first curator of the Royal Society, and when anything was to
+ be investigated, usually invented the mechanical devices for doing so.
+ Astronomical apparatus, instruments for measuring specific weights, clocks
+ and chronometers, methods of measuring the velocity of falling bodies,
+ freezing and boiling points, strength of gunpowder, magnetic instruments&mdash;in
+ short, all kinds of ingenious mechanical devices in all branches of
+ science and mechanics. It was he who made the famous air-pump of Robert
+ Boyle, based on Boyle's plans. Incidentally, Hooke claimed to be the
+ inventor of the first air-pump himself, although this claim is now
+ entirely discredited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within a period of two years he devised no less than thirty different
+ methods of flying, all of which, of course, came to nothing, but go to
+ show the fertile imagination of the man, and his tireless energy. He
+ experimented with electricity and made some novel suggestions upon the
+ difference between the electric spark and the glow, although on the whole
+ his contributions in this field are unimportant. He also first pointed out
+ that the motions of the heavenly bodies must be looked upon as a
+ mechanical problem, and was almost within grasping distance of the exact
+ theory of gravitation, himself originating the idea of making use of the
+ pendulum in measuring gravity. Likewise, he first proposed the wave theory
+ of light; although it was Huygens who established it on its present
+ foundation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hooke published, among other things, a book of plates and descriptions of
+ his Microscopical Observations, which gives an idea of the advance that
+ had already been made in microscopy in his time. Two of these plates are
+ given here, which, even in this age of microscopy, are both interesting
+ and instructive. These plates are made from prints of Hooke's original
+ copper plates, and show that excellent lenses were made even at that time.
+ They illustrate, also, how much might have been accomplished in the field
+ of medicine if more attention had been given to microscopy by physicians.
+ Even a century later, had physicians made better use of their microscopes,
+ they could hardly have overlooked such an easily found parasite as the
+ itch mite, which is quite as easily detected as the cheese mite, pictured
+ in Hooke's book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In justice to Hooke, and in extenuation of his otherwise inexcusable
+ peculiarities of mind, it should be remembered that for many years he
+ suffered from a painful and wasting disease. This may have affected his
+ mental equilibrium, without appreciably affecting his ingenuity. In his
+ own time this condition would hardly have been considered a disease; but
+ to-day, with our advanced ideas as to mental diseases, we should be more
+ inclined to ascribe his unfortunate attitude of mind to a pathological
+ condition, rather than to any manifestation of normal mentality. From this
+ point of view his mental deformity seems not unlike that of Cavendish's,
+ later, except that in the case of Cavendish it manifested itself as an
+ abnormal sensitiveness instead of an abnormal irritability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHRISTIAN HUYGENS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If for nothing else, the world is indebted to the man who invented the
+ pendulum clock, Christian Huygens (1629-1695), of the Hague, inventor,
+ mathematician, mechanician, astronomer, and physicist. Huygens was the
+ descendant of a noble and distinguished family, his father, Sir
+ Constantine Huygens, being a well-known poet and diplomatist. Early in
+ life young Huygens began his career in the legal profession, completing
+ his education in the juridical school at Breda; but his taste for
+ mathematics soon led him to neglect his legal studies, and his aptitude
+ for scientific researches was so marked that Descartes predicted great
+ things of him even while he was a mere tyro in the field of scientific
+ investigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of his first endeavors in science was to attempt an improvement of the
+ telescope. Reflecting upon the process of making lenses then in vogue,
+ young Huygens and his brother Constantine attempted a new method of
+ grinding and polishing, whereby they overcame a great deal of the
+ spherical and chromatic aberration. With this new telescope a much clearer
+ field of vision was obtained, so much so that Huygens was able to detect,
+ among other things, a hitherto unknown satellite of Saturn. It was these
+ astronomical researches that led him to apply the pendulum to regulate the
+ movements of clocks. The need for some more exact method of measuring time
+ in his observations of the stars was keenly felt by the young astronomer,
+ and after several experiments along different lines, Huygens hit upon the
+ use of a swinging weight; and in 1656 made his invention of the pendulum
+ clock. The year following, his clock was presented to the states-general.
+ Accuracy as to time is absolutely essential in astronomy, but until the
+ invention of Huygens's clock there was no precise, nor even approximately
+ precise, means of measuring short intervals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Huygens was one of the first to adapt the micrometer to the telescope&mdash;a
+ mechanical device on which all the nice determination of minute distances
+ depends. He also took up the controversy against Hooke as to the
+ superiority of telescopic over plain sights to quadrants, Hooke contending
+ in favor of the plain. In this controversy, the subject of which attracted
+ wide attention, Huygens was completely victorious; and Hooke, being unable
+ to refute Huygens's arguments, exhibited such irritability that he
+ increased his already general unpopularity. All of the arguments for and
+ against the telescope sight are too numerous to be given here. In
+ contending in its favor Huygens pointed out that the unaided eye is unable
+ to appreciate an angular space in the sky less than about thirty seconds.
+ Even in the best quadrant with a plain sight, therefore, the altitude must
+ be uncertain by that quantity. If in place of the plain sight a telescope
+ is substituted, even if it magnify only thirty times, it will enable the
+ observer to fix the position to one second, with progressively increased
+ accuracy as the magnifying power of the telescope is increased. This was
+ only one of the many telling arguments advanced by Huygens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the field of optics, also, Huygens has added considerably to science,
+ and his work, Dioptrics, is said to have been a favorite book with Newton.
+ During the later part of his life, however, Huygens again devoted himself
+ to inventing and constructing telescopes, grinding the lenses, and
+ devising, if not actually making, the frame for holding them. These
+ telescopes were of enormous lengths, three of his object-glasses, now in
+ possession of the Royal Society, being of 123, 180, and 210 feet focal
+ length respectively. Such instruments, if constructed in the ordinary form
+ of the long tube, were very unmanageable, and to obviate this Huygens
+ adopted the plan of dispensing with the tube altogether, mounting his
+ lenses on long poles manipulated by machinery. Even these were unwieldy
+ enough, but the difficulties of manipulation were fully compensated by the
+ results obtained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been discovered, among other things, that in oblique refraction
+ light is separated into colors. Therefore, any small portion of the convex
+ lens of the telescope, being a prism, the rays proceed to the focus,
+ separated into prismatic colors, which make the image thus formed edged
+ with a fringe of color and indistinct. But, fortunately for the early
+ telescope makers, the degree of this aberration is independent of the
+ focal length of the lens; so that, by increasing this focal length and
+ using the appropriate eye-piece, the image can be greatly magnified, while
+ the fringe of colors remains about the same as when a less powerful lens
+ is used. Hence the advantage of Huygens's long telescope. He did not
+ confine his efforts to simply lengthening the focal length of his
+ telescopes, however, but also added to their efficiency by inventing an
+ almost perfect achromatic eye-piece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1663 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of London, and in
+ 1669 he gave to that body a concise statement of the laws governing the
+ collision of elastic bodies. Although the same views had been given by
+ Wallis and Wren a few weeks earlier, there is no doubt that Huygens's
+ views were reached independently; and it is probable that he had arrived
+ at his conclusions several years before. In the Philosophical Transactions
+ for 1669 it is recorded that the society, being interested in the laws of
+ the principles of motion, a request was made that M. Huygens, Dr. Wallis,
+ and Sir Christopher Wren submit their views on the subject. Wallis
+ submitted his paper first, November 15, 1668. A month later, December
+ 17th, Wren imparted to the society his laws as to the nature of the
+ collision of bodies. And a few days later, January 5, 1669, Huygens sent
+ in his "Rules Concerning the Motion of Bodies after Mutual Impulse."
+ Although Huygens's report was received last, he was anticipated by such a
+ brief space of time, and his views are so clearly stated&mdash;on the
+ whole rather more so than those of the other two&mdash;that we give them
+ in part here:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "1. If a hard body should strike against a body equally hard at rest,
+ after contact the former will rest and the latter acquire a velocity equal
+ to that of the moving body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "2. But if that other equal body be likewise in motion, and moving in the
+ same direction, after contact they will move with reciprocal velocities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "3. A body, however great, is moved by a body however small impelled with
+ any velocity whatsoever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "5. The quantity of motion of two bodies may be either increased or
+ diminished by their shock; but the same quantity towards the same part
+ remains, after subtracting the quantity of the contrary motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "6. The sum of the products arising from multiplying the mass of any hard
+ body into the squares of its velocity is the same both before and after
+ the stroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "7. A hard body at rest will receive a greater quantity of motion from
+ another hard body, either greater or less than itself, by the
+ interposition of any third body of a mean quantity, than if it was
+ immediately struck by the body itself; and if the interposing body be a
+ mean proportional between the other two, its action upon the quiescent
+ body will be the greatest of all."(10)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was only one of several interesting and important communications sent
+ to the Royal Society during his lifetime. One of these was a report on
+ what he calls "Pneumatical Experiments." "Upon including in a vacuum an
+ insect resembling a beetle, but somewhat larger," he says, "when it seemed
+ to be dead, the air was readmitted, and soon after it revived; putting it
+ again in the vacuum, and leaving it for an hour, after which the air was
+ readmitted, it was observed that the insect required a longer time to
+ recover; including it the third time for two days, after which the air was
+ admitted, it was ten hours before it began to stir; but, putting it in a
+ fourth time, for eight days, it never afterwards recovered.... Several
+ birds, rats, mice, rabbits, and cats were killed in a vacuum, but if the
+ air was admitted before the engine was quite exhausted some of them would
+ recover; yet none revived that had been in a perfect vacuum.... Upon
+ putting the weight of eighteen grains of powder with a gauge into a
+ receiver that held several pounds of water, and firing the powder, it
+ raised the mercury an inch and a half; from which it appears that there is
+ one-fifth of air in gunpowder, upon the supposition that air is about one
+ thousand times lighter than water; for in this experiment the mercury rose
+ to the eighteenth part of the height at which the air commonly sustains
+ it, and consequently the weight of eighteen grains of powder yielded air
+ enough to fill the eighteenth part of a receiver that contained seven
+ pounds of water; now this eighteenth part contains forty-nine drachms of
+ water; wherefore the air, that takes up an equal space, being a thousand
+ times lighter, weighs one-thousandth part of forty-nine drachms, which is
+ more than three grains and a half; it follows, therefore, that the weight
+ of eighteen grains of powder contains more than three and a half of air,
+ which is about one-fifth of eighteen grains...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From 1665 to 1681, accepting the tempting offer made him through Colbert,
+ by Louis XIV., Huygens pursued his studies at the Bibliotheque du Roi as a
+ resident of France. Here he published his Horologium Oscillatorium,
+ dedicated to the king, containing, among other things, his solution of the
+ problem of the "centre of oscillation." This in itself was an important
+ step in the history of mechanics. Assuming as true that the centre of
+ gravity of any number of interdependent bodies cannot rise higher than the
+ point from which it falls, he reached correct conclusions as to the
+ general principle of the conservation of vis viva, although he did not
+ actually prove his conclusions. This was the first attempt to deal with
+ the dynamics of a system. In this work, also, was the true determination
+ of the relation between the length of a pendulum and the time of its
+ oscillation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1681 he returned to Holland, influenced, it is believed, by the
+ attitude that was being taken in France against his religion. Here he
+ continued his investigations, built his immense telescopes, and, among
+ other things, discovered "polarization," which is recorded in Traite de la
+ Lumiere, published at Leyden in 1690. Five years later he died,
+ bequeathing his manuscripts to the University of Leyden. It is interesting
+ to note that he never accepted Newton's theory of gravitation as a
+ universal property of matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI. NEWTON AND THE COMPOSITION OF LIGHT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Galileo, that giant in physical science of the early seventeenth century,
+ died in 1642. On Christmas day of the same year there was born in England
+ another intellectual giant who was destined to carry forward the work of
+ Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo to a marvellous consummation through the
+ discovery of the great unifying law in accordance with which the planetary
+ motions are performed. We refer, of course, to the greatest of English
+ physical scientists, Isaac Newton, the Shakespeare of the scientific
+ world. Born thus before the middle of the seventeenth century, Newton
+ lived beyond the first quarter of the eighteenth (1727). For the last
+ forty years of that period his was the dominating scientific personality
+ of the world. With full propriety that time has been spoken of as the "Age
+ of Newton."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the man who was to achieve such distinction gave no early premonition
+ of future greatness. He was a sickly child from birth, and a boy of little
+ seeming promise. He was an indifferent student, yet, on the other hand, he
+ cared little for the common amusements of boyhood. He early exhibited,
+ however, a taste for mechanical contrivances, and spent much time in
+ devising windmills, water-clocks, sun-dials, and kites. While other boys
+ were interested only in having kites that would fly, Newton&mdash;at least
+ so the stories of a later time would have us understand&mdash;cared more
+ for the investigation of the seeming principles involved, or for testing
+ the best methods of attaching the strings, or the best materials to be
+ used in construction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the future philosopher was acquiring a taste for reading and
+ study, delving into old volumes whenever he found an opportunity. These
+ habits convinced his relatives that it was useless to attempt to make a
+ farmer of the youth, as had been their intention. He was therefore sent
+ back to school, and in the summer of 1661 he matriculated at Trinity
+ College, Cambridge. Even at college Newton seems to have shown no unusual
+ mental capacity, and in 1664, when examined for a scholarship by Dr.
+ Barrow, that gentleman is said to have formed a poor opinion of the
+ applicant. It is said that the knowledge of the estimate placed upon his
+ abilities by his instructor piqued Newton, and led him to take up in
+ earnest the mathematical studies in which he afterwards attained such
+ distinction. The study of Euclid and Descartes's "Geometry" roused in him
+ a latent interest in mathematics, and from that time forward his
+ investigations were carried on with enthusiasm. In 1667 he was elected
+ Fellow of Trinity College, taking the degree of M.A. the following spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will thus appear that Newton's boyhood and early manhood were passed
+ during that troublous time in British political annals which saw the
+ overthrow of Charles I., the autocracy of Cromwell, and the eventual
+ restoration of the Stuarts. His maturer years witnessed the overthrow of
+ the last Stuart and the reign of the Dutchman, William of Orange. In his
+ old age he saw the first of the Hanoverians mount the throne of England.
+ Within a decade of his death such scientific path-finders as Cavendish,
+ Black, and Priestley were born&mdash;men who lived on to the close of the
+ eighteenth century. In a full sense, then, the age of Newton bridges the
+ gap from that early time of scientific awakening under Kepler and Galileo
+ to the time which we of the twentieth century think of as essentially
+ modern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE COMPOSITION OF WHITE LIGHT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In December, 1672, Newton was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, and
+ at this meeting a paper describing his invention of the refracting
+ telescope was read. A few days later he wrote to the secretary, making
+ some inquiries as to the weekly meetings of the society, and intimating
+ that he had an account of an interesting discovery that he wished to lay
+ before the society. When this communication was made public, it proved to
+ be an explanation of the discovery of the composition of white light. We
+ have seen that the question as to the nature of color had commanded the
+ attention of such investigators as Huygens, but that no very satisfactory
+ solution of the question had been attained. Newton proved by demonstrative
+ experiments that white light is composed of the blending of the rays of
+ diverse colors, and that the color that we ascribe to any object is merely
+ due to the fact that the object in question reflects rays of that color,
+ absorbing the rest. That white light is really made up of many colors
+ blended would seem incredible had not the experiments by which this
+ composition is demonstrated become familiar to every one. The experiments
+ were absolutely novel when Newton brought them forward, and his
+ demonstration of the composition of light was one of the most striking
+ expositions ever brought to the attention of the Royal Society. It is
+ hardly necessary to add that, notwithstanding the conclusive character of
+ Newton's work, his explanations did not for a long time meet with general
+ acceptance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Newton was led to his discovery by some experiments made with an ordinary
+ glass prism applied to a hole in the shutter of a darkened room, the
+ refracted rays of the sunlight being received upon the opposite wall and
+ forming there the familiar spectrum. "It was a very pleasing diversion,"
+ he wrote, "to view the vivid and intense colors produced thereby; and
+ after a time, applying myself to consider them very circumspectly, I
+ became surprised to see them in varying form, which, according to the
+ received laws of refraction, I expected should have been circular. They
+ were terminated at the sides with straight lines, but at the ends the
+ decay of light was so gradual that it was difficult to determine justly
+ what was their figure, yet they seemed semicircular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Comparing the length of this colored spectrum with its breadth, I found
+ it almost five times greater; a disproportion so extravagant that it
+ excited me to a more than ordinary curiosity of examining from whence it
+ might proceed. I could scarce think that the various thicknesses of the
+ glass, or the termination with shadow or darkness, could have any
+ influence on light to produce such an effect; yet I thought it not amiss,
+ first, to examine those circumstances, and so tried what would happen by
+ transmitting light through parts of the glass of divers thickness, or
+ through holes in the window of divers bigness, or by setting the prism
+ without so that the light might pass through it and be refracted before it
+ was transmitted through the hole; but I found none of those circumstances
+ material. The fashion of the colors was in all these cases the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I suspected whether by any unevenness of the glass or other
+ contingent irregularity these colors might be thus dilated. And to try
+ this I took another prism like the former, and so placed it that the
+ light, passing through them both, might be refracted contrary ways, and so
+ by the latter returned into that course from which the former diverted it.
+ For, by this means, I thought, the regular effects of the first prism
+ would be destroyed by the second prism, but the irregular ones more
+ augmented by the multiplicity of refractions. The event was that the
+ light, which by the first prism was diffused into an oblong form, was by
+ the second reduced into an orbicular one with as much regularity as when
+ it did not all pass through them. So that, whatever was the cause of that
+ length, 'twas not any contingent irregularity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I then proceeded to examine more critically what might be effected by the
+ difference of the incidence of rays coming from divers parts of the sun;
+ and to that end measured the several lines and angles belonging to the
+ image. Its distance from the hole or prism was 22 feet; its utmost length
+ 13 1/4 inches; its breadth 2 5/8; the diameter of the hole 1/4 of an inch;
+ the angle which the rays, tending towards the middle of the image, made
+ with those lines, in which they would have proceeded without refraction,
+ was 44 degrees 56'; and the vertical angle of the prism, 63 degrees 12'.
+ Also the refractions on both sides of the prism&mdash;that is, of the
+ incident and emergent rays&mdash;were, as near as I could make them,
+ equal, and consequently about 54 degrees 4'; and the rays fell
+ perpendicularly upon the wall. Now, subducting the diameter of the hole
+ from the length and breadth of the image, there remains 13 inches the
+ length, and 2 3/8 the breadth, comprehended by those rays, which, passing
+ through the centre of the said hole, which that breadth subtended, was
+ about 31', answerable to the sun's diameter; but the angle which its
+ length subtended was more than five such diameters, namely 2 degrees 49'.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having made these observations, I first computed from them the refractive
+ power of the glass, and found it measured by the ratio of the sines 20 to
+ 31. And then, by that ratio, I computed the refractions of two rays
+ flowing from opposite parts of the sun's discus, so as to differ 31' in
+ their obliquity of incidence, and found that the emergent rays should have
+ comprehended an angle of 31', as they did, before they were incident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But because this computation was founded on the hypothesis of the
+ proportionality of the sines of incidence and refraction, which though by
+ my own experience I could not imagine to be so erroneous as to make that
+ angle but 31', which in reality was 2 degrees 49', yet my curiosity caused
+ me again to make my prism. And having placed it at my window, as before, I
+ observed that by turning it a little about its axis to and fro, so as to
+ vary its obliquity to the light more than an angle of 4 degrees or 5
+ degrees, the colors were not thereby sensibly translated from their place
+ on the wall, and consequently by that variation of incidence the quantity
+ of refraction was not sensibly varied. By this experiment, therefore, as
+ well as by the former computation, it was evident that the difference of
+ the incidence of rays flowing from divers parts of the sun could not make
+ them after decussation diverge at a sensibly greater angle than that at
+ which they before converged; which being, at most, but about 31' or 32',
+ there still remained some other cause to be found out, from whence it
+ could be 2 degrees 49'."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this caused Newton to suspect that the rays, after their trajection
+ through the prism, moved in curved rather than in straight lines, thus
+ tending to be cast upon the wall at different places according to the
+ amount of this curve. His suspicions were increased, also, by happening to
+ recall that a tennis-ball sometimes describes such a curve when "cut" by a
+ tennis-racket striking the ball obliquely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For a circular as well as a progressive motion being communicated to it
+ by the stroke," he says, "its parts on that side where the motions
+ conspire must press and beat the contiguous air more violently than on the
+ other, and there excite a reluctancy and reaction of the air
+ proportionately greater. And for the same reason, if the rays of light
+ should possibly be globular bodies, and by their oblique passage out of
+ one medium into another acquire a circulating motion, they ought to feel
+ the greater resistance from the ambient ether on that side where the
+ motions conspire, and thence be continually bowed to the other. But
+ notwithstanding this plausible ground of suspicion, when I came to examine
+ it I could observe no such curvity in them. And, besides (which was enough
+ for my purpose), I observed that the difference 'twixt the length of the
+ image and diameter of the hole through which the light was transmitted was
+ proportionable to their distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The gradual removal of these suspicions at length led me to the
+ experimentum crucis, which was this: I took two boards, and, placing one
+ of them close behind the prism at the window, so that the light must pass
+ through a small hole, made in it for the purpose, and fall on the other
+ board, which I placed at about twelve feet distance, having first made a
+ small hole in it also, for some of the incident light to pass through.
+ Then I placed another prism behind this second board, so that the light
+ trajected through both the boards might pass through that also, and be
+ again refracted before it arrived at the wall. This done, I took the first
+ prism in my hands and turned it to and fro slowly about its axis, so much
+ as to make the several parts of the image, cast on the second board,
+ successively pass through the hole in it, that I might observe to what
+ places on the wall the second prism would refract them. And I saw by the
+ variation of these places that the light, tending to that end of the image
+ towards which the refraction of the first prism was made, did in the
+ second prism suffer a refraction considerably greater than the light
+ tending to the other end. And so the true cause of the length of that
+ image was detected to be no other than that LIGHT consists of RAYS
+ DIFFERENTLY REFRANGIBLE, which, without any respect to a difference in
+ their incidence, were, according to their degrees of refrangibility,
+ transmitted towards divers parts of the wall."(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE NATURE OF COLOR
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus proved the composition of light, Newton took up an exhaustive
+ discussion as to colors, which cannot be entered into at length here. Some
+ of his remarks on the subject of compound colors, however, may be stated
+ in part. Newton's views are of particular interest in this connection,
+ since, as we have already pointed out, the question as to what constituted
+ color could not be agreed upon by the philosophers. Some held that color
+ was an integral part of the substance; others maintained that it was
+ simply a reflection from the surface; and no scientific explanation had
+ been generally accepted. Newton concludes his paper as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I might add more instances of this nature, but I shall conclude with the
+ general one that the colors of all natural bodies have no other origin
+ than this, that they are variously qualified to reflect one sort of light
+ in greater plenty than another. And this I have experimented in a dark
+ room by illuminating those bodies with uncompounded light of divers
+ colors. For by that means any body may be made to appear of any color.
+ They have there no appropriate color, but ever appear of the color of the
+ light cast upon them, but yet with this difference, that they are most
+ brisk and vivid in the light of their own daylight color. Minium appeareth
+ there of any color indifferently with which 'tis illustrated, but yet most
+ luminous in red; and so Bise appeareth indifferently of any color with
+ which 'tis illustrated, but yet most luminous in blue. And therefore
+ Minium reflecteth rays of any color, but most copiously those indued with
+ red; and consequently, when illustrated with daylight&mdash;that is, with
+ all sorts of rays promiscuously blended&mdash;those qualified with red
+ shall abound most in the reflected light, and by their prevalence cause it
+ to appear of that color. And for the same reason, Bise, reflecting blue
+ most copiously, shall appear blue by the excess of those rays in its
+ reflected light; and the like of other bodies. And that this is the entire
+ and adequate cause of their colors is manifest, because they have no power
+ to change or alter the colors of any sort of rays incident apart, but put
+ on all colors indifferently with which they are enlightened."(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This epoch-making paper aroused a storm of opposition. Some of Newton's
+ opponents criticised his methods, others even doubted the truth of his
+ experiments. There was one slight mistake in Newton's belief that all
+ prisms would give a spectrum of exactly the same length, and it was some
+ time before he corrected this error. Meanwhile he patiently met and
+ answered the arguments of his opponents until he began to feel that
+ patience was no longer a virtue. At one time he even went so far as to
+ declare that, once he was "free of this business," he would renounce
+ scientific research forever, at least in a public way. Fortunately for the
+ world, however, he did not adhere to this determination, but went on to
+ even greater discoveries&mdash;which, it may be added, involved still
+ greater controversies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In commenting on Newton's discovery of the composition of light, Voltaire
+ said: "Sir Isaac Newton has demonstrated to the eye, by the bare
+ assistance of a prism, that light is a composition of colored rays, which,
+ being united, form white color. A single ray is by him divided into seven,
+ which all fall upon a piece of linen or a sheet of white paper, in their
+ order one above the other, and at equal distances. The first is red, the
+ second orange, the third yellow, the fourth green, the fifth blue, the
+ sixth indigo, the seventh a violet purple. Each of these rays transmitted
+ afterwards by a hundred other prisms will never change the color it bears;
+ in like manner as gold, when completely purged from its dross, will never
+ change afterwards in the crucible."(3)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII. NEWTON AND THE LAW OF GRAVITATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We come now to the story of what is by common consent the greatest of
+ scientific achievements. The law of universal gravitation is the most
+ far-reaching principle as yet discovered. It has application equally to
+ the minutest particle of matter and to the most distant suns in the
+ universe, yet it is amazing in its very simplicity. As usually phrased,
+ the law is this: That every particle of matter in the universe attracts
+ every other particle with a force that varies directly with the mass of
+ the particles and inversely as the squares of their mutual distance.
+ Newton did not vault at once to the full expression of this law, though he
+ had formulated it fully before he gave the results of his investigations
+ to the world. We have now to follow the steps by which he reached this
+ culminating achievement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the very beginning we must understand that the idea of universal
+ gravitation was not absolutely original with Newton. Away back in the old
+ Greek days, as we have seen, Anaxagoras conceived and clearly expressed
+ the idea that the force which holds the heavenly bodies in their orbits
+ may be the same that operates upon substances at the surface of the earth.
+ With Anaxagoras this was scarcely more than a guess. After his day the
+ idea seems not to have been expressed by any one until the seventeenth
+ century's awakening of science. Then the consideration of Kepler's Third
+ Law of planetary motion suggested to many minds perhaps independently the
+ probability that the force hitherto mentioned merely as centripetal,
+ through the operation of which the planets are held in their orbits is a
+ force varying inversely as the square of the distance from the sun. This
+ idea had come to Robert Hooke, to Wren, and perhaps to Halley, as well as
+ to Newton; but as yet no one had conceived a method by which the validity
+ of the suggestion might be tested. It was claimed later on by Hooke that
+ he had discovered a method demonstrating the truth of the theory of
+ inverse squares, and after the full announcement of Newton's discovery a
+ heated controversy was precipitated in which Hooke put forward his claims
+ with accustomed acrimony. Hooke, however, never produced his
+ demonstration, and it may well be doubted whether he had found a method
+ which did more than vaguely suggest the law which the observations of
+ Kepler had partially revealed. Newton's great merit lay not so much in
+ conceiving the law of inverse squares as in the demonstration of the law.
+ He was led to this demonstration through considering the orbital motion of
+ the moon. According to the familiar story, which has become one of the
+ classic myths of science, Newton was led to take up the problem through
+ observing the fall of an apple. Voltaire is responsible for the story,
+ which serves as well as another; its truth or falsity need not in the
+ least concern us. Suffice it that through pondering on the familiar fact
+ of terrestrial gravitation, Newton was led to question whether this force
+ which operates so tangibly here at the earth's surface may not extend its
+ influence out into the depths of space, so as to include, for example, the
+ moon. Obviously some force pulls the moon constantly towards the earth;
+ otherwise that body would fly off at a tangent and never return. May not
+ this so-called centripetal force be identical with terrestrial
+ gravitation? Such was Newton's query. Probably many another man since
+ Anaxagoras had asked the same question, but assuredly Newton was the first
+ man to find an answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thought that suggested itself to Newton's mind was this: If we make a
+ diagram illustrating the orbital course of the moon for any given period,
+ say one minute, we shall find that the course of the moon departs from a
+ straight line during that period by a measurable distance&mdash;that: is
+ to say, the moon has been virtually pulled towards the earth by an amount
+ that is represented by the difference between its actual position at the
+ end of the minute under observation and the position it would occupy had
+ its course been tangential, as, according to the first law of motion, it
+ must have been had not some force deflected it towards the earth.
+ Measuring the deflection in question&mdash;which is equivalent to the
+ so-called versed sine of the arc traversed&mdash;we have a basis for
+ determining the strength of the deflecting force. Newton constructed such
+ a diagram, and, measuring the amount of the moon's departure from a
+ tangential rectilinear course in one minute, determined this to be, by his
+ calculation, thirteen feet. Obviously, then, the force acting upon the
+ moon is one that would cause that body to fall towards the earth to the
+ distance of thirteen feet in the first minute of its fall. Would such be
+ the force of gravitation acting at the distance of the moon if the power
+ of gravitation varies inversely as the square of the distance? That was
+ the tangible form in which the problem presented itself to Newton. The
+ mathematical solution of the problem was simple enough. It is based on a
+ comparison of the moon's distance with the length of the earth's radius.
+ On making this calculation, Newton found that the pull of gravitation&mdash;if
+ that were really the force that controls the moon&mdash;gives that body a
+ fall of slightly over fifteen feet in the first minute, instead of
+ thirteen feet. Here was surely a suggestive approximation, yet, on the
+ other band, the discrepancy seemed to be too great to warrant him in the
+ supposition that he had found the true solution. He therefore dismissed
+ the matter from his mind for the time being, nor did he return to it
+ definitely for some years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illustration caption = DIAGRAM TO ILLUSTRATE NEWTON'S LAW OF GRAVITATION
+ (E represents the earth and A the moon. Were the earth's pull on the moon
+ to cease, the moon's inertia would cause it to take the tangential course,
+ AB. On the other hand, were the moon's motion to be stopped for an
+ instant, the moon would fall directly towards the earth, along the line
+ AD. The moon's actual orbit, resulting from these component forces, is AC.
+ Let AC represent the actual flight of the moon in one minute. Then BC,
+ which is obviously equal to AD, represents the distance which the moon
+ virtually falls towards the earth in one minute. Actual computation, based
+ on measurements of the moon's orbit, showed this distance to be about
+ fifteen feet. Another computation showed that this is the distance that
+ the moon would fall towards the earth under the influence of gravity, on
+ the supposition that the force of gravity decreases inversely with the
+ square of the distance; the basis of comparison being furnished by falling
+ bodies at the surface of the earth. Theory and observations thus
+ coinciding, Newton was justified in declaring that the force that pulls
+ the moon towards the earth and keeps it in its orbit, is the familiar
+ force of gravity, and that this varies inversely as the square of the
+ distance.)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was to appear in due time that Newton's hypothesis was perfectly valid
+ and that his method of attempted demonstration was equally so. The
+ difficulty was that the earth's proper dimensions were not at that time
+ known. A wrong estimate of the earth's size vitiated all the other
+ calculations involved, since the measurement of the moon's distance
+ depends upon the observation of the parallax, which cannot lead to a
+ correct computation unless the length of the earth's radius is accurately
+ known. Newton's first calculation was made as early as 1666, and it was
+ not until 1682 that his attention was called to a new and apparently
+ accurate measurement of a degree of the earth's meridian made by the
+ French astronomer Picard. The new measurement made a degree of the earth's
+ surface 69.10 miles, instead of sixty miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Learning of this materially altered calculation as to the earth's size,
+ Newton was led to take up again his problem of the falling moon. As he
+ proceeded with his computation, it became more and more certain that this
+ time the result was to harmonize with the observed facts. As the story
+ goes, he was so completely overwhelmed with emotion that he was forced to
+ ask a friend to complete the simple calculation. That story may well be
+ true, for, simple though the computation was, its result was perhaps the
+ most wonderful demonstration hitherto achieved in the entire field of
+ science. Now at last it was known that the force of gravitation operates
+ at the distance of the moon, and holds that body in its elliptical orbit,
+ and it required but a slight effort of the imagination to assume that the
+ force which operates through such a reach of space extends its influence
+ yet more widely. That such is really the case was demonstrated presently
+ through calculations as to the moons of Jupiter and by similar
+ computations regarding the orbital motions of the various planets. All
+ results harmonizing, Newton was justified in reaching the conclusion that
+ gravitation is a universal property of matter. It remained, as we shall
+ see, for nineteenth-century scientists to prove that the same force
+ actually operates upon the stars, though it should be added that this
+ demonstration merely fortified a belief that had already found full
+ acceptance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus epitomized Newton's discovery, we must now take up the steps
+ of his progress somewhat in detail, and state his theories and their
+ demonstration in his own words. Proposition IV., theorem 4, of his
+ Principia is as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That the moon gravitates towards the earth and by the force of gravity is
+ continually drawn off from a rectilinear motion and retained in its orbit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The mean distance of the moon from the earth, in the syzygies in
+ semi-diameters of the earth, is, according to Ptolemy and most
+ astronomers, 59; according to Vendelin and Huygens, 60; to Copernicus, 60
+ 1/3; to Street, 60 2/3; and to Tycho, 56 1/2. But Tycho, and all that
+ follow his tables of refractions, making the refractions of the sun and
+ moon (altogether against the nature of light) to exceed the refractions of
+ the fixed stars, and that by four or five minutes NEAR THE HORIZON, did
+ thereby increase the moon's HORIZONTAL parallax by a like number of
+ minutes, that is, by a twelfth or fifteenth part of the whole parallax.
+ Correct this error and the distance will become about 60 1/2
+ semi-diameters of the earth, near to what others have assigned. Let us
+ assume the mean distance of 60 diameters in the syzygies; and suppose one
+ revolution of the moon, in respect to the fixed stars, to be completed in
+ 27d. 7h. 43', as astronomers have determined; and the circumference of the
+ earth to amount to 123,249,600 Paris feet, as the French have found by
+ mensuration. And now, if we imagine the moon, deprived of all motion, to
+ be let go, so as to descend towards the earth with the impulse of all that
+ force by which (by Cor. Prop. iii.) it is retained in its orb, it will in
+ the space of one minute of time describe in its fall 15 1/12 Paris feet.
+ For the versed sine of that arc which the moon, in the space of one minute
+ of time, would by its mean motion describe at the distance of sixty
+ semi-diameters of the earth, is nearly 15 1/12 Paris feet, or more
+ accurately 15 feet, 1 inch, 1 line 4/9. Wherefore, since that force, in
+ approaching the earth, increases in the reciprocal-duplicate proportion of
+ the distance, and upon that account, at the surface of the earth, is 60 x
+ 60 times greater than at the moon, a body in our regions, falling with
+ that force, ought in the space of one minute of time to describe 60 x 60 x
+ 15 1/12 Paris feet; and in the space of one second of time, to describe 15
+ 1/12 of those feet, or more accurately, 15 feet, 1 inch, 1 line 4/9. And
+ with this very force we actually find that bodies here upon earth do
+ really descend; for a pendulum oscillating seconds in the latitude of
+ Paris will be 3 Paris feet, and 8 lines 1/2 in length, as Mr. Huygens has
+ observed. And the space which a heavy body describes by falling in one
+ second of time is to half the length of the pendulum in the duplicate
+ ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter (as Mr. Huygens has
+ also shown), and is therefore 15 Paris feet, 1 inch, 1 line 4/9. And
+ therefore the force by which the moon is retained in its orbit is that
+ very same force which we commonly call gravity; for, were gravity another
+ force different from that, then bodies descending to the earth with the
+ joint impulse of both forces would fall with a double velocity, and in the
+ space of one second of time would describe 30 1/6 Paris feet; altogether
+ against experience."(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this is beautifully clear, and its validity has never in recent
+ generations been called in question; yet it should be explained that the
+ argument does not amount to an actually indisputable demonstration. It is
+ at least possible that the coincidence between the observed and computed
+ motion of the moon may be a mere coincidence and nothing more. This
+ probability, however, is so remote that Newton is fully justified in
+ disregarding it, and, as has been said, all subsequent generations have
+ accepted the computation as demonstrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us produce now Newton's further computations as to the other planetary
+ bodies, passing on to his final conclusion that gravity is a universal
+ force.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "PROPOSITION V., THEOREM V.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "That the circumjovial planets gravitate towards Jupiter; the
+ circumsaturnal towards Saturn; the circumsolar towards the sun; and by the
+ forces of their gravity are drawn off from rectilinear motions, and
+ retained in curvilinear orbits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For the revolutions of the circumjovial planets about Jupiter, of the
+ circumsaturnal about Saturn, and of Mercury and Venus and the other
+ circumsolar planets about the sun, are appearances of the same sort with
+ the revolution of the moon about the earth; and therefore, by Rule ii.,
+ must be owing to the same sort of causes; especially since it has been
+ demonstrated that the forces upon which those revolutions depend tend to
+ the centres of Jupiter, of Saturn, and of the sun; and that those forces,
+ in receding from Jupiter, from Saturn, and from the sun, decrease in the
+ same proportion, and according to the same law, as the force of gravity
+ does in receding from the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "COR. 1.&mdash;There is, therefore, a power of gravity tending to all the
+ planets; for doubtless Venus, Mercury, and the rest are bodies of the same
+ sort with Jupiter and Saturn. And since all attraction (by Law iii.) is
+ mutual, Jupiter will therefore gravitate towards all his own satellites,
+ Saturn towards his, the earth towards the moon, and the sun towards all
+ the primary planets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "COR. 2.&mdash;The force of gravity which tends to any one planet is
+ reciprocally as the square of the distance of places from the planet's
+ centre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "COR. 3.&mdash;All the planets do mutually gravitate towards one another,
+ by Cor. 1 and 2, and hence it is that Jupiter and Saturn, when near their
+ conjunction, by their mutual attractions sensibly disturb each other's
+ motions. So the sun disturbs the motions of the moon; and both sun and
+ moon disturb our sea, as we shall hereafter explain.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "SCHOLIUM
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "The force which retains the celestial bodies in their orbits has been
+ hitherto called centripetal force; but it being now made plain that it can
+ be no other than a gravitating force, we shall hereafter call it gravity.
+ For the cause of the centripetal force which retains the moon in its orbit
+ will extend itself to all the planets by Rules i., ii., and iii.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "PROPOSITION VI., THEOREM VI.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "That all bodies gravitate towards every planet; and that the weights of
+ the bodies towards any the same planet, at equal distances from the centre
+ of the planet, are proportional to the quantities of matter which they
+ severally contain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has been now a long time observed by others that all sorts of heavy
+ bodies (allowance being made for the inability of retardation which they
+ suffer from a small power of resistance in the air) descend to the earth
+ FROM EQUAL HEIGHTS in equal times; and that equality of times we may
+ distinguish to a great accuracy by help of pendulums. I tried the thing in
+ gold, silver, lead, glass, sand, common salt, wood, water, and wheat. I
+ provided two wooden boxes, round and equal: I filled the one with wood,
+ and suspended an equal weight of gold (as exactly as I could) in the
+ centre of oscillation of the other. The boxes hanging by eleven feet, made
+ a couple of pendulums exactly equal in weight and figure, and equally
+ receiving the resistance of the air. And, placing the one by the other, I
+ observed them to play together forward and backward, for a long time, with
+ equal vibrations. And therefore the quantity of matter in gold was to the
+ quantity of matter in the wood as the action of the motive force (or vis
+ motrix) upon all the gold to the action of the same upon all the wood&mdash;that
+ is, as the weight of the one to the weight of the other: and the like
+ happened in the other bodies. By these experiments, in bodies of the same
+ weight, I could manifestly have discovered a difference of matter less
+ than the thousandth part of the whole, had any such been. But, without all
+ doubt, the nature of gravity towards the planets is the same as towards
+ the earth. For, should we imagine our terrestrial bodies removed to the
+ orb of the moon, and there, together with the moon, deprived of all
+ motion, to be let go, so as to fall together towards the earth, it is
+ certain, from what we have demonstrated before, that, in equal times, they
+ would describe equal spaces with the moon, and of consequence are to the
+ moon, in quantity and matter, as their weights to its weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Moreover, since the satellites of Jupiter perform their revolutions in
+ times which observe the sesquiplicate proportion of their distances from
+ Jupiter's centre, their accelerative gravities towards Jupiter will be
+ reciprocally as the square of their distances from Jupiter's centre&mdash;that
+ is, equal, at equal distances. And, therefore, these satellites, if
+ supposed to fall TOWARDS JUPITER from equal heights, would describe equal
+ spaces in equal times, in like manner as heavy bodies do on our earth.
+ And, by the same argument, if the circumsolar planets were supposed to be
+ let fall at equal distances from the sun, they would, in their descent
+ towards the sun, describe equal spaces in equal times. But forces which
+ equally accelerate unequal bodies must be as those bodies&mdash;that is to
+ say, the weights of the planets (TOWARDS THE SUN) must be as their
+ quantities of matter. Further, that the weights of Jupiter and his
+ satellites towards the sun are proportional to the several quantities of
+ their matter, appears from the exceedingly regular motions of the
+ satellites. For if some of these bodies were more strongly attracted to
+ the sun in proportion to their quantity of matter than others, the motions
+ of the satellites would be disturbed by that inequality of attraction. If
+ at equal distances from the sun any satellite, in proportion to the
+ quantity of its matter, did gravitate towards the sun with a force greater
+ than Jupiter in proportion to his, according to any given proportion,
+ suppose d to e; then the distance between the centres of the sun and of
+ the satellite's orbit would be always greater than the distance between
+ the centres of the sun and of Jupiter nearly in the subduplicate of that
+ proportion: as by some computations I have found. And if the satellite did
+ gravitate towards the sun with a force, lesser in the proportion of e to
+ d, the distance of the centre of the satellite's orb from the sun would be
+ less than the distance of the centre of Jupiter from the sun in the
+ subduplicate of the same proportion. Therefore, if at equal distances from
+ the sun, the accelerative gravity of any satellite towards the sun were
+ greater or less than the accelerative gravity of Jupiter towards the sun
+ by one-one-thousandth part of the whole gravity, the distance of the
+ centre of the satellite's orbit from the sun would be greater or less than
+ the distance of Jupiter from the sun by one one-two-thousandth part of the
+ whole distance&mdash;that is, by a fifth part of the distance of the
+ utmost satellite from the centre of Jupiter; an eccentricity of the orbit
+ which would be very sensible. But the orbits of the satellites are
+ concentric to Jupiter, and therefore the accelerative gravities of Jupiter
+ and of all its satellites towards the sun, at equal distances from the
+ sun, are as their several quantities of matter; and the weights of the
+ moon and of the earth towards the sun are either none, or accurately
+ proportional to the masses of matter which they contain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "COR. 5.&mdash;The power of gravity is of a different nature from the
+ power of magnetism; for the magnetic attraction is not as the matter
+ attracted. Some bodies are attracted more by the magnet; others less; most
+ bodies not at all. The power of magnetism in one and the same body may be
+ increased and diminished; and is sometimes far stronger, for the quantity
+ of matter, than the power of gravity; and in receding from the magnet
+ decreases not in the duplicate, but almost in the triplicate proportion of
+ the distance, as nearly as I could judge from some rude observations.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "PROPOSITION VII., THEOREM VII.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "That there is a power of gravity tending to all bodies, proportional to
+ the several quantities of matter which they contain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That all the planets mutually gravitate one towards another we have
+ proved before; as well as that the force of gravity towards every one of
+ them considered apart, is reciprocally as the square of the distance of
+ places from the centre of the planet. And thence it follows, that the
+ gravity tending towards all the planets is proportional to the matter
+ which they contain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Moreover, since all the parts of any planet A gravitates towards any
+ other planet B; and the gravity of every part is to the gravity of the
+ whole as the matter of the part is to the matter of the whole; and to
+ every action corresponds a reaction; therefore the planet B will, on the
+ other hand, gravitate towards all the parts of planet A, and its gravity
+ towards any one part will be to the gravity towards the whole as the
+ matter of the part to the matter of the whole. Q.E.D.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "HENCE IT WOULD APPEAR THAT the force of the whole must arise from the
+ force of the component parts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Newton closes this remarkable Book iii. with the following words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hitherto we have explained the phenomena of the heavens and of our sea by
+ the power of gravity, but have not yet assigned the cause of this power.
+ This is certain, that it must proceed from a cause that penetrates to the
+ very centre of the sun and planets, without suffering the least diminution
+ of its force; that operates not according to the quantity of the surfaces
+ of the particles upon which it acts (as mechanical causes used to do), but
+ according to the quantity of solid matter which they contain, and
+ propagates its virtue on all sides to immense distances, decreasing always
+ in the duplicate proportions of the distances. Gravitation towards the sun
+ is made up out of the gravitations towards the several particles of which
+ the body of the sun is composed; and in receding from the sun decreases
+ accurately in the duplicate proportion of the distances as far as the orb
+ of Saturn, as evidently appears from the quiescence of the aphelions of
+ the planets; nay, and even to the remotest aphelions of the comets, if
+ those aphelions are also quiescent. But hitherto I have not been able to
+ discover the cause of those properties of gravity from phenomena, and I
+ frame no hypothesis; for whatever is not deduced from the phenomena is to
+ be called an hypothesis; and hypotheses, whether metaphysical or physical,
+ whether of occult qualities or mechanical, have no place in experimental
+ philosophy.... And to us it is enough that gravity does really exist, and
+ act according to the laws which we have explained, and abundantly serves
+ to account for all the motions of the celestial bodies and of our sea."(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very magnitude of the importance of the theory of universal
+ gravitation made its general acceptance a matter of considerable time
+ after the actual discovery. This opposition had of course been foreseen by
+ Newton, and, much as he dreaded controversy, he was prepared to face it
+ and combat it to the bitter end. He knew that his theory was right; it
+ remained for him to convince the world of its truth. He knew that some of
+ his contemporary philosophers would accept it at once; others would at
+ first doubt, question, and dispute, but finally accept; while still others
+ would doubt and dispute until the end of their days. This had been the
+ history of other great discoveries; and this will probably be the history
+ of most great discoveries for all time. But in this case the discoverer
+ lived to see his theory accepted by practically all the great minds of his
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delambre is authority for the following estimate of Newton by Lagrange.
+ "The celebrated Lagrange," he says, "who frequently asserted that Newton
+ was the greatest genius that ever existed, used to add&mdash;'and the most
+ fortunate, for we cannot find MORE THAN ONCE a system of the world to
+ establish.'" With pardonable exaggeration the admiring followers of the
+ great generalizer pronounced this epitaph:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Nature and Nature's laws lay hid in night;
+ God said 'Let Newton be!' and all was light."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII. INSTRUMENTS OF PRECISION IN THE AGE OF NEWTON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ During the Newtonian epoch there were numerous important inventions of
+ scientific instruments, as well as many improvements made upon the older
+ ones. Some of these discoveries have been referred to briefly in other
+ places, but their importance in promoting scientific investigation
+ warrants a fuller treatment of some of the more significant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the errors that had arisen in various scientific calculations
+ before the seventeenth century may be ascribed to the crudeness and
+ inaccuracy in the construction of most scientific instruments. Scientists
+ had not as yet learned that an approach to absolute accuracy was necessary
+ in every investigation in the field of science, and that such accuracy
+ must be extended to the construction of the instruments used in these
+ investigations and observations. In astronomy it is obvious that
+ instruments of delicate exactness are most essential; yet Tycho Brahe, who
+ lived in the sixteenth century, is credited with being the first
+ astronomer whose instruments show extreme care in construction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems practically settled that the first telescope was invented in
+ Holland in 1608; but three men, Hans Lippershey, James Metius, and
+ Zacharias Jansen, have been given the credit of the invention at different
+ times. It would seem from certain papers, now in the library of the
+ University of Leyden, and included in Huygens's papers, that Lippershey
+ was probably the first to invent a telescope and to describe his
+ invention. The story is told that Lippershey, who was a spectacle-maker,
+ stumbled by accident upon the discovery that when two lenses are held at a
+ certain distance apart, objects at a distance appear nearer and larger.
+ Having made this discovery, he fitted two lenses with a tube so as to
+ maintain them at the proper distance, and thus constructed the first
+ telescope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Galileo, however, as referred to in a preceding chapter, who first
+ constructed a telescope based on his knowledge of the laws of refraction.
+ In 1609, having heard that an instrument had been invented, consisting of
+ two lenses fixed in a tube, whereby objects were made to appear larger and
+ nearer, he set about constructing such an instrument that should follow
+ out the known effects of refraction. His first telescope, made of two
+ lenses fixed in a lead pipe, was soon followed by others of improved
+ types, Galileo devoting much time and labor to perfecting lenses and
+ correcting errors. In fact, his work in developing the instrument was so
+ important that the telescope came gradually to be known as the "Galilean
+ telescope."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the construction of his telescope Galileo made use of a convex and a
+ concave lens; but shortly after this Kepler invented an instrument in
+ which both the lenses used were convex. This telescope gave a much larger
+ field of view than the Galilean telescope, but did not give as clear an
+ image, and in consequence did not come into general use until the middle
+ of the seventeenth century. The first powerful telescope of this type was
+ made by Huygens and his brother. It was of twelve feet focal length, and
+ enabled Huygens to discover a new satellite of Saturn, and to determine
+ also the true explanation of Saturn's ring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Huygens, together with Malvasia and Auzout, who first applied the
+ micrometer to the telescope, although the inventor of the first micrometer
+ was William Gascoigne, of Yorkshire, about 1636. The micrometer as used in
+ telescopes enables the observer to measure accurately small angular
+ distances. Before the invention of the telescope such measurements were
+ limited to the angle that could be distinguished by the naked eye, and
+ were, of course, only approximately accurate. Even very careful observers,
+ such as Tycho Brahe, were able to obtain only fairly accurate results. But
+ by applying Gascoigne's invention to the telescope almost absolute
+ accuracy became at once possible. The principle of Gascoigne's micrometer
+ was that of two pointers lying parallel, and in this position pointing to
+ zero. These were arranged so that the turning of a single screw separated
+ or approximated them at will, and the angle thus formed could be
+ determined with absolute accuracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Huygens's micrometer was a slip of metal of variable breadth inserted at
+ the focus of the telescope. By observing at what point this exactly
+ covered an object under examination, and knowing the focal length of the
+ telescope and the width of the metal, he could then deduce the apparent
+ angular breadth of the object. Huygens discovered also that an object
+ placed in the common focus of the two lenses of a Kepler telescope appears
+ distinct and clearly defined. The micrometers of Malvasia, and later of
+ Auzout and Picard, are the development of this discovery. Malvasia's
+ micrometer, which he described in 1662, consisted of fine silver wires
+ placed at right-angles at the focus of his telescope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As telescopes increased in power, however, it was found that even the
+ finest wire, or silk filaments, were much too thick for astronomical
+ observations, as they obliterated the image, and so, finally, the
+ spider-web came into use and is still used in micrometers and other
+ similar instruments. Before that time, however, the fine crossed wires had
+ revolutionized astronomical observations. "We may judge how great was the
+ improvement which these contrivances introduced into the art of
+ observing," says Whewell, "by finding that Hevelius refused to adopt them
+ because they would make all the old observations of no value. He had spent
+ a laborious and active life in the exercise of the old methods, and could
+ not bear to think that all the treasures which he had accumulated had lost
+ their worth by the discovery of a new mine of richer ones."(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until the time of Newton, all the telescopes in use were either of the
+ Galilean or Keplerian type, that is, refractors. But about the year 1670
+ Newton constructed his first reflecting telescope, which was greatly
+ superior to, although much smaller than, the telescopes then in use. He
+ was led to this invention by his experiments with light and colors. In
+ 1671 he presented to the Royal Society a second and somewhat larger
+ telescope, which he had made; and this type of instrument was little
+ improved upon until the introduction of the achromatic telescope, invented
+ by Chester Moor Hall in 1733.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As is generally known, the element of accurate measurements of time plays
+ an important part in the measurements of the movements of the heavenly
+ bodies. In fact, one was scarcely possible without the other, and as it
+ happened it was the same man, Huygens, who perfected Kepler's telescope
+ and invented the pendulum clock. The general idea had been suggested by
+ Galileo; or, better perhaps, the equal time occupied by the successive
+ oscillations of the pendulum had been noted by him. He had not been able,
+ however, to put this discovery to practical account. But in 1656 Huygens
+ invented the necessary machinery for maintaining the motion of the
+ pendulum and perfected several accurate clocks. These clocks were of
+ invaluable assistance to the astronomers, affording as they did a means of
+ keeping time "more accurate than the sun itself." When Picard had
+ corrected the variation caused by heat and cold acting upon the pendulum
+ rod by combining metals of different degrees of expansibility, a high
+ degree of accuracy was possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while the pendulum clock was an unequalled stationary time-piece, it
+ was useless in such unstable situations as, for example, on shipboard. But
+ here again Huygens played a prominent part by first applying the coiled
+ balance-spring for regulating watches and marine clocks. The idea of
+ applying a spring to the balance-wheel was not original with Huygens,
+ however, as it had been first conceived by Robert Hooke; but Huygens's
+ application made practical Hooke's idea. In England the importance of
+ securing accurate watches or marine clocks was so fully appreciated that a
+ reward of L20,000 sterling was offered by Parliament as a stimulus to the
+ inventor of such a time-piece. The immediate incentive for this offer was
+ the obvious fact that with such an instrument the determination of the
+ longitude of places would be much simplified. Encouraged by these offers,
+ a certain carpenter named Harrison turned his attention to the subject of
+ watch-making, and, after many years of labor, in 1758 produced a spring
+ time-keeper which, during a sea-voyage occupying one hundred and sixty-one
+ days, varied only one minute and five seconds. This gained for Harrison a
+ reward Of L5000 sterling at once, and a little later L10,000 more, from
+ Parliament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While inventors were busy with the problem of accurate chronometers,
+ however, another instrument for taking longitude at sea had been invented.
+ This was the reflecting quadrant, or sextant, as the improved instrument
+ is now called, invented by John Hadley in 1731, and independently by
+ Thomas Godfrey, a poor glazier of Philadelphia, in 1730. Godfrey's
+ invention, which was constructed on the same principle as that of the
+ Hadley instrument, was not generally recognized until two years after
+ Hadley's discovery, although the instrument was finished and actually in
+ use on a sea-voyage some months before Hadley reported his invention. The
+ principle of the sextant, however, seems to have been known to Newton, who
+ constructed an instrument not very unlike that of Hadley; but this
+ invention was lost sight of until several years after the philosopher's
+ death and some time after Hadley's invention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The introduction of the sextant greatly simplified taking reckonings at
+ sea as well as facilitating taking the correct longitude of distant
+ places. Before that time the mariner was obliged to depend upon his
+ compass, a cross-staff, or an astrolabe, a table of the sun's declination
+ and a correction for the altitude of the polestar, and very inadequate and
+ incorrect charts. Such were the instruments used by Columbus and Vasco da
+ Gama and their immediate successors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the Newtonian period the microscopes generally in use were those
+ constructed of simple lenses, for although compound microscopes were
+ known, the difficulties of correcting aberration had not been surmounted,
+ and a much clearer field was given by the simple instrument. The results
+ obtained by the use of such instruments, however, were very satisfactory
+ in many ways. By referring to certain plates in this volume, which
+ reproduce illustrations from Robert Hooke's work on the microscope, it
+ will be seen that quite a high degree of effectiveness had been attained.
+ And it should be recalled that Antony von Leeuwenhoek, whose death took
+ place shortly before Newton's, had discovered such micro-organisms as
+ bacteria, had seen the blood corpuscles in circulation, and examined and
+ described other microscopic structures of the body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIV. PROGRESS IN ELECTRICITY FROM GILBERT AND VON GUERICKE TO FRANKLIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We have seen how Gilbert, by his experiments with magnets, gave an impetus
+ to the study of magnetism and electricity. Gilbert himself demonstrated
+ some facts and advanced some theories, but the system of general laws was
+ to come later. To this end the discovery of electrical repulsion, as well
+ as attraction, by Von Guericke, with his sulphur ball, was a step forward;
+ but something like a century passed after Gilbert's beginning before
+ anything of much importance was done in the field of electricity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1705, however, Francis Hauksbee began a series of experiments that
+ resulted in some startling demonstrations. For many years it had been
+ observed that a peculiar light was seen sometimes in the mercurial
+ barometer, but Hauksbee and the other scientific investigators supposed
+ the radiance to be due to the mercury in a vacuum, brought about, perhaps,
+ by some agitation. That this light might have any connection with
+ electricity did not, at first, occur to Hauksbee any more than it had to
+ his predecessors. The problem that interested him was whether the vacuum
+ in the tube of the barometer was essential to the light; and in
+ experimenting to determine this, he invented his "mercurial fountain."
+ Having exhausted the air in a receiver containing some mercury, he found
+ that by allowing air to rush through the mercury the metal became a jet
+ thrown in all directions against the sides of the vessel, making a great,
+ flaming shower, "like flashes of lightning," as he said. But it seemed to
+ him that there was a difference between this light and the glow noted in
+ the barometer. This was a bright light, whereas the barometer light was
+ only a glow. Pondering over this, Hauksbee tried various experiments,
+ revolving pieces of amber, flint, steel, and other substances in his
+ exhausted air-pump receiver, with negative, or unsatisfactory, results.
+ Finally, it occurred to him to revolve an exhausted glass tube itself.
+ Mounting such a globe of glass on an axis so that it could be revolved
+ rapidly by a belt running on a large wheel, he found that by holding his
+ fingers against the whirling globe a purplish glow appeared, giving
+ sufficient light so that coarse print could be read, and the walls of a
+ dark room sensibly lightened several feet away. As air was admitted to the
+ globe the light gradually diminished, and it seemed to him that this
+ diminished glow was very similar in appearance to the pale light seen in
+ the mercurial barometer. Could it be that it was the glass, and not the
+ mercury, that caused it? Going to a barometer he proceeded to rub the
+ glass above the column of mercury over the vacuum, without disturbing the
+ mercury, when, to his astonishment, the same faint light, to all
+ appearances identical with the glow seen in the whirling globe, was
+ produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning these demonstrations over in his mind, he recalled the well-known
+ fact that rubbed glass attracted bits of paper, leaf-brass, and other
+ light substances, and that this phenomenon was supposed to be electrical.
+ This led him finally to determine the hitherto unsuspected fact, that the
+ glow in the barometer was electrical as was also the glow seen in his
+ whirling globe. Continuing his investigations, he soon discovered that
+ solid glass rods when rubbed produced the same effects as the tube. By
+ mere chance, happening to hold a rubbed tube to his cheek, he felt the
+ effect of electricity upon the skin like "a number of fine, limber hairs,"
+ and this suggested to him that, since the mysterious manifestation was so
+ plain, it could be made to show its effects upon various substances.
+ Suspending some woollen threads over the whirling glass cylinder, he found
+ that as soon as he touched the glass with his hands the threads, which
+ were waved about by the wind of the revolution, suddenly straightened
+ themselves in a peculiar manner, and stood in a radical position, pointing
+ to the axis of the cylinder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Encouraged by these successes, he continued his experiments with
+ breathless expectancy, and soon made another important discovery, that of
+ "induction," although the real significance of this discovery was not
+ appreciated by him or, for that matter, by any one else for several
+ generations following. This discovery was made by placing two revolving
+ cylinders within an inch of each other, one with the air exhausted and the
+ other unexhausted. Placing his hand on the unexhausted tube caused the
+ light to appear not only upon it, but on the other tube as well. A little
+ later he discovered that it is not necessary to whirl the exhausted tube
+ to produce this effect, but simply to place it in close proximity to the
+ other whirling cylinder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These demonstrations of Hauksbee attracted wide attention and gave an
+ impetus to investigators in the field of electricity; but still no great
+ advance was made for something like a quarter of a century. Possibly the
+ energies of the scientists were exhausted for the moment in exploring the
+ new fields thrown open to investigation by the colossal work of Newton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE EXPERIMENTS OF STEPHEN GRAY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1729 Stephen Gray (died in 1736), an eccentric and irascible old
+ pensioner of the Charter House in London, undertook some investigations
+ along lines similar to those of Hauksbee. While experimenting with a glass
+ tube for producing electricity, as Hauksbee had done, he noticed that the
+ corks with which he had stopped the ends of the tube to exclude the dust,
+ seemed to attract bits of paper and leaf-brass as well as the glass
+ itself. He surmised at once that this mysterious electricity, or "virtue,"
+ as it was called, might be transmitted through other substances as it
+ seemed to be through glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having by me an ivory ball of about one and three-tenths of an inch in
+ diameter," he writes, "with a hole through it, this I fixed upon a
+ fir-stick about four inches long, thrusting the other end into the cork,
+ and upon rubbing the tube found that the ball attracted and repelled the
+ feather with more vigor than the cork had done, repeating its attractions
+ and repulsions for many times together. I then fixed the ball on longer
+ sticks, first upon one of eight inches, and afterwards upon one of
+ twenty-four inches long, and found the effect the same. Then I made use of
+ iron, and then brass wire, to fix the ball on, inserting the other end of
+ the wire in the cork, as before, and found that the attraction was the
+ same as when the fir-sticks were made use of, and that when the feather
+ was held over against any part of the wire it was attracted by it; but
+ though it was then nearer the tube, yet its attraction was not so strong
+ as that of the ball. When the wire of two or three feet long was used, its
+ vibrations, caused by the rubbing of the tube, made it somewhat
+ troublesome to be managed. This put me to thinking whether, if the ball
+ was hung by a pack-thread and suspended by a loop on the tube, the
+ electricity would not be carried down the line to the ball; I found it to
+ succeed accordingly; for upon suspending the ball on the tube by a
+ pack-thread about three feet long, when the tube had been excited by
+ rubbing, the ivory ball attracted and repelled the leaf-brass over which
+ it was held as freely as it had done when it was suspended on sticks or
+ wire, as did also a ball of cork, and another of lead that weighed one
+ pound and a quarter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gray next attempted to determine what other bodies would attract the bits
+ of paper, and for this purpose he tried coins, pieces of metal, and even a
+ tea-kettle, "both empty and filled with hot or cold water"; but he found
+ that the attractive power appeared to be the same regardless of the
+ substance used.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I next proceeded," he continues, "to try at what greater distances the
+ electric virtues might be carried, and having by me a hollow walking-cane,
+ which I suppose was part of a fishing-rod, two feet seven inches long, I
+ cut the great end of it to fit into the bore of the tube, into which it
+ went about five inches; then when the cane was put into the end of the
+ tube, and this excited, the cane drew the leaf-brass to the height of more
+ than two inches, as did also the ivory ball, when by a cork and stick it
+ had been fixed to the end of the cane.... With several pieces of Spanish
+ cane and fir-sticks I afterwards made a rod, which, together with the
+ tube, was somewhat more than eighteen feet long, which was the greatest
+ length I could conveniently use in my chamber, and found the attraction
+ very nearly, if not altogether, as strong as when the ball was placed on
+ the shorter rods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This experiment exhausted the capacity of his small room, but on going to
+ the country a little later he was able to continue his experiments. "To a
+ pole of eighteen feet there was tied a line of thirty-four feet in length,
+ so that the pole and line together were fifty-two feet. With the pole and
+ tube I stood in the balcony, the assistant below in the court, where he
+ held the board with the leaf-brass on it. Then the tube being excited, as
+ usual, the electric virtue passed from the tube up the pole and down the
+ line to the ivory ball, which attracted the leaf-brass, and as the ball
+ passed over it in its vibrations the leaf-brass would follow it till it
+ was carried off the board."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gray next attempted to send the electricity over a line suspended
+ horizontally. To do this he suspended the pack-thread by pieces of string
+ looped over nails driven into beams for that purpose. But when thus
+ suspended he found that the ivory ball no longer excited the leaf-brass,
+ and he guessed correctly that the explanation of this lay in the fact that
+ "when the electric virtue came to the loop that was suspended on the beam
+ it went up the same to the beam," none of it reaching the ball. As we
+ shall see from what follows, however, Gray had not as yet determined that
+ certain substances will conduct electricity while others will not. But by
+ a lucky accident he made the discovery that silk, for example, was a poor
+ conductor, and could be turned to account in insulating the
+ conducting-cord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain Mr. Wheler had become much interested in the old pensioner and
+ his work, and, as a guest at the Wheler house, Gray had been repeating
+ some of his former experiments with the fishing-rod, line, and ivory ball.
+ He had finally exhausted the heights from which these experiments could be
+ made by climbing to the clock-tower and exciting bits of leaf-brass on the
+ ground below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As we had no greater heights here," he says, "Mr. Wheler was desirous to
+ try whether we could not carry the electric virtue horizontally. I then
+ told him of the attempt I had made with that design, but without success,
+ telling him the method and materials made use of, as mentioned above. He
+ then proposed a silk line to support the line by which the electric virtue
+ was to pass. I told him it might do better upon account of its smallness;
+ so that there would be less virtue carried from the line of communication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The first experiment was made in the matted gallery, July 2, 1729, about
+ ten in the morning. About four feet from the end of the gallery there was
+ a cross line that was fixed by its ends to each side of the gallery by two
+ nails; the middle part of the line was silk, the rest at each end
+ pack-thread; then the line to which the ivory ball was hung and by which
+ the electric virtue was to be conveyed to it from the tube, being eighty
+ and one-half feet in length, was laid on the cross silk line, so that the
+ ball hung about nine feet below it. Then the other end of the line was by
+ a loop suspended on the glass cane, and the leaf-brass held under the ball
+ on a piece of white paper; when, the tube being rubbed, the ball attracted
+ the leaf-brass, and kept it suspended on it for some time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This experiment succeeded so well that the string was lengthened until it
+ was some two hundred and ninety-three feet long; and still the attractive
+ force continued, apparently as strong as ever. On lengthening the string
+ still more, however, the extra weight proved too much for the strength of
+ the silk suspending-thread. "Upon this," says Gray, "having brought with
+ me both brass and iron wire, instead of the silk we put up small iron
+ wire; but this was too weak to bear the weight of the line. We then took
+ brass wire of a somewhat larger size than that of iron. This supported our
+ line of communication; but though the tube was well rubbed, yet there was
+ not the least motion or attraction given by the ball, neither with the
+ great tube, which we made use of when we found the small solid cane to be
+ ineffectual; by which we were now convinced that the success we had before
+ depended upon the lines that supported the line of communication being
+ silk, and not upon their being small, as before trial I had imagined it
+ might be; the same effect happening here as it did when the line that is
+ to convey the electric virtue is supported by pack-thread."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after this Gray and his host suspended a pack-thread six hundred and
+ sixty-six feet long on poles across a field, these poles being slightly
+ inclined so that the thread could be suspended from the top by small silk
+ cords, thus securing the necessary insulation. This pack-thread line,
+ suspended upon poles along which Gray was able to transmit the
+ electricity, is very suggestive of the modern telegraph, but the idea of
+ signalling or making use of it for communicating in any way seems not to
+ have occurred to any one at that time. Even the successors of Gray who
+ constructed lines some thousands of feet long made no attempt to use them
+ for anything but experimental purposes&mdash;simply to test the distances
+ that the current could be sent. Nevertheless, Gray should probably be
+ credited with the discovery of two of the most important properties of
+ electricity&mdash;that it can be conducted and insulated, although, as we
+ have seen, Gilbert and Von Guericke had an inkling of both these
+ properties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ EXPERIMENTS OF CISTERNAY DUFAY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far England had produced the two foremost workers in electricity. It
+ was now France's turn to take a hand, and, through the efforts of Charles
+ Francois de Cisternay Dufay, to advance the science of electricity very
+ materially. Dufay was a highly educated savant, who had been soldier and
+ diplomat betimes, but whose versatility and ability as a scientist is
+ shown by the fact that he was the only man who had ever contributed to the
+ annals of the academy investigations in every one of the six subjects
+ admitted by that institution as worthy of recognition. Dufay upheld his
+ reputation in this new field of science, making many discoveries and
+ correcting many mistakes of former observers. In this work also he proved
+ himself a great diplomat by remaining on terms of intimate friendship with
+ Dr. Gray&mdash;a thing that few people were able to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost his first step was to overthrow the belief that certain bodies are
+ "electrics" and others "non-electrics"&mdash;that is, that some substances
+ when rubbed show certain peculiarities in attracting pieces of paper and
+ foil which others do not. Dufay proved that all bodies possess this
+ quality in a certain degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have found that all bodies (metallic, soft, or fluid ones excepted),"
+ he says, "may be made electric by first heating them more or less and then
+ rubbing them on any sort of cloth. So that all kinds of stones, as well
+ precious as common, all kinds of wood, and, in general, everything that I
+ have made trial of, became electric by beating and rubbing, except such
+ bodies as grow soft by beat, as the gums, which dissolve in water, glue,
+ and such like substances. 'Tis also to be remarked that the hardest stones
+ or marbles require more chafing or heating than others, and that the same
+ rule obtains with regard to the woods; so that box, lignum vitae, and such
+ others must be chafed almost to the degree of browning, whereas fir,
+ lime-tree, and cork require but a moderate heat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having read in one of Mr. Gray's letters that water may be made
+ electrical by holding the excited glass tube near it (a dish of water
+ being fixed to a stand and that set on a plate of glass, or on the brim of
+ a drinking-glass, previously chafed, or otherwise warmed), I have found,
+ upon trial, that the same thing happened to all bodies without exception,
+ whether solid or fluid, and that for that purpose 'twas sufficient to set
+ them on a glass stand slightly warmed, or only dried, and then by bringing
+ the tube near them they immediately became electrical. I made this
+ experiment with ice, with a lighted wood-coal, and with everything that
+ came into my mind; and I constantly remarked that such bodies of
+ themselves as were least electrical had the greatest degree of electricity
+ communicated to them at the approval of the glass tube."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His next important discovery was that colors had nothing to do with the
+ conduction of electricity. "Mr. Gray says, towards the end of one of his
+ letters," he writes, "that bodies attract more or less according to their
+ colors. This led me to make several very singular experiments. I took nine
+ silk ribbons of equal size, one white, one black, and the other seven of
+ the seven primitive colors, and having hung them all in order in the same
+ line, and then bringing the tube near them, the black one was first
+ attracted, the white one next, and others in order successively to the red
+ one, which was attracted least, and the last of them all. I afterwards cut
+ out nine square pieces of gauze of the same colors with the ribbons, and
+ having put them one after another on a hoop of wood, with leaf-gold under
+ them, the leaf-gold was attracted through all the colored pieces of gauze,
+ but not through the white or black. This inclined me first to think that
+ colors contribute much to electricity, but three experiments convinced me
+ to the contrary. The first, that by warming the pieces of gauze neither
+ the black nor white pieces obstructed the action of the electrical tube
+ more than those of the other colors. In like manner, the ribbons being
+ warmed, the black and white are not more strongly attracted than the rest.
+ The second is, the gauzes and ribbons being wetted, the ribbons are all
+ attracted equally, and all the pieces of gauze equally intercept the
+ action of electric bodies. The third is, that the colors of a prism being
+ thrown on a white gauze, there appear no differences of attraction. Whence
+ it proceeds that this difference proceeds, not from the color, as a color,
+ but from the substances that are employed in the dyeing. For when I
+ colored ribbons by rubbing them with charcoal, carmine, and such other
+ substances, the differences no longer proved the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In connection with his experiments with his thread suspended on glass
+ poles, Dufay noted that a certain amount of the current is lost, being
+ given off to the surrounding air. He recommended, therefore, that the
+ cords experimented with be wrapped with some non-conductor&mdash;that it
+ should be "insulated" ("isolee"), as he said, first making use of this
+ term.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DUFAY DISCOVERS VITREOUS AND RESINOUS ELECTRICITY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been shown in an earlier chapter how Von Guericke discovered that
+ light substances like feathers, after being attracted to the sulphur-ball
+ electric-machine, were repelled by it until they touched some object. Von
+ Guericke noted this, but failed to explain it satisfactorily. Dufay,
+ repeating Von Guericke's experiments, found that if, while the excited
+ tube or sulphur ball is driving the repelled feather before it, the ball
+ be touched or rubbed anew, the feather comes to it again, and is repelled
+ alternately, as, the hand touches the ball, or is withdrawn. From this he
+ concluded that electrified bodies first attract bodies not electrified,
+ "charge" them with electricity, and then repel them, the body so charged
+ not being attracted again until it has discharged its electricity by
+ touching something.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On making the experiment related by Otto von Guericke," he says, "which
+ consists in making a ball of sulphur rendered electrical to repel a down
+ feather, I perceived that the same effects were produced not only by the
+ tube, but by all electric bodies whatsoever, and I discovered that which
+ accounts for a great part of the irregularities and, if I may use the
+ term, of the caprices that seem to accompany most of the experiments on
+ electricity. This principle is that electric bodies attract all that are
+ not so, and repel them as soon as they are become electric by the vicinity
+ or contact of the electric body. Thus gold-leaf is first attracted by the
+ tube, and acquires an electricity by approaching it, and of consequence is
+ immediately repelled by it. Nor is it reattracted while it retains its
+ electric quality. But if while it is thus sustained in the air it chance
+ to light on some other body, it straightway loses its electricity, and in
+ consequence is reattracted by the tube, which, after having given it a new
+ electricity, repels it a second time, which continues as long as the tube
+ keeps its electricity. Upon applying this principle to the various
+ experiments of electricity, one will be surprised at the number of obscure
+ and puzzling facts that it clears up. For Mr. Hauksbee's famous experiment
+ of the glass globe, in which silk threads are put, is a necessary
+ consequence of it. When these threads are arranged in the form of rays by
+ the electricity of the sides of the globe, if the finger be put near the
+ outside of the globe the silk threads within fly from it, as is well
+ known, which happens only because the finger or any other body applied
+ near the glass globe is thereby rendered electrical, and consequently
+ repels the silk threads which are endowed with the same quality. With a
+ little reflection we may in the same manner account for most of the other
+ phenomena, and which seem inexplicable without attending to this
+ principle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chance has thrown in my way another principle, more universal and
+ remarkable than the preceding one, and which throws a new light on the
+ subject of electricity. This principle is that there are two distinct
+ electricities, very different from each other, one of which I call
+ vitreous electricity and the other resinous electricity. The first is that
+ of glass, rock-crystal, precious stones, hair of animals, wool, and many
+ other bodies. The second is that of amber, copal, gumsack, silk thread,
+ paper, and a number of other substances. The characteristic of these two
+ electricities is that a body of the vitreous electricity, for example,
+ repels all such as are of the same electricity, and on the contrary
+ attracts all those of the resinous electricity; so that the tube, made
+ electrical, will repel glass, crystal, hair of animals, etc., when
+ rendered electric, and will attract silk thread, paper, etc., though
+ rendered electrical likewise. Amber, on the contrary, will attract
+ electric glass and other substances of the same class, and will repel
+ gum-sack, copal, silk thread, etc. Two silk ribbons rendered electrical
+ will repel each other; two woollen threads will do the like; but a woollen
+ thread and a silken thread will mutually attract each other. This
+ principle very naturally explains why the ends of threads of silk or wool
+ recede from each other, in the form of pencil or broom, when they have
+ acquired an electric quality. From this principle one may with the same
+ ease deduce the explanation of a great number of other phenomena; and it
+ is probable that this truth will lead us to the further discovery of many
+ other things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In order to know immediately to which of the two classes of electrics
+ belongs any body whatsoever, one need only render electric a silk thread,
+ which is known to be of the resinuous electricity, and see whether that
+ body, rendered electrical, attracts or repels it. If it attracts it, it is
+ certainly of the kind of electricity which I call VITREOUS; if, on the
+ contrary, it repels it, it is of the same kind of electricity with the
+ silk&mdash;that is, of the RESINOUS. I have likewise observed that
+ communicated electricity retains the same properties; for if a ball of
+ ivory or wood be set on a glass stand, and this ball be rendered electric
+ by the tube, it will repel such substances as the tube repels; but if it
+ be rendered electric by applying a cylinder of gum-sack near it, it will
+ produce quite contrary effects&mdash;namely, precisely the same as
+ gum-sack would produce. In order to succeed in these experiments, it is
+ requisite that the two bodies which are put near each other, to find out
+ the nature of their electricity, be rendered as electrical as possible,
+ for if one of them was not at all or but weakly electrical, it would be
+ attracted by the other, though it be of that sort that should naturally be
+ repelled by it. But the experiment will always succeed perfectly well if
+ both bodies are sufficiently electrical."(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we now know, Dufay was wrong in supposing that there were two different
+ kinds of electricity, vitreous and resinous. A little later the matter was
+ explained by calling one "positive" electricity and the other "negative,"
+ and it was believed that certain substances produced only the one kind
+ peculiar to that particular substance. We shall see presently, however,
+ that some twenty years later an English scientist dispelled this illusion
+ by producing both positive (or vitreous) and negative (or resinous)
+ electricity on the same tube of glass at the same time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the death of Dufay his work was continued by his fellow-countryman
+ Dr. Joseph Desaguliers, who was the first experimenter to electrify
+ running water, and who was probably the first to suggest that clouds might
+ be electrified bodies. But about, this time&mdash;that is, just before the
+ middle of the eighteenth century&mdash;the field of greatest experimental
+ activity was transferred to Germany, although both England and France were
+ still active. The two German philosophers who accomplished most at this
+ time were Christian August Hansen and George Matthias Bose, both
+ professors in Leipsic. Both seem to have conceived the idea,
+ simultaneously and independently, of generating electricity by revolving
+ globes run by belt and wheel in much the same manner as the apparatus of
+ Hauksbee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such machines it was possible to generate a much greater amount of
+ electricity than Dufay had been able to do with the rubbed tube, and so
+ equipped, the two German professors were able to generate electric sparks
+ and jets of fire in a most startling manner. Bose in particular had a love
+ for the spectacular, which he turned to account with his new electrical
+ machine upon many occasions. On one of these occasions he prepared an
+ elaborate dinner, to which a large number of distinguished guests were
+ invited. Before the arrival of the company, however, Bose insulated the
+ great banquet-table on cakes of pitch, and then connected it with a huge
+ electrical machine concealed in another room. All being ready, and the
+ guests in their places about to be seated, Bose gave a secret signal for
+ starting this machine, when, to the astonishment of the party, flames of
+ fire shot from flowers, dishes, and viands, giving a most startling but
+ beautiful display.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To add still further to the astonishment of his guests, Bose then
+ presented a beautiful young lady, to whom each of the young men of the
+ party was introduced. In some mysterious manner she was insulated and
+ connected with the concealed electrical machine, so that as each gallant
+ touched her fingertips he received an electric shock that "made him reel."
+ Not content with this, the host invited the young men to kiss the
+ beautiful maid. But those who were bold enough to attempt it received an
+ electric shock that nearly "knocked their teeth out," as the professor
+ tells it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LUDOLFF'S EXPERIMENT WITH THE ELECTRIC SPARK
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Bose was only one of several German scientists who were making
+ elaborate experiments. While Bose was constructing and experimenting with
+ his huge machine, another German, Christian Friedrich Ludolff,
+ demonstrated that electric sparks are actual fire&mdash;a fact long
+ suspected but hitherto unproved. Ludolff's discovery, as it chanced, was
+ made in the lecture-hall of the reorganized Academy of Sciences at Berlin,
+ before an audience of scientists and great personages, at the opening
+ lecture in 1744.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of this lecture on electricity, during which some of the
+ well-known manifestations of electricity were being shown, it occurred to
+ Ludolff to attempt to ignite some inflammable fluid by projecting an
+ electric spark upon its surface with a glass rod. This idea was suggested
+ to him while performing the familiar experiment of producing a spark on
+ the surface of a bowl of water by touching it with a charged glass rod. He
+ announced to his audience the experiment he was about to attempt, and
+ having warmed a spoonful of sulphuric ether, he touched its surface with
+ the glass rod, causing it to burst into flame. This experiment left no
+ room for doubt that the electric spark was actual fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as this experiment of Ludolff's was made known to Bose, he
+ immediately claimed that he had previously made similar demonstrations on
+ various inflammable substances, both liquid and solid; and it seems highly
+ probable that he had done so, as he was constantly experimenting with the
+ sparks, and must almost certainly have set certain substances ablaze by
+ accident, if not by intent. At all events, he carried on a series of
+ experiments along this line to good purpose, finally succeeding in
+ exploding gun-powder, and so making the first forerunner of the electric
+ fuses now so universally used in blasting, firing cannon, and other
+ similar purposes. It was Bose also who, observing some of the peculiar
+ manifestations in electrified tubes, and noticing their resemblance to
+ "northern lights," was one of the first, if not the first, to suggest that
+ the aurora borealis is of electric origin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These spectacular demonstrations had the effect of calling public
+ attention to the fact that electricity is a most wonderful and mysterious
+ thing, to say the least, and kept both scientists and laymen agog with
+ expectancy. Bose himself was aflame with excitement, and so determined in
+ his efforts to produce still stronger electric currents, that he
+ sacrificed the tube of his twenty-foot telescope for the construction of a
+ mammoth electrical machine. With this great machine a discharge of
+ electricity was generated powerful enough to wound the skin when it
+ happened to strike it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until this time electricity had been little more than a plaything of the
+ scientists&mdash;or, at least, no practical use had been made of it. As it
+ was a practising physician, Gilbert, who first laid the foundation for
+ experimenting with the new substance, so again it was a medical man who
+ first attempted to put it to practical use, and that in the field of his
+ profession. Gottlieb Kruger, a professor of medicine at Halle in 1743,
+ suggested that electricity might be of use in some branches of medicine;
+ and the year following Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein made a first
+ experiment to determine the effects of electricity upon the body. He found
+ that "the action of the heart was accelerated, the circulation increased,
+ and that muscles were made to contract by the discharge": and he began at
+ once administering electricity in the treatment of certain diseases. He
+ found that it acted beneficially in rheumatic affections, and that it was
+ particularly useful in certain nervous diseases, such as palsies. This was
+ over a century ago, and to-day about the most important use made of the
+ particular kind of electricity with which he experimented (the static, or
+ frictional) is for the treatment of diseases affecting the nervous system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the middle of the century a perfect mania for making electrical
+ machines had spread over Europe, and the whirling, hand-rubbed globes were
+ gradually replaced by great cylinders rubbed by woollen cloths or pads,
+ and generating an "enormous power of electricity." These cylinders were
+ run by belts and foot-treadles, and gave a more powerful, constant, and
+ satisfactory current than known heretofore. While making experiments with
+ one of these machines, Johann Heinrichs Winkler attempted to measure the
+ speed at which electricity travels. To do this he extended a cord
+ suspended on silk threads, with the end attached to the machine and the
+ end which was to attract the bits of gold-leaf near enough together so
+ that the operator could watch and measure the interval of time that
+ elapsed between the starting of the current along the cord and its
+ attracting the gold-leaf. The length of the cord used in this experiment
+ was only a little over a hundred feet, and this was, of course, entirely
+ inadequate, the current travelling that space apparently instantaneously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The improved method of generating electricity that had come into general
+ use made several of the scientists again turn their attention more
+ particularly to attempt putting it to some practical account. They were
+ stimulated to these efforts by the constant reproaches that were beginning
+ to be heard on all sides that electricity was merely a "philosopher's
+ plaything." One of the first to succeed in inventing something that
+ approached a practical mechanical contrivance was Andrew Gordon, a Scotch
+ Benedictine monk. He invented an electric bell which would ring
+ automatically, and a little "motor," if it may be so called. And while
+ neither of these inventions were of any practical importance in
+ themselves, they were attempts in the right direction, and were the first
+ ancestors of modern electric bells and motors, although the principle upon
+ which they worked was entirely different from modern electrical machines.
+ The motor was simply a wheel with several protruding metal points around
+ its rim. These points were arranged to receive an electrical discharge
+ from a frictional machine, the discharge causing the wheel to rotate.
+ There was very little force given to this rotation, however, not enough,
+ in fact, to make it possible to more than barely turn the wheel itself.
+ Two more great discoveries, galvanism and electro-magnetic induction, were
+ necessary before the practical motor became possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sober Gordon had a taste for the spectacular almost equal to that of
+ Bose. It was he who ignited a bowl of alcohol by turning a stream of
+ electrified water upon it, thus presenting the seeming paradox of fire
+ produced by a stream of water. Gordon also demonstrated the power of the
+ electrical discharge by killing small birds and animals at a distance of
+ two hundred ells, the electricity being conveyed that distance through
+ small wires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE LEYDEN JAR DISCOVERED
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As yet no one had discovered that electricity could be stored, or
+ generated in any way other than by some friction device. But very soon two
+ experimenters, Dean von Kleist, of Camin, Pomerania, and Pieter van
+ Musschenbroek, the famous teacher of Leyden, apparently independently,
+ made the discovery of what has been known ever since as the Leyden jar.
+ And although Musschenbroek is sometimes credited with being the
+ discoverer, there can be no doubt that Von Kleist's discovery antedated
+ his by a few months at least.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Von Kleist found that by a device made of a narrow-necked bottle
+ containing alcohol or mercury, into which an iron nail was inserted, he
+ was able to retain the charge of electricity, after electrifying this
+ apparatus with the frictional machine. He made also a similar device, more
+ closely resembling the modern Leyden jar, from a thermometer tube partly
+ filled with water and a wire tipped with a ball of lead. With these
+ devices he found that he could retain the charge of electricity for
+ several hours, and could produce the usual electrical manifestations, even
+ to igniting spirits, quite as well as with the frictional machine. These
+ experiments were first made in October, 1745, and after a month of further
+ experimenting, Von Kleist sent the following account of them to several of
+ the leading scientists, among others, Dr. Lieberkuhn, in Berlin, and Dr.
+ Kruger, of Halle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When a nail, or a piece of thick brass wire, is put into a small
+ apothecary's phial and electrified, remarkable effects follow; but the
+ phial must be very dry, or warm. I commonly rub it over beforehand with a
+ finger on which I put some pounded chalk. If a little mercury or a few
+ drops of spirit of wine be put into it, the experiment succeeds better. As
+ soon as this phial and nail are removed from the electrifying-glass, or
+ the prime conductor, to which it has been exposed, is taken away, it
+ throws out a pencil of flame so long that, with this burning machine in my
+ hand, I have taken above sixty steps in walking about my room. When it is
+ electrified strongly, I can take it into another room and there fire
+ spirits of wine with it. If while it is electrifying I put my finger, or a
+ piece of gold which I hold in my hand, to the nail, I receive a shock
+ which stuns my arms and shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A tin tube, or a man, placed upon electrics, is electrified much stronger
+ by this means than in the common way. When I present this phial and nail
+ to a tin tube, which I have, fifteen feet long, nothing but experience can
+ make a person believe how strongly it is electrified. I am persuaded," he
+ adds, "that in this manner Mr. Bose would not have taken a second
+ electrical kiss. Two thin glasses have been broken by the shock of it. It
+ appears to me very extraordinary, that when this phial and nail are in
+ contact with either conducting or non-conducting matter, the strong shock
+ does not follow. I have cemented it to wood, metal, glass, sealing-wax,
+ etc., when I have electrified without any great effect. The human body,
+ therefore, must contribute something to it. This opinion is confirmed by
+ my observing that unless I hold the phial in my hand I cannot fire spirits
+ of wine with it."(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it seems that none of the men who saw this account were able to repeat
+ the experiment and produce the effects claimed by Von Kleist, and probably
+ for this reason the discovery of the obscure Pomeranian was for a time
+ lost sight of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Musschenbroek's discovery was made within a short time after Von Kleist's&mdash;in
+ fact, only a matter of about two months later. But the difference in the
+ reputations of the two discoverers insured a very different reception for
+ their discoveries. Musschenbroek was one of the foremost teachers of
+ Europe, and so widely known that the great universities vied with each
+ other, and kings were bidding, for his services. Naturally, any discovery
+ made by such a famous person would soon be heralded from one end of Europe
+ to the other. And so when this professor of Leyden made his discovery, the
+ apparatus came to be called the "Leyden jar," for want of a better name.
+ There can be little doubt that Musschenbroek made his discovery entirely
+ independently of any knowledge of Von Kleist's, or, for that matter,
+ without ever having heard of the Pomeranian, and his actions in the matter
+ are entirely honorable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His discovery was the result of an accident. While experimenting to
+ determine the strength of electricity he suspended a gun-barrel, which he
+ charged with electricity from a revolving glass globe. From the end of the
+ gun-barrel opposite the globe was a brass wire, which extended into a
+ glass jar partly filled with water. Musschenbroek held in one hand this
+ jar, while with the other he attempted to draw sparks from the barrel.
+ Suddenly he received a shock in the hand holding the jar, that "shook him
+ like a stroke of lightning," and for a moment made him believe that "he
+ was done for." Continuing his experiments, nevertheless, he found that if
+ the jar were placed on a piece of metal on the table, a shock would be
+ received by touching this piece of metal with one hand and touching the
+ wire with the other&mdash;that is, a path was made for the electrical
+ discharge through the body. This was practically the same experiment as
+ made by Von Kleist with his bottle and nail, but carried one step farther,
+ as it showed that the "jar" need not necessarily be held in the hand, as
+ believed by Von Kleist. Further experiments, continued by many
+ philosophers at the time, revealed what Von Kleist had already pointed
+ out, that the electrified jar remained charged for some time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after this Daniel Gralath, wishing to obtain stronger discharges than
+ could be had from a single Leyden jar, conceived the idea of combining
+ several jars, thus for the first time grouping the generators in a
+ "battery" which produced a discharge strong enough to kill birds and small
+ animals. He also attempted to measure the strength of the discharges, but
+ soon gave it up in despair, and the solution of this problem was left for
+ late nineteenth-century scientists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The advent of the Leyden jar, which made it possible to produce strong
+ electrical discharges from a small and comparatively simple device, was
+ followed by more spectacular demonstrations of various kinds all over
+ Europe. These exhibitions aroused the interest of the kings and noblemen,
+ so that electricity no longer remained a "plaything of the philosophers"
+ alone, but of kings as well. A favorite demonstration was that of sending
+ the electrical discharge through long lines of soldiers linked together by
+ pieces of wire, the discharge causing them to "spring into the air
+ simultaneously" in a most astonishing manner. A certain monk in Paris
+ prepared a most elaborate series of demonstrations for the amusement of
+ the king, among other things linking together an entire regiment of nine
+ hundred men, causing them to perform simultaneous springs and contortions
+ in a manner most amusing to the royal guests. But not all the experiments
+ being made were of a purely spectacular character, although most of them
+ accomplished little except in a negative way. The famous Abbe Nollet, for
+ example, combined useful experiments with spectacular demonstrations, thus
+ keeping up popular interest while aiding the cause of scientific
+ electricity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILLIAM WATSON
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naturally, the new discoveries made necessary a new nomenclature, new
+ words and electrical terms being constantly employed by the various
+ writers of that day. Among these writers was the English scientist William
+ Watson, who was not only a most prolific writer but a tireless
+ investigator. Many of the words coined by him are now obsolete, but one at
+ least, "circuit," still remains in use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1746, a French scientist, Louis Guillaume le Monnier, bad made a
+ circuit including metal and water by laying a chain half-way around the
+ edge of a pond, a man at either end holding it. One of these men dipped
+ his free hand in the water, the other presenting a Leyden jar to a rod
+ suspended on a cork float on the water, both men receiving a shock
+ simultaneously. Watson, a year later, attempted the same experiment on a
+ larger scale. He laid a wire about twelve hundred feet long across
+ Westminster Bridge over the Thames, bringing the ends to the water's edge
+ on the opposite banks, a man at one end holding the wire and touching the
+ water. A second man on the opposite side held the wire and a Leyden jar;
+ and a third touched the jar with one hand, while with the other he grasped
+ a wire that extended into the river. In this way they not only received
+ the shock, but fired alcohol as readily across the stream as could be done
+ in the laboratory. In this experiment Watson discovered the superiority of
+ wire over chain as a conductor, rightly ascribing this superiority to the
+ continuity of the metal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Watson continued making similar experiments over longer watercourses, some
+ of them as long as eight thousand feet, and while engaged in making one of
+ these he made the discovery so essential to later inventions, that the
+ earth could be used as part of the circuit in the same manner as bodies of
+ water. Lengthening his wires he continued his experiments until a circuit
+ of four miles was made, and still the electricity seemed to traverse the
+ course instantaneously, and with apparently undiminished force, if the
+ insulation was perfect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Watson's writings now carried the field of active discovery across the
+ Atlantic, and for the first time an American scientist appeared&mdash;a
+ scientist who not only rivalled, but excelled, his European
+ contemporaries. Benjamin Franklin, of Philadelphia, coming into possession
+ of some of Watson's books, became so interested in the experiments
+ described in them that he began at once experimenting with electricity. In
+ Watson's book were given directions for making various experiments, and
+ these assisted Franklin in repeating the old experiments, and eventually
+ adding new ones. Associated with Franklin, and equally interested and
+ enthusiastic, if not equally successful in making discoveries, were three
+ other men, Thomas Hopkinson, Philip Sing, and Ebenezer Kinnersley. These
+ men worked together constantly, although it appears to have been Franklin
+ who made independently the important discoveries, and formulated the
+ famous Franklinian theory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Working steadily, and keeping constantly in touch with the progress of the
+ European investigators, Franklin soon made some experiments which he
+ thought demonstrated some hitherto unknown phases of electrical
+ manifestation. This was the effect of pointed bodies "in DRAWING OFF and
+ THROWING OFF the electrical fire." In his description of this phenomenon,
+ Franklin writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Place an iron shot of three or four inches diameter on the mouth of a
+ clean, dry, glass bottle. By a fine silken thread from the ceiling right
+ over the mouth of the bottle, suspend a small cork ball, about the bigness
+ of a marble; the thread of such a length that the cork ball may rest
+ against the side of the shot. Electrify the shot, and the ball will be
+ repelled to the distance of four or five inches, more or less, according
+ to the quantity of electricity. When in this state, if you present to the
+ shot the point of a long, slender shaft-bodkin, at six or eight inches
+ distance, the repellency is instantly destroyed, and the cork flies to the
+ shot. A blunt body must be brought within an inch, and draw a spark, to
+ produce the same effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To prove that the electrical fire is DRAWN OFF by the point, if you take
+ the blade of the bodkin out of the wooden handle and fix it in a stick of
+ sealing-wax, and then present it at the distance aforesaid, or if you
+ bring it very near, no such effect follows; but sliding one finger along
+ the wax till you touch the blade, and the ball flies to the shot
+ immediately. If you present the point in the dark you will see, sometimes
+ at a foot distance, and more, a light gather upon it like that of a
+ fire-fly or glow-worm; the less sharp the point, the nearer you must bring
+ it to observe the light; and at whatever distance you see the light, you
+ may draw off the electrical fire and destroy the repellency. If a cork
+ ball so suspended be repelled by the tube, and a point be presented quick
+ to it, though at a considerable distance, 'tis surprising to see how
+ suddenly it flies back to the tube. Points of wood will do as well as
+ those of iron, provided the wood is not dry; for perfectly dry wood will
+ no more conduct electricity than sealing-wax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To show that points will THROW OFF as well as DRAW OFF the electrical
+ fire, lay a long, sharp needle upon the shot, and you cannot electrify the
+ shot so as to make it repel the cork ball. Or fix a needle to the end of a
+ suspended gun-barrel or iron rod, so as to point beyond it like a little
+ bayonet, and while it remains there, the gun-barrel or rod cannot, by
+ applying the tube to the other end, be electrified so as to give a spark,
+ the fire continually running out silently at the point. In the dark you
+ may see it make the same appearance as it does in the case before
+ mentioned."(3)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Von Guericke, Hauksbee, and Gray had noticed that pointed bodies attracted
+ electricity in a peculiar manner, but this demonstration of the "drawing
+ off" of "electrical fire" was original with Franklin. Original also was
+ the theory that he now suggested, which had at least the merit of being
+ thinkable even by non-philosophical minds. It assumes that electricity is
+ like a fluid, that will flow along conductors and accumulate in proper
+ receptacles, very much as ordinary fluids do. This conception is probably
+ entirely incorrect, but nevertheless it is likely to remain a popular one,
+ at least outside of scientific circles, or until something equally
+ tangible is substituted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FRANKLIN'S THEORY OF ELECTRICITY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Franklin's theory, electricity exists in all bodies as a
+ "common stock," and tends to seek and remain in a state of equilibrium,
+ just as fluids naturally tend to seek a level. But it may, nevertheless,
+ be raised or lowered, and this equilibrium be thus disturbed. If a body
+ has more electricity than its normal amount it is said to be POSITIVELY
+ electrified; but if it has less, it is NEGATIVELY electrified. An
+ over-electrified or "plus" body tends to give its surplus stock to a body
+ containing the normal amount; while the "minus" or under-electrified body
+ will draw electricity from one containing the normal amount.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Working along lines suggested by this theory, Franklin attempted to show
+ that electricity is not created by friction, but simply collected from its
+ diversified state, the rubbed glass globe attracting a certain quantity of
+ "electrical fire," but ever ready to give it up to any body that has less.
+ He explained the charged Leyden jar by showing that the inner coating of
+ tin-foil received more than the ordinary quantity of electricity, and in
+ consequence is POSITIVELY electrified, while the outer coating, having the
+ ordinary quantity of electricity diminished, is electrified NEGATIVELY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These studies of the Leyden jar, and the studies of pieces of glass coated
+ with sheet metal, led Franklin to invent his battery, constructed of
+ eleven large glass plates coated with sheets of lead. With this machine,
+ after overcoming some defects, he was able to produce electrical
+ manifestations of great force&mdash;a force that "knew no bounds," as he
+ declared ("except in the matter of expense and of labor"), and which could
+ be made to exceed "the greatest know effects of common lightning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This reference to lightning would seem to show Franklin's belief, even at
+ that time, that lightning is electricity. Many eminent observers, such as
+ Hauksbee, Wall, Gray, and Nollet, had noticed the resemblance between
+ electric sparks and lightning, but none of these had more than surmised
+ that the two might be identical. In 1746, the surgeon, John Freke, also
+ asserted his belief in this identity. Winkler, shortly after this time,
+ expressed the same belief, and, assuming that they were the same, declared
+ that "there is no proof that they are of different natures"; and still he
+ did not prove that they were the same nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FRANKLIN INVENTS THE LIGHTNING-ROD
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even before Franklin proved conclusively the nature of lightning, his
+ experiments in drawing off the electric charge with points led to some
+ practical suggestions which resulted in the invention of the
+ lightning-rod. In the letter of July, 1750, which he wrote on the subject,
+ he gave careful instructions as to the way in which these rods might be
+ constructed. In part Franklin wrote: "May not the knowledge of this power
+ of points be of use to mankind in preserving houses, churches, ships,
+ etc., from the stroke of lightning by directing us to fix on the highest
+ parts of the edifices upright rods of iron made sharp as a needle, and
+ gilt to prevent rusting, and from the foot of these rods a wire down the
+ outside of the building into the grounds, or down round one of the shrouds
+ of a ship and down her side till it reaches the water? Would not these
+ pointed rods probably draw the electrical fire silently out of a cloud
+ before it came nigh enough to strike, and thereby secure us from that most
+ sudden and terrible mischief?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To determine this question, whether the clouds that contain the lightning
+ are electrified or not, I propose an experiment to be tried where it may
+ be done conveniently. On the top of some high tower or steeple, place a
+ kind of sentry-box, big enough to contain a man and an electrical stand.
+ From the middle of the stand let an iron rod rise and pass, bending out of
+ the door, and then upright twenty or thirty feet, pointed very sharp at
+ the end. If the electrical stand be kept clean and dry, a man standing on
+ it when such clouds are passing low might be electrified and afford
+ sparks, the rod drawing fire to him from a cloud. If any danger to the man
+ be apprehended (though I think there would be none), let him stand on the
+ floor of his box and now and then bring near to the rod the loop of a wire
+ that has one end fastened to the leads, he holding it by a wax handle; so
+ the sparks, if the rod is electrified, will strike from the rod to the
+ wire and not effect him."(4)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not satisfied with all the evidence that he had collected pointing to the
+ identity of lightning and electricity, he adds one more striking and very
+ suggestive piece of evidence. Lightning was known sometimes to strike
+ persons blind without killing them. In experimenting on pigeons and
+ pullets with his electrical machine, Franklin found that a fowl, when not
+ killed outright, was sometimes rendered blind. The report of these
+ experiments were incorporated in this famous letter of the Philadelphia
+ philosopher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attitude of the Royal Society towards this clearly stated letter, with
+ its useful suggestions, must always remain as a blot on the record of this
+ usually very receptive and liberal-minded body. Far from publishing it or
+ receiving it at all, they derided the whole matter as too visionary for
+ discussion by the society. How was it possible that any great scientific
+ discovery could be made by a self-educated colonial newspaper editor, who
+ knew nothing of European science except by hearsay, when all the great
+ scientific minds of Europe had failed to make the discovery? How indeed!
+ And yet it would seem that if any of the influential members of the
+ learned society had taken the trouble to read over Franklin's clearly
+ stated letter, they could hardly have failed to see that his suggestions
+ were worthy of consideration. But at all events, whether they did or did
+ not matters little. The fact remains that they refused to consider the
+ paper seriously at the time; and later on, when its true value became
+ known, were obliged to acknowledge their error by a tardy report on the
+ already well-known document.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if English scientists were cold in their reception of Franklin's
+ theory and suggestions, the French scientists were not. Buffon, perceiving
+ at once the importance of some of Franklin's experiments, took steps to
+ have the famous letter translated into French, and soon not only the
+ savants, but members of the court and the king himself were intensely
+ interested. Two scientists, De Lor and D'Alibard, undertook to test the
+ truth of Franklin's suggestions as to pointed rods "drawing off
+ lightning." In a garden near Paris, the latter erected a pointed iron rod
+ fifty feet high and an inch in diameter. As no thunder-clouds appeared for
+ several days, a guard was stationed, armed with an insulated brass wire,
+ who was directed to test the iron rods with it in case a storm came on
+ during D'Alibard's absence. The storm did come on, and the guard, not
+ waiting for his employer's arrival, seized the wire and touched the rod.
+ Instantly there was a report. Sparks flew and the guard received such a
+ shock that he thought his time had come. Believing from his outcry that he
+ was mortally hurt, his friends rushed for a spiritual adviser, who came
+ running through rain and hail to administer the last rites; but when he
+ found the guard still alive and uninjured, he turned his visit to account
+ by testing the rod himself several times, and later writing a report of
+ his experiments to M. d'Alibard. This scientist at once reported the
+ affair to the French Academy, remarking that "Franklin's idea was no
+ longer a conjecture, but a reality."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FRANKLIN PROVES THAT LIGHTNING IS ELECTRICITY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Europe, hitherto somewhat sceptical of Franklin's views, was by this time
+ convinced of the identity of lightning and electricity. It was now
+ Franklin's turn to be sceptical. To him the fact that a rod, one hundred
+ feet high, became electrified during a storm did not necessarily prove
+ that the storm-clouds were electrified. A rod of that length was not
+ really projected into the cloud, for even a very low thunder-cloud was
+ more than a hundred feet above the ground. Irrefutable proof could only be
+ had, as he saw it, by "extracting" the lightning with something actually
+ sent up into the storm-cloud; and to accomplish this Franklin made his
+ silk kite, with which he finally demonstrated to his own and the world's
+ satisfaction that his theory was correct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking his kite out into an open common on the approach of a
+ thunder-storm, he flew it well up into the threatening clouds, and then,
+ touching, the suspended key with his knuckle, received the electric spark;
+ and a little later he charged a Leyden jar from the electricity drawn from
+ the clouds with his kite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a brief but direct letter, he sent an account of his kite and his
+ experiment to England:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Make a small cross of two light strips of cedar," he wrote, "the arms so
+ long as to reach to the four corners of a large, thin, silk handkerchief
+ when extended; tie the corners of the handkerchief to the extremities of
+ the cross so you have the body of a kite; which being properly
+ accommodated with a tail, loop, and string, will rise in the air like
+ those made of paper; but this being of silk is fitter to bear the wind and
+ wet of a thunder-gust without tearing. To the top of the upright stick of
+ the cross is to be fixed a very sharp-pointed wire, rising a foot or more
+ above the wood. To the end of the twine, next the hand, is to be tied a
+ silk ribbon; where the silk and twine join a key may be fastened. This
+ kite is to be raised when a thunder-gust appears to be coming on, and the
+ person who holds the string must stand within a door or window or under
+ some cover, so that the silk ribbon may not be wet; and care must be taken
+ that the twine does not touch the frame of the door or window. As soon as
+ any of the thunder-clouds come over the kite, the pointed wire will draw
+ the electric fire from them, and the kite, with all the twine, will be
+ electrified and the loose filaments will stand out everywhere and be
+ attracted by the approaching finger, and when the rain has wet the kite
+ and twine so that it can conduct the electric fire freely, you will find
+ it stream out plentifully from the key on the approach of your knuckle,
+ and with this key the phial may be charged; and from electric fire thus
+ obtained spirits may be kindled and all other electric experiments
+ performed which are usually done by the help of a rubbed glass globe or
+ tube, and thereby the sameness of the electric matter with that of
+ lightning completely demonstrated."(5)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In experimenting with lightning and Franklin's pointed rods in Europe,
+ several scientists received severe shocks, in one case with a fatal
+ result. Professor Richman, of St. Petersburg, while experimenting during a
+ thunder-storm, with an iron rod which he had erected on his house,
+ received a shock that killed him instantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About 1733, as we have seen, Dufay had demonstrated that there were two
+ apparently different kinds of electricity; one called VITREOUS because
+ produced by rubbing glass, and the other RESINOUS because produced by
+ rubbed resinous bodies. Dufay supposed that these two apparently different
+ electricities could only be produced by their respective substances; but
+ twenty years later, John Canton (1715-1772), an Englishman, demonstrated
+ that under certain conditions both might be produced by rubbing the same
+ substance. Canton's experiment, made upon a glass tube with a roughened
+ surface, proved that if the surface of the tube were rubbed with oiled
+ silk, vitreous or positive electricity was produced, but if rubbed with
+ flannel, resinous electricity was produced. He discovered still further
+ that both kinds could be excited on the same tube simultaneously with a
+ single rubber. To demonstrate this he used a tube, one-half of which had a
+ roughened the other a glazed surface. With a single stroke of the rubber
+ he was able to excite both kinds of electricity on this tube. He found
+ also that certain substances, such as glass and amber, were electrified
+ positively when taken out of mercury, and this led to his important
+ discovery that an amalgam of mercury and tin, when used on the surface of
+ the rubber, was very effective in exciting glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XV. NATURAL HISTORY TO THE TIME OF LINNAEUS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Modern systematic botany and zoology are usually held to have their
+ beginnings with Linnaeus. But there were certain precursors of the famous
+ Swedish naturalist, some of them antedating him by more than a century,
+ whose work must not be altogether ignored&mdash;such men as Konrad Gesner
+ (1516-1565), Andreas Caesalpinus (1579-1603), Francisco Redi (1618-1676),
+ Giovanni Alfonso Borelli (1608-1679), John Ray (1628-1705), Robert Hooke
+ (1635-1703), John Swammerdam (1637-1680), Marcello Malpighi (1628-1694),
+ Nehemiah Grew (1628-1711), Joseph Tournefort (1656-1708), Rudolf Jacob
+ Camerarius (1665-1721), and Stephen Hales (1677-1761). The last named of
+ these was, to be sure, a contemporary of Linnaeus himself, but Gesner and
+ Caesalpinus belong, it will be observed, to so remote an epoch as that of
+ Copernicus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reference has been made in an earlier chapter to the microscopic
+ investigations of Marcello Malpighi, who, as there related, was the first
+ observer who actually saw blood corpuscles pass through the capillaries.
+ Another feat of this earliest of great microscopists was to dissect
+ muscular tissue, and thus become the father of microscopic anatomy. But
+ Malpighi did not confine his observations to animal tissues. He dissected
+ plants as well, and he is almost as fully entitled to be called the father
+ of vegetable anatomy, though here his honors are shared by the Englishman
+ Grew. In 1681, while Malpighi's work, Anatomia plantarum, was on its way
+ to the Royal Society for publication, Grew's Anatomy of Vegetables was in
+ the hands of the publishers, making its appearance a few months earlier
+ than the work of the great Italian. Grew's book was epoch-marking in
+ pointing out the sex-differences in plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert Hooke developed the microscope, and took the first steps towards
+ studying vegetable anatomy, publishing in 1667, among other results, the
+ discovery of the cellular structure of cork. Hooke applied the name "cell"
+ for the first time in this connection. These discoveries of Hooke,
+ Malpighi, and Grew, and the discovery of the circulation of the blood by
+ William Harvey shortly before, had called attention to the similarity of
+ animal and vegetable structures. Hales made a series of investigations
+ upon animals to determine the force of the blood pressure; and similarly
+ he made numerous statical experiments to determine the pressure of the
+ flow of sap in vegetables. His Vegetable Statics, published in 1727, was
+ the first important work on the subject of vegetable physiology, and for
+ this reason Hales has been called the father of this branch of science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In botany, as well as in zoology, the classifications of Linnaeus of
+ course supplanted all preceding classifications, for the obvious reason
+ that they were much more satisfactory; but his work was a culmination of
+ many similar and more or less satisfactory attempts of his predecessors.
+ About the year 1670 Dr. Robert Morison (1620-1683), of Aberdeen, published
+ a classification of plants, his system taking into account the woody or
+ herbaceous structure, as well as the flowers and fruit. This
+ classification was supplanted twelve years later by the classification of
+ Ray, who arranged all known vegetables into thirty-three classes, the
+ basis of this classification being the fruit. A few years later Rivinus, a
+ professor of botany in the University of Leipzig, made still another
+ classification, determining the distinguishing character chiefly from the
+ flower, and Camerarius and Tournefort also made elaborate classifications.
+ On the Continent Tournefort's classification was the most popular until
+ the time of Linnaeus, his systematic arrangement including about eight
+ thousand species of plants, arranged chiefly according to the form of the
+ corolla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of these early workers gave attention to both vegetable and animal
+ kingdoms. They were called naturalists, and the field of their
+ investigations was spoken of as "natural history." The specialization of
+ knowledge had not reached that later stage in which botanist, zoologist,
+ and physiologist felt their labors to be sharply divided. Such a division
+ was becoming more and more necessary as the field of knowledge extended;
+ but it did not become imperative until long after the time of Linnaeus.
+ That naturalist himself, as we shall see, was equally distinguished as
+ botanist and as zoologist. His great task of organizing knowledge was
+ applied to the entire range of living things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carolus Linnaeus was born in the town of Rashult, in Sweden, on May 13,
+ 1707. As a child he showed great aptitude in learning botanical names, and
+ remembering facts about various plants as told him by his father. His
+ eagerness for knowledge did not extend to the ordinary primary studies,
+ however, and, aside from the single exception of the study of physiology,
+ he proved himself an indifferent pupil. His backwardness was a sore trial
+ to his father, who was desirous that his son should enter the ministry;
+ but as the young Linnaeus showed no liking for that calling, and as he had
+ acquitted himself well in his study of physiology, his father at last
+ decided to allow him to take up the study of medicine. Here at last was a
+ field more to the liking of the boy, who soon vied with the best of his
+ fellow-students for first honors. Meanwhile he kept steadily at work in
+ his study of natural history, acquiring considerable knowledge of
+ ornithology, entomology, and botany, and adding continually to his
+ collection of botanical specimens. In 1729 his botanical knowledge was
+ brought to the attention of Olaf Rudbeck, professor of botany in the
+ University of Upsala, by a short paper on the sexes of plants which
+ Linnaeus had prepared. Rudbeck was so impressed by some of the ideas
+ expressed in this paper that he appointed the author as his assistant the
+ following year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the beginning of Linnaes's career as a botanist. The academic
+ gardens were thus thrown open to him, and he found time at his disposal
+ for pursuing his studies between lecture hours and in the evenings. It was
+ at this time that he began the preparation of his work the Systema
+ naturae, the first of his great works, containing a comprehensive sketch
+ of the whole field of natural history. When this work was published, the
+ clearness of the views expressed and the systematic arrangement of the
+ various classifications excited great astonishment and admiration, and
+ placed Linaeus at once in the foremost rank of naturalists. This work was
+ followed shortly by other publications, mostly on botanical subjects, in
+ which, among other things, he worked out in detail his famous "system."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This system is founded on the sexes of plants, and is usually referred to
+ as an "artificial method" of classification because it takes into account
+ only a few marked characters of plants, without uniting them by more
+ general natural affinities. At the present time it is considered only as a
+ stepping-stone to the "natural" system; but at the time of its
+ promulgation it was epoch-marking in its directness and simplicity, and
+ therefore superiority, over any existing systems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the great reforms effected by Linnaeus was in the matter of
+ scientific terminology. Technical terms are absolutely necessary to
+ scientific progress, and particularly so in botany, where obscurity,
+ ambiguity, or prolixity in descriptions are fatally misleading. Linnaeus's
+ work contains something like a thousand terms, whose meanings and uses are
+ carefully explained. Such an array seems at first glance arbitrary and
+ unnecessary, but the fact that it has remained in use for something like
+ two centuries is indisputable evidence of its practicality. The
+ descriptive language of botany, as employed by Linnaeus, still stands as a
+ model for all other subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Closely allied to botanical terminology is the subject of botanical
+ nomenclature. The old method of using a number of Latin words to describe
+ each different plant is obviously too cumbersome, and several attempts had
+ been made prior to the time of Linnaeus to substitute simpler methods.
+ Linnaeus himself made several unsatisfactory attempts before he finally
+ hit upon his system of "trivial names," which was developed in his Species
+ plantarum, and which, with some, minor alterations, remains in use to this
+ day. The essence of the system is the introduction of binomial
+ nomenclature&mdash;that is to say, the use of two names and no more to
+ designate any single species of animal or plant. The principle is quite
+ the same as that according to which in modern society a man has two names,
+ let us say, John Doe, the one designating his family, the other being
+ individual. Similarly each species of animal or plant, according to the
+ Linnaeean system, received a specific or "trivial" name; while various
+ species, associated according to their seeming natural affinities into
+ groups called genera, were given the same generic name. Thus the generic
+ name given all members of the cat tribe being Felis, the name Felis leo
+ designates the lion; Felis pardus, the leopard; Felis domestica, the house
+ cat, and so on. This seems perfectly simple and natural now, but to
+ understand how great a reform the binomial nomenclature introduced we have
+ but to consult the work of Linnaeus's predecessors. A single illustration
+ will suffice. There is, for example, a kind of grass, in referring to
+ which the naturalist anterior to Linnaeus, if he would be absolutely
+ unambiguous, was obliged to use the following descriptive formula: Gramen
+ Xerampelino, Miliacea, praetenuis ramosaque sparsa panicula, sive
+ Xerampelino congener, arvense, aestivum; gramen minutissimo semine.
+ Linnaeus gave to this plant the name Poa bulbosa&mdash;a name that
+ sufficed, according to the new system, to distinguish this from every
+ other species of vegetable. It does not require any special knowledge to
+ appreciate the advantage of such a simplification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While visiting Paris in 1738 Linnaeus met and botanized with the two
+ botanists whose "natural method" of classification was later to supplant
+ his own "artificial system." These were Bernard and Antoine Laurent de
+ Jussieu. The efforts of these two scientists were directed towards
+ obtaining a system which should aim at clearness, simplicity, and
+ precision, and at the same time be governed by the natural affinities of
+ plants. The natural system, as finally propounded by them, is based on the
+ number of cotyledons, the structure of the seed, and the insertion of the
+ stamens. Succeeding writers on botany have made various modifications of
+ this system, but nevertheless it stands as the foundation-stone of modern
+ botanical classification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPE" id="link2H_APPE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ REFERENCE LIST
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ SCIENCE IN THE DARK AGE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 4). James Harvey Robinson, An Introduction to the History of
+ Western Europe, New York, 1898, p. 330.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 6). Henry Smith Williams, A Prefatory Characterization of The
+ History of Italy, in vol. IX. of The Historians' History of the World, 25
+ vols., London and New York, 1904.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ MEDIAEVAL SCIENCE IN THE WEST
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 47). Etigene Muntz, Leonardo do Vinci, Artist, Thinker, and Man of
+ Science, 2 vols., New York, 1892. Vol. II., p. 73.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE NEW COSMOLOGY&mdash;COPERNICUS TO KEPLER AND GALILEO
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 62). Copernicus, uber die Kreisbewegungen der Welfkorper, trans.
+ from Dannemann's Geschichle du Naturwissenschaften, 2 vols., Leipzig,
+ 1896.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 90). Galileo, Dialogo dei due Massimi Systemi del Mondo, trans.
+ from Dannemann, op. cit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ GALILEO AND THE NEW PHYSICS (1) (p. 101). Rothmann, History of Astronomy
+ (in the Library of Useful Knowledge), London, 1834.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 102). William Whewell, History of the Inductive Sciences, 3 Vols,
+ London, 1847-Vol. II., p. 48.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) (p. 111). The Lives of Eminent Persons, by Biot, Jardine, Bethune,
+ etc., London, 1833.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (4) (p. 113). William Gilbert, De Magnete, translated by P. Fleury
+ Motteley, London, 1893. In the biographical memoir, p. xvi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (5) (p. 114). Gilbert, op. cit., p. x1vii.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (6) (p. 114). Gilbert, op. cit., p. 24.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ TWO PSEUDO-SCIENCES&mdash;ALCHEMY AND ASTROLOGY
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 125). Exodus xxxii, 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 126). Charles Mackay, Popular Delusions, 3 vols., London, 1850.
+ Vol. II., p. 280.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) (p. 140). Mackay, op. cit., Vol. 11., p. 289.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (4) (P. 145). John B. Schmalz, Astrology Vindicated, New York, 1898.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (5) (p. 146). William Lilly, The Starry Messenger, London, 1645, p. 63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (6) (p. 149). Lilly, op. cit., p. 70.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (7) (p. 152). George Wharton, An Astrological judgement upon His Majesty's
+ Present March begun from Oxford, May 7, 1645, pp. 7-10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (8) (p. 154). C. W. Roback, The Mysteries of Astrology, Boston, 1854, p.
+ 29.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ FROM PARACELSUS TO HARVEY
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 159). A. E. Waite, The Hermetic and Alchemical Writings of
+ Paracelsus, 2 vols., London, 1894. Vol. I., p. 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 167). E. T. Withington, Medical History from the Earliest Times,
+ London, 1894, p. 278.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) (p. 173). John Dalton, Doctrines of the Circulation, Philadelphia,
+ 1884, p. 179.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (4) (p. 174). William Harvey, De Motu Cordis et Sanguinis, London, 1803,
+ chap. X.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (5) (p. 178). The Works of William Harvey, translated by Robert Willis,
+ London, 1847, p. 56.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ MEDICINE IN THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 189). Hermann Baas, History of Medicine, translated by H. E.
+ Henderson, New York, 1894, p. 504.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 189). E. T. Withington, Medical History from the Earliest Times,
+ London, 1894, p. 320.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ PHILOSOPHER-SCIENTISTS AND NEW INSTITUTIONS OF LEARNING
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 193). George L. Craik, Bacon and His Writings and Philosophy, 2
+ vols., London, 1846. Vol. II., p. 121.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 193). From Huxley's address On Descartes's Discourse Touching the
+ Method of Using One's Reason Rightly and of Seeking Scientific Truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) (p. 195). Rene Descartes, Traite de l'Homme (Cousins's edition. in ii
+ vols.), Paris, 1824. Vol, VI., p. 347.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE SUCCESSORS OF GALILEO IN PHYSICAL SCIENCE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 205). See The Phlogiston Theory, Vol, IV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 205). Robert Boyle, Philosophical Works, 3 vols., London, 1738.
+ Vol. III., p. 41.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) (p. 206). Ibid., Vol. III., p. 47.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (4) (p. 206). Ibid., Vol. II., p. 92.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (5) (p. 207). Ibid., Vol. II., p. 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (6) (p. 209). Ibid., Vol. I., p. 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (7) (p. 209). Ibid., vol. III., p. 508.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (8) (p. 210). Ibid., Vol. III., p. 361.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (9) (p. 213). Otto von Guericke, in the Philosophical Transactions of the
+ Royal Society of London, No. 88, for 1672, p. 5103.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (10) (p. 222). Von Guericke, Phil. Trans. for 1669, Vol I., pp. 173, 174.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ NEWTON AND THE COMPOSITION OF LIGHT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 233). Phil. Trans. of Royal Soc. of London, No. 80, 1672, pp.
+ 3076-3079. (2) (p 234). Ibid., pp. 3084, 3085.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) (p. 235). Voltaire, Letters Concerning the English Nation, London,
+ 1811.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ NEWTON AND THE LAW OF GRAVITATION
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 242). Sir Isaac Newton, Principia, translated by Andrew Motte, New
+ York, 1848, pp. 391, 392.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 250). Newton op. cit., pp. 506, 507.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ PROGRESS IN ELECTRICITY FROM GILBERT AND VON GUERICKE TO FRANKLIN
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (1) (p. 274). A letter from M. Dufay, F.R.S. and of the Royal Academy of
+ Sciences at Paris, etc., in the Phil. Trans. of the Royal Soc., vol.
+ XXXVIII., pp. 258-265.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) (p. 282). Dean von Kleist, in the Danzick Memoirs, Vol. I., p. 407.
+ From Joseph Priestley's History of Electricity, London, 1775, pp. 83, 84.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) (p. 288). Benjamin Franklin, New Experiments and Observations on
+ Electricity, London, 1760, pp. 107, 108.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (4) (p. 291). Franklin, op. cit., pp. 62, 63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (5) (p. 295). Franklin, op. cit., pp. 107, 108.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (For notes and bibliography to vol. II. see vol. V.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS <br /><br /> FOR THE FIVE VOLUMES
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0002"> <b>BOOK
+ I</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0003">
+ I. PREHISTORIC SCIENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0004">
+ II. EGYPTIAN SCIENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0005">
+ III. SCIENCE OF BABYLONIA AND ASSYRIA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0006">
+ IV. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ALPHABET </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0007">
+ V. THE BEGINNINGS OF GREEK SCIENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0008">
+ VI. THE EARLY GREEK PHILOSOPHERS IN ITALY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0009">
+ VII. GREEK SCIENCE IN THE EARLY ATTIC PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0010">
+ VIII. POST-SOCRATIC SCIENCE AT ATHENS&mdash;PLATO, ARISTOTLE, AND
+ THEOPHRASTUS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0011">
+ IX. GREEK SCIENCE OF THE ALEXANDRIAN OR HELLENISTIC PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0012">
+ X. SCIENCE OF THE ROMAN PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1705/1705-h/1705-h.htm#2H_4_0013">
+ XI. A RETROSPECTIVE GLANCE AT CLASSICAL SCIENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0002"> <b>BOOK
+ II. THE BEGINNINGS OF MODERN SCIENCE</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0003">
+ I. SCIENCE IN THE DARK AGE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0004">
+ II. MEDIAEVAL SCIENCE AMONG THE ARABIANS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0005">
+ III. MEDIAEVAL SCIENCE IN THE WEST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0006">
+ IV. THE NEW COSMOLOGY&mdash;COPERNICUS TO KEPLER AND GALILEO </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0007">
+ V. GALILEO AND THE NEW PHYSICS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0008">
+ VI. TWO PSEUDO-SCIENCES&mdash;ALCHEMY AND ASTROLOGY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0009">
+ VII. FROM PARACELSUS TO HARVEY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0010">
+ VIII. MEDICINE IN THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0011">
+ IX. PHILOSOPHER-SCIENTISTS AND NEW INSTITUTIONS OF LEARNING </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0012">
+ X. THE SUCCESSORS OF GALILEO IN PHYSICAL SCIENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0013">
+ XI. NEWTON AND THE COMPOSITION OF LIGHT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0014">
+ XII. NEWTON AND THE LAW OF GRAVITATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0015">
+ XIII. INSTRUMENTS OF PRECISION IN THE AGE OF NEWTON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0016">
+ XIV. PROGRESS IN ELECTRICITY FROM GILBERT AND VON GUERICKE TO
+ FRANKLIN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1706/1706-h/1706-h.htm#2H_4_0017">
+ XV. NATURAL HISTORY TO THE TIME OF LINNAEUS </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0001"> <b>BOOK
+ III. MODERN DEVELOPMENT OF THE PHYSICAL SCIENCES</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0002">
+ I. THE SUCCESSORS OF NEWTON IN ASTRONOMY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0003">
+ II. THE PROGRESS OF MODERN ASTRONOMY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0004">
+ III. THE NEW SCIENCE OF PALEONTOLOGY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0005">
+ IV. THE ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN GEOLOGY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0006">
+ V. THE NEW SCIENCE OF METEOROLOGY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0007">
+ VI. MODERN THEORIES OF HEAT AND LIGHT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0008">
+ VII. THE MODERN DEVELOPMENT OF ELECTRICITY AND MAGNETISM </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0009">
+ VIII. THE CONSERVATION OF ENERGY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1707/1707-h/1707-h.htm#2H_4_0010">
+ IX. THE ETHER AND PONDERABLE MATTER </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0001"> <b>BOOK
+ IV. MODERN DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0002">
+ I. THE PHLOGISTON THEORY IN CHEMISTRY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0003">
+ II. THE BEGINNINGS OF MODERN CHEMISTRY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0004">
+ III. CHEMISTRY SINCE THE TIME OF DALTON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0005">
+ IV. ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0006">
+ V. ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0007">
+ VI. THEORIES OF ORGANIC EVOLUTION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0008">
+ VII. EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY MEDICINE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0009">
+ VIII. NINETEENTH-CENTURY MEDICINE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0010">
+ IX. THE NEW SCIENCE OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1708/1708-h/1708-h.htm#2H_4_0011">
+ X. THE NEW SCIENCE OF ORIENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0001">
+ <b>BOOK V. ASPECTS OF RECENT SCIENCE</b> </a><br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0003">
+ I. THE BRITISH MUSEUM </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0004">
+ II. THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON FOR IMPROVING NATURAL KNOWLEDGE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0005">
+ III. THE ROYAL INSTITUTION AND THE LOW-TEMPERATURE RESEARCHES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0006">
+ IV. SOME PHYSICAL LABORATORIES AND PHYSICAL PROBLEMS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0007">
+ V. THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY AT NAPLES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0008">
+ VI. ERNST HAECKEL AND THE NEW ZOOLOGY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0009">
+ VII. SOME MEDICAL LABORATORIES AND MEDICAL PROBLEMS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0010">
+ VII. SOME UNSOLVED SCIENTIFIC PROBLEMS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30495/30495-h/30495-h.htm#2H_4_0011">
+ IX. RETROSPECT AND PROSPECT </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A History of Science, Volume 2(of 5), by
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