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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific Culture, and Other Essays, by Josiah Parsons Cooke.
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Scientific Culture, and Other Essays, by
+Josiah Parsons Cooke
+
+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: Scientific Culture, and Other Essays
+ Second Edition; with Additions
+
+Author: Josiah Parsons Cooke
+
+Release Date: September 15, 2011 [EBook #37427]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCIENTIFIC CULTURE, AND ***
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+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>SCIENTIFIC CULTURE,</h1>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3><i>AND OTHER ESSAYS</i>.</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h3><small>BY</small><br />
+<big>JOSIAH PARSONS COOKE, LL. D.,</big><br />
+<small>PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY AND MINERALOGY, IN HARVARD COLLEGE.</small></h3>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4><i>SECOND EDITION; WITH ADDITIONS.</i></h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h4>NEW YORK:<br />
+<span class="g">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,</span><br />
+<small>1, 3, <span class="smcap">and</span> 5 BOND STREET.</small><br />
+1885.</h4>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1881, 1885,<br />
+<span class="smcap">By JOSIAH PARSONS COOKE</span>.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h4>TO<br />
+<big>MY ASSOCIATES</big><br />
+IN<br />
+<span class="g">THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY</span><br />
+OF<br />
+<span class="g">HARVARD COLLEGE</span><br />
+THIS VOLUME<br />
+IS<br />
+AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED.</h4>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The essays collected in this volume, although written
+for special occasions without reference to each other, have
+all a bearing on the subject selected as the title of the
+volume, and are an outcome of a somewhat large experience
+in teaching physical science to college students.
+Thirty years ago, when the writer began his work at
+Cambridge, instruction in the experimental sciences was
+given in our American colleges solely by means of lectures
+and recitations. Chemistry and Physics were
+allowed a limited space in the college curriculum as
+branches of useful knowledge, but were regarded as
+wholly subordinate to the classics and mathematics as a
+means of education; and as physical science was then
+taught, there can be no question that the accepted opinion
+was correct. Experimental science can never be
+<span class='pagenum'>[Pg v]</span>
+made of value as a means of education unless taught by
+its own methods, with the one great aim in view to train
+the faculties of the mind so as to enable the educated
+man to read the Book of Nature for himself.</p>
+
+<p>Since the period just referred to, the example early
+set at Cambridge of making the student's own observations
+in the laboratory or cabinet the basis of
+all teaching, either in experimental or natural history
+science, has been generally followed. But in most centers
+of education the old traditions so far survive that
+the great end of scientific culture is lost in attempting to
+conform even laboratory instruction to the old academic
+methods of recitations and examinations. These, as
+usually conducted, are simply hindrances in a course of
+scientific training, because they are no tests of the only
+ability or acquirement which science values, and therefore
+set before the student a false aim. To point out
+this error, and to claim for science teaching its appropriate
+methods, was one object of the writer in these essays.</p>
+
+<p>It is, however, too often the case that, in following
+out our theories of education, we avoid Scylla only to
+encounter Charybdis, and so, in specializing our courses
+of laboratory instruction, there is great danger of falling
+<span class='pagenum'>[Pg vi]</span>
+into the mechanical routine of a technical art, and losing
+sight of those grand ideas and generalizations which give
+breadth and dignity to scientific knowledge. That these
+great truths are as important an element of scientific culture
+as experimental skill, the author has also endeavored
+to illustrate, and he has added brief notices of the lives
+of two noble men of science which may add force to the
+illustrations.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[Pg vii]</span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='right' colspan='3'><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#I">I.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;Scientific Culture</td><td align='right'>5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#II">II.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;The Nobility of Knowledge</td><td align='right'>45</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#III">III.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;The Elementary Teaching of Physical Science</td><td align='right'>71</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#IV">IV.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;The Radiometer</td><td align='right'>86</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#V">V.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;Memoir of Thomas Graham</td><td align='right'>127</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#VI">VI.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;Memoir of William Hallowes Miller</td><td align='right'>145</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#VII">VII.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;William Barton Rogers</td><td align='right'>160</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#VIII">VIII.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;Jean-Baptiste-Andr&eacute; Dumas</td><td align='right'>181</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#IX">IX.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;The Greek Question</td><td align='right'>203</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#X">X.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;Further Remarks on the Greek Question</td><td align='right'>214</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#XI">XI.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;Scientific Culture; its Spirit, its Aim, and its Methods</td><td align='right'> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 227</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#XII">XII.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;"Noblesse Oblige"</td><td align='right'>267</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#XIII">XIII.</a></td><td class='tdsc'>&mdash;The Spiritual Life</td><td align='right'>289</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<h1>ESSAYS.</h1>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<h3><a name="I" id="I"></a>I.</h3>
+
+<h2>SCIENTIFIC CULTURE.</h2>
+
+<h4><i>An Address delivered July 7, 1875, at the Opening of the Summer
+Courses of Instruction in Chemistry, at Harvard University.</i></h4>
+
+
+<p>You have come together this morning to begin various
+elementary courses of instruction in chemistry and
+mineralogy. As I have been informed, most of you are
+teachers by profession, and your chief object is to become
+acquainted with the experimental methods of teaching
+physical science, and to gain the advantages in your
+study which the large apparatus of this university is capable
+of affording.</p>
+
+<p>In all this I hope you will not be disappointed. You,
+as teachers, know perfectly well that success must depend,
+first of all, on your own efforts; but, since the
+methods of studying Nature are so different from those
+with which you are familiar in literary studies, I feel
+that the best service I can render, in this introductory
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+address, is to state, as clearly as I can, the great objects
+which should be kept in view in the courses on which
+you are now entering.</p>
+
+<p>By your very attendance on these courses you have
+given the strongest evidence of your appreciation of the
+value of chemical studies as a part of the system of education,
+and let me say, in the first place, that you have
+not overvalued their importance. The elementary principles
+and more conspicuous facts of chemistry are so
+intimately associated with the experience of every-day
+life, and find such important applications in the useful
+arts, that no man at the present day can be regarded as
+educated who is ignorant of them. Not to know why
+the fire burns, or how the sulphur trade affects the industries
+of the world, will be regarded, by the generation of
+men among whom your pupils will have to win their
+places in society, as a greater mark of ignorance than a
+false quantity in Latin prosody or a solecism in grammar.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, I need not tell you that physical science
+has become a great power in the world. Indeed, after religion,
+it is the greatest power of our modern civilization.
+Consider how much it has accomplished during the last
+century toward increasing the comforts and enlarging the
+intellectual vision of mankind. The railroad, the steamship,
+the electric telegraph, photography, gaslights, petroleum
+oils, coal-tar colors, chlorine bleaching, an&aelig;sthe<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>sia,
+are a few of its recent material gifts to the world;
+and not only has it made one pair of hands to do the
+work of twenty, but it has so improved and facilitated
+the old industries that what were luxuries to the fathers
+of our republic have become necessities to our generation.</p>
+
+<p>And when, passing from these material fruits, you
+consider the purely intellectual triumphs of physical science,
+such as those which have been gained with the
+telescope, the microscope, and the spectroscope, you can
+not wonder at the esteem in which these branches of
+study are held in this practical age of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Now, these immense results have been gained by the
+application to the study of Nature of a method which
+was so admirably described by Lord Bacon in his "Novum
+Organon," and which is now generally called the
+experimental method. What we observe in Nature is an
+orderly succession of phenomena. The ancients speculated
+about these phenomena as well as ourselves, but
+they contented themselves with speculations, animating
+Nature with the products of their wild fancies. Their
+great master, Aristotle, has never been excelled in the
+art of dialectics; but his method of logic applied to the
+external world was of very necessity an utter failure. It
+is frequently said, in defense of the exclusive study of
+the records of ancient learning, that they are the prod<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>ucts
+of thinking, loving, and hating men, like ourselves,
+and it is claimed that the study of science can never rise
+to the same nobility because it deals only with lifeless
+matter. But this is a mere play on words, a repetition
+of the error of the old schoolmen.</p>
+
+<p>Physical science is noble because it does deal with
+thought, and with the very noblest of all thought. Nature
+at once manifests and conceals an Infinite Presence:
+her methods and orderly successions are the manifestations
+of Omnipotent Will; her contrivances and laws the
+embodiment of Omniscient Thought. The disciples of
+Aristotle so signally failed simply because they could
+see in Nature only a reflection of their idle fancies.
+The followers of Bacon have so gloriously succeeded
+because they approached Nature as humble students,
+and, having first learned how to question her, have been
+content to be taught and not sought to teach. The ancient
+logic never relieved a moment of pain, or lifted an
+ounce of the burden of human misery. The modern
+logic has made a very large share of material comfort
+the common heritage of all civilized men.</p>
+
+<p>In what, then, does this Baconian system consist?
+Simply in these elements: 1. Careful observation of the
+conditions under which a given phenomenon occurs; 2.
+The varying of these conditions by experiments, and observing
+the effects produced by the variation. We thus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+find that some of the conditions are merely accidental
+circumstances, having no necessary connection with the
+phenomenon, while others are its invariable antecedent.
+Having now discovered the true relations of the phenomenon
+we are studying, a happy guess, suggested
+probably by analogy, furnishes us with a clew to the real
+causes on which it depends. We next test our guess by
+further experiments. If our hypothesis is true, this or
+that must follow; and, if in all points the theory holds,
+we have discovered the law of which we are in search.
+If, however, these necessary inferences are not realized,
+then we must abandon our hypothesis, make another
+guess, and test that in its turn. Let me illustrate by two
+well-known examples:</p>
+
+<p>The, of old, universally accepted principle that all living
+organisms are propagated by seeds or germs (<i>omnia
+ex ovo</i>) has been seriously questioned by a modern school
+of naturalists. Various observers have maintained that
+there were conditions under which the lower forms of organic
+life were developed independently of all such accessories,
+but other, and equally competent, naturalists,
+who have attempted to investigate the subject, have obtained
+conflicting results.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was observed that certain low forms of life
+were quite constantly developed in beef juice that had
+been carefully prepared and hermetically sealed in glass<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+flasks, even after these flasks had been exposed for a
+long time to the temperature of boiling water. "Here,"
+proclaims the new school, "is unmistakable evidence of
+spontaneous generation; for, if past experience is any
+guide, all germs must have been killed by the boiling
+water." "No," answer the more cautious naturalists,
+"you have not yet proved your point. You have no
+right to assume that all germs are killed at this temperature."</p>
+
+<p>The experiments, therefore, were repeated under various
+conditions and at different temperatures, but with
+unsatisfactory results, until Pasteur, a distinguished
+French physicist, devised a very simple mode of testing
+the question. He reasoned thus: "If, as is generally
+believed, the presence of invisible spores in the air is
+an essential condition of the development of these lower
+growths, then their production must bear some proportion
+to the abundance of these spores. Near the habitations
+of animals and plants, where the spores are known
+to be in abundance, the development would be naturally
+at a maximum, and we should expect that the growth
+would diminish in proportion as the microscope indicated
+that the spores diminished in the atmosphere."</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, Pasteur selected a region in the Jura
+Mountains suitable for his purpose, and repeated the well-known
+experiment with beef juice, first at the inn of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+town at the foot of the mountains, and then at various
+elevations up to the bare rocks which covered the top of
+the ridge, a height of some eight thousand feet. At each
+point he sealed up beef juice in a large number of flasks,
+and watched the result. He found that while in the town
+the animalcules were developed in almost all the flasks,
+they appeared only in two or three out of a hundred
+cases where the flasks had been sealed at the top of the
+mountain, and to a proportionate extent in those sealed
+at the intermediate elevations. What, now, did these experiments
+prove? Simply this, that the development of
+these organic forms was in direct proportion to the number
+of germs in the air. It did not settle the question of
+spontaneous generation, but it showed that false conclusions
+had been deduced from the experiments which had
+been cited to prove it.</p>
+
+<p>A still more striking illustration of the same method
+of questioning Nature is to be found in the investigation
+of Sir Humphry Davy, on the composition of water.
+The voltaic battery which works our telegraphs was invented
+by Volta in 1800; and later, during the same
+year, it was discovered in London, by Nicholson and Carlisle,
+that this remarkable instrument had the power of
+decomposing water. These physicists at once recognized
+that the chief products of the action of the battery on
+water were hydrogen and oxygen gases, thus confirming<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+the results of Cavendish, who, in 1781, had obtained water
+by combining these elementary substances; oxygen
+having been previously discovered in 1775, and hydrogen,
+at least, as early as 1766. It was, however, very
+soon also observed that there were always formed by the
+action of the battery on water, besides these a&euml;riform
+products, an alkali and an acid, the alkali collecting
+around the negative pole, and the acid around the positive
+pole of the electrical combination. In regard to the
+nature of this acid and alkali, there was the greatest difference
+of opinion among the early experimenters on this
+subject. Cruickshanks supposed that the acid was nitrous
+acid, and the alkali ammonia. Desormes, a French
+chemist, attempted to prove that the acid was muriatic
+acid; while Brugnatelli asserted that a new and peculiar
+acid was formed, which he called the electric
+acid.</p>
+
+<p>It was in this state of the question that Sir Humphry
+Davy began his investigation. From the analogies of
+chemical science, as well as from the previous experiments
+of Cavendish and Lavoisier, he was persuaded that
+water consisted solely of oxygen and hydrogen gases, and
+that the acid and alkali were merely adventitious products.
+This opinion was undoubtedly well founded; but,
+great disciple of Bacon as he was, Davy felt that his
+opinion was worth nothing unless substantiated by ex<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>perimental
+evidence, and accordingly he set himself to
+work to obtain the required proof.</p>
+
+<p>In Davy's first experiments the two glass tubes which
+he used to contain the water were connected together by
+an animal membrane, and he found, on immersing the
+poles of his battery in their respective tubes, that, besides
+the now well-known gases, there were really formed muriatic
+acid in one tube, and a fixed alkali in the other.
+Davy at once, however, suspected that the acid and alkali
+came from common salt contained in the animal membrane,
+and he therefore rejected this material and connected
+the glass tubes by carefully washed cotton fiber,
+when, on submitting the water as before to the action
+of the voltaic current, and continuing the experiment
+through a great length of time, no <i>muriatic</i> acid appeared;
+but he still found that the water in the one tube
+was strongly alkaline, and in the other strongly acid, although
+the acid was chiefly, at least, nitrous acid. A
+part of the acid evidently came from the animal membrane,
+but not the whole, and the source of the alkali
+was as obscure as before.</p>
+
+<p>Davy then made another guess. He knew that alkali
+was used in the manufacture of glass; and it occurred
+to him that the glass of the tubes, decomposed by the
+electric current, might be the origin of the alkali in
+his experiments. He therefore substituted for the glass<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+tubes cups of agate, which contains no alkali, and repeated
+the experiment, but still the troublesome acid
+and alkali appeared. Nevertheless, he said, it is possible
+that these products may be derived from some
+impurities existing in the agate cups, or adhering to
+them; and so, in order to make his experiments as refined
+as possible, he rejected the agate vessels and procured
+two conical cups of pure gold, but, on repeating
+the experiments, the acid and alkali again appeared.</p>
+
+<p>And now let me ask who is there of us who would
+not have concluded at this stage of the inquiry that the
+acid and alkali were essential products of the decomposition
+of water? But not so with Davy. He knew perfectly
+well that all the circumstances of his experiments
+had not been tested, and until this had been done he had
+no right to draw such a conclusion. He next turned to
+the water he was using. It was distilled water, which he
+supposed to be pure, but still, he said, it is possible that
+the impurities of the spring-water may be carried over
+to a slight extent by the steam in the process of distillation,
+and may therefore exist in my distilled water to a
+sufficient amount to have caused the difficulty. Accordingly,
+he evaporated a quart of this water in a silver dish,
+and obtained seven-tenths of a grain of dry residue. He
+then added this residue to the small amount of water
+in the gold cones and again repeated the experiment.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+The proportion of alkali and acid was sensibly increased.</p>
+
+<p>You think he has found at last the source of the acid
+and alkali in the impurities of the water. So thought
+Davy, but he was too faithful a disciple of Bacon to leave
+this legitimate inference unverified. Accordingly, he repeatedly
+distilled the water from a silver alembic until it
+left absolutely no residue on evaporation, and then with
+water which he knew to be pure, and contained in vessels
+of gold from which he knew it could acquire no taint, he
+still again repeated the already well-tried experiment.
+He dipped his test-paper into the vessel connected with
+the positive pole, and the water was still decidedly acid.
+He dipped the paper into the vessel connected with the
+negative pole, and the water was still alkaline.</p>
+
+<p>You might well think that Davy would have been
+discouraged here. But not in the least. The path to the
+great truths which Nature hides often leads through a far
+denser and a more bewildering forest than this; but then
+there is not infrequently a "blaze" on the trees which
+points out the way, although it may require a sharp eye
+in a clear head to see the marks. And Davy was well
+enough trained to observe a circumstance which showed
+that he was now on the right path and heading straight
+for the goal.</p>
+
+<p>On examining the alkali formed in this last experi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>ment,
+he found that it was not, as before, a fixed alkali,
+soda or potash, but the volatile alkali ammonia. Evidently
+the fixed alkali came from the impurities of
+the water, and when, on repeating the experiment with
+pure water in agate cups or glass tubes, the same results
+followed, he felt assured that so much at least had been
+established. There was still, however, the production of
+the volatile alkali and of nitrous acid to be accounted for.
+As these contain only the elements of air and water,
+Davy thought that possibly they might be formed by the
+combination of hydrogen at the one pole and of oxygen
+at the other with the nitrogen of the air, which was necessarily
+dissolved in the water. In order, therefore, to
+eliminate the effect of the air, he again repeated the experiment
+under the receiver of an air-pump from which
+the atmosphere had been exhausted, but still the acid and
+alkali appeared in the two cups.</p>
+
+<p>Davy, however, was not discouraged by this, for the
+"blazes" on the trees were becoming more numerous,
+and he now felt sure that he was fast approaching the
+end. He observed that the quantity of acid and alkali
+had been greatly diminished by exhausting the air, and
+this was all that could be expected, for, as Davy knew perfectly
+well, the best air-pumps do not remove all the air.
+He therefore, for the last experiment, not only exhausted
+the air, but replaced it with pure hydrogen, and then ex<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>hausted
+the hydrogen and refilled the receiver with the
+same gas several times in succession, until he was perfectly
+sure that the last traces of air had been as it were
+washed out. In this atmosphere of pure hydrogen he
+allowed the battery to act on the water, and not until the
+end of twenty-four hours did he disconnect the apparatus.
+He then dips his test-paper into the water connected
+with the positive pole, and there is no trace of
+acid; he dips it into the water at the negative pole, and
+there is no alkali; and you may judge with what satisfaction
+he withdraws those slips of test-paper, whose
+unaltered surfaces showed that he had been guided at
+last to the truth, and that his perseverance had been rewarded.</p>
+
+<p>The fame of Sir Humphry Davy rests on his discovery
+of the metals of the alkalies and earths which first
+revealed the wonderful truth that the crust of our globe
+consists of metallic cinders; but none of these brilliant
+results show so great scientific merit or such eminent
+power of investigating Nature as the experiments which
+I have just detailed. I have not, however, described
+them here for the purpose of glorifying that renowned
+man. His honored memory needs no such office at my
+hands. My only object was to show you what is meant
+by the Baconian method of science, and to give some
+idea of the nature of that modern logic which within the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+last fifty years has produced more wonderful transformations
+in human society than the author of Aladdin
+ever imagined in his wildest dreams. In this short address
+I can of course give you but a very dim and imperfect
+idea of what I have called the Baconian system
+of experimental reasoning. Indeed, you can not form
+any clear conception of it, until in some humble way you
+have attempted to use the method, each one for himself,
+and you have come here in order that you may acquire
+such experience.</p>
+
+<p>My object, however, will be gained if these illustrations
+serve to give emphasis to the following statements,
+which I feel I ought to make at the opening of these
+courses of instruction&mdash;statements which have an especial
+appropriateness in this place, since I am addressing teachers,
+who are in a position to exert an important influence
+on the system of education in this country.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, then, I must declare my conviction
+that no educated man can expect to realize his best possibilities
+of usefulness without a practical knowledge of the
+methods of experimental science. If he is to be a physician,
+his whole success will depend on the skill with
+which he can use these great tools of modern civilization.
+If he is to be a lawyer, his advancement will in no small
+measure be determined by the acuteness with which he
+can criticise the manner in which the same tools have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+been used by his own or his opponent's clients. If he is
+to be a clergyman, he must take sides in the great conflict
+between theology and science which is now raging
+in the world, and, unless he wishes to play the part of
+the doughty knight Don Quixote, and think he is winning
+great victories by knocking down the imaginary
+adversaries which his ignorance has set up, he must try
+the steel of his adversary's blade.</p>
+
+<p>Let me be fully understood. It is not to be expected
+or desired that many of our students should
+become professional men of science. The places of
+employment for scientific men are but few, and more
+in the future than in the past they will naturally be
+secured by those whom Nature has endowed with special
+aptitudes or tastes&mdash;usually the signs of aptitudes&mdash;to
+investigate her laws. That our country will always
+offer an honorable career to her men of genius, we have
+every reason to expect, and these born students of Nature
+will usually follow the plain indications of Providence
+without encouragement or direction from us.</p>
+
+<p>It is different, however, with the great body of earnest
+students who are conscious of no special aptitudes,
+but who are desirous of doing the best thing to fit themselves
+for usefulness in the world; and I feel that any
+system of education is radically defective which does
+not comprise a sufficient training in the methods of ex<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>perimental
+science to make the mass of our educated
+men familiar with this tool of modern civilization: so
+that, when, hereafter, new conquests over matter are announced
+and great discoveries are proclaimed, they may
+be able not only to understand but also to criticise the
+methods by which the assumed results have been reached,
+and thus be in a position to distinguish between the true
+and the false. Whether we will or not, we must live under
+the direction of this great power of modern society,
+and the only question is whether we will be its ignorant
+slave or its intelligent servant.</p>
+
+<p>In the second place, it seems fitting that I should
+state to you what I regard as the true aims to be kept in
+view in a course of scientific study, and to give my reasons
+for the methods we have adopted in arranging the
+courses you are about beginning.</p>
+
+<p>In our day there has arisen a warm discussion as to
+the relative claims of two kinds of culture, and attempts
+are made to create an antagonism between them. But
+all culture is the same in spirit. Its object is to awaken
+and strengthen the powers of the mind; for these, like
+the muscles of the body, are developed and rendered
+strong and active only by exercise; while, on the other
+hand, they may become atrophied from mere want of use.
+Science culture differs in its methods from the old classical
+culture, but it has the same spirit and the same ob<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>ject.
+You must not, therefore, expect me to advocate
+the former at the expense of the latter; for, although I
+have labored assiduously during a quarter of a century to
+establish the methods of science teaching which have
+now become general, I am far from believing that they
+are the only true modes of obtaining a liberal education.
+So far from this, if it were necessary to choose one of
+two systems, I should favor the classical; and why?</p>
+
+<p>Language is the medium of thought, and can not be
+separated from it. He who would think well must have
+a good command of language, and he who has the best
+command of language I am almost tempted to say will
+think the best. For this reason a certain amount of
+critical study of language is essential for every educated
+man, and such study is not likely to be gained except
+through the great ancient languages; the advocates of
+classical scholarship frequently say, can not be gained. I
+am not ready to accept this dictum; but I most willingly
+concede that in the present state of our schools it is not
+likely to be gained. I never had any taste myself for
+classical studies; but I know that I owe to the study a
+great part of the mental culture which has enabled me
+to do the work that has fallen to my share in life.</p>
+
+<p>But, while I concede all this, I do not believe, on the
+other hand, that the classical is the only effective method
+of culture; you evidently do not think so, for you would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+not be here if you did. But, in abandoning the old tried
+method, which is known to be good, for the new, you
+must be careful that you gain the advantages which the
+new offers; and you will not gain the new culture you
+seek unless you study science in the right way. In the
+classical departments the methods are so well established,
+and have been so long tested by experience, that there can
+hardly be a wrong way. But in science there is not only
+a wrong way, but this wrong way is so easy and alluring
+that you will most certainly stray into it unless you strive
+earnestly to keep out of it. Hence I am most anxious
+to point out to you the right way, and do what I can to
+keep you in it; and you will find that our courses and
+methods have been devised with this object.</p>
+
+<p>When advocating in our mother University of Cambridge,
+in Old England, the claims of scientific culture,
+I was pushed with an argument which had very great
+weight with the eminent English scholars present, and
+which you will be surprised to learn was regarded as
+fatal to the success of the science "triposes" then under
+debate. The argument was that the experimental sciences
+could not be made the subjects of competitive
+examinations. Some may smile at such an objection;
+but, as viewed from the English standpoint, there was
+really a great deal in it, and the argument brought out the
+radical difference between scientific and classical culture.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The old method of culture may be said to have culminated
+in the competitive examinations of the English
+universities. We have no such examinations here.
+Success depends not simply on knowing your subject
+thoroughly, but on having it at your fingers' ends, and
+those fingers so agile that they can accomplish not only a
+prodigious amount of work in a short time, but can do
+this work with absolute accuracy. For the only approach
+we make to an experience of this kind, we must look to
+our athletic contests. It may of course be doubted
+whether the ability, once in a man's life, to perform such
+mental feats, is worth what it costs. Still it implies a
+very high degree of mental culture, and it is perfectly
+certain that the experimental sciences give no field for
+that sort of mental prize-fights. It is easy to prepare
+written examinations which will show whether the students
+have been faithful to their work, but they can not
+be adapted to such competitions as I have described without
+abandoning the true object of science culture. The
+ability of the scientific student can only be shown by long-continued
+work at the laboratory table, and by his success
+in investigating the problems which Nature presents.</p>
+
+<p>We have here struck the true key-note of the scientific
+method. The great object of all our study should be
+to study Nature, and all our methods should be directed
+to this one object. This aim alone will ennoble our schol<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>arship
+as students, and will give dignity to our scientific
+calling as men of science. It is this high aim, moreover,
+which vindicates the worth of the mode of culture we
+have chosen. What is it that ennobles literary culture
+but the great minds which, through this culture, have
+honored the nations to which they belong?</p>
+
+<p>The culture we have chosen is capable of even greater
+things; not because science is nobler than art, for both
+are equally noble&mdash;it is the thought, the conception, which
+ennobles, and I care not whether it be attained through
+one kind of exercise of the mental faculties or another&mdash;but
+we are capable of grander and nobler thoughts than
+Plato, Cicero, Shakespeare, or Newton, because we live
+in a later period of the world's history, when, through
+science, the world has become richer in great ideas. It
+is, I repeat, the great thought which ennobles, and it ennobles
+because it raises to a higher plane that which is
+immortal in our manhood.</p>
+
+<p>If I have made my meaning clear, and if you sympathize
+with my feelings, you will understand why I regard
+culture as so important to the individual and to the nation.
+The works of Shakespeare and of Bacon are of
+more value to England to-day than the memories of Blenheim
+or Trafalgar; and those great minds will still be
+living powers in the world when Marlborough and Nelson
+are only remembered as historical names.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I therefore believe that it is the first duty of a country
+to foster the highest culture, and that it should be the
+aim of every scholar to promote this culture both by his
+own efforts and his active influence. A nation can become
+really great in no other way. We live in a country
+of great possibilities; and the danger is that, as with many
+men I have known in college, of great potential abilities,
+the greatness will end where it begins. The scholars of
+the country should have but one voice in this matter, and
+urge upon the government and upon individuals the duty
+of encouraging and supporting mental culture for its own
+sake.</p>
+
+<p>The time has passed when we can afford to limit the
+work of our higher institutions of learning to teaching
+knowledge already acquired. Henceforth the investigation
+of unsolved problems, and the discovery of new
+truth, should be one of the main objects at our American
+universities, and no cost grudged which is required to
+maintain at them the most active minds, in every branch
+of knowledge which the country can be stimulated to
+produce.</p>
+
+<p>I could urge this on the self-interest of the nation
+as an obvious dictate of political economy. I could
+say, and say truly, that the culture of science will help
+us to develop those latent resources of which we are
+so proud; will enable us to grow two blades of grass<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+where one grew before; to extract a larger percentage of
+metal from our ores; to economize our coal, and in general
+to direct our waiting energies so that they may produce
+a more abundant pecuniary reward. I could tell of
+Galvani studying for twenty long years, to no apparent
+purpose, the twitching of frogs' hind-legs, and thus sowing
+the seed from which has sprung the greatest invention
+of modern times. Or, if our Yankee impatience
+would be unwilling to wait half a century for the fruit
+to ripen, I could point to the purely theoretical investigations
+of organic chemistry, which in less than five years
+have revolutionized one of the great industries of Europe,
+and liberated thousands of acres for a more beneficent
+agriculture. This is all true, and may be urged properly
+if higher considerations will not prevail. It is an argument
+I have used in other places, but I will not use it
+here; although I gladly acknowledge the Providence
+which brings at last even material fruits to reward conscientious
+labor for the advancement of knowledge and
+the intellectual elevation of mankind. I would rather
+point to that far greater multitude who worked in faith
+for the love of knowledge, and who ennobled themselves
+and ennobled their nation, not because they added to its
+material prosperity, but because they made themselves
+and made their fellows more noble men.</p>
+
+<p>I come back now again to the moral of all this, to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+urge upon you, as the noblest patriotism and the most
+enlightened self-interest, the duty of striving for yourselves
+and encouraging in others the highest culture in
+the studies you have chosen, and this culture with one
+end in view, to advance knowledge. I am far, of course,
+from advising you to grapple immaturely with unsolved
+problems, or, when you have gained the knowledge with
+which you can dare to venture from the beaten track, to
+undertake work beyond your power. Many a young
+scientific man has suffered the fate of Icarus in attempting
+to soar too high. Moreover, I am far from expecting
+that all or many of you will ever have the opportunity
+of going beyond the well-explored fields of knowledge;
+but you can all have the aim, and that aim will
+make your work more worthy and more profitable to
+yourselves. Every American boy can not be President
+of the United States, but if, as our English cousins
+allege, he believes that he can be, the very belief makes
+him an abler man.</p>
+
+<p>We have dwelt long enough on these generalities,
+and it is time to come down to commonplaces, and to
+inquire what are the essential conditions of this scientific
+culture which shall fit us to investigate Nature; and the
+first thought that occurs to me in this connection may be
+expressed thus: Science presents to us two aspects, which
+I may call its objective and its subjective aspect. Objec<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>tively
+it is a body of facts, which we have to observe,
+and subjectively it is a body of truths, conclusions, or inferences,
+deduced from these facts; and the two sides of
+the subject should always be kept in view.</p>
+
+<p>I propose next to say a few words in regard to each of
+these two aspects of our study, and in regard to the best
+means of training our faculties so as to work successfully
+in each sphere. First, then, success in the observation of
+phenomena implies three qualities at least, namely, quickness
+and sharpness of perception, accuracy in details, and
+truthfulness; and on its power to cultivate these qualities
+a large part of the value of science, as a means of
+education, depends.</p>
+
+<p>To begin with the cultivation of our perceptions.
+We are all gifted with senses, but how few of us use
+them to the best advantage! "We have eyes and see
+not"; for, although the light paints the picture on the
+retina, our dull perceptions give no attention to the
+details, and we retain only a confused impression of
+what has passed before our eyes. "But how," you may
+ask, "are we to cultivate this sharpness of perception?"
+I answer, only by making a conscious effort to fix our
+attention on the objects we study until the habit becomes
+a second nature. I have often noticed, with surprise,
+the power which uneducated miners frequently
+possess of recognizing many minerals at sight. This<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+they have acquired by long experience and close familiarity
+with such objects, and such power of observation
+is with them so purely a habit that they are frequently
+unable to state clearly the grounds on which their conclusions
+are based. They recognize the minerals by what
+in common language is called their "looks" and they
+notice delicate differences in the "looks" to which most
+men are blind. It is, however, the business of the scientific
+mineralogist to analyze these "looks," and to point
+out in what the differences consist; so that by fixing his
+attention on these points the student may gain, by a few
+hours' study, the power which the miner acquires only
+after long experience.</p>
+
+<p>The chief difficulty, however, which we find in teaching
+mineralogy is, that the students do not readily see
+the differences when they are pointed out, or, if they
+see them, do not remember them with sufficient precision
+to render their subsequent observations conclusive
+and precise. This either arises from a failure to
+cultivate the powers of observation in childhood, or the
+subsequent blunting of them by disuse. The ladies
+will scout the idea that a brooch of cut-glass is as ornamental
+as one of diamond, and yet I venture to assert
+that there is not one person in fifty, at least of those
+who have not made a study of the subject, who can
+tell the difference between the two. The external ap<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>pearance
+depends simply on what we call lustre. The
+lustre of glass is vitreous, that of the diamond adamantine;
+and I know of no other distinction which it is more
+difficult for students to recognize than this. Those of
+you who study mineralogy will experience this difficulty,
+and it can be overcome only by giving careful attention
+to the subject. The teacher can do nothing more than
+put in your hands the specimens which illustrate the
+point, and you must study these specimens until you see
+the difference. It is a question of sight, not of understanding,
+and all the optical theories of the cause of the
+lustre will not help you in the least toward seeing the
+difference between diamond and glass, or anglesite and
+heavy spar.</p>
+
+<p>Another illustration of the same fact is the constant
+failure of students to distinguish by the eye alone between
+the two minerals called copper-glance and gray
+copper. There is a difference of color and lustre which,
+although usually well marked, it requires an educated
+eye to distinguish.</p>
+
+<p>Mineralogy undoubtedly demands a more careful cultivation
+of the perceptions than the other branches of
+chemistry; but still you will find abundant practice for
+close observation in them all. I have often known students
+to reach erroneous results in qualitative analysis by
+mistaking a white precipitate in a colored liquid for a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+colored precipitate, or by not attending to similar broad
+distinctions, which would have been obvious to any careful
+observer; and so in quantitative analysis, mere delicacy
+of touch or handling is a great element of success.</p>
+
+<p>But I must pass on to speak of the importance in the
+study of Nature of accuracy in detail, which is the second
+condition of successful observation of which I spoke.
+We must cultivate not only accuracy in observing details,
+but also accuracy in following details which have been
+laid down by others for our guidance. In science we
+can not draw correct conclusions from our premises unless
+we are sure that we have all the facts, and what
+seemed at first an unimportant detail often proves to be
+the determining condition of the result; and, again, if
+we are told that under certain conditions a certain sign is
+the proof of the presence of a certain substance, we have
+no right to assume that the sign is of any value unless
+the conditions are fulfilled. A black precipitate, for example,
+obtained under certain conditions, is a proof of
+the presence of nickel, but we can not assert that we
+have found nickel unless we have followed out those
+details in every particular.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, we must avoid empiricism as far as we
+can. We must seek to learn the reasons of the details,
+and such knowledge will not only render our work intelligent,
+but will also frequently enable us to judge<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+how far the details are essential, and to what extent
+our processes may be varied with safety. We must also
+avoid trifling, and, above all, "the straining at a gnat
+and swallowing a camel," as is the habit with triflers.
+Large knowledge and good judgment will avoid all such
+errors; but, if we must choose between fussiness and
+carelessness, the first is the least evil. Slovenly work
+means slovenly results, and habits of carefulness, neatness,
+and order produce as excellent fruits in the laboratory
+as in the home.</p>
+
+<p>Last in order but first in importance of the conditions
+of successful observation, mentioned above, stands truthfulness.
+Here you may think I am approaching a delicate
+subject, of which even to speak might seem to cast
+a reproach. But not so at all. I am not speaking here
+of conscious deception, for I assume that no one who aspires
+to be a student of Nature can be guilty of that.
+But I am speaking of a quality whose absence is not
+necessarily a mark of sinfulness, but whose possession, in
+a high degree, is a characteristic of the greatest scientific
+talent. As every lawyer knows, he is a rare man
+whose testimony is not colored by his interests, and a
+very large amount of self-deception is compatible with
+conscious honesty of purpose.</p>
+
+<p>So among scientific students the power to keep the
+mind unbiased, and not to color our observations in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+least degree, is one of the rarest as it is one of the
+noblest of qualities. It is a quality we must strive
+after with all our might, and we shall not attain it unless
+we strive. Remember, our observations are our
+data, and, unless accurate, everything deduced from them
+must have the taint of our deception. We can not deceive
+Nature, however much we may deceive ourselves;
+and there is many a student who would cut off his right
+hand rather than be guilty of a conscious untruth, who
+is yet constantly untruthful to himself. Every year students
+of mineralogy present to me written descriptions
+of mineral specimens which particularize, as observed,
+characters that do not appear on the specimen given them
+to determine, although they may be the correct characters
+of some other mineral.</p>
+
+<p>There is usually no want of honesty in this, but, deceived
+by some accident, the student has made a wrong
+guess, and then imagined that he saw on the specimen
+those characters which he knew from the descriptions
+ought to appear on the assumed mineral. So, also, it not
+unfrequently happens that a student in qualitative analysis,
+who has obtained some hints in regard to the composition
+of his solution, will torture his observations until they
+seem to him to confirm his erroneous inferences; and
+again the student in quantitative analysis, who finds out
+the exact weight he ought to obtain, is often insensibly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+influenced by this knowledge&mdash;in the washing and ignition
+of his precipitate, or in some other way&mdash;and thus
+obtains results whose only apparent fault may be a too
+close agreement with theory, but which, nevertheless,
+are not accurate because not true. It is evident how
+fatal such faults as these must be to the investigation of
+truth, and they are equally destructive of all scientific
+scholarship. Their effect on the student is so marked
+that, although he may deceive himself, he will rarely deceive
+his teacher. That he should lose confidence in his
+own results is, to the teacher, one of the most marked
+indications of such false methods of study, but the student
+usually refers his want of success to any cause but
+the real one&mdash;his own untruthfulness. He will complain
+of the teacher, or of the methods of instruction, and may
+even persuade himself that all scientific results are as uncertain
+as his own. As I have said, mere ordinary truthfulness,
+which spurns any conscious deception, will not
+save us from falling into such faults. Our scientific
+study demands a much higher order of truthfulness than
+this. We should so love the truth above all price as to
+strive for it with single-hearted and unswerving purpose.
+We must be constantly on our guard to avoid any circumstance
+which would tend to bias our minds or warp
+our judgments, and we must make the attainment of
+the truth our sole motive, guide, and end.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It remains for me, before closing this address, to say
+a few words on what I have called the subjective aspect
+of scientific study. Science offers us not only a mass of
+phenomena to be observed, but also a body of truths
+which have been deduced from these observations; and,
+without the power of drawing correct inferences from
+the data acquired, exact observations would be of little
+value. I have already described the inductive method of
+reasoning, and illustrated it by two noteworthy examples,
+and, in a humbler measure, we must apply the same
+method in our daily work in the laboratory. We must
+learn how to vary our experiments so as to eliminate the
+accidental circumstances, and make evident the essential
+conditions of the phenomena we are studying. Such
+power can only be acquired by practice, and a somewhat
+long experience in active teaching has convinced me that
+there is no better means of training this logical faculty
+than the study of qualitative chemical analysis in which
+many of you are to engage.</p>
+
+<p>The results of the processes of qualitative analysis
+are perfectly definite and trustworthy; but they are only
+reached by following out the indications of experiments
+which are frequently obscure, and even apparently contradictory;
+reconciling by new experiments the seeming
+discrepancies, and, at last, having eliminated all
+other possible causes of the phenomena observed, dis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>covering
+the true nature of the substances under examination.</p>
+
+<p>The study of mineralogy affords an almost equally
+good practice, although in a somewhat different form.
+By comparing carefully many specimens of the same
+mineral, you learn to distinguish the accidental from the
+essential characters, and on this distinction you must
+base your inferences in regard to the nature of the specimens
+you may be called upon to determine. A single
+remark occurs to me which may aid you in cultivating
+this scientific logic.</p>
+
+<p>Do not attempt to reason on insufficient data. Multiply
+your observations or experiments, and when your premises
+are ample, the conclusion will generally take care
+of itself. Are you in doubt in regard to a mineral specimen?
+Repeat your observations again and again, multiply
+them with the aid of the blow-pipe or goniometer,
+compare the specimen with known specimens which it
+resembles, until either your doubts are removed or you
+are satisfied that you are unequal to the task; and remember
+that, in many cases, the last is the only honest conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Are you in doubt in regard to the reactions of the
+substance you are analyzing, whether they are really those
+of a metal you suspect to be present? Do not rest in
+such a frame of mind, and, above all, do not try to re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>move
+the doubt by comparing your experience with that
+of your neighbor, but multiply your own experiments;
+procure some compound of the metal, and compare its
+reactions with those you have observed until you reach
+either a positive or a negative result.</p>
+
+<p>Remember that the way to remove your doubts is
+to widen your own knowledge, and not to depend on
+the knowledge of others. When your knowledge of the
+facts is ample, your inferences will be satisfactory, and
+then an unexplained phenomenon is the guide to a new
+discovery. Do not be discouraged if you have to labor
+long in the dark before the day begins to dawn. It will
+at last dawn to you, as it has dawned to others before,
+and, when the morning breaks, you will be satisfied with
+the result of your labor.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, I feel confident that such experience will
+very greatly tend to increase your appreciation of the
+value of scientific studies in training the reasoning faculties
+of the mind. This, as every one must admit, is the
+best test of their utility in a scheme of education, and it
+is precisely here that I claim for them the very highest
+place. It has generally been admitted that mathematical
+studies are peculiarly well adapted to train the logical
+faculties, but still many persons have maintained that,
+since the mathematics deal wholly with absolute certainties,
+an exclusive devotion to this class of subjects unfits<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+the mind for weighing the probable evidence by which
+men are chiefly guided in the affairs of life.</p>
+
+<p>But, without attempting to discuss this question, on
+which much might be said on both sides, it is certain that
+no such objection can be urged against the study of the
+physical sciences if conducted in the manner I have attempted
+to describe. These subjects present to the consideration
+of the student every degree of probable evidence,
+accustoming him to weigh all the evidence for or
+against a given conclusion, and to reject or to provisionally
+accept only on the balance of probabilities. Moreover,
+in practical science, the student is taught to follow
+out a chain of probable evidence with care and caution,
+to eliminate all accidental phenomena, and supply,
+by experiment or observation, the missing links, until
+he reaches the final conclusion&mdash;an intellectual process
+which, though based wholly on probable evidence, may
+have all the force and certainty of a mathematical demonstration.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, that highly valued scientific acumen and skill
+which enables the student to brush away the accidental
+circumstances by which the laws of Nature are always
+concealed until the truth stands out in bold relief, is
+but a higher phase of the same talent which marks
+professional skill in all the higher walks of life. The
+physician who looks through the external symptoms of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+his patient to the real disease which lurks beneath;
+the lawyer, who disentangles a mass of conflicting testimony,
+and follows out the truth successfully to the end;
+the statesman, who sees beneath the froth of political life
+the great fundamental principles which will inevitably
+rule the conduct of the state, and thus foresees and provides
+for the coming change; the general, who discovers
+amid the confusion of the battlefield the weak point of
+his enemy's front; the merchant, even, who can interpret
+the signs of the unsettled market&mdash;employ the same
+faculty, and frequently in not a much lower degree, that
+discovered the law of gravitation, and which, since the
+days of Newton, has worked so successfully to unveil the
+mysteries of the material creation.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, I hope, my friends, that you will come to
+value scientific studies, not simply because they cultivate
+the perceptive and reasoning faculties, but also because
+they fill the mind with lofty ideals, elevated conceptions,
+and noble thoughts. Indeed, I claim that there is no
+better school in which to train the &aelig;sthetical faculties of
+the mind, the tastes, and the imagination, than the study
+of natural science.</p>
+
+<p>The beauty of Nature is infinite, and the more we
+study her works the more her loveliness unfolds. The
+upheaved mountain, with its mantle of eternal snow; the
+majestic cataract, with its whirl and roar of waters;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+the sunset cloud, with its blending of gorgeous hues,
+lose nothing of their beauty for him who knows the mystery
+they conceal. On the contrary, they become, one
+and all, irradiated by the Infinite Presence which shines
+through them, and fill the mind with grander conceptions
+and nobler ideas than your uneducated child of Nature
+could ever attain.</p>
+
+<p>Remember that I am not recommending an exclusive
+devotion to the natural sciences. I am only claiming
+for them their proper place in the scheme of education,
+and I do not, of course, deny the unquestionable
+value of both the ancient and the modern classics in
+cultivating a pure and elevated taste. But I do say
+that the poet-laureate of England has drawn a deeper
+inspiration from Nature interpreted by science than any
+of his predecessors of the classical school; and I do
+also affirm that the pre-Raphaelite school of painting,
+with all its grotesque mimicry of Nature, embodies a
+truer and purer ideal than that of any Roman fable or
+Grecian dream.</p>
+
+<p>And what shall we say of the imagination? Where
+can you find a wider field for its exercise than that
+opened by the discoveries of modern science? And as
+the mind wanders over the vast expanse, crossing boundless
+spaces, dwelling in illimitable time, witnessing the
+displays of immeasurable power, and studying the adapta<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>tions
+of Omniscient skill, it lives in a realm of beauty,
+of wonder, and of awe, such as no artist has ever attained
+to in word, in sound, in color, or in form. And
+if such a life does not lead man to feel his own dependence,
+to yearn toward the Infinite Father, and to rest
+on the bosom of Infinite Love, it is simply because it
+is not the noble in intellect, not the great in talent, not
+the profound in knowledge, not the rich in experience,
+not the lofty in aspiration, not the gifted in imagery,
+but solely the pure in heart, who see God.</p>
+
+<p>Such, then, is a very imperfect presentation of what
+I believe to be the value of scientific studies as a means
+of education. In what I have stated I have implied that,
+for these studies to be of any real value, the end must be
+constantly kept in view, and everything made subservient
+to the one great object.</p>
+
+<p>To study the natural sciences merely as a collection
+of interesting facts which it is well for every educated
+man to know, seldom serves a useful purpose. The
+young mind becomes wearied with the details, and soon
+forgets what it has never more than half acquired. The
+lessons become an exercise of the memory and of nothing
+more; and if, as is too frequently the case, an attempt
+is made to cram the half-formed mind in a single school-year
+with an epitome of half the natural sciences&mdash;natural
+philosophy, astronomy, and chemistry, physiology,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+zo&ouml;logy, botany, and mineralogy, following each other
+in rapid succession&mdash;these studies become a great evil,
+an actual nuisance, which I should be the first to vote
+to abate. The tone of mind is not only not improved,
+but seriously impaired, and the best product is a superficial,
+smattering smartness, which is the crying evil not
+only of our schools but also of our country.</p>
+
+<p>In order that the sciences should be of value in our
+educational system, they must be taught more from
+things than from books, and never from books without
+the things. They must be taught, also, by real living
+teachers, who are themselves interested in what they
+teach, are interested also in their pupils, and understand
+how to direct them aright. Above all, the teachers
+must see to it that their pupils study with the understanding,
+and not solely with the memory, not permitting
+a single lesson to be recited which is not thoroughly
+understood, taking the greatest care not to load the memory
+with any useless lumber, and eschewing merely memorized
+rules as they would deadly poison. The great
+difficulty against which the teachers of natural science
+have to contend in the colleges are the wretched tread-mill
+habits the students bring with them from the schools.
+Allow our students to memorize their lessons, and they
+will appear respectably well, but you might as easily remove
+a mountain as to make many of them think. They<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+will solve an involved equation of algebra readily enough
+so long as they can do it by turning their mental crank,
+when they will break down on the simplest practical
+problem of arithmetic which requires of them only
+thought enough to decide whether they shall multiply or
+divide.</p>
+
+<p>Many a boy of good capabilities has been irretrievably
+ruined, as a scholar, by being compelled to learn
+the Latin grammar by rote at an age when he was incapable
+of understanding it; and I fear that schools
+may still be found where young minds are tortured by
+this stupefying exercise. Those of us who have faith
+in the educational value of scientific studies are most
+anxious that the students who resort to our colleges
+should be as well fitted in the physical sciences as in the
+classics, for otherwise the best results of scientific culture
+can not be expected. As it is, our students come to the
+university, not only with no preparation in physical science,
+but with their perceptive and reasoning faculties so
+undeveloped that the acquisition of the elementary principles
+of science is burdensome and distasteful; and good
+scholars, who are ambitious of distinction, can more
+readily win their laurels on the old familiar track than
+on an untried course of which they know nothing, and
+for which they must begin their training anew.</p>
+
+<p>We have improved our system of instruction in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+college as fast as we could obtain the means, but we are
+persuaded that the best results can not be reached without
+the co&ouml;peration of the schools. We feel, therefore, that it
+is incumbent upon us, in the first place, to do everything
+in our power to prove to the teachers of this country how
+great is the educational value of the physical sciences,
+when properly taught; and secondly, to aid them in acquiring
+the best methods of teaching these subjects. It
+is with such aims that our summer courses have been instituted,
+and your presence here in such numbers is the
+best evidence that they have met a real want of the community.
+We welcome you to the university and to such
+advantages as it can afford, and we shall do all in our
+power to render your brief residence here fruitful, both
+in experience and in knowledge; hoping, also, that the
+university may become to you, as she has to so many
+others, a bright light shining calmly over the troubled
+sea of active life, ever suggesting lofty thoughts, encouraging
+noble endeavors, and inciting all her children to
+work together toward those great ends, the advancement
+of knowledge and the education of mankind.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="II" id="II"></a>II.</h3>
+
+<h2>THE NOBILITY OF KNOWLEDGE.</h2>
+
+<h4><i>An Address delivered before the Free Institute at Worcester, Massachusetts,
+July 28, 1874.</i></h4>
+
+
+<p>Within a comparatively few years schools for the
+instruction of artisans have become a prominent feature
+in the educational systems both of this country and of
+Europe, and seem destined to supersede the old system of
+apprenticeships. The establishment of these schools has
+been an important step in human progress, not because
+any great advantage has been gained in the cultivation of
+mechanical skill, but because here the future mechanic
+acquires culture of the mind as well as skill of the hand.
+Indeed, it may be doubted whether our utilitarian age can
+ever successfully compete with those "elder days of art"
+when</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Builders wrought with greatest care<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Each minute and unseen part."<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></div></div>
+
+<p>But, if our industrial schools do not make better mechanics
+than the workshops of the olden time, they certainly
+educate better men, and, by adding to skill, knowledge,
+they are elevating the mechanic and ennobling his
+calling.</p>
+
+<p>If, therefore, these schools are the representatives in
+our age of the workshops with their bands of apprentices
+in the days of yore, then that by which the schools are
+distinguished, that which they have added to the old
+system, is not art but mental culture; and therefore, when
+asked to address you on this occasion, I could think of no
+more appropriate subject than the Nobility of Knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>Identified with an institution in which mental culture
+is the chief aim, I felt that I was asked to address a body
+of cultivated working-men with whom, though employed
+in the mechanic arts, the acquisition of knowledge was
+also a privilege and a pride. I felt, moreover, that a
+proper appreciation of the true dignity of knowledge, in
+itself considered, and apart from all economical considerations,
+is one of the great wants of our age and of our
+country.</p>
+
+<p>"Knowledge is power." "Knowledge is wealth."
+These trite maxims are sufficiently esteemed in our community,
+and need not that they be enforced by any one.
+So far as knowledge will yield immediate distinction or
+gain, it is sought and fostered by multitudes. But, when<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+the aim is low, the attainment is low, and too many of
+our students are satisfied with superficiality, if it only glitters,
+and with charlatanry, if it only brings gold.</p>
+
+<p>Let me not be understood to depreciate the material
+advantages of learning. I rejoice that in this world
+knowledge frequently yields wealth and fame, and I
+should have little hope for human progress were the
+prizes of scholarship less than they are. Power and
+wealth are noble aims, and when rightly used may be
+the means of conferring unmeasured blessings on mankind;
+but I desire at this time to impress upon you, my
+friends, the fact that knowledge has nobler fruits than
+these, and that the worth of your knowledge is to be
+measured not by the credits it will add to your account
+in the ledger, or the position it may give you among
+men, but by the extent to which it educates your higher
+nature, and elevates you in the scale of manhood.</p>
+
+<p>I address young men who are just entering on life,
+who are at an age when the mystery of our being usually
+presses most closely upon the soul, and whose aspirations
+for higher culture and clearer vision have not been deadened
+by the sordid damps of the world. Trust no croakers
+who tell you that your youthful visions are illusions,
+which a little contact with the real business of the world
+will dispel.</p>
+
+<p>It is only too true that these visions will become<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+fainter and fainter, if you allow the cares of the world
+to engross your thoughts; but, unless your higher nature
+becomes wholly deadened, you will look back to the
+time when the visions were brightest, as the golden period
+of your life, and let me assure you that, if you only
+are true to the aspirations of your youth, the visions will
+become clearer and clearer to the last, and, as we firmly
+believe, will prove to be the dawn of the perfect day.</p>
+
+<p>My friends, if you have seen these visions, "the nobility
+of knowledge" has been a reality of your experience.
+You know that there is a life lived in communion
+with the thoughts of great men or with the thoughts of
+God as we can read them in Nature and Revelation,
+which is purer and nobler than a life of money-making
+or political intrigue, and I would that I could so bring
+you to appreciate not only the nobility, but also the
+happiness, of such a life as to induce you to try to
+live it.</p>
+
+<p>Do you tell me that it is only granted to a few men
+to become scholars, and that you have been educated
+for some industrial pursuit? Remember, as I said before,
+that it is your special privilege to have been educated,
+to have added knowledge to your handicraft, and
+that this very knowledge, if kept alive so far as you are
+able, will ennoble your life. Knowledge, like the fairy's
+wand, ennobles whatever it touches. The humblest occu<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>pations
+are adorned by it, and without it the most exalted
+positions appear to true men mean and low.</p>
+
+<p>Nor is it the extent of the knowledge alone which
+ennobles, but much more the spirit and aim with which
+it is cultivated, and that spirit and aim you may carry
+into any occupation, however engrossing, and into any
+condition of life, however obscure.</p>
+
+<p>And let me add that what I have said is true not only
+of the individual, but also, and to an even greater degree,
+of the nation. Our people, for the most part, look upon
+universities and other higher institutions of learning as
+merely schools for recruiting the learned professions, and
+estimate their efficiency solely by the amount of teaching
+work which they perform. But, however important the
+teaching function of the university may be, I need not
+tell you that this is not its only or chief value to a community.
+The university should be the center of scientific
+investigation and literary culture, the nursery of lofty
+aspirations and noble thoughts, and thus should become
+the soul of the higher life of the nation. For this and
+this chiefly it should be sustained and honored, and no
+cost and no sacrifice can be too great which are required
+to maintain its efficiency; and its success should be measured
+by the amount of knowledge it produces rather
+than by the amount of instruction it imparts.</p>
+
+<p>Harvard College, by cherishing and honoring the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+great naturalist she has recently lost, has done more for
+Massachusetts than by educating hosts of commonplace
+professional men. The simple title of teacher, which in
+his last will Louis Agassiz wrote after his name, was a
+nobler distinction than any earthly authority could confer;
+but remember he was a teacher not of boys, but of
+men, and his influence depended not on the instruction in
+natural history which he gave in his lecture-room, but on
+his great discoveries, his far-reaching generalization, and
+his noble thoughts. Although that man died poor, as the
+world counts poverty, yet the bequest which he left to
+this people can not be estimated in coin.</p>
+
+<p>It is a sorry confession to make, but it is nevertheless
+the truth, that, if we compare our American universities,
+in point of literary or scientific productiveness, with those
+of the Old World, they will appear lamentably deficient.
+Let me add, however, that this deficiency arises not from
+any want of proper aims in our scholars, but simply from
+the circumstance that our people do not sufficiently appreciate
+the value of the higher forms of literary and
+scientific work to bear the burden which the production
+necessary entails. Scholars must live, as well as other
+men, and in a style which is in harmony with their surroundings
+and cultivated tastes, and their best efforts can
+not be devoted to the extension of knowledge unless they
+are relieved from anxiety in regard to their daily bread.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In our colleges the professors are paid for teaching
+and for teaching only, while in a foreign university the
+teaching is wholly secondary, and the professor is expected
+to announce in his lectures the results of his own
+study, and not the thoughts of other men. Until the
+whole status of the professors in our chief universities
+can be changed, very little original thought or investigation
+can be expected, and these institutions can not become
+what they should be, the soul of the higher life of
+the nation.</p>
+
+<p>It is in your power, however, to bring about this
+change, but the reform can be effected in only one way.
+You must give to your universities the means of supporting
+fully and generously those men of genius who
+have shown themselves capable of extending the boundaries
+of human knowledge, and demand of them, only,
+that they devote their lives to study and research, and let
+me assure you that no money can be spent which will
+yield a larger or more valuable return.</p>
+
+<p>If you do not look beyond your material interests, the
+higher life of the nation, which you will thus serve to
+cherish and foster, will guard your honor and protect
+your home; and, on the other hand, what can you expect
+in a nation whose highest ideal is the dollar or what
+the dollar will buy, but venality, corruption, and ultimate
+ruin?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But, rising at once to the noblest considerations, and
+regarding only the welfare of your country and the education
+of your race, what higher service can you render
+than by sustaining and cherishing the grandest thought,
+the purest ideals, and the loftiest aspirations which
+humanity has reached, and making your universities the
+altars where the holy fire shall be kept ever burning
+bright and warm?</p>
+
+<p>Do you think me an enthusiast? Look back through
+history, and see for yourselves what has made the nations
+great and glorious. Why is it that, after twenty centuries,
+the memory of ancient Greece is still enshrined
+among the most cherished traditions of our race? Is it
+not because Homer sang, Phidias wrought, and Plato,
+Aristotle, Demosthenes, Thucydides, with a host of
+others, thought and wrote? Or, if for you the military
+exploits of that classic age have the greater charm, do
+not forget that were it not for Grecian literature, Thermopyl&aelig;,
+Marathon, and Salamis would have been long
+since forgotten, and that the bravery, self-devotion, and
+patriotism which these names embalm were the direct
+fruits of that higher life which those great thinkers illustrated
+and sustained.</p>
+
+<p>And, coming down to modern times, what are the
+shrines in our mother country which we chiefly venerate,
+and to which the transatlantic pilgrim oftenest di<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>rects
+his steps? Is it her battlefields, her castles and
+baronial halls, or such spots as Stratford-on-Avon, Abbotsford,
+and Rydal Mount? Why, then, will we not
+learn the lesson which history so plainly teaches, and
+strive for those achievements in knowledge and mental
+culture which will be remembered with gratitude when
+all local distinctions and political differences shall have
+passed away and been forgotten?</p>
+
+<p>While I was considering the line of discourse which
+I should follow on this occasion, an incident occurred
+suggesting an historical parallel, which will illustrate,
+better than any reflections of mine, the truth I would
+enforce. The ship Faraday arrived on our coast after
+laying over the bed of the Atlantic another of those electric
+nerves through which pulsate the thoughts of two
+continents, and as I read the description of that noble
+ship, fitted out with all the appliances which modern
+science had created to insure the successful accomplishment
+of the enterprise, I remembered that not a century
+had elapsed since the first obscure phenomena were observed,
+whose conscientious study, pursued with the unselfish
+spirit of the scientific investigator, had led to these
+momentous results, and my imagination carried me back
+to an autumn day of the year 1786, in the old city of
+Bologna, in Italy, and I seemed to assist at the memorable
+experiment which has associated the name of Aloy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>sius
+Galvani with that mode of electrical energy which
+flashes through the wire cords that now unite the four
+quarters of the globe.</p>
+
+<p>Galvani is Professor of Anatomy in the University
+of Bologna, and there is hanging from the iron balcony
+of his house a small animal preparation, which is not an
+unfamiliar sight in Southern Europe, where it is regarded
+as a delicacy of the table. It is the hind-legs of a
+frog, from which the skin had been removed, and the
+great nerve of the back exposed. Six years before, his
+attention had been called to the fact that the muscles of
+the frog were convulsed by the indirect action of an electrical
+machine, under conditions which he had found
+very difficult to interpret. He had connected the phenomenon
+with a theory of his own: that electricity&mdash;that
+is, common friction electricity, the only mode of electrical
+action then known&mdash;was the medium of all nervous
+action; and this had led him into a protracted investigation
+of the subject, during which he had varied the
+original experiment in a thousand ways, and he had now
+suspended the frog's legs to the iron balcony, in order to
+discover if atmospheric electricity would have any effect
+on the muscles of the animal.</p>
+
+<p>Galvani has spent a long day in fruitless watching,
+when, while holding in his hand a brass wire, connected
+with the muscles of the frog, he rubs the end, apparently<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+listlessly, against the iron railing, when, lo! the frog's
+legs are convulsed.</p>
+
+<p>The patient waiting had been rewarded, for this observation
+was the beginning of a line of discovery which
+was ere long to revolutionize the world. But Galvani
+was not destined to follow far the new path he had thus
+opened. The remarkable fact observed was this: The
+convulsions of the frog's legs could be produced without
+the intervention of electricity, or, at least, of the one
+kind of electricity then known, and Galvani soon found
+out that the only condition necessary to produce the result
+was, that the nerve of the frog should be connected
+with the muscle of the leg by some good electrical conductor.</p>
+
+<p>But, although Galvani followed up this observation
+with the greatest zeal, and showed remarkable sagacity
+throughout his whole investigation, yet he was too
+strongly wedded to his own theory to interpret correctly
+the facts he observed. He supposed, to the end of his
+life, that the whole effect was caused by animal electricity
+flowing through the conductor from the nerve to the
+muscle, and his experiments were chiefly interesting to
+himself and to his contemporaries from the light they
+were supposed to throw on the mysterious principle of
+life. We now know that animal electricity played only
+a small part in the phenomena he observed, and that the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+chief effects were due to a cause of which he was wholly
+ignorant.</p>
+
+<p>Galvani published his observations in 1791, in a
+monograph entitled "The Action of Electricity in Muscular
+Motion." This publication excited the most
+marked attention, and, within a year, all Europe was experimenting
+on frogs' legs. The phenomena were everywhere
+reproduced, but Galvani's explanation of the phenomena
+was by no means so universally accepted. His
+theory was controverted in many quarters, and by no one
+more successfully than by Alexander Volta, Professor of
+Physics in the neighboring University of Pavia.</p>
+
+<p>Volta, while admitting, with Galvani, that the muscular
+contractions were caused by electricity, explained the
+origin of the electricity in a wholly different way. According
+to Volta, the electricity originated not in the
+animal, but in the contact of the dissimilar metals or
+other materials used in the experiment. This difference
+of opinion led to one of the most remarkable controversies
+in the history of science, and for six years, until his
+death in 1798, Galvani was occupied in defending his
+theory of animal electricity against the assaults of his distinguished
+countryman.</p>
+
+<p>This discussion created the liveliest interest throughout
+Europe. Every scholar of science took sides with
+one or the other of these eminent Italian philosophers,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+and the scientific world became divided into the school
+of Galvani and the school of Volta. Yet, so far at least
+as the fundamental experiment was concerned, both were
+wrong. The electricity came neither from the body of
+the frog nor from the contact of dissimilar kinds of matter,
+but was the result of chemical action, which both
+had equally overlooked.</p>
+
+<p>But, nevertheless, the controversy led to the most
+important results: for Volta, while endeavoring to sustain
+his false theory by experimental proofs, was led to
+the discovery of the Voltaic pile, or, as we now call
+it, the Voltaic battery, an instrument whose influence
+on civilization can be compared only with the printing-press
+and the steam-engine. Yet, although the whole
+action of the battery was in direct contradiction to his
+pet theory, still, to the last, Volta persistently defended
+the erroneous doctrine he had espoused in his controversy
+with Galvani thirty years before, and he died in
+1827, without realizing how great a boon he had been
+instrumental in conferring on mankind; so true it is that
+Providence works out his bright designs even through
+the blindness and mistakes of man.</p>
+
+<p>But there is another lesson to be learned from this
+history, which can not be too often rehearsed in this self-sufficient
+age, which boasts so proudly of its practical
+wisdom. There were, doubtless, many practical men in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+that city of Bologna to smile at their sage professor, who
+had spent ten long years in studying, to little apparent
+purpose, the twitchings of frogs' hind-legs, and there
+was many a jest among the courtiers of Europe at the
+expense of the learned philosophers who "wasted" so
+much time in discussing the cause of such trivial phenomena.
+But how is it now?</p>
+
+<p>Less than a century has passed since Galvani's death,
+and in a small hut on the shores of Valentia Bay may
+be seen one of the most skillful of a new class of practical
+men, representing a profession which owes its origin
+to Galvani and Volta. The <i>electrician</i> is watching
+a spot of light on the scale of an instrument which is
+called a <i>galvanometer</i>. Since the fathers fell asleep, the
+field of knowledge which they first entered has spread
+out wider and wider before the untiring explorers who
+have succeeded them. Oersted and Seebeck, Arago and
+Amp&egrave;re, Faraday and our own Henry, have made wonderful
+discoveries in that field; and other great men,
+like Steinheil, Wheatstone, Morse, and Thomson, have
+invented ingenious instruments and appliances, by which
+these discoveries might be made to yield great practical
+results.</p>
+
+<p>The spot of light, which the electrician is watching,
+is reflected from one of the latest of these inventions, the
+reflecting galvanometer of Thomson. He and his assist<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>ants
+had been watching by turns the same spot for several
+days, since the Great Eastern had steamed from the bay,
+paying out a cable of insulated wire. These electricians
+had no anxiety as to the result, for daily signals had been
+exchanged between the ship and the shore, as hundreds
+after hundreds of miles of this electrical conductor had
+been laid on the bed of the broad ocean. The coast of
+Newfoundland had already been reached, and they were
+only waiting for the landing of the cable at the now far-distant
+end.</p>
+
+<p>At length the light quivers, and the spot begins to
+move. It answers to concerted signals. And soon the
+operator spells out the joyful message. The ocean has
+been spanned with an electric nerve, and the New World
+responds to the greetings of the Old.</p>
+
+<p>Here is something practical, which all can appreciate,
+and all are ready to honor. We honor the courage which
+conceived, the skill which executed, and, above all, the
+success which crowned the undertaking. But do we not
+forget that professor of Bologna, with his frogs' legs,
+who sowed the seed from which all this has sprung? He
+labored without hope of temporal reward, stimulated by
+the pure love of truth, and the grain which he planted
+has brought forth this abundant harvest. Do we not
+forget, also, that succession of equally noble men, Volta,
+and Oersted, and Faraday, with many other not less de<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>voted
+investigators of electrical science, without whose
+unselfish labors the great result never could have been
+achieved? Such men, of course, need no recognition at
+our hands, and I ask the question not for their sakes, but
+for ours. The intellectual elevation of the lives they led
+was their all-sufficient reward.</p>
+
+<p>It is, however, of the utmost importance for us, citizens
+of a country with almost unlimited resources, that we
+should recognize what are the real springs of true national
+greatness and enduring influence. In this age of
+material interests, the hand is too ready to say to the
+head, "I have no need of thee"; and, amid the ephemeral
+applause which follows the realization of some triumph
+over matter, we are apt to be deceived, and not
+observe whence the power came. We associate the great
+invention with some man of affairs man who overcame
+the last material obstacle, and who, although worthy of
+all praise, probably added very little to the total wealth
+of knowledge of which the invention was an immediate
+consequence; and, not seeing the antecedents, we are apt
+to underrate the part which the student or scientific investigator
+may have contributed to the result.</p>
+
+<p>It is idle, for example, to speak of the electric telegraph
+as invented by any single man. It was a growth
+of time, and many of the men who contributed to win
+this great victory of mind over space "builded far better<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+than they knew." As I view the subject, that invention
+is as much a gift of Providence as if the details had been
+supernaturally revealed. But, whatever may be our
+speculative views, it is of the utmost importance to the
+welfare of our community that we should realize the fact
+that purely theoretical scientific study, pursued for truth's
+sake, is the essential prerequisite for such inventions.
+Knowledge is the condition of invention. The old Latin
+word <i>invenio</i> signifies <i>to meet with</i>, as well as to <i>find</i>,
+and these great gifts of God are <i>met with</i> along the
+pathway of civilization; but the throng of the world
+passes them unnoticed, for only those can recognize the
+treasure whose minds have been stored with the knowledge
+which the scholar has discovered and made known.</p>
+
+<p>If, then, as no one will deny, science and scholarship
+are the powers by which improvements in the useful arts
+are made, I might appeal to your self-interest to support
+and cherish them. But I should despise myself for
+appealing to such a motive, and you for requiring it.
+The supreme importance of science and scholarship to a
+nation does not depend in the least on the circumstance
+that important practical results may follow. When, as
+in the case of Galvani's frogs, they come in the order of
+Providence, let us thank God for them as a gift which
+we had no right either to expect or demand. Science, if
+studied successfully, must be studied for the pure love of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+truth; and, if we serve her solely for mercenary ends,
+her truths, the only gold she offers, will turn to dross in
+our hands, and we shall degrade ourselves in proportion
+as we dishonor her.</p>
+
+<p>Galvani, and Volta, and Oersted, who discovered the
+truths of which the electric telegraph is a simple application,
+sure to be made as soon as the time was ripe,
+are not the less to be honored because they died before
+the fullness of that time had come. We honor them
+for the truths they discovered, and the lustre of their
+consecrated lives could be neither enhanced nor impaired
+by subsequent events; and it is because I am
+persuaded that such lives are the salt of the world, the
+saviours of society, that I would lead you to cherish and
+sustain them; and, that I may enforce this conclusion,
+allow me to ask your attention to another historical incident,
+which presents a striking parallelism to the last.</p>
+
+<p>I must take you back to a period which we, of a
+nation born but yesterday, regard as distant, but which
+was one of the most noted epochs of modern history&mdash;the
+age of Luther and the Reformation. I must ask you
+to accompany me to the small town of Allenstein, near
+Frauenberg, in Eastern Prussia, where, on May 23, 1543,
+there lay dying one of the great benefactors of mankind.</p>
+
+<p>This man, old at seventy years, "bent and furrowed
+with labor, but in whose eye the fire of genius was still<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+glowing," was then known as one of the most learned
+men of his time. Doctor of medicine as well as of theology,
+Canon of Frauenberg, Honorary Professor of Bologna
+and Rome, while devoting his leisure to study, he
+had passed a life of active benevolence in administering
+to the bodily as well as the spiritual wants of the ignorant
+people among whom his lot had been cast. He was also
+a great mechanical genius, and, by various labor-saving
+machines, of his own invention, he had contributed
+greatly to the welfare of the surrounding country.</p>
+
+<p>But the superstitious peasants, although they had hitherto
+reverenced the great man as their best friend and
+benefactor, had been recently incited by his enemies and
+rivals in the church to curse him as a heretic and a wizard.
+A few days back he had been the unwilling witness of one
+of those out-of-door spectacles, so common at that time,
+in which his scientific opinions had been travestied, his
+charities ridiculed, and his devoted life made the object
+of slander and reproach. This ingratitude of his flock had
+broken his heart, and he could not recover from the blow.</p>
+
+<p>The occasion of this outburst of fanaticism was the
+approaching publication of a work in which he had dared
+to question the received opinions of theologians and
+schoolmen, in regard to cosmogony. He had, forsooth,
+denied that the visible firmament was a solid azure-colored
+shell, to which the sun and planets were fastened,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+and through whose opened doors the rain descended. He
+had proved that the sun was the center of the system,
+around which the earth and planets revolved, and, with
+his clear scientific vision, he had been able to gain
+glimpses, at least, of the grand conceptions of modern
+astronomy: For this man was Nicolas Copernicus, and
+the expected book was his great work&mdash;"De Orbium
+C&#339;lestium Revolutionibus"&mdash;destined to form the broad
+basis of astronomical science.</p>
+
+<p>The work was printing at Nuremberg, and the last
+proofs had been returned; but reports had come that
+a similar outburst of fanaticism was raging at that place,
+that a mob had burned the manuscript on the public
+square, and had threatened to break the press should the
+printing proceed. But, thanks to God! the old man
+was not to die before the hour of triumph came. While
+still conscious, a horse, covered with foam, gallops to the
+door of his humble dwelling, and an armed messenger
+enters the chamber, who, breathless with haste, places
+in the hands of the dying man a volume still wet from
+the press. He has only strength to return a smile of
+recognition, and murmur the last words:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Nunc dimittis servum tuum, Domine."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Grand close of a noble life! The seed has been sown&mdash;what
+could we desire more?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Again the centuries roll on&mdash;not one, but three&mdash;while
+the seed grows to a great tree, which overshadows
+the nations. Great minds have never been wanting to
+cherish and prime it, like Tycho Brahe and Kepler, Galileo
+and Newton, Laplace and Lagrange; and although at
+times some, while lingering in the deep shade of the foliage,
+may have lost sight of the summit, the noble tree
+has ever pointed upward to direct aspiration and encourage
+hope.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the 24th of September, 1846, in
+the Observatory of Berlin, a trained astronomical observer
+was carefully measuring the position of a faint
+star in the constellation Capricorn. Only the day before,
+he had received from Le Verrier a letter announcing the
+result of that remarkable investigation which has made
+the name of this distinguished French astronomer so
+justly celebrated. By the studies of the great men who
+succeeded Copernicus, his system had become so perfected
+as to enable the astronomer to predict, with unerring certainty,
+the paths of the planets through the heavens.
+But there was one failing case. The planet Uranus, then
+supposed to be the outer planet of the solar system,
+wandered from the path which theory assigned to it;
+and although the deviations were but small, yet any discrepancy
+between theory and observation in so accurate
+a science as astronomy could not be overlooked.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Long before this, the hypothesis had been advanced
+that the deviations were caused by the attractive force
+of an unseen and still more distant planet; but, as no
+such planet had been discovered, the hypothesis had remained
+until now wholly barren. The hypothesis, however,
+was reasonable, and furnished the only conceivable
+explanation of the facts; and, moreover, if true,
+the received system of astronomy ought to be able to assign
+the position and magnitude of the disturbing body,
+the magnitude and direction of the displacements being
+given.</p>
+
+<p>This possibility was generally appreciated by astronomers,
+and the very great length and difficulty of the
+mathematical calculation which the investigation involved
+was probably the reason that no one had hitherto
+undertaken it. Le Verrier, however, had both the courage
+and the youthful strength required for the work.
+And now the great work had been done; and, on the
+18th of September, Le Verrier had sent to the Observatory
+of Berlin his communication announcing the final
+result, namely, that the planet would be found about 5&deg;
+to the east of the star Delta of Capricorn.</p>
+
+<p>The letter containing this announcement was received
+by Galle, at Berlin, on the 23d, and it was Galle whom
+we left measuring the position of that faint star on the
+evening of the 24th. It so happened that a chart of that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+portion of the heavens had recently been prepared by
+the Berlin Observatory, and was on the eve of publication;
+and, on the very evening he received the letter,
+Galle had found, near the position assigned by Le Verrier,
+a faint star, which was not marked on this chart.
+The object differed in appearance from the surrounding
+stars, but still it was perfectly possible that it might be
+a fixed star which had escaped previous observation.</p>
+
+<p>But, if a fixed star, its position in the constellation
+would not vary, while, if a planet, a single night would
+show a perceptible change of place. Hence, you may
+conceive of the interest with which Galle was measuring
+anew its position on the evening of the 24th.</p>
+
+<p>The star had moved, and in the direction which theory
+indicated; and for once, at least, the world rang
+with applause at a brilliant scientific conquest from which
+there was not one cent of money to be made. Yet, was
+that conquest any less important to the world? What
+had it secured? It had confirmed the theory of astronomy
+which Copernicus and his successors had built up,
+and it had clinched the last nail in the proof that those
+grand conceptions of modern astronomy, now household
+thoughts, are realities, and not dreams. Certainly no
+military conquest can compare with this.</p>
+
+<p>Do not smile at the enthusiasm which rates so high
+a purely intellectual achievement? Go out with me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+under the heavens, in some starlight night, and, looking
+up into the depths of space, recall the truths you have
+learned in regard to that immensity, and allow the imagination
+free scope as it stretches out into the infinitudes
+of time, space, and power, carrying the mind on, bound
+by bound, through the limitless expanse, until even the
+imagination refuses to follow, and fairly quails before
+the mighty form of the Infinite, which rises to confront
+it! Remember now that your forefathers, of only a few
+centuries back, saw there nothing but a solid dome hemming
+in the earth and skies, and that you are able to
+look upon this grand spectacle only because great minds
+have lived who have opened your intellectual eyes; and
+then answer me, is not this result worth all the labor, all
+the sacrifice, all the treasure it has cost?</p>
+
+<p>Every educated man, who has not sold his birthright
+for a mess of pottage, lives a grander and nobler life,
+because the great astronomers have thought and taught,
+and this elevation of human life is the greatest achievement
+of which man can boast. Before it all material
+conquests appear of little worth, and the lustre of all
+military or civil glory grows dim. Cherish this intellectual
+life; foster it; sustain it; do what you can by
+your own spirit and influence, and, if you are blessed
+with riches, give of your abundance to support and encourage
+those who, by genius, talent, and devotion, will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+widen the intellectual kingdom. Be assured you will
+thus help to confer an inestimable boon on your race and
+on your country; and the influence for good will not be
+felt by the intellectual life of the nation only. That corruption
+which is now festering at the heart of our body
+politic, and threatening its destruction, can in no way be
+fought and conquered so effectually as by keeping constantly
+before the nation noble and high ideals; for,
+where the higher life is cherished and honored, the mercenary
+and sensual motives of action, which both invite
+and shield corruption, lose much of their force and
+power.</p>
+
+<p>But you may tell me that there is a life higher than
+the intellectual life, and that I have ascribed to science
+and scholarship influences which come only from a source
+which I have forgotten, or left out of view. My friends,
+all truth is one and inseparable, and I have therefore
+made no distinction in this address between the truths
+of science and truths of religion. The grand old word
+knowledge, as I have used it, includes both, and, in just
+the proportion that you reverence religion, you must reverence
+also true science. All truth is God's truth, and,
+in praying for the coming of his kingdom, you certainly
+do not expect that Nature will be divorced from Grace.
+If the truths of religion required a special revelation, it
+must be expected that they would transcend human in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>telligence.
+These very conditions imply conflict, but the
+conflict comes not from the knowledge, but from the
+ignorance and conceit of men; and the only proper attitude
+for the devout scholar is "to labor and to wait."
+And what more wonderful confirmation could we have
+of the essential unity of the two phases of truth than is
+to be found in the fact that the characteristic of science,
+which I have been endeavoring to illustrate in this address,
+is the great prominent feature of Christianity?
+Christianity was revealed in a life, and ever abides a life
+in the soul of man, to purify, ennoble, and redeem humanity.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"And so the Word had breath, and wrought,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">With human hands, the creed of creeds,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">In loveliness of perfect deeds,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">More strong than all poetic thought&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Which he may read that binds the sheaf,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Or builds the house, or digs the grave,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And those wild eyes that watch the wave,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In roarings round the coral reef."<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="III" id="III"></a>III.</h3>
+
+<h2>THE ELEMENTARY TEACHING OF
+PHYSICAL SCIENCE.</h2>
+
+<h4><i>An Address to the Schoolmasters of Boston, delivered
+February 4, 1878.</i></h4>
+
+
+<p>I felt a great reluctance at accepting the invitation
+of your excellent superintendent to address you on this
+occasion; for, although I could claim an unusually long
+experience in presenting the elements of physical science
+to college students, I was fully conscious that I knew
+little of the conditions under which such subjects must
+be studied, if at all, in the elementary schools, and was
+therefore in danger of appearing in a capacity which I
+should most sedulously shun, that of a babbler about
+impracticable theories of education. It is very easy to
+criticize another man's labor, and such criticisms, however
+plausible, do the grossest injustice when, as is often
+the case, they leave out of view the necessary conditions<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+and limitations under which the work must be done.
+While, however, I felt most keenly my incapacity to deal
+with many of the practical problems which you have to
+solve, yet, on consideration, I concluded that it was my
+duty under the circumstances to state as clearly and
+forcibly as I could the very definite opinions which I
+had formed on the subject you are discussing, knowing
+that you will only give such weight to these opinions as
+your mature judgment can allow. In stating the results
+of my experience, I can not avoid a certain personal element,
+which would be wholly inexcusable were it not
+that the facts, as I think you will admit, form the basis
+of my argument.</p>
+
+<p>I am a Boston boy, born in this immediate neighborhood,
+and fitted for college at the "Latin School." It so
+happened that, while I was very unsuccessfully endeavoring
+to commit to memory, in the old school-house on
+School Street, Andrews and Stoddard's Latin grammar,
+not one word of which I could understand, the "Lowell
+Institute" lectures were opened at the "Odeon" on Congress
+Street. At those lectures I got my first taste of
+real knowledge, and that taste awakened an appetite
+which has never yet been satisfied. As a boy, I eagerly
+sought the small amount of popular science which the
+English literature of that day afforded; and I can now
+distinctly recall almost every page of Mrs. Marcet's "Con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>versations
+on Chemistry," which was the first book on
+my science that I ever read. More to the point than
+this, a boy's pertinacity, favored by a kind father's indulgence,
+found the means of repeating, in a small way,
+most of the experiments first seen at the Lowell Institute
+lecture; and thus it came to pass that, before I entered
+college, I had acquired a real, available knowledge of the
+facts of chemistry; although, with much labor and intense
+weariness, I had gained only a formal knowledge of
+those subjects which were then regarded as the only
+essential preparation for the college course. In college,
+my attention was almost exclusively devoted to other
+studies&mdash;for, in my day at Cambridge, chemistry was one
+of the lost arts. But when, the year after I graduated, I
+was most unexpectedly called upon to give my first
+course of lectures, the only laboratory in which I had
+worked was the shed of my father's house on Winthrop
+Place, and the only apparatus at my command was what
+this boy's laboratory contained. With these simple tools,
+or, as I should rather say, because they were so simple, I
+gained that measure of success which determined my
+subsequent career.</p>
+
+<p>I feel that I owe you a constant apology for these
+personal details, and I should not be guilty of them did I
+not believe that they establish two points more conclusively
+than I could prove them in any other way. First,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+that it is perfectly possible for a child before fifteen years
+of age to acquire a real and living knowledge of the
+fundamental facts of nature on which physical science is
+based. Secondly, that this knowledge can be effectually
+gained by the use of the simplest tools. Let me add
+that this is not a question of natural endowments or special
+aptitudes, for every one who has studied from the
+love of knowledge has had the same experience; and I
+do not believe that, if my first taste of real knowledge
+had been of history, nay, I will even say, of philology,
+instead of chemistry, the circumstance would have materially
+influenced my success in life, however different the
+direction into which it might have turned my study. My
+early tastes were utterly at variance with all my surroundings
+and all my inheritances, and were simply
+determined by the accident which first satisfied that natural
+thirst for knowledge which every child experiences to
+a greater or less degree&mdash;a desire most rudely repressed
+in our usual methods of teaching.</p>
+
+<p>My bitter experience as a pupil in the Boston Latin
+School and my subsequent more fortunate experience of
+thirty years as a teacher in Harvard College have impressed
+me most profoundly with the conviction that the
+only way to arouse and sustain a love for knowledge in
+children is to cultivate their perceptive faculties. To
+present the rudiments of knowledge to immature minds<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+in an abstract form, whether the subject be grammar or
+physical science, is, in my judgment, not only culpable
+folly, but also downright wrong. And, if, to those who
+have been accustomed to the long established routine of
+our public school, my opinions may appear revolutionary
+and extreme, I am, nevertheless, sure that they would
+receive the universal assent of the men whom all would
+recognize as the foremost scientific teachers of the world.
+I can well remember that when, many years ago, the late
+Professor Agassiz declared in my hearing that he would
+have no text-books used in his museum, I thought his
+plan of pure object-teaching chimerical in the extreme,
+and yet experience has not only convinced me of the wisdom
+of his judgment in regard to the teaching of natural
+history, but brought me to a similar conclusion in regard
+to the elementary teaching both of natural philosophy
+and of chemistry.</p>
+
+<p>Allow me then to express my firm persuasion that
+it is not only useless but injurious to the education of
+young minds to present to them at the outset any department
+of physical science as a body of definitions,
+principles, laws, or theories; and that in elementary
+schools only such facts should be taught as can be verified
+by the experience of the pupil, or by such simple
+experiments as the pupils can try for themselves. The
+usual method of committing by heart the words of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+school-book, and repeating them at the dictation of a
+teacher, may afford a good exercise for the memory, but
+it is absurd to regard such a task as a lesson in physical
+science, and this kind of study can be spent with vastly
+greater profit on the spelling-book.</p>
+
+<p>There is one department of physical science which
+has been taught in this absurd way in our schools from
+time immemorial. I refer, of course, to the study of geography,
+and I leave for you to judge whether the result
+is worth the one hundredth part of the toil and drudgery
+spent in obtaining it. Let us suppose that your child
+is able to give you the names of all the rivers, bays, and
+capes from Greenland to Patagonia, how much more
+does that child know of the structure and social relations
+of this globe on which its lot has been cast than it did
+before this senseless feat was attempted, a feat, moreover,
+to which only a child's memory would be equal?
+And, when you turn to your own experience, what is the
+outcome of all the time and labor spent on geography?
+Is it not solely just that portion of your knowledge
+which, in spite of the system, was direct object-teaching&mdash;the
+images you insensibly acquired from the maps and
+pictures in the school-books?</p>
+
+<p>But there is a very different way of teaching geography,
+by which the study may be made a pleasure, not
+a task. The teacher does not begin with abstract defini<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>tions
+of rivers, and bays, and oceans, which convey no
+definite meaning to a child, but with Charles River, Boston
+Harbor, and the Atlantic Ocean, which are to him
+real things, however imperfect his conceptions of their
+extent. The child is first shown, not a map of the globe,
+which he can not by any possibility understand, but a
+map of a very limited region around his own home. He
+is taught how to find the north and south, the east and
+west directions. He is encouraged to make excursions
+to verify the map, or to add to its details, and such excursions
+may be made to have for him all the zest of
+voyages of discovery; and when thus the rudiments of
+geographical science have been mastered, not in technical
+terms, but in substance, then the teacher may begin to
+expand the horizon of the pupil's knowledge, judiciously
+omitting details in proportion as distance increases, until
+at length the general survey embraces the globe. Of
+course, such teaching as this can only be given orally
+with the help of proper apparatus, such as wall maps,
+and globes, and photographs. It must take the interrogative
+form, and the questions should be directed to
+bring out the child's already acquired knowledge, and to
+lead him to observe facts which had hitherto escaped his
+notice. What a child reads in a book, or even what you
+tell him, is never one half learnt, unless his interest is
+aroused. But what a child observes for himself he never<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+forgets, and when you have thus aroused his interest you
+can associate a large number of facts with one observation,
+and these all crystallize in his memory around this
+nucleus.</p>
+
+<p>This is no mere theory, no untried method which I
+am advocating. So far from it, I am describing the
+precise method which has been used for many years in
+Germany, where the science of education is far better
+understood than with us, and where economy both of
+time and labor in teaching is most carefully studied. If
+our school committees could attend and understand a
+single exercise in geography, such as are daily given in
+the elementary schools of Prussia, I am sure that at least
+one form of child torture would soon disappear from the
+primary schools of this country. Indeed, I already see
+evidence of a growing public opinion on this subject, an
+effect which I trace in no small measure to the influence
+of the Department of Education of the Exhibition at
+Philadelphia in 1876.</p>
+
+<p>That which is true of geography applies with still
+greater force to such subjects as physics and chemistry,
+since the abstract conceptions which these sciences involve
+are more abstruse, and the language by which the
+conceptions are expressed or defined far less plain than
+is the case with the older and more descriptive branch
+of knowledge. Hence, as sciences, properly so called,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+that is, as philosophical systems, they have no place whatever
+in elementary education. But, underlying these
+systems, there is a great multitude of phenomena which
+a child can be led to observe and apprehend as readily as
+the facts of geography. Take that subject&mdash;mechanics&mdash;which
+our ordinary school-books very philosophically but
+most unpractically place at the beginning of what they
+call "Natural" Philosophy. How many of the fundamental
+facts of this difficult subject can be made familiar
+to a child? Select, as an example, Newton's "First Law
+of Motion." Suppose you make a boy memorize the
+ordinary rule, "Every body continues in a state of rest
+or of uniform motion in a straight line until acted upon
+by some external force," how much will he know about
+it? Suppose you make him do a lot of problems involving
+distances, velocities, and times, will he know any
+more about it? But ask him, "Can you pitch a ball as
+well as your playmate?" and he answers at once, "No;
+John is stronger than I am." And then, if again you
+ask, "Can you catch John's ball?" he will probably reply,
+"Of course, not! It requires a boy as strong as
+John to catch his balls." And thus, by a few well-directed
+questions, you would bring that boy to learn a lesson
+which he would never forget, and which he would recall
+every time he played base-ball; namely, that John's swift
+balls could not be set in motion without an expenditure<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+of a definite amount of muscular effort, and could not be
+stopped without the exertion of an equal amount of
+what, after a while, you could get him to call <i>force</i>.
+From the ball you would naturally pass to the railroad
+train or the steamboat, and I should not wonder if, with
+a little patience, you could bring even a boy to understand
+that motion can not be maintained against a resistance,
+in other words, that work can not be done without
+a constant expenditure of muscular effort, or of some
+other source of power; and it is a fond hope of mine
+that by the time these boys grow into men our intelligent
+New England community might become so far
+educated in the elementary principles of mechanics that
+no self-sustained motors, nor other mechanical nostrums
+which claim to have superseded the primeval curse&mdash;if
+that law was a curse, which compels man to earn his
+bread with the sweat of his brow&mdash;will receive the sanction
+of our respectable journals; and then&mdash;if they have
+not previously learned the lesson by dire experience&mdash;we
+may hope to persuade our people of the parallel and
+equally elementary principle of political economy, that
+value can not be legislated into rags.</p>
+
+<p>But, my friends, our subject gives no occasion for
+banter, and presents aspects too serious to be treated
+lightly or in jests. As inhabitants of a not over-fruitful
+land, and, therefore, members of a community which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+must excel, if at all, solely by its enterprise and intelligence,
+we have a duty to our children which we can not
+avoid, if we would, and for which we shall be held responsible
+by our posterity. These children are entering
+life surrounded not only by all the wonders and glories
+of nature, but, also, by giant conditions, which, whether
+stationed on their path as a blessing or a curse, will inevitably
+strike if their behests are not obeyed. So far as
+science has been able to define these giant forms, it is our
+duty, as it is our privilege, to point them out to those we
+are bound to protect and guide; and in many cases it is
+in our power to change the curse into a blessing, and to
+transform the destructive demon into a guardian angel.
+After that command of language which the necessities
+of civilized life imperatively require, there is no acquisition
+which we can give our children that will exert so
+important an influence on their material welfare as a
+knowledge of the laws of nature, under which they must
+live and to which they must conform; and throughout
+whose universal dominion the only question is whether
+men shall grovel as ignorant slaves or shall rule as intelligent
+servants. Yes; rule by obeying. "Ich Dien";
+for only under that motto, which, five hundred years ago,
+the great Black Prince bore so victoriously through the
+fields of Cressy and Poitiers, can man ever rule in Nature's
+kingdom.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I regard it, therefore, as the highest duty and the
+most enlightened self-interest of a community like this
+to provide the best means for the instruction of its children
+in the elements of physical science; and I was, therefore,
+most anxious to do all in my power to second the
+enlightened efforts of your eminent Superintendent in
+this direction. You must remember, however, that the
+best tools are worthless in themselves, and can secure no
+valuable results unless judiciously used. Indeed, there is
+danger in too many tools, and I have a great horror of
+that array of brass-work which is usually miscalled "philosophical"
+apparatus. The greater part of this is, in my
+opinion, a mere hindrance to the teacher, because it at
+once erects a barrier between the scholar and the simple
+facts of nature, and the child inevitably associates with
+the phenomenon illustrated some legerdemain, and looks
+on your experiments very much as he would on the exhibition
+of a Houdin or a Signor Blitz. The secret of success
+in teaching physical science is to use the simplest
+and most familiar means to illustrate your point.</p>
+
+<p>When a very young man I was favored with an introduction
+to Michael Faraday, and had the privilege of
+attending a portion of a course of lectures which this
+noble man was then in the habit of giving every Christmas
+season to a juvenile auditory at the Royal Institution
+of London. As a boy, I had become familiar with lec<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>tures
+on chemistry at the Lowell Institute, where they
+did not lack the pomp of circumstance or the display of
+apparatus, and I had come to associate these elements
+with the conditions of success in lectures of this kind.
+What, then, was my surprise to find Faraday, the acknowledged
+leader of the world in his science, and who
+had every means of illustration at his command, using
+the plainest language and the simplest tools. When, in
+my youthful admiration at the result, I expressed, after
+one of the lectures, my surprise at the simplicity of the
+means employed, the great master replied: "That is the
+whole secret of interesting these young people. I always
+use the simplest means, but I never leave a point not illustrated.
+If I mention the force of gravitation I take
+up a stone and let it drop." At this distance of time, I
+can not be sure that I quote his exact language, but the
+lesson and the illustration I could not forget; and to this
+lesson, more than to any other one thing, I owe whatever
+success I have had as a teacher of physical science.</p>
+
+<p>I repeat, therefore, it is not only useless but injurious
+in the education of young minds to present
+any department of physical science as a body of definitions,
+principles, laws, or theories; and that in elementary
+schools such facts only should be taught as can
+be verified either by the experience of the pupils or by
+the simplest experiments, which the pupils can repeat by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+themselves; and now, after this discussion, I add, that the
+teacher must depend on his own ingenuity for his experiments,
+and on his intercourse with his pupils for his instruction.</p>
+
+<p>But you will tell me all this involves grave difficulties,
+and conditions incompatible with our ordinary school life.
+I freely admit the difficulties, but I am none the less sure
+that, unless science can be taught on the principles I have
+endeavored to illustrate, it had better not be taught at
+all. I know very well that the proper teaching of physical
+science is wholly incompatible with our usual school
+methods. But this only proves to me that these methods
+ought to be changed, and I am persuaded that the
+changes required will benefit the literary and classical as
+well as the scientific courses of study. For do not the
+same general principles apply to the acquisition of knowledge
+in all subjects? And when a child's perceptive faculties
+have been duly stimulated, and his intelligence fully
+awakened, he will find interest in grammar, in literature,
+or in history, as well as in science.</p>
+
+<p>In repelling the reproach of narrowness, to which our
+elective system at Cambridge undoubtedly frequently
+leads, how often have I urged the self-evident proposition
+that to arouse a love of study in any subject, I care not
+how subordinate its importance or how limited its scope,
+is to take the first step toward making your man a scholar;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+while to fail to gain his interest in any study is to lose
+the whole end of education&mdash;and what is true of the man
+is still more true of the child. Classical culture on the
+one hand and scientific culture on the other are excellent
+things, but, if your boy can not be made to take an interest
+either in classics or in science, how plain it is that
+such treasures are not for him, and, in the absence of the
+one condition which can give value to any study, how
+idle and inconsequent all questions in regard to the relative
+merits of these studies appear! On the other hand,
+a love of study once gained, all studies are alike good.</p>
+
+<p>And as with the pupil, so with the teacher. No
+teaching is of any real value that does not come directly
+from the intelligence, and heart of the teacher, and thus
+appeals to the intelligence and heart of the pupil. It,
+of course, implies more acquisition, and it requires far
+more energy to teach from one's own knowledge than to
+teach from a book, but then, just in proportion to the
+difficulties overcome, does the teacher raise his profession
+and ennoble himself. There is no nobler service than the
+life of a true teacher; but the mere task-master has no
+right to the teacher's name, and can never attain the
+teacher's reward.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="IV" id="IV"></a>IV.</h3>
+
+<h2>THE RADIOMETER:</h2>
+
+<h4>A FRESH EVIDENCE OF A MOLECULAR UNIVERSE.</h4>
+
+<h4><i>A Lecture delivered in the Sanders Theatre of Harvard University,
+March 6, 1878.</i></h4>
+
+
+<p>No one who is not familiar with the history of physical
+science can appreciate how very modern are those
+grand conceptions which add so much to the loftiness of
+scientific studies; and, of the many who, on one of our
+starlit nights, look up into the depths of space, and are
+awed by the thoughts of that immensity which come
+crowding upon the mind, there are few, I imagine, who
+realize the fact that almost all the knowledge which
+gives such great sublimity to that sight is the result of
+comparatively recent scientific investigation; and that
+the most elementary student can now gain conceptions of
+the immensity of the universe of which the fathers of
+astronomy never dreamed. And how very grand are<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+the familiar astronomical facts which the sight of the
+starry heavens suggests!</p>
+
+<p>Those brilliant points are all suns like the one which
+forms the center of our system, and around which our
+earth revolves; yet so inconceivably remote, that, although
+moving through space with an incredible velocity,
+they have not materially changed their relative
+position since recorded observations began. Compared
+with their distance, the distance of our own sun&mdash;92,000,000
+miles&mdash;seems as nothing; yet how inconceivable
+even that distance is when we endeavor to mete it out
+with our terrestrial standards! For if, when Copernicus&mdash;the
+great father of modern astronomy&mdash;died, in 1543,
+just at the close of the Protestant Reformation, a messenger
+had started for the sun, and traveled ever since
+with the velocity of a railroad train&mdash;thirty miles an hour&mdash;he
+would not yet have reached his destination!</p>
+
+<p>Evidently, then, no standards, which, like our ordinary
+measures, bear a simple or at least a conceivable
+relation to the dimensions of our own bodies, can help us
+to stretch a line in such a universe. We must seek for
+some magnitude which is commensurate with these immensities
+of space; and, in the wonderfully rapid motion
+of light, astronomy furnishes us with a suitable standard.
+By the eclipses of Jupiter's satellites the astronomers
+have determined that this mysterious effluence reaches us<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+from the sun in eight minutes and a half, and therefore
+must travel through space with the incredible velocity&mdash;shall
+I dare to name it?&mdash;of 186,000 miles in a second of
+time! Yet, inconceivably rapid as this motion is, capable
+of girdling the earth nearly eight times in a single second,
+the very nearest of the fixed stars, &#945; Centauri, is so
+remote that the light by which it will be seen in the
+southern heavens to-night, near that magnificent constellation,
+the Southern Cross, must have started on its
+journey three years and a half ago. But this light comes
+from merely the threshold of the stellar universe; and
+the telescope reveals to us stars so distant that, had they
+been blotted out of existence when history began, the
+tidings of the event could not yet have reached the earth!</p>
+
+<p>Compare now with these grand conceptions the popular
+belief of only a few centuries back. Where we look
+into the infinite depths, our Puritan forefathers saw
+only a solid dome hemming in the earth and skies, and
+through whose opened doors the rain descended. They
+regarded the sun and moon merely as great luminaries
+set in this firmament to rule the day and night, and to
+their understandings the stars served no better purpose
+than the spangles which glitter on the azure ceiling of
+many a modern church. The great work of Copernicus,
+"De Orbium C&#339;lestium Revolutionibus," which was
+destined, ultimately, to overthrow the crude cosmography<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+which Christianity had inherited from Judaism, was not
+published until just at the close of the author's life in
+1543, the date before mentioned. The telescope, which
+was required to fully convince the world of its previous
+error, was not invented until more than half a century
+later, and it was not until 1835 that Struve detected the
+parallax of &#945; Lyr&aelig;. The measurement of this parallax,
+together with Bessel's determination of the parallax of
+61 Cygni, and Henderson's that of &#945; Centauri, at about
+the same time, gave us our first accurate knowledge of
+the distances of the fixed stars.</p>
+
+<p>To the thought I have endeavored to express, I must
+add another, before I can draw the lesson which I wish
+to teach. Great scientific truths become popularized
+very slowly, and, after they have been thoroughly
+worked out by the investigators, it is often many years
+before they become a part of the current knowledge of
+mankind. It was fully a century after Copernicus died,
+with his great volume&mdash;still wet from the press of Nuremberg&mdash;in
+his hands, before the Copernican theory
+was generally accepted even by the learned; and the intolerant
+spirit with which this work was received and
+the persecution which Galileo encountered more than
+half a century later were due solely to the circumstance
+that the new theory tended to subvert the popular faith
+in the cosmography of the Church. In modern times,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+with the many popular expositors of science, the diffusion
+of new truth is more rapid; but even now there
+is always a long interval after any great discovery
+in abstract science before the new conception is translated
+into the language of common life, so that it
+can be apprehended by the mass even of educated
+men.</p>
+
+<p>I have thus dwelt on what must be familiar facts in
+the past history of astronomy, because they illustrate
+and will help you to realize the present condition of a
+much younger branch of physical science; for, in the
+transition period I have described, there exists now a
+conception which opens a vision into the microcosmos
+beneath us as extensive and as grand as that which
+the Copernican theory revealed into the macrocosmos
+above us.</p>
+
+<p>The conception to which I refer will be at once suggested
+to every scientific scholar by the word <i>molecule</i>.
+This word is a Latin diminutive, which means, primarily,
+a small mass of matter; and, although heretofore often
+applied in mechanics to the indefinitely small particles
+of a body between which the attractive or repulsive
+forces might be supposed to act, it has only recently
+acquired the exact significance with which we now
+use it.</p>
+
+<p>In attempting to discover the original usage of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+word molecule, I was surprised to find that it was apparently
+first introduced into science by the great French
+naturalist, Buffon, who employed the term in a very
+peculiar sense. Buffon does not seem to have been troubled
+with the problem which so engrosses our modern
+naturalists&mdash;how the vegetable and animal kingdoms
+were developed into their present condition&mdash;but he was
+greatly exercised by an equally difficult problem, which
+seems to have been lost sight of in the present controversy,
+and which is just as obscure to-day as it was in
+Buffon's time, at the close of the last century, and that
+is, Why species are so persistent in Nature; why the
+acorn always grows into the oak, and why every creature
+always produces of its kind. And, if you will reflect
+upon it, I am sure you will conclude that this last is by
+far the more fundamental problem of the two, and one
+which necessarily includes the first. That, of two eggs,
+in which no anatomist can discover any structural difference,
+the one should, in a few short years, <i>develop</i> an intelligence
+like Newton's, while the other soon ends in a
+Guinea-pig, is certainly a greater mystery than that, in
+the course of unnumbered ages, monkeys, by insensible
+gradations, should <i>grow</i> into men.</p>
+
+<p>In order to explain the remarkable constancy of species,
+Buffon advanced a theory which, when freed from
+a good deal that was fanciful, may be expressed thus:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+The attributes of every species, whether of plants or of
+animals, reside in their ultimate particles, or, to use a
+more philosophical but less familiar word, <i>inhere</i> in these
+particles, which Buffon names <i>organic molecules</i>. According
+to Buffon, the oak owes all the peculiarities of
+its organization to the special oak molecules of which it
+consists; and so all the differences in the vegetable or
+animal kingdom, from the lowest to the highest species,
+depend on fundamental peculiarities with which their
+respective molecules were primarily endowed. There
+must, of course, be as many kinds of molecules as there
+are different species of living beings; but, while the
+molecules of the same species were supposed to be exactly
+alike, and to have a strong affinity or attraction for
+each other, those of different species were assumed to be
+inherently distinct and to have no such affinities. Buffon
+further assumed that these molecules of organic nature
+were diffused more or less widely through the atmosphere
+and through the soil, and that the acorn grew to
+the oak simply because, consisting itself of oak molecules,
+it could draw only oak molecules from the surrounding
+media.</p>
+
+<p>With our present knowledge of the chemical constitution
+of organic beings, we can find a great deal that is
+both fantastic and absurd in this theory of Buffon; but
+it must be remembered that the science of chemistry is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+almost wholly a growth of the present century, while
+Buffon died in 1788; and, if we look at the theory solely
+from the standpoint of his knowledge, we shall find in it
+much that was worthy of this great man. Indeed, in our
+time, the essential features of the theory of Buffon have
+been transferred from natural history to chemistry almost
+unchanged.</p>
+
+<p>According to our modern chemistry, the qualities of
+every substance reside or inhere in its molecules. Take
+this lump of sugar. It has certain qualities with which
+every one is familiar. Are those qualities attributes of
+the lump or of its parts? Certainly of its parts; for,
+if we break up the lump, the smallest particles will still
+taste sweet and show all the characteristics of sugar.
+Could we, then, carry on this subdivision indefinitely,
+provided only we had senses or tests delicate enough to
+recognize the qualities of sugar in the resulting particles?
+To this question, modern chemistry answers decidedly,
+No! You would before long reach the smallest mass
+that can have the qualities of sugar. You would have
+no difficulty in breaking up these masses, but you would
+then obtain, not smaller particles of sugar, but particles
+of those utterly different substances which we call carbon,
+oxygen, and hydrogen&mdash;in a word, particles of the
+elementary substances of which sugar consists. These
+ultimate particles of sugar we call the molecules of sugar,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+and thus we come to the present chemical definition of a
+molecule, "<i>The smallest particles of a substance in which
+its qualities inhere</i>," which, as you see, is a reproduction
+of Buffon's idea, although applied to matter and not to
+organism.</p>
+
+<p>A lump of sugar, then, has its peculiar qualities because
+it is an aggregate of molecules which have those
+qualities, and a lump of salt differs from a lump of sugar
+simply because the molecules of salt differ from those of
+sugar, and so with every other substance. There are as
+many kinds of molecules in Nature as there are different
+substances, but all the molecules of the same substance
+are absolutely alike in every respect.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far, as you see, we are merely reviving in a different
+association the old ideas of Buffon. But just at
+this point comes in a new conception, which gives far
+greater grandeur to our modern theory: for we conceive
+that those smallest particles in which the qualities of a
+substance inhere are definite bodies or systems of bodies
+moving in space, and that <i>a lump of sugar is a universe
+of moving worlds</i>.</p>
+
+<p>If on a clear night you direct a telescope to one of
+the many star-clusters of our northern heavens, you will
+have presented to the eye as good a diagram as we can at
+present draw of what we suppose would, under certain
+circumstances, be seen in a lump of sugar if we could<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+look into the molecular universe with the same facility
+with which the telescope penetrates the depths of space.</p>
+
+<p>Do you tell me that the absurdities of Buffon were wisdom
+when compared with such wild speculations as these?
+The criticism is simply what I expected, and I must remind
+you that, as I intimated at the outset, this conception
+of modern science is in the transition period of
+which I then spoke, and, although very familiar to scientific
+scholars, has not yet been grasped by the popular
+mind. I can further only add that, wild as it may
+appear, the idea is the growth of legitimate scientific
+investigation, and express my conviction that it will soon
+become as much a part of the popular belief as those
+grand conceptions of astronomy to which I have referred.</p>
+
+<p>Do you rejoin that we can see the suns in a stellar cluster,
+but can not even begin to see the molecules? I must
+again remind you that, in fact, you only see points of
+light in the field of the telescope, and that your knowledge
+that these points are immensely distant suns is an
+inference of astronomical science; and, further, that our
+knowledge&mdash;if I may so call our confident belief&mdash;that
+the lump of sugar is an aggregate of moving molecules
+is an equally legitimate inference of molecular mechanics,
+a science which, although so much newer, is as positive
+a field of study as astronomy. Moreover, sight is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+not the only avenue to knowledge; and, although our
+material limitations forbid us to expect that the microscope
+will ever be able to penetrate the molecular universe,
+yet we feel assured that we have been able by
+strictly experimental methods to weigh molecular masses
+and measure molecular magnitudes with as much accuracy
+as those of the fixed stars.</p>
+
+<p>Of all forms of matter the gas has the simplest molecular
+structure, and, as might be anticipated, our knowledge
+of molecular magnitudes is as yet chiefly confined
+to materials of this class. I have given below some of
+the results which have been obtained in regard to the
+molecular magnitudes of hydrogen gas, one of the best
+studied of this class of substances; and, although the vast
+numbers are as inconceivable as are those of astronomy,
+they can not fail to impress you with the reality of the
+magnitudes they represent. I take hydrogen gas for my
+illustration rather than air, because our atmosphere is a
+mixture of two gases, oxygen and nitrogen, and therefore
+its condition is less simple than that of a perfectly
+homogeneous material like hydrogen. The molecular
+dimensions of other substances, although varying very
+greatly in their relative values, are of the same order
+of magnitude as these.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Dimension of Hydrogen Molecules calculated for Temperature of
+Melting Ice, and for the Mean Height of the Barometer of the
+Sea Level:</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">
+Mean velocity, 6,099 feet a second.<br />
+Mean path, 31 ten-millionths of an inch.<br />
+Collisions, 17,750 millions each second.<br />
+Diameter, 438,000, side by side, measure <sup>1</sup>&frasl;<sub>100</sub> of an inch.<br />
+Mass, 14 (millions<sup>3</sup>) weigh <sup>1</sup>&frasl;<sub>1000</sub> of a grain.<br />
+Gas-volume, 311 (millions<sup>3</sup>) fill one cubic inch.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>To explain how the values here presented were
+obtained would be out of place in a popular lec<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>ture,<a name="FNanchor_B_2" id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a>
+but a few words in regard to two or three of
+the data are required to elucidate the subject of this
+lecture.</p>
+
+<p>First, then, in regard to the mass or weight of the
+molecules. So far as their relative values are concerned,
+chemistry gives us the means of determining the molecular
+weights with very great accuracy; but when we
+attempt to estimate their weights in fractions of a grain&mdash;the
+smallest of our common standards&mdash;we can not
+expect precision, simply because the magnitudes compared
+are of such a different order; and the same is true
+of most of the other absolute dimensions, such as the
+diameter and volume of the molecules. We only regard
+the values given in our table as a very rough estimate,
+but still we have good grounds for believing that they
+are sufficiently accurate to give us a true idea of the order
+of the quantities with which we are dealing; and it will
+be seen that, although the numbers required to express
+the relations to our ordinary standards are so large, these
+molecular magnitudes are no more removed from us on
+the one side than are those of astronomy on the other.</p>
+
+<p>Passing next to the velocity of the molecular motion,
+we find in that a quantity which, although large, is commensurate
+with the velocity of sound, the velocity of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+rifle-ball, and the velocities of many other motions with
+which we are familiar. We are, therefore, not comparing,
+as before, quantities of an utterly different order,
+and we have confidence that we have been able to determine
+the value within very narrow limits of error. But
+how surprising the result is! Those molecules of hydrogen
+are constantly moving to and fro with this great
+velocity, and not only are the molecules of all a&euml;riform
+substances moving at similar, although differing
+rates, but the same is equally true of the molecules
+of every substance, whatever may be its state of aggregation.</p>
+
+<p>The gas is the simplest molecular condition of matter,
+because in this state the molecules are so far separated
+from each other that their motions are not influenced by
+mutual attractions. Hence, in accordance with the well-known
+laws of motion, gas molecules must always move
+in straight lines and with a constant velocity until they
+collide with each other or strike against the walls of the
+containing vessel, when, in consequence of their elasticity,
+they at once rebound and start on a new path with a new
+velocity. In these collisions, however, there is no loss of
+motion, for, as the molecules have the same weight and
+are perfectly elastic, they simply change velocities, and
+whatever one may lose the other must gain.</p>
+
+<p>But, if the velocity changes in this way, you may ask,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+What meaning has the definite value given in our table?
+The answer is, that this is the mean value of the velocity
+of all the molecules in a mass of hydrogen gas under the
+assumed conditions; and, by the principle just stated,
+the mean value can not be changed by the collisions of
+the molecules among themselves, however great may be
+the change in the motion of the individuals.</p>
+
+<p>In both liquids and solids the molecular motions are
+undoubtedly as active as in a gas, but they must be greatly
+influenced by the mutual attractions which hold the particles
+together, and hence the conditions are far more
+complicated, and present a problem which we have been
+able to solve only very imperfectly, and with which,
+fortunately, we have not at present to deal.</p>
+
+<p>Limiting, then, our study to the molecular condition
+of a gas, picture to yourselves what must be the condition
+of our atmosphere, with its molecules flying about in all
+directions. Conceive what a molecular storm must be
+raging about us, and how it must beat against our bodies
+and against every exposed surface. The molecules of
+our atmosphere move, on an average, nearly four (3&middot;8)
+times slower than those of hydrogen under the same conditions;
+but then they weigh, on an average, fourteen
+and a half times more than hydrogen molecules, and
+therefore strike with as great energy. And do not think
+that the effect of these blows is insignificant because the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+molecular projectiles are so small; they make up by
+their number for what they want in size.</p>
+
+<p>Consider, for example, a cubic yard of air, which, if
+measured at the freezing-point, weighs considerably over
+two pounds. That cubic yard of material contains over
+two pounds of molecules, which are moving with an
+average velocity of 1,605 feet a second, and this motion
+is equivalent, in every respect, to that of a cannon-ball of
+equal weight rushing along its path at the same tremendous
+rate. Of course, this is true of every cubic
+yard of air at the same temperature; and, if the motion
+of the molecules of the atmosphere around us could by
+any means be turned into one and the same direction,
+the result would be a hurricane sweeping over the earth
+with this velocity&mdash;that is, at the rate of 1,094 miles an
+hour&mdash;whose destructive violence not even the Pyramids
+could withstand.</p>
+
+<p>Living as we do in the midst of a molecular tornado
+capable of such effects, our safety lies wholly in
+the circumstance that the storm beats equally in all
+directions at the same time, and the force is thus so
+exactly balanced that we are wholly unconscious of the
+tumult. Not even the aspen-leaf is stirred, nor the
+most delicate membrane broken; but let us remove
+the air from one of the surfaces of such a membrane,
+and then the power of the molecular storm be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>comes
+evident, as in the familiar experiments with an
+air-pump.</p>
+
+<p>As has already been intimated, the values of the velocities
+both of hydrogen and of air molecules given above
+were measured at a definite temperature, 32&deg; of our
+Fahrenheit thermometer, the freezing point of water;
+and this introduces a very important point bearing on our
+subject, namely, that the molecular velocities vary very
+greatly with the temperature. Indeed, according to our
+theory, this very molecular motion constitutes that state
+or condition of matter which we call temperature. A
+hot body is one whose molecules are moving comparatively
+rapidly, and a cold body one in which they are
+moving comparatively slowly. Without, however, entering
+into further details, which would involve the whole
+mechanical theory of heat, let me call your attention to a
+single consequence of the principle I have stated.</p>
+
+<p>When we heat hydrogen, air, or any mass of gas, we
+simply increase the velocity of its moving molecules.
+When we cool the gas, we simply lessen the velocity of
+the same molecules. Take a current of air which enters
+a room through a furnace. In passing it comes in contact
+with heated iron, and, as we say, is heated. But, as
+we view the process, the molecules of the air, while in
+contact with the hot iron, collide with the very rapidly
+oscillating metallic molecules, and fly back as a billiard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>-ball
+would under similar circumstances, with a greatly
+increased velocity, and it is this more rapid motion which
+alone constitutes the higher temperature.</p>
+
+<p>Consider, next, what must be the effect on the surface.
+A moment's reflection will show that the normal
+pressure exerted by the molecular storm, always raging
+in the atmosphere, is due not only to the impact of the
+molecules, but also to the reaction caused by their rebound.
+When the molecules rebound, they are, as it
+were, driven away from the surface in virtue of the inherent
+elasticity both of the surface and of the molecules.
+Now, what takes place when one mass of matter
+is driven away from another&mdash;when a cannon-ball is
+driven out of a gun, for example? Why, the gun <i>kicks</i>!
+And so every surface from which molecules rebound
+must <i>kick</i>; and, if the velocity is not changed by the
+collision, one half of the pressure caused by the molecular
+bombardment is due to the recoil. From a heated
+surface, as we have said, the molecules rebound with an
+increased velocity, and hence the recoil must be proportionally
+increased, determining a greater pressure against
+the surface.</p>
+
+<p>According to this theory, then, we should expect that
+the air would press unequally against surfaces at different
+temperatures, and that, other things being equal, the
+pressure exerted would be greater the higher the tem<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>perature
+of the surface. Such a result, of course, is
+wholly contrary to common experience, which tells us
+that a uniform mass of air presses equally in all directions
+and against all surfaces of the same area, whatever
+may be their condition. It would seem, then, at first
+sight, as if we had here met with a conspicuous case in
+which our theory fails. But further study will convince
+us that the result is just what we should expect in a
+dense atmosphere like that in which we dwell; and, in
+order that this may become evident, let me next call
+your attention to another class of molecular magnitudes.</p>
+
+<p>It must seem strange indeed that we should be able
+to measure molecular velocities; but the next point I
+have to bring to your notice is stranger yet, for we are
+confident that we have been able to determine with approximate
+accuracy for each kind of gas molecule the
+average number of times one of these little bodies runs
+against its neighbors in a second, assuming, of course,
+that the conditions of the gas are given. Knowing, now,
+the molecular velocity and the number of collisions a
+second, we can readily calculate the mean path of the
+molecule&mdash;that is, the average distance it moves, under
+the same conditions, between two successive collisions.
+Of course, for any one molecule, this path must be constantly
+varying; since, while at one time the molecule
+may find a clear coast and make a long run, the very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+next time it may hardly start before its course is arrested.
+Still, taking a mass of gas under constant conditions, the
+doctrine of averages shows that the mean path must
+have a definite value, and an illustration will give an
+idea of the manner in which we have been able to estimate
+it.</p>
+
+<p>The nauseous, smelling gas we call sulphide of hydrogen
+has a density only a little greater than that of air,
+and its molecules must therefore move with very nearly
+as great velocity as the average air molecule&mdash;that is to
+say, about fourteen hundred and eighty feet a second;
+and we might therefore expect that, on opening a jar of
+the gas, its molecules would spread instantly through the
+surrounding atmosphere. But, so far from this, if the
+air is quiet, so that the gas is not transported by currents,
+a very considerable time will elapse before the characteristic
+odor is perceived on the opposite side of an ordinary
+room. The reason is obvious: the molecules must elbow
+their way through the crowd of air molecules which already
+occupy the space, and can therefore advance only
+slowly; and it is obvious that, the oftener they come into
+collision with their neighbors, the slower their progress
+must be. Knowing, then, the mean velocity of the
+molecular motion, and being able to measure by appropriate
+means <i>the rate of diffusion</i>, as it is called, we have
+the data from which we can calculate both the number<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+of collisions in a second and also the mean path between
+two successive collisions. The results, as we must expect,
+are of the same order as the other molecular magnitudes.
+But, inconceivably short as the free<a name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a> path of a molecule
+certainly is, it is still, in the case of hydrogen gas, 136
+times the diameter of the moving body, which would
+certainly be regarded among men as quite ample elbow-room.</p>
+
+<p>Although, in this lecture, I have as yet had no occasion
+to mention the radiometer, I have by no means forgotten
+my main subject, and everything which has been
+said has had a direct bearing on the theory of this remarkable
+instrument; and still, before you can understand
+the great interest with which it is regarded, we
+must follow out another line of thought, converging on
+the same point.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most remarkable results of modern science
+is the discovery that all energy at work on the surface of
+this planet comes from the sun. Most of you probably
+saw, at our Centennial Exhibition, that great artificial
+cascade in Machinery Hall, and were impressed with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+power of the steam-pump which could keep flowing such
+a mass of water. But, also, when you stood before the
+falls at Niagara, did you realize the fact that the enormous
+floods of water which you saw surging over those
+cliffs were in like manner supplied by an all-powerful
+pump, and that pump the sun? And not only is this
+true, but it is equally true that every drop of water that
+falls, every wave that beats, every wind that blows, every
+creature that moves on the surface of the earth, one and
+all, are animated by that mysterious effluence we call
+the sunbeam. I say mysterious effluence; for how that
+power is transmitted over those 92,000,000 miles between
+the earth and the sun is still one of the greatest mysteries
+of Nature.</p>
+
+<p>In the science of optics, as is well known, the phenomena
+of light are explained by the assumption that
+the energy is transmitted in waves through a medium
+which fills all space called the luminiferous ether, and
+there is no question that this theory of Nature, known
+in science as the Undulatory Theory of Light, is, as a
+working hypothesis, one of the most comprehensive and
+searching which the human mind has ever framed. It
+has both correlated known facts and pointed the way to
+remarkable discoveries. But, the moment we attempt to
+apply it to the problem before us, it demands conditions
+which tax even a philosopher's credulity.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As sad experience on the ocean only too frequently
+teaches, energy can be transmitted by waves as well as
+in any other way. But every mechanic will tell you
+that the transmission of energy, whatever be the means
+employed, implies certain well-known conditions. Assume
+that the energy is to be used to turn the spindles of
+a cotton mill. The engineer can tell you just how many
+horse-power he must supply for every working-day, and
+it is equally true that a definite amount of energy must
+come from the sun to do each day's work on the surface
+of the globe. Further, the engineer will also tell you
+that, in order to transmit the power from his turbine or
+his steam-engine, he must have shafts and pulleys and
+belts of adequate strength, and he knows in every case
+what is the lowest limit of safety. In like manner, the
+medium through which the energy which runs the world
+is transmitted must be strong enough to do the immense
+work put upon it; and, if the energy is transmitted by
+waves, this implies that the medium must have an enormously
+great elasticity, an elasticity vastly greater than
+that of the best-tempered steel.</p>
+
+<p>But turn now to the astronomers, and learn what they
+have to tell us in regard to the assumed luminiferous
+ether through which all this energy is supposed to be
+transmitted. Our planet is rushing in its orbit around
+the sun at an average rate of over 1,000 miles a minute,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+and makes its annual journey of some 550,000,000 miles
+in 365 days, 6 hours, 9 seconds, and <sup>6</sup>&frasl;<sub>10</sub> of a second. Mark
+the tenths; for astronomical observations are so accurate
+that, if the length of the year varied permanently by
+the tenth of a second, we should know it; and you can
+readily understand that, if there were a medium in space
+which offered as much resistance to the motion of the
+earth as would gossamer threads to a race-horse, the
+planet could never come up to time, year after year, to
+the tenth of a second.</p>
+
+<p>How, then, can we save our theory by which we set
+so much, and rightly, because it has helped us so effectively
+in studying Nature? If we may be allowed such
+an extravagant solecism, let us suppose that the engineer
+of our previous illustration was the hero of a fairy tale.
+He has built a mill, set a steam-engine in the basement,
+arranged his spindles above, and is connecting the pulleys
+by the usual belts, when some stern necessity requires
+him to transmit all the energy with cobwebs. Of course,
+a good fairy comes to his aid, and what does she do?
+Simply makes the cobwebs indefinitely strong. So
+the physicists, not to be outdone by any fairies, make
+their ether indefinitely elastic, and their theory lands
+them just here, with a medium filling all space, thousands
+of times more elastic than steel, and thousands on
+thousands of times less dense than hydrogen gas. There<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+must be a fallacy somewhere, and I strongly suspect it
+is to be found in our ordinary materialistic notions of
+causation, which involve the old metaphysical dogma,
+"<i>nulla actio in distans</i>," and which in our day have
+culminated in the famous apothegm of the German
+materialist, "Kein Phosphor kein Gedanke."</p>
+
+<p>But it is not my purpose to discuss the doctrines of
+causation, and I have dwelt on the difficulty, which this
+subject presents in connection with the undulatory theory,
+solely because I wished you to appreciate the great
+interest with which scientific men have looked for some
+direct manifestation of the mechanical action of light. It
+is true that the ether waves must have dimensions similar
+to those of the molecules discussed above, and we must
+expect, therefore, that they would act primarily on the
+molecules and not on masses of matter. But still the
+well-known principles of wave motion have led competent
+physicists to maintain that a more or less considerable
+pressure ought to be exerted by the ether waves on
+the surfaces against which they beat, as a partial resultant
+of the molecular tremors first imparted. Already, in the
+last century, attempts were made to discover some evidence
+of such action, and in various experiments the
+sun's direct rays were concentrated on films, delicately
+suspended and carefully protected from all other extraneous
+influences, but without any apparent effect; and thus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+the question remained until about three years ago, when
+the scientific world were startled by the announcement
+of Mr. Crookes, of London, that, on suspending a small
+piece of blackened alder pith in the very perfect vacuum
+which can now be obtained with the mercury pump, invented
+by Sprengel, he had seen this light body actually
+repelled by the sun's rays; and they were still more startled,
+when, after a few further experiments, he presented
+us with the instrument he called a radiometer, in which
+the sun's rays do the no inconsiderable work of turning
+a small wheel. Let us examine for a moment the construction
+of this remarkable instrument.</p>
+
+<p>The moving part of the radiometer is a small horizontal
+wheel, to the ends of whose arms are fastened
+vertical vanes, usually of mica, and blackened on one
+side. A glass cap forms the hub, and by the glass-blower's
+art the wheel is inclosed in a glass bulb, so that
+the cap rests on the point of a cambric needle; and the
+wheel is so delicately balanced on this pivot that it turns
+with the greatest freedom. From the interior of the
+bulb the air is now exhausted by means of the Sprengel
+pump, until less than <sup>1</sup>&frasl;<sub>1000</sub> of the original quantity is
+left, and the only opening is then hermetically sealed.
+If, now, the sun's light or even the light from a candle
+shines on the vanes, the blackened surfaces&mdash;which are
+coated with lampblack&mdash;are repelled, and, these being<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+symmetrically placed around the wheel, the several forces
+conspire to produce the rapid motion which results. The
+effect has all the appearance of a direct mechanical action
+exerted by the light, and for some time was so regarded
+by Mr. Crookes and other eminent physicists, although
+in his published papers it should be added that Mr.
+Crookes carefully abstained from speculating on the
+subject&mdash;aiming, as he has since said, to keep himself
+unbiased by any theory, while he accumulated the facts
+upon which a satisfactory explanation might be based.</p>
+
+<p>Singularly, however, the first aspects of the new phenomena
+proved to be wholly deceptive, and the motion,
+so far from being an effect of the direct mechanical
+action of the waves of light, is now believed to be a new
+and very striking manifestation of molecular motion. To
+this opinion Mr. Crookes himself has come, and, in a recent
+article, he writes: "Twelve months' research, however,
+has thrown much light on these actions, and the
+explanation afforded by the dynamical theory of gases
+makes what was a year ago obscure and contradictory
+now reasonable and intelligible."</p>
+
+<p>As is frequently the case in Nature, the chief effect
+is here obscured by various subordinate phenomena, and
+it is not surprising that a great difference of opinion
+should have arisen in regard to the cause of the motion.
+This would not be an appropriate place to describe the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+numerous investigations occasioned by the controversy,
+many of which show in a most striking manner how easily
+experimental evidence may be honestly misinterpreted
+in support of a preconceived opinion. I will, however,
+venture to trespass further on your patience, so far as to
+describe the few experiments by which, very early in
+the controversy, I satisfied my own mind on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>When, two years ago, I had for the first time an opportunity
+of experimenting with a radiometer, the opinion
+was still prevalent that the motion of the wheel was a
+direct mechanical effect of the waves of light, and, therefore,
+that the impulses came from the outside of the instrument,
+the waves passing freely through the glass
+envelope. At the outset, this opinion did not seem to
+me to be reasonable, or in harmony with well-known
+facts; for, knowing how great must be the molecular
+disturbance caused by the sun's rays, as shown by their
+heating power, I could not believe that a residual action,
+such as has been referred to, would first appear in these
+delicate phenomena observed by Mr. Crookes, and should
+only be manifested in the vacuum of a mercury pump.</p>
+
+<p>On examining the instrument, my attention was at
+once arrested by the lampblack coating on the alternate
+surfaces of the vanes; and, from the remarkable power
+of lampblack to absorb radiant heat, it was evident at
+once that, whatever other effects the rays from the sun<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+or from a flame might cause, they must necessarily determine
+a constant difference of temperature between the
+two surfaces of the vanes, and the thought at once occurred
+that, after all, the motion might be a direct result
+of this difference of temperature&mdash;in other words, that
+the radiometer might be a small heat engine, whose motions,
+like those of every other heat engine, depend on
+the difference of temperature between its parts.</p>
+
+<p>But, if this were true, the effect ought to be proportional
+solely to the heating power of the rays, and a very
+easy means of roughly testing this question was at hand.
+It is well known that an aqueous solution of alum, although
+transmitting light as freely as the purest water,
+powerfully absorbs those rays, of any source, which have
+the chief heating power. Accordingly, I interposed what
+we call an alum cell in the path of the rays shining
+on the radiometer, when, although the light on the vanes
+was as bright as before, the motion was almost completely
+arrested.</p>
+
+<p>This experiment, however, was not conclusive, as it
+might still be said that the <i>heat</i>-giving rays acted <i>mechanically</i>,
+and it must be admitted that the chief part
+of the energy in the rays, even from the most brilliant
+luminous sources, always takes the form of heat. But,
+if the action is mechanical, the reaction must be against
+the medium through which the rays are transmitted,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+while, if the radiometer is simply a heat engine, the action
+and reaction must be, ultimately at least, between the
+heater and the cooler, which in this case are respectively
+the blackened surfaces of the vanes and the glass walls of
+the inclosing bulb; and here, again, a very easy method
+of testing the actual condition at once suggested itself.</p>
+
+<p>If the motion of the radiometer wheel is an effect of
+mechanical impulses transmitted in the direction of the
+beam of light, it was certainly to be expected that the
+beam would act on the lustrous as well as on the blackened
+mica surfaces, however large might be the difference
+in the resultants producing mechanical motion, in
+consequence of the great absorbing power of the lampblack.
+Moreover, since the instrument is so constructed
+that, of two vanes on opposite sides of the wheel, one
+always presents a blackened and the other a lustrous surface
+to an incident beam, we should further expect to
+find in the motion of the wheel a differential phenomenon,
+due to the unequal action of the light on these surfaces.
+On the other hand, if the radiometer is a heat
+engine, and the reaction takes place between the heated
+blackened surfaces of the vanes and the colder glass, it is
+evident that the total effect will be simply the sum of
+the effects at the several surfaces.</p>
+
+<p>In order to investigate the question thus presented, I
+placed the radiometer before a common kerosene lamp,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+and observed, with a stop-watch, the number of seconds
+that elapsed during ten revolutions of the little wheel.
+Finding that this number was absolutely constant, I next
+screened one half of the bulb, so that only the blackened
+faces were exposed to the light as the wheel turned them
+into the beam. Again, I several times observed the
+number of seconds during ten turns, which, although
+equally constant, was greater than before. Lastly, I
+screened the blackened surfaces so that, as the wheel
+turned, only the lustrous surfaces of mica were exposed
+to the light, when, to my surprise, the wheel continued
+to turn in the same direction as before, although much
+more slowly. It appeared as if the lustrous surfaces
+were attracted by the light. Again I observed the time
+of ten revolutions, and here I have collected my results,
+reducing them, in the last column, so as to show the corresponding
+number of revolutions in the same time:</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="1" rules="cols" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><th class="bbox">CONDITIONS.</th><th class="bbox">Time of ten revolutions.</th><th class="bbox">No. of revolutions in same time.</th></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Both faces exposed</td><td align='left'> &nbsp;&nbsp; 8 seconds.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; &nbsp; 319</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Blackened faces only</td><td align='left'> &nbsp;11 &nbsp; &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; &nbsp; 232</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mica faces only</td><td align='left'> &nbsp;29 &nbsp; &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 88</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>It will be noticed that 88 + 232 equals very nearly
+319. Evidently the effect, so far from being differential,
+is concurrent. Hence, the action which causes the
+motion must take place between the parts of the instru<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>ment,
+and can not be a direct effect of impulses imparted
+by ether waves; or else we are driven to the most improbable
+alternative, that lampblack and mica should
+have such a remarkable selective power that the impulses
+imparted by the light should exert a repulsive force at
+one surface and an attractive force at the other. Were
+there, however, such an improbable effect, it must be
+independent of the thickness of the mica vanes; while,
+on the other hand, if, as seemed to us now most probable,
+the whole effect depended on the difference of temperature
+between the lampblack and the mica, and if the
+light produced an effect on the mica surface only because,
+the mica plate being diathermous to a very considerable
+extent, the lampblack became heated through
+the plate more than the plate itself, then it would follow
+that, if we used a thicker mica plate, which would absorb
+more of the heat, we ought to obtain a marked difference
+of effect. Accordingly, we repeated the experiment
+with an equally sensitive radiometer, which we made for
+the purpose, with comparatively thick vanes, and with
+this the effect of a beam of light on the mica surface was
+absolutely null, the wheel revolving in the same time,
+whether these faces were protected or not.</p>
+
+<p>But one thing was now wanting to make the demonstration
+complete. A heat engine is reversible, and if
+the motion of the radiometer depended on the circum<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>stance
+that the temperature of the blackened faces of the
+vanes was higher than that of the glass, then by reversing
+the conditions we ought to reverse the motion. Accordingly,
+I carefully heated the glass bulb over a lamp,
+until it was as hot as the hand would bear, and then
+placed the instrument in a cold room, trusting to the
+great radiating power of lampblack to maintain the temperature
+of the blackened surfaces of the vanes below
+that of the glass. Immediately the wheel began to turn
+in the opposite direction, and continued to turn until the
+temperature of the glass came into equilibrium with the
+surrounding objects.</p>
+
+<p>These early experiments have since been confirmed
+to the fullest extent, and no physicist at the present day
+can reasonably doubt that the radiometer is a very beautiful
+example of a heat engine, and it is the first that has
+been made to work continuously by the heat of the sunbeam.
+But it is one thing to show that the instrument
+is a heat engine, and quite another thing to explain in
+detail the manner in which it acts. In regard to the last
+point, there is still room for much difference of opinion,
+although physicists are generally agreed in referring the
+action to the residual gas that is left in the bulb. As
+for myself, I became strongly persuaded&mdash;after experimenting
+with more than one hundred of these instruments,
+made under my own eye, with every variation of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+condition I could suggest&mdash;<i>that the effect was due to the
+same cause which determines gas pressure</i>, and, according
+to the dynamical theory of gases, this amounts to saying
+that the effect is due to molecular motion. I have not
+time, however, to describe either my own experiments on
+which this opinion was first based, or the far more thorough
+investigations since made by others, which have
+served to strengthen the first impression.<a name="FNanchor_D_4" id="FNanchor_D_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_D_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a> But, after
+our previous discussions, a few words will suffice to show
+how the molecular theory explains the new phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>Although the air in the bulb has been so nearly exhausted
+that less than the one-thousandth part remains,
+yet it must be borne in mind that the number of molecules
+left behind is by no means inconsiderable. As will
+be seen by referring to our table, there must still be no
+less than 311,000 million million in every cubic inch.
+Moreover, the absolute pressure which this residual gas
+exerts is a very appreciable quantity. It is simply the
+one-thousandth of the normal pressure of the atmosphere,
+that is, of 14<sup>7</sup>&frasl;<sub>10</sub> pounds on a square inch, which is equivalent
+to a little over one hundred grains on the same
+area. Now, the area of the blackened surfaces of the
+vanes of an ordinary radiometer measures just about a
+square inch, and the wheel is mounted so delicately that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+a constant pressure of one-tenth of a grain would be sufficient
+to produce rapid motion. So that a difference of
+pressure on the opposite faces of the vanes, equal to one
+one-thousandth of the whole amount, is all that we need
+account for; and, as can easily be calculated, a difference
+of temperature of less than half a degree Fahrenheit
+would cause all this difference in the pressure of the
+rarefied air.</p>
+
+<p>But you may ask, How can such a difference of pressure
+exist on different surfaces exposed to one and the
+same medium? and your question is a perfectly legitimate
+one; for it is just here that the new phenomena
+seem to belie all our previous experience. If, however,
+you followed me in my very partial exposition of the mechanical
+theory of gases, you will easily see that on this
+theory it is a more difficult question to explain why such
+a difference of pressure does not manifest itself in every
+gas medium and under all conditions between any two
+surfaces having different temperatures.</p>
+
+<p>We saw that gas pressure is a double effect, caused
+both by the impact of molecules and by the recoil of the
+surface attending their rebound. We also saw that when
+molecules strike a heated surface they rebound with increased
+velocity, and hence produce an increased pressure
+against the surface, the greater the higher the temperature.
+According to this theory, then, we should expect<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+to find the same atmosphere pressing unequally on equal
+surfaces if at different temperatures; and the difference
+in the pressure on the lampblack and mica surfaces of
+the vanes, which the motion of the radiometer wheel necessarily
+implies, is therefore simply the normal effect of
+the mechanical condition of every gas medium. The
+real difficulty is, to explain why we must exhaust the air
+so perfectly before the effect manifests itself.</p>
+
+<p>The new theory is equal to the emergency. As has
+been already pointed out, in the ordinary state of the air
+the amplitude of the molecular motion is exceedingly
+small, not over a few ten-millionths of an inch&mdash;a very
+small fraction, therefore, of the height of the inequalities
+on the lampblack surfaces of the vanes of a radiometer.
+Under such circumstances, evidently the molecules would
+not leave the heated surface, but simply bound back and
+forth between the vanes and the surrounding mass of
+dense air, which, being almost absolutely a non-conductor
+of heat, must act essentially like an elastic solid wall confining
+the vanes on either side. For the time being,
+and until replaced by convection currents, the oscillating
+molecules are as much a part of the vanes as our atmosphere
+is a part of the earth; and on this system, as a
+whole, the homogeneous dense air which surrounds it
+must press equally from all directions. In proportion,
+however, as the air is exhausted, the molecules find more<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+room and the amplitude of the molecular motion is increased,
+and, when a very high degree of exhaustion is
+reached, the air particles no longer bound back and forth
+on the vanes without change of condition, but they either
+bound off entirely like a ball from a cannon, or else, having
+transferred a portion of their momentum, return with
+diminished velocity, and in either case the force of the
+reaction is felt.<a name="FNanchor_E_5" id="FNanchor_E_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_E_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p><p>Thus it appears that we have been able to show by
+very definite experimental evidence that the radiometer
+is a heat engine. We have also been able to show that
+such a difference of temperature as the radiation must
+produce in the air in <i>direct</i> contact with the opposite
+faces of the vanes of the radiometer would determine a
+difference of tension, which is sufficient to account for
+the motion of the wheel. Finally, we have shown, as
+fully as is possible in a popular lecture, that, according to
+the mechanical theory of gases, such a difference of tension
+would have its normal effect only in a highly rarefied
+atmosphere, and thus we have brought the new
+phenomena into harmony with the general principles of
+molecular mechanics previously established.</p>
+
+<p>More than this can not be said of the steam-engine,
+although, of course, in the older engine the measure<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>ments
+on which the theory is based are vastly more accurate
+and complete. But the moment we attempt to go
+beyond the general principles of heat engines, of which
+the steam-engine is such a conspicuous illustration, and
+explain how the heat is transformed into motion, we
+have to resort to the molecular theory just as in the case
+of the radiometer; and the motion of the steam-engine
+seems to us less wonderful than that of the radiometer
+only because it is more familiar and more completely
+harmonized with the rest of our knowledge. Moreover,
+the very molecular theory which we call upon to explain
+the steam-engine involves consequences which, as we
+have seen, have been first realized in the radiometer;
+and thus it is that this new instrument, although disappointing
+the first expectations of its discoverer, has furnished
+a very striking confirmation of this wonderful
+theory. Indeed, the confirmation is so remote and yet
+so close, so unexpected and yet so strong, that the new
+phenomena almost seem to be a direct manifestation of
+the molecular motion which our theory assumes; and
+when a new discovery thus confirms the accuracy of a
+previous generalization, and gives us additional reason to
+believe that the glimpses we have gained into the order
+of Nature are trustworthy, it excites, with reason, among
+scientific scholars the warmest interest.</p>
+
+<p>And when we consider the vast scope of the molecu<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>lar
+theory, the order on order of existences which it
+opens to the imagination, how can we fail to be impressed
+with the position in which it places man midway
+between the molecular cosmos on the one side and the
+stellar cosmos on the other&mdash;a position in which he is
+able, in some measure at least, to study and interpret
+both?</p>
+
+<p>Since the time to which we referred at the beginning
+of this lecture, when man's dwelling-place was looked
+at as the center of a creation which was solely subservient
+to his wants, there has been a reaction to the opposite
+extreme, and we have heard much of the utter insignificance
+of the earth in a universe among whose immensities
+all human belongings are but as a drop in the
+ocean. When now, however, we learn from Sir William
+Thomson that the drop of water in our comparison is
+itself a universe, consisting of units so small that, were
+the drop magnified to the size of the earth, these units
+would not exceed in magnitude a cricket-ball,<a name="FNanchor_F_6" id="FNanchor_F_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_F_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a> and
+when, on studying chemistry, we still further learn that
+these units are not single masses but systems of atoms,
+we may leave the illusions of the imagination from the
+one side to correct those from the other, and all will
+teach us the great lesson that man's place in Nature
+is not to be estimated by relations of magnitude, but
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>by the intelligence which makes the whole creation his
+own.</p>
+
+<p>But, if it is man's privilege to follow both the atoms
+and the stars in their courses, he finds that, while thus
+exercising the highest attributes of his nature, he is ever
+in the presence of an immeasurably superior intelligence,
+before which he must bow and adore, and thus
+come to him both the assurance and the pledge of a kinship
+in which his only real glory can be found.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="V" id="V"></a>V.</h3>
+
+<h2>MEMOIR OF THOMAS GRAHAM.</h2>
+
+<h4><i>Reprinted from the "Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts
+and Sciences," Vol. VIII, May 24, 1870.</i></h4>
+
+
+<p>It would be difficult to find in the history of science
+a character more simple, more noble, or more symmetrical
+in all its parts than that of Thomas Graham, and he
+will always be remembered as one of the most eminent
+of those great students of nature who have rendered our
+Saxon race illustrious. He was born of Scotch parents
+in Glasgow in the year 1805, and in that city, where he
+received his education, all his early life was passed. In
+1837 he went to London as Professor of Chemistry in
+the newly established London University, now called
+University College, and he occupied this chair until the
+year 1855, when he succeeded Sir John Herschel as
+Master of the Royal Mint, a post which he held to the
+close of his life. His death, on the 16th of September<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+last (1869), at the age of sixty, was caused by no active
+disease, but was simply the wearing out of a constitution
+enfeebled in youth by privations voluntarily and courageously
+encountered that he might devote his life to scientific
+study. As with all earnest students, that life was
+uneventful, if judged by ordinary standards; and the
+records of his discoveries form the only materials for his
+biography.</p>
+
+<p>Although one of the most successful investigators of
+physical science, the late Master of the Mint had not
+that felicity of language or that copiousness of illustration
+which added so much to the popular reputation
+of his distinguished contemporary, Faraday; but his influence
+on the progress of science was not less marked
+or less important. Both of these eminent men were for
+a long period of years best known to the English public
+as teachers of chemistry, but their investigations were
+chiefly limited to physical problems; yet, although both
+cultivated the border ground between chemistry and
+physics, they followed wholly different lines of research.
+While Faraday was so successfully developing the principles
+of electrical action, Graham with equal success was
+investigating the laws of molecular motion. Each followed
+with wonderful constancy, as well as skill, a single
+line of study from first to last, and to this concentration
+of power their great discoveries are largely due.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One of the earliest and most important of Graham's
+investigations, and the one which gave the direction to
+his subsequent course of study, was that on the diffusion
+of gases. It had already been recognized that impenetrability
+in its ordinary sense is not, as was formerly
+supposed, a universal quality of matter. Dalton had not
+only recognized that a&euml;riform bodies exhibit a positive
+tendency to mix, or to penetrate through each other,
+even in opposition to the force of gravity, but had made
+this quality of gases the subject of experimental investigation.
+He inferred, as the result of his inquiry, "that
+different gases afford no resistance to each other; but
+that one gas spreads or expands into the space occupied
+by another gas, as it would rush into a vacuum; at least,
+that the resistance which the particles of one gas offer to
+those of another is of a very imperfect kind, to be compared
+to the resistance which stones in the channel of a
+stream oppose to the flow of running water." But, although
+this theory of Dalton was essentially correct and
+involved the whole truth, yet it was supported by no
+sufficient evidence, and he failed to perceive the simple
+law which underlies this whole class of phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>Graham, "on entering on this inquiry, found that
+gases diffuse into the atmosphere with different degrees
+of ease and rapidity." This was first observed by allowing
+each gas to diffuse from a bottle into the air through<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+a narrow tube in opposition to the solicitation of gravity.
+Afterward an observation of Doebereiner on the escape
+of hydrogen gas by a fissure or crack in a glass receiver
+caused him to vary the conditions of his experiments,
+and led to the invention of the well-known "diffusion
+tube." In this simple apparatus a thin septum of plaster
+of Paris is used to separate the diffusing gases, which,
+while it arrests in a great measure all direct currents
+between the two media, does not interfere with the
+molecular motion. Much later, Graham found in prepared
+graphite a material far better adapted to this purpose
+than the plaster, and he used septa of this mineral
+to confirm his early results, in answer to certain ill-considered
+criticisms in Bunsen's work on gasometry. These
+septa he was in the habit of calling his "atomic filters."</p>
+
+<p>By means of the diffusion tube, Graham was able to
+measure accurately the relative times of diffusion of
+different gases, and he found that <i>equal volumes of any
+two gases interpenetrate each other in times which are
+inversely proportional to the square roots of their respective
+densities</i>; and this fundamental law was the greatest
+discovery of our late foreign associate. It is now universally
+recognized as one of the few great cardinal principles
+which form the basis of physical science.</p>
+
+<p>It can be shown, on the principles of pneumatics,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+that gases should rush into a vacuum with velocities
+corresponding to the numbers which have been found to
+express their diffusion times; and, in a series of experiments
+on what he calls the "<i>effusion</i>" of gases, Graham
+confirmed by trial this deduction of theory. In these experiments
+a measured volume of the gas was allowed to
+find its way into the vacuous jar through a minute aperture
+in a thin metallic plate, and he carefully distinguished
+between this class of phenomena and the flowing
+of gases through capillary tubes into a vacuum, in which
+case, however short the tube, the effects of friction materially
+modify the result. This last class of phenomena
+Graham likewise investigated, and designated by the
+term "transpiration."</p>
+
+<p>While, however, it thus appears that the results of
+Graham's investigation were in strict accordance with
+Dalton's theory, it must also be evident that Graham was
+the first to observe the exact numerical relation which
+obtains in this class of phenomena, and that all-important
+circumstance entitles him to be regarded as the discoverer
+of the law of diffusion. The law, however, at first enunciated,
+was purely empirical, and Graham himself says
+that something more must be assumed than that gases
+are vacua to each other, in order to explain all the phenomena
+observed; and according to his original view
+this representation of the process was only a convenient<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+mode of expressing the final result. Such has proved to
+be the case.</p>
+
+<p>Like other great men, Graham built better than he
+knew. In the progress of physical science during the
+last twenty-five years, two principles have become more
+and more conspicuous, until at last they have completely
+revolutionized the philosophy of chemistry. In the first
+place, it has appeared that a host of chemical as well as of
+physical facts are co&ouml;rdinated by the assumption that all
+substances in the state of gas have the same molecular
+volume, or, in other words, contain the same number of
+molecules in a given space; and in the second place, it
+has become evident that the phenomena of heat are
+simply the manifestations of molecular motion. According
+to this view, the temperature of a body is the <i>vis
+viva</i> of its molecules; and, since all molecules at a given
+temperature have the same <i>vis viva</i>, it follows that the
+molecules must move with velocities which are inversely
+proportional to the square roots of the molecular weights.
+Moreover, since the molecular volumes are equal, and the
+molecular weights therefore proportional to the densities
+of the a&euml;riform bodies in which the molecules are the
+active units, it also follows that the velocities of the
+molecules in any two gases are inversely proportional to
+the square roots of their respective densities. Thus the
+simple numerical relations first observed in the phe<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>nomena
+of diffusion are the direct result of molecular
+motion; and it is now seen that Graham's empirical law
+is included under the fundamental laws of motion. Thus
+Graham's investigation has become the basis of the new
+science of molecular mechanics, and his measurements
+of the rates of diffusion prove to be the measures of molecular
+velocities.</p>
+
+<p>From the study of diffusion Graham passed by a natural
+transition to the investigation of a class of phenomena
+which, although closely allied to the first as to the
+effects produced, differ wholly in their essential nature.
+Here also he followed in the footsteps of Dalton. This
+distinguished chemist had noticed that a bubble of air
+separated by a film of water from an atmosphere of carbonic
+anhydride gradually expanded until it burst. In
+like manner a moist bladder, half filled with air and tied,
+if suspended in an atmosphere of the same material, becomes
+in time greatly distended by the insinuation of
+this gas through its substance. This effect can not be
+the result of simple diffusion, for it is to be remembered
+that the thinnest film of water, or of any liquid, is absolutely
+impermeable to a gas as such, and, moreover, only
+the carbonic anhydride passes through the film, very little
+or none of the air escaping outward. The result depends,
+first, upon the solution of the carbonic anhydride
+by the water on one surface of the film; secondly, on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+the evaporation into the air, from the other surface, of
+the gas thus absorbed. Similar experiments were made
+by Drs. Mitchell and Faust, and others, in which gases
+passed through a film of India-rubber, entering into a
+partial combination with the material on one surface, and
+escaping from it on the other.</p>
+
+<p>Graham not only considerably extended our knowledge
+of this class of phenomena, but also gave us a satisfactory
+explanation of the mode in which these remarkable
+results are produced. He recognized in these cases
+the action of a feeble chemical force, insufficient to produce
+a definite compound, but still capable of determining
+a more or less perfect union, as in the case of simple
+solution. He also distinguished the influence of mass in
+causing the formation or decomposition of such weak
+chemical compounds. The conditions of the phenomena
+under consideration are simply these:</p>
+
+<p>First. A material for the septum capable of forming
+a feeble chemical union with the gas to be transferred.</p>
+
+<p>Secondly. An excess of the gas on one side of the film
+and a deficiency on the other.</p>
+
+<p>Thirdly. Such a temperature that the unstable compound
+may form at the surface, where the a&euml;riform constituent
+is present in large mass, while it decomposes at
+the opposite surface, where the quantity is less abundant.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most remarkable results of Graham's study<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+of this peculiar mode of transfer of a&euml;riform matter
+through the very substance of solid bodies was an ingenious
+method of separating the oxygen from the atmosphere.
+The apparatus consisted simply of a bag of India-rubber
+kept distended by an interior framework, while it
+was exhausted by a Sprengel pump. Under these circumstances
+the selective affinity of the caoutchouc determines
+such a difference in the rate of transfer of the
+two constituents of the atmosphere that the amount of
+oxygen in the transpired air rises to forty per cent., and
+by repeating the process nearly pure oxygen may be obtained.
+It was at first hoped that this method might
+find a valuable application in the arts, but in this Graham
+was disappointed; for the same result has since been effected
+by purely chemical methods, which are both cheaper
+and more rapid.</p>
+
+<p>These experiments on India-rubber naturally led to
+the study of similar effects produced with metallic septa,
+which, although to some extent previously observed in
+passing gases through heated metallic tubes, had been
+only imperfectly understood. Thus, when a stream of
+hydrogen or carbonic oxide is passed through a red-hot
+iron tube, a no inconsiderable portion of the gas escapes
+through the walls. The same is true to a still greater degree
+when hydrogen is passed through a red-hot tube of
+platinum, and Graham showed that, through the walls of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+a tube of palladium, hydrogen gas passes, under the same
+conditions, almost as rapidly as water through a sieve.
+Moreover, our distinguished associate proved that this
+rapid transfer of gas through these dense metallic septa
+was due, as in the case of the India-rubber, to an actual
+chemical combination of its material with the metal,
+formed at the surface, where the gas is in excess, and as
+rapidly decomposed on the opposite face of the septum.
+He not only recognized as belonging to this class of phenomena
+the very great absorption of hydrogen by platinum
+plate and sponge in the familiar experiment of the
+Doebereiner lamp, but also showed that this gas is a definite
+constituent of meteoric iron&mdash;a fact of great interest
+from its bearing on the meteoric theory.</p>
+
+<p>We are thus led to Graham's last important discovery,
+which was the justification of the theory we have
+been considering, and the crowning of this long line of
+investigation. As may be anticipated from what has
+been said, the most marked example of that order of
+chemical compounds, to which the metallic transpiration
+of a&euml;riform matter we have been considering is due, is
+the compound of palladium with hydrogen. Graham
+showed that, when a plate of this metal is made the negative
+pole in the electrolysis of water, it absorbs nearly
+one thousand times its volume of hydrogen gas&mdash;a quantity
+approximatively equivalent to one atom of hydrogen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+to each atom of palladium. He further showed that the
+metal thus becomes so profoundly altered as to indicate
+that the product of this union is a definite compound.
+Not only is the volume of the metal increased, but its
+tenacity and conducting power for electricity are diminished,
+and it acquires a slight susceptibility to magnetism,
+which the pure metal does not possess. The chemical
+qualities of this product are also remarkable. It
+precipitates mercury from a solution of its chloride, and
+in general acts as a strong reducing agent. Exposed to
+the action of chlorine, bromine, or iodine, the hydrogen
+leaves the palladium and enters into direct union with
+these elements. Moreover, although the compound is
+readily decomposed by heat, the gas can not be expelled
+from the metal by simple mechanical means.</p>
+
+<p>These facts recall the similar relations frequently observed
+between the qualities of an alloy and those of the
+constituent metals, and suggest the inference made by
+Graham, that palladium charged with hydrogen is a compound
+of the same class&mdash;a conclusion which harmonizes
+with the theory long held by many chemists, that hydrogen
+gas is the vapor of a very volatile metal. This element,
+however, when combined with palladium, is in a
+peculiarly active state, which sustains somewhat the same
+relation to the familiar gas that ozone bears to ordinary
+oxygen. Hence Graham distinguished this condition of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+hydrogen by the term "hydrogenium." Shortly before
+his death a medal was struck at the Royal Mint from the
+hydrogen palladium alloy in honor of its discovery; but,
+although this discovery attracted public attention chiefly
+on account of the singular chemical relations of hydrogen,
+which it brought so prominently to notice, it will be
+remembered in the history of science rather as the beautiful
+termination of a life-long investigation, of which the
+medal was the appropriate seal.</p>
+
+<p>Simultaneously with the experiments on <i>gases</i>, whose
+results we have endeavored to present in the preceding
+pages, Graham carried forward a parallel line of investigation
+of an allied class of phenomena, which may be regarded
+as the manifestations of molecular motion in <i>liquid</i>
+bodies. The phenomena of diffusion reappear in liquids,
+and Graham carefully observed the times in which equal
+weights of various salts dissolved in water diffused from
+an open-mouth bottle into a large volume of pure water,
+in which the bottle was immersed. He was not, however,
+able to correlate the results of these experiments by
+such a simple law as that which obtains with gases. It
+appeared, nevertheless, that the rate of diffusion differs
+very greatly for the different soluble salts, having some
+relation to the chemical composition of the salt which he
+was unable to discover. But he found it possible to divide
+the salts into groups of equi-diffusive substances, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+he showed that the rate of diffusion of the several groups
+bear to one another simple numerical ratios.</p>
+
+<p>More important results were obtained from the study
+of a class of phenomena corresponding to the transpiration
+of gases through India-rubber or metallic septa.
+These phenomena, as manifested in the transfer of liquids
+and of salts in solution through bladder or a similar
+membrane, had previously been frequently studied under
+the names of exosmose and endosmose, but to Graham
+we owe the first satisfactory explanation. As in the
+case of gases, he referred these effects to the influence of
+chemical force, combination taking place on one surface
+of the membrane and the compound breaking up on the
+other, the difference depending, as in the previous instance,
+on the influence of mass. He also swept away
+the arbitrary distinctions made by previous experimenters,
+showed that this whole class of phenomena are essentially
+similar, and called this manifestation of power
+simply "osmose."</p>
+
+<p>While studying osmotic action, Graham was led to
+one of his most important generalizations&mdash;the recognition
+of the crystalline and amorphous states as fundamental
+distinctions in chemistry. Bodies in the first
+state he called crystalloids; those in the last state, colloids
+(resembling glue). That there is a difference in structure
+between crystalloids, like sugar or felspar, and col<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>loids,
+like barley candy or glass, has of course always
+been evident to the most superficial observer; but
+Graham was the first to recognize in these external differences
+two fundamentally distinct conditions of matter
+not peculiar to certain substances, but underlying all
+chemical differences, and appearing to a greater or less
+degree in every substance. He showed that the power
+of diffusion through liquids depends very much on these
+fundamental differences of condition&mdash;sugar, one of the
+least diffusible of the crystalloids, diffusing fourteen times
+more rapidly than caromel, the corresponding colloid.
+He also showed that, in accordance with the general
+chemical rule, while colloids readily combine with crystalloids,
+bodies in the same condition manifest little or no
+tendency to chemical union. Hence, in osmose, where
+the membranes employed are invariably colloidal, the
+osmotic action is confined almost entirely to crystalloids,
+since they alone are capable of entering into that combination
+with the material of the septum on which the
+whole action depends.</p>
+
+<p>On the above principles Graham based a simple
+method of separating crystalloids from colloids, which he
+calls "dialysis," and which was a most valuable addition
+to the means of chemical analysis. A shallow tray, prepared
+by stretching parchment paper (an insoluble colloid)
+over a gutta-percha hoop, is the only apparatus re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>quired.
+The solution to be "dialyzed" is poured into
+this tray, which is then floated on pure water, whose
+volume should be eight or ten times greater than that of
+the solution. Under these conditions the crystalloids
+will diffuse through the porus septum into the water,
+leaving the colloids on the tray, and in the course of a
+few days a more or less complete separation of the two
+classes of bodies will have taken place. In this way
+arsenious acid and similar crystalloids may be separated
+from the colloidal materials with which, in the case of
+poisoning, they are usually found mixed in the animal
+juices or tissues.</p>
+
+<p>But, besides having these practical applications, the
+method of dialysis in the hands of Graham yielded the
+most startling results, developing an almost entirely new
+class of bodies, as the colloidal forms of our most familiar
+substances, and justifying the conclusion that the colloidal
+as well as the crystalline condition is an almost universal
+attribute of matter. Thus, he was able to obtain solutions
+in water of the colloidal states of aluminic, ferric,
+chromic, stannic, metastannic, titanic, molybdic, tungstic,
+and silicic hydrates, all of which gelatinize under definite
+conditions like a solution of glue. The wonderful nature
+of these facts can be thoroughly appreciated only by
+those familiar with the subject, but all may understand
+the surprise with which the chemist saw such hard, in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>soluble
+bodies as flint dissolved abundantly in water and
+converted into soft jellies. These facts are, without doubt,
+the most important contributions of Dr. Graham to pure
+chemistry.</p>
+
+<p>In this sketch of the scientific career of our late associate,
+we have followed the logical, rather than the chronological,
+order of events, hoping thus to render the relations
+of the different parts of his work more intelligible.
+It must be remembered, however, that the two lines of
+investigation we have distinguished were in fact inter-woven,
+and that the beautiful harmony which his completed
+life presents was the result, not of a preconceived
+plan, but of a constant devotion to truth, and a childlike
+faith, which unhesitatingly pressed forward whenever
+nature pointed out the way.</p>
+
+<p>Although the investigations of the phenomena connected
+with the molecular motion in gases and liquids
+were by far the most important of Dr. Graham's labors,
+he also contributed to chemistry many researches which
+can not be included under this head. Of these, which
+we may regard as his detached efforts, the most important
+was his investigation of the hydrates and other salts
+of phosphorus. It is true that the interpretation he
+gave of the results has been materially modified by the
+modern chemical philosophy, yet the facts which he established
+form an important part of the basis on which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+that philosophy rests. Indeed, it seems as if he almost
+anticipated the later doctrines of types and polybasic
+acids, and in none of his work did he show more discriminating
+observation or acute reasoning. A subsequent
+investigation on the condition of water in several
+crystalline salts and in the hydrates of sulphuric acid is
+equally remarkable. Lastly, Graham also made interesting
+observations on the combination of alcohol with
+salts, on the process of etherification, on the slow oxidation
+of phosphorus, and on the spontaneous inflammability
+of phosphureted hydrogen. It would not, however,
+be appropriate in this place to do more than
+enumerate the subjects of these less important studies;
+and we have therefore only aimed in this sketch to give
+a general view of the character of the field which this
+eminent student of nature chiefly cultivated, and to show
+how abundant was the harvest of truth which we owe to
+his faithful toil.</p>
+
+<p>Graham was not a voluminous writer. His scientific
+papers were all very brief, but comprehensive, and his
+"Elements of Chemistry" was his only large work.
+This was an admirable exposition of chemical physics,
+as well as of pure chemistry, and gave a more philosophical
+account of the theory of the galvanic battery than
+had previously appeared. Our late associate was fortunate
+in receiving during life a generous recognition of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+the value of his labors. His membership was sought by
+almost all the chief scientific societies of the world, and
+he enjoyed to a high degree the confidence and esteem
+of his associates. Indeed, he was singularly elevated
+above the petty jealousies and belittling quarrels which
+so often mar the beauty of a student's life, while the
+great loveliness and kindliness of his nature closely endeared
+him to his friends.</p>
+
+<p>In concluding, we must not forget to mention that
+most genial trait of Graham's character, his sympathy
+with young men, which gave him great influence as a
+teacher in the college with which he was long associated.
+There are many now prominent in the scientific world
+who have found in his encouragement the strongest incentive
+to perseverance, and in his approval and friendship
+the best reward of success.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="VI" id="VI"></a>VI.</h3>
+
+<h2>MEMOIR OF WILLIAM HALLOWES
+MILLER.</h2>
+
+<h4><i>Reprinted from the "Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts
+and Sciences," Vol. XVI, May 24, 1881.</i></h4>
+
+
+<p>William Hallowes Miller, who was elected Foreign
+Honorary Member of this Academy in the place of
+C. F. Naumann, May 26, 1874, died at his residence in
+Cambridge, England, on the 20th of May, 1880, at the
+age of seventy-nine, having been born at Velindre, in
+Wales, April 5, 1801. His life was singularly uneventful,
+even for a scholar. Graduating with mathematical
+honors at Cambridge in 1826, he became a fellow of his
+college (St. John's) in 1829, and was elected Professor
+of Mineralogy in the University in 1832. Under the influence
+of the calm and elegant associations of this ancient
+English university, Miller passed a long and tranquil life&mdash;crowded
+with useful labors, honored by the respect and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+love of his associates, and blessed by congenial family
+ties. This quiet student-life was exactly suited to his
+nature, which shunned the bustle and unrest of our
+modern world. For relaxation, even, he loved to seek the
+retired valleys of the Eastern Alps; and the description
+which he once gave to the writer, of himself sitting at
+the side of his wife amid the grand scenery, intent on
+developing crystallographic formul&aelig;, while the accomplished
+artist traced the magnificent outlines of the Dolomite
+mountains, was a beautiful idyl of science.</p>
+
+<p>Miller's activities, however, were not confined to the
+University. In 1838 he became a Fellow of the Royal
+Society, and in 1856 he was appointed its Foreign Secretary&mdash;a
+post for which he was eminently fitted, and which
+he filled for many years. In 1843 he was selected one
+of a committee to superintend the construction of the
+new Parliamentary standards of length and weight, to
+replace those which had been lost in the fire which consumed
+the Houses of Parliament in 1834, and to Professor
+Miller was confided the construction of the new
+standard of weight. His work on this important committee,
+described in an extended paper published in the
+"Philosophical Transactions" for 1856, was a model of
+conscientious investigation and scientific accuracy. Professor
+Miller was subsequently a member of a new Royal
+Commission for "examining into and reporting on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+state of the secondary standards, and for considering
+every question which could affect the primary, secondary,
+and local standards"; and in 1870 he was appointed a
+member of the "Commission Internationale du M&egrave;tre."
+His services on this commission were of great value, and
+it has been said that "there was no member whose opinions
+had greater weight in influencing a decision upon
+any intricate and delicate question."</p>
+
+<p>Valuable, however, as were Professor Miller's public
+services on these various commissions, his chief work was
+at the University. His teacher, Dr. William Whewell&mdash;afterward
+the Master of Trinity College&mdash;was his immediate
+predecessor in the Professorship of Mineralogy at
+Cambridge. This great scholar, whose encyclop&aelig;dic
+mind could not long be confined in so narrow a field,
+held the professorship only four years; but during this
+period he devoted himself with his usual enthusiasm to
+the study of crystallography, and he accomplished a most
+important work in attracting to the same study young
+Miller, who brought his mathematical training to its elucidation.
+It was the privilege of Professor Miller to
+accomplish a unique work, for the like of which a more
+advanced science, with its multiplicity of details, will
+offer few opportunities.</p>
+
+<p>The foundations of crystallography had been laid long
+before Miller's time. Ha&uuml;y is usually regarded as the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+founder of the science; for he first discovered the importance
+of cleavage, and classed the known facts under
+a definite system. Taking cleavage as his guide, and
+assuming that the forms of cleavage were not only the
+<i>primitive forms</i> of crystals as a whole, but also the forms
+of their <i>integrant molecules</i>, he endeavored to show that
+all secondary forms might be derived from a few primary
+forms, regarded as elements of nature, by means of <i>decrements</i>
+of molecules at their edges. In like manner
+he showed that all the forms of a given mineral, like
+fluor-spar or calcite, might be built up from the integrant
+molecules by skillfully placing together the primitive
+forms. Ha&uuml;y's dissection of crystals, in a manner which
+appeared to lead to their ultimate crystalline elements,
+gained for his system great popular attention and applause.
+The system was developed with great perspicuity
+and completeness in a work remarkable for the vivacity
+of its style and the felicity of its illustration. Moreover,
+a simple mathematical expression was given to the system,
+and the notation which Ha&uuml;y invented to express the
+relation of the secondary to the primary forms, as modified
+and improved by L&egrave;vy, is still used by the French
+mineralogists.</p>
+
+<p>The system of Ha&uuml;y, however, was highly artificial,
+and only prepared the way for a simpler and more general
+expression of the facts. The German crystallogra<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>pher,
+Weiss, seems to be the first to have recognized the
+truth that the decrements of Ha&uuml;y were merely a mechanical
+mode of representing the fact that all the secondary
+faces of a crystal make intercepts on the edges of
+the primitive form which are simple multiples of each
+other; and, this general conception once gained, it was
+soon seen that these ratios could be as simply measured
+on the axes of symmetry of the crystal as on the edges
+of the fundamental forms; and, moreover, that, when
+crystal forms are viewed in their relation to these axes, a
+more general law becomes evident, and the artificial distinction
+between primary and secondary forms disappears.</p>
+
+<p>Thus became slowly evolved the conception of a
+crystal as a group of similar planes symmetrically disposed
+around certain definite and obvious systems of
+axes, and so placed that the intercepts, or parameters, on
+these axes bore to each other a simple numerical ratio.
+Representing by <i>a</i> : <i>b</i> : <i>c</i> the ratio of the intercepts of a
+plane on the three axes of a crystal of a given substance,
+then the intercepts of every other plane of this, or of any
+other crystal of the same substance, conform to the general
+proportion <i>m</i> <i>a</i> : <i>n</i> <i>b</i> : <i>p</i> <i>c</i>, in which <i>m</i>, <i>n</i>, <i>p</i> are three
+simple whole numbers. This simple notation, devised
+by Weiss, expressed the fundamental law of crystallography;
+and the conception of a crystal as a system
+of planes, symmetrically distributed according to this law,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+was a great advance beyond the decrements of Ha&uuml;y, an
+advance not unlike that of astronomy from the system of
+vortices to the law of gravitation. Yet, as the mechanism
+of vortices was a natural prelude to the law of Newton,
+so the decrements of Ha&uuml;y prepared the way for the
+wider views of the German crystallographers.</p>
+
+<p>Whether Weiss or Mohs contributed most to advance
+crystallography to its more philosophical stage, it is not
+important here to inquire. Each of these eminent scholars
+did an important work in developing and diffusing
+the larger ideas, and in showing by their investigations
+that the facts of nature corresponded to the new conceptions.
+But to Carl Friedrich Naumann, Professor at the
+time in the "Bergakademie zu Freiberg," belongs the
+merit of first developing a complete system of theoretical
+crystallography based on the laws of symmetry and
+axial ratios. His "Lehrbuch der reinen und angewandten
+Krystallographie," published in two volumes at Leipzig
+in 1830, was a remarkable production, and seemed to
+grasp the whole theory of the external forms of crystals.
+Naumann used the obvious and direct methods of analytical
+geometry to express the quantitative relations between
+the parts of a crystal; and, although his methods
+are often unnecessarily prolix and his notation awkward,
+his formul&aelig; are well adapted to calculation, and easily intelligible
+to persons moderately disciplined in mathematics.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But, however comprehensive and perfect in its details,
+the system of Naumann was cumbrous, and lacked
+elegance of mathematical form. This arose chiefly from
+the fact that the old methods of analytical geometry
+were unsuited to the problems of crystallography; but it
+resulted also from a habit of the German mind to dwell
+on details and give importance to systems of classification.
+To Naumann the six crystalline systems were as
+much realities of nature as were the forms of the integrant
+molecules to Ha&uuml;y, and he failed to grasp the larger
+thought which includes all partial systems in one comprehensive
+plan.</p>
+
+<p>Our late colleague, Professor Miller, on the other
+hand, had that power of mathematical generalization
+which enabled him to properly subordinate the parts to
+the whole, and to develop a system of mathematical crystallography
+of such simplicity and beauty of form that it
+leaves little to be desired. This was the great work of
+his life, and a work worthy of the university which had
+produced the "Principia." It was published in 1839,
+under the title, "A Treatise on Crystallography"; and
+in 1863 the substance of the work was reproduced in a
+more perfect form, still more condensed and generalized,
+in a thin volume of only eighty-six pages, which the author
+modestly called, "A Tract on Crystallography."</p>
+
+<p>Miller began his study of crystallography with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+same materials as Naumann; but, in addition, he adopted
+the beautiful method of Franz Ernst Neumann of referring
+the faces of a crystal to the surface of a circumscribed
+sphere by means of radii drawn perpendicular to
+the faces. The points where the radii meet the spherical
+surface are the poles of the faces, and the arcs of
+great circles connecting these poles may obviously be
+used as a measure of the angles between the crystal faces.
+This invention of Neumann's was the germ of Miller's
+system of crystallography, for it enabled the English
+mathematician to apply the elegant and compendious
+methods of spherical trigonometry to the solution of
+crystallographic problems; and Professor Miller always
+expressed his great indebtedness to Neumann, not only
+for this simple mode of defining the position of the faces
+of a crystal, but also for his method of representing the
+relative position of the poles of the faces on a plane surface
+by a beautiful application of the methods of stereo-graphic
+and gnomonic projection. This method of representing
+a crystal shows very clearly the relations of the
+parts, and was undoubtedly of great aid to Miller in assisting
+him to generalize his deductions.</p>
+
+<p>From the outset, Professor Miller apprehended more
+clearly than any previous writer the all-embracing scope
+of the great law of crystallography. He opens his treatise
+with its enunciation, and, from this law as the funda<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>mental
+principle of the subject, the whole of his system
+of crystallography is logically developed. Beyond this,
+all that is peculiar to Miller's system is involved in two
+or three general theorems. The rest of his treatise consists
+of deductions from these principles and their application
+to particular cases.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most important of these principles, and
+one which in the treatise is involved in the enunciation
+of the fundamental law of crystallography, is in its
+essence nothing but an analytical device. As we have
+already stated, Weiss had shown that, if <i>a</i> : <i>b</i> : <i>c</i> represent
+the ratio of the intercepts of any plane of a crystal on
+the three axes <i>x</i>, <i>y</i>, and <i>z</i>, respectively, the intercepts of
+any other possible plane must satisfy the proportion&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>A</i> : <i>B</i> : <i>C</i> = <i>m a</i> : <i>n b</i> : <i>p c</i>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>in which <i>m</i>, <i>n</i>, and <i>p</i> are simple whole numbers. The
+irrational values <i>a</i>, <i>b</i>, and <i>c</i> are fundamental magnitudes
+for every crystalline substance;<a name="FNanchor_G_7" id="FNanchor_G_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_G_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a> and Miller called these
+relative magnitudes the parameters of the crystals, while
+he called the whole numbers, <i>m</i>, <i>n</i>, and <i>p</i>, the indices of
+the respective planes. But, instead of writing the pro<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>portion
+which expresses the law of crystallography as
+above, he gave to it a slightly different form, thus:</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'><i>A</i> : <i>B</i> : <i>C</i> =</td>
+<td align='left'>1<br /><span class="o"><i>h</i></span></td><td align='left'><i>a</i> : </td>
+<td align='left'>1<br /><span class="o"><i>k</i></span></td><td align='left'><i>b</i> : </td>
+<td align='left'>1<br /><span class="o"><i>l</i>&nbsp;</span></td><td align='left'><i>c</i>,</td>
+</tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>and used in his system for the indices of a plane the
+values <i>h</i> : <i>k</i> : <i>l</i>, which are also in the ratio of whole numbers,
+and usually of simpler whole numbers than <i>m</i> : <i>n</i> : <i>p</i>.
+This seems a small difference; for <i>h k l</i> in the last proportion
+are obviously the reciprocals of <i>m n p</i> in the first;
+but the difference, small as it is, causes a wonderful simplification
+of the formul&aelig; which express the relations between
+the parts of a crystal. From the last proportion we
+derive at once</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="">
+<tr>
+<td align='left'>1<br /><span class="o"><i>h</i></span></td><td align='left'> &middot; </td><td align='left'><i>a</i><br /><span class="o"><i>A</i></span></td><td align='left'> = </td>
+<td align='left'>1<br /><span class="o"><i>k</i></span></td><td align='left'> &middot; </td><td align='left'><i>b</i><br /><span class="o"><i>B</i></span></td><td align='left'> = </td>
+<td align='left'>1<br /><span class="o"><i>l</i>&nbsp;</span></td><td align='left'> &middot; </td><td align='left'><i>c</i><br /><span class="o"><i>C</i></span></td><td align='left'>,</td>
+</tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>which is the form in which Miller stated his fundamental
+law.</p>
+
+<p>If <i>P</i> represents the "pole" of a face whose "indices"
+are <i>h k l</i>, that is, represents the point where the radius
+drawn normal to the face meets the surface of the sphere
+circumscribed around the crystal (the sphere of projection,
+as it is called), and if <i>X</i>, <i>Y</i>, <i>Z</i> represent the points
+where the axes of the crystal meet the same spherical
+surface,<a name="FNanchor_H_8" id="FNanchor_H_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_H_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a> then it is evident that <i>X Y</i>, <i>X Z</i>, and <i>Y Z</i> are
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>the arcs of great circles, which measure the inclination of
+the axes to each other, and that <i>P X</i>, <i>P Y</i>, and <i>P Z</i> are
+arcs of other great circles, which measure the inclination
+of the plane (<i>h</i> <i>k</i> <i>l</i>) on planes normal to the respective axes;
+and, also, that these several arcs form the sides of spherical
+triangles thus drawn on the sphere of projection.
+Now, it is very easily shown that</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="">
+<tr>
+<td align='left'><i>a</i><br /><span class="o"><i>h</i></span></td><td align='left'> cos <i>P X</i></td><td align='left'> = </td>
+<td align='left'><i>b</i><br /><span class="o"><i>k</i></span></td><td align='left'> cos <i>P Y</i></td><td align='left'> = </td>
+<td align='left'><i>c</i><br /><span class="o"><i>l</i>&nbsp;</span></td><td align='left'> cos <i>P Z</i>,</td>
+</tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>and by means of this theorem we are able to reduce a
+great many problems of crystallography to the solution of
+spherical triangles.</p>
+
+<p>Another very large class of problems in crystallography
+is based on the relation of faces in a zone; that is, of
+faces which are all parallel to one line called the zone
+axis, and whose mutual intersections, therefore, are all
+parallel to each other. If, now, <i>h</i> <i>k</i> <i>l</i> and <i>p</i> <i>q</i> <i>r</i> are the
+indices of any two planes of a zone (not parallel to each
+other), any other plane in the same zone must fulfill the
+condition expressed by the simple equation</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+u <i>u</i> + v <i>v</i> + w <i>w</i> = <i>o</i>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>where <i>u</i> <i>v</i> and <i>w</i> are the indices of the third plane, and
+u v w have the values</p>
+
+<p class="center">u = <i>k r</i> &minus; <i>l q</i> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; v = <i>l p</i> &minus; <i>h r</i> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; w = <i>h q</i> &minus; <i>k p</i>.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Since <i>h</i> <i>k</i> <i>l</i> and <i>p</i> <i>q</i> <i>r</i> are whole numbers, it is evident that
+u v w must also be whole numbers, and these quantities
+are called the indices of the zone. The three whole numbers
+which are the indices of a plane when written in succession
+serve as a very convenient symbol of that plane,
+and represent to the crystallographer all its relations;
+and in like manner Miller used the indices of a zone inclosed
+in brackets as the symbol of that zone. Thus 123,
+531, 010 are symbols of planes, and [111], [213], [001]
+symbols of zones.</p>
+
+<p>An additional theorem enables us to calculate the
+symbols of a fourth plane in a zone when the angular
+distances between the four planes and the symbols of
+three of them are known, but this problem can not be
+made intelligible with a few words.</p>
+
+<p>The few propositions to which we have referred involve
+all that is essential and peculiar to the system of
+Professor Miller. These given, and the rest could be at
+once developed by any scholar who was familiar with the
+facts of crystallography; and the circumstance that its
+essential features can be so briefly stated is sufficient to
+show how exceedingly simple the system is. At the same
+time, it is wonderfully comprehensive, and the student
+who has mastered it feels that it presents to him in one
+grand view the entire scheme of crystal forms, and that
+it greatly helps him to comprehend the scheme as a whole,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+and not simply as the sum of certain distinct parts. So
+felt Professor Miller himself; and, while he regarded the
+six systems of crystals of the German crystallographers
+as natural divisions of the field, he considered that they
+were bounded by artificial lines which have no deeper
+significance than the boundary lines on a map. How
+great the unfolding of the science from Ha&uuml;y to Miller,
+and yet now we can see the great fundamental ideas shining
+through the obscurity from the first! What we now
+call the parameters of a crystal were to Ha&uuml;y the fundamental
+dimensions of his "integrant molecules," our indices
+were his "decrements," and our conceptions of symmetry
+his "fundamental forms." There has been nothing
+peculiar, however, in the growth of crystallography. This
+growth has followed the usual order of science, and here
+as elsewhere the early, gross, material conceptions have
+been the stepping-stones by which men rose to higher
+things. In sciences like chemistry, which are obviously
+still in the earlier stages of their development, it would
+be well if students would bear in mind this truth of history,
+and not attach undue importance to structural formul&aelig;
+and similar mechanical devices, which, although
+useful for aiding the memory, are simply hindrances to
+progress as soon as the necessity of such assistance is
+passed. And, when the life of a great master of science
+has ended, it is well to look back over the road he has<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+traveled, and, while we take courage in his success, consider
+well the lesson which his experience has to teach;
+and, as progress in this world's knowledge has ever been
+from the gross to the spiritual, may we not rejoice as those
+who have a great hope?</p>
+
+<p>Although the exceeding merit of the "Treatise on
+Crystallography" casts into the shade all that was subordinate,
+we must not omit to mention that Professor Miller
+published an early work on hydrostatics, and numerous
+shorter papers on mineralogy and physics, which
+were all valuable, and constantly contained important additions
+to knowledge. Moreover, the "New Edition of
+Phillips's Mineralogy," which he published in 1852 in
+connection with H. J. Brooke, owed its chief value to a
+mass of crystallographic observations which he had made
+with his usual accuracy and patience during many years,
+and there tabulated in his concise manner. As has been
+said by one of his associates in the Royal Society, "it is
+a monument to Miller's name, although he almost expunged
+that name from it."<a name="FNanchor_I_9" id="FNanchor_I_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_I_9" class="fnanchor">[I]</a> It is due to Professor
+Miller's memory that his works should be collated, and
+especially that by a suitable commentary his "Tract on
+Crystallography" should be made accessible to the great
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>body of the students of physical science, who have not,
+as a rule, the ability or training which enables them to
+apprehend a generalization when solely expressed in mathematical
+terms. The very merits of Professor Miller's
+book as a scientific work render it very difficult to the
+average student, although it only involves the simplest
+forms of algebra and trigonometry.</p>
+
+<p>Independence, breadth, accuracy, simplicity, humility,
+courtesy, are luminous words which express the character
+of Professor Miller. In his genial presence the young
+student felt encouraged to express his immature thoughts,
+which were sure to be treated with consideration, while
+from a wealth of knowledge the great master made the
+error evident by making the truth resplendent. It was
+the greatest satisfaction to the inexperienced investigator
+when his observations had been confirmed by Professor
+Miller, and he was never made to feel discouraged when
+his mistakes were corrected. The writer of this notice
+regards it as one of the great privileges of his youth, and
+one of the most important elements of his education, to
+have been the recipient of the courtesies and counsel of
+three great English men of science, who have always been
+"his own ideal knights," and these noble knights were
+Faraday, Graham, and Miller.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="VII" id="VII"></a>VII.</h3>
+
+<h2>WILLIAM BARTON ROGERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>William Barton Rogers was born at Philadelphia,
+on the 7th of December, 1804. His father, Patrick
+Kerr Rogers, was a native of Newton Stewart, in the
+north of Ireland; but while a student at Trinity College,
+Dublin, becoming an object of suspicion on account of
+his sympathy with the Rebellion of 1798, he emigrated
+to this country, and finished his education in the University
+of Pennsylvania, at Philadelphia, where he
+received the degree of Doctor of Medicine.</p>
+
+<p>Here he married Hannah Blythe, a Scotch lady&mdash;who
+was at the time living with her aunt, Mrs. Ramsay&mdash;and
+settled himself in his profession in a house on
+Ninth Street, opposite to the University; and in this
+house William B. Rogers was born. He was the second
+of four sons&mdash;James, William, Henry, and Robert&mdash;all
+of whom became distinguished as men of science.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Patrick Kerr Rogers, finding that his prospects of
+medical practice in Philadelphia had been lessened in
+consequence of a protracted absence in Ireland, made
+necessary by the death of his father, removed to Baltimore;
+but soon afterward accepted the Professorship of
+Chemistry and Physics in William and Mary College,
+Virginia, made vacant by the resignation of the late
+Robert Hare; and it is a fact worthy of notice that,
+while he succeeded Dr. Hare at William and Mary College,
+his eldest son, James, succeeded Dr. Hare at the
+University of Pennsylvania. At William and Mary College
+the four brothers Rogers were educated; and on the
+death of the father, at Ellicott Mills, in 1828, William
+B. Rogers succeeded to the professorship thus made vacant.</p>
+
+<p>He had already earned a reputation as a teacher by a
+course of lectures before the Maryland Institute in Baltimore
+during the previous year, and after his appointment
+at once entered on his career as a scientific investigator.
+At this period he published a paper on "Dew,"
+and, in connection with his brother Henry, another paper
+on the "Voltaic Battery"&mdash;both subjects directly connected
+with his professorship. But his attention was
+early directed to questions of chemical geology; and he
+wrote, while at William and Mary College, a series of
+articles for the "Farmer's Register" on the "Green<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+Sands and Marls of Eastern Virginia," and their value as
+fertilizers. Next we find the young professor going before
+the Legislature of Virginia, and, while modestly presenting
+his own discoveries, making them the occasion
+for urging upon that body the importance of a systematic
+geological survey for developing the resources of the
+State. So great was the scientific reputation that Professor
+Rogers early acquired by such services, that in
+1835 he was called to fill the important Professorship of
+Natural Philosophy and Geology in the University of
+Virginia; and during the same year he was appointed
+State Geologist of Virginia, and began those important
+investigations which will always associate his name with
+American geology.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Rogers remained at the head of the Geological
+Survey of Virginia until it was discontinued, in
+1842, and published a series of very valuable annual reports.
+As was anticipated, the survey led to a large
+accumulation of material, and to numerous discoveries of
+great local importance. As this was one of the earliest
+geological surveys undertaken in the United States, its
+directors had in great measure to devise the methods and
+lay out the plans of investigation which have since become
+general. This is not the place, however, for such
+details; but there are four or five general results of Professor
+Rogers's geological work at this period which have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+exerted a permanent influence on geological science, and
+which should therefore be briefly noticed. Some of
+these results were first published in the "American
+Journal of Science"; others were originally presented
+to the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists,
+and published in its "Transactions." Professor
+Rogers took a great interest in the organization of this
+association in 1840, presided over its meeting in 1845,
+and again, two years later, when it was expanded into
+the American Association for the Advancement of Science.</p>
+
+<p>In connection with his brother Robert, Professor
+William B. Rogers was the first to investigate the solvent
+action of water&mdash;especially when charged with carbonic
+acid&mdash;on various minerals and rocks; and by showing
+the extent of this action in nature, and its influence
+in the formation of mineral deposits of various kinds,
+he was one of the first to observe and interpret the important
+class of facts which are the basis of chemical
+geology.</p>
+
+<p>Another important result of Professor Rogers's geological
+work was to show that the condition of any coal-bed
+stands in a close genetic relation to the amount of
+disturbance to which the enclosing strata have been submitted,
+the coal becoming harder and containing less
+volatile matter as the evidence of disturbance increases.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+This generalization, which seems to us now almost self-evident&mdash;understanding,
+as we do, more of the history
+of the formation of coal&mdash;was with Professor Rogers an
+induction from a great mass of observed facts.</p>
+
+<p>By far, however, the most memorable contribution of
+Professor Rogers to geology was that made in connection
+with Henry D. Rogers, in a paper entitled "The Laws
+of Structure of the more Disturbed Zones of the Earth's
+Crust," presented by the two brothers at the meeting of
+the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists,
+held at Boston in 1842. This paper was the first presentation
+of what may be called in brief the "Wave Theory
+of Mountain Chains." This theory was deduced by
+the brothers Rogers from an extended study of the Appalachian
+Chain in Pennsylvania and Virginia, and was
+supported by numerous geological sections and by a great
+mass of facts. The hypothesis which they offered as an
+explanation of the origin of the great mountain waves
+may not be generally received; but the general fact, that
+the structure of mountain chains is alike in all the essential
+features which the brothers Rogers first pointed out,
+has been confirmed by the observations of Murchison in
+the Ural, of Darwin in the Andes, and of the Swiss
+geologists in the Alps. "In the Appalachians the wave
+structure is very simple, and the same is true in all corrugated
+districts where the crust movements have been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+simple, and have acted in one direction only. But where
+the elevating forces have acted in different directions at
+different times, causing interference of waves like a
+chopped sea, as in the Swiss Alps and the mountains
+of Wales or Cumberland, the undulations are disguised,
+and are with extreme difficulty made out." The wave
+theory of mountain chains was the first important contribution
+to dynamical and structural geology which had
+been brought forward in this country. It excited at the
+time great interest, as well from the novelty of the views
+as from the eloquence with which they were set forth;
+and to-day it is still regarded as one of the most important
+advances in orographic geology.</p>
+
+<p>A marked feature of mountain regions is that rupturing
+of the strata called faults; and another of the striking
+geological generalizations of the brothers Rogers is
+what may be called the law of the distribution of faults.
+They showed that faults do not occur on gentle waves,
+but in the most compressed flexures of the mountain
+chains, which in the act of moving have snapped or given
+way at the summit where the bend is sharpest, the less
+inclined side being shoved up on the plane of the fault,
+this plane being generally parallel to, if it does not coincide
+with, the axis plane; and, further, that "the direction
+of these faults generally follows the run of the line
+of elevation of the mountains, the length and vertical<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+displacement depending on the strength of the disturbing
+force."</p>
+
+<p>The last of the general geological results to which we
+referred above was published under the name of William
+B. Rogers only. It was based on the observed positions
+of more than fifty thermal springs in the Appalachian
+belt, occurring in an area of about fifteen thousand
+square miles, which were shown to issue from
+anticlinal axes and faults, or from points very near such
+lines; and in connection with these springs it was further
+shown that there was a great preponderance of nitrogen
+in the gases which the waters held in solution.</p>
+
+<p>It must be remembered that, during the time when
+this geological work was accomplished, Professor Rogers
+was an active teacher in the University of Virginia, giving
+through a large part of the year almost daily lectures
+either on physics or geology. Those who met him in
+his after-life in various relations in Boston, and were
+often charmed by his wonderful power of scientific exposition,
+can readily understand the effect he must have
+produced, when in the prime of manhood, upon the enthusiastic
+youths who were brought under his influence.
+His lecture-room was always thronged. As one of his
+former students writes, "All the aisles would be filled,
+and even the windows crowded from the outside. In
+one instance I remember the crowd had assembled long<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+before the hour named for the lecture, and so filled the
+hall that the professor could only gain admittance through
+a side entrance leading from the rear of the hall through
+the apparatus-room. These facts show how he was regarded
+by the students of the University of Virginia.
+His manner of presenting the commonest subject in science&mdash;clothing
+his thoughts, as he always did, with a
+marvelous fluency and clearness of expression and
+beauty of diction&mdash;caused the warmest admiration, and
+often aroused the excitable nature of Southern youths to
+the exhibition of enthusiastic demonstrations of approbation.
+Throughout Virginia, and indeed the entire South,
+his former students are scattered, who even now regard it
+as one of the highest privileges of their lives to have attended
+his lectures."</p>
+
+<p>Such was the impression which Professor Rogers left
+at the University of Virginia, that, when he returned,
+thirty-five years later, to aid in the celebration of the
+semi-centennial, he was met with a perfect ovation. Although
+the memories of the civil war, which had intervened,
+and Professor Rogers's known sympathies with
+the Northern cause, might well have damped enthusiasm,
+yet the presence of the highly honored teacher was sufficient
+to rekindle the former admiration; and, in the
+language of a contemporary Virginia newspaper, "the
+old students beheld before them the same William B.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+Rogers who thirty-five years before had held them spellbound
+in his class of natural philosophy; and, as the great
+orator warmed up, these men forgot their age; they were
+again young, and showed their enthusiasm as wildly as
+when, in days of yore, enraptured by his eloquence, they
+made the lecture-room of the University ring with their
+applause."</p>
+
+<p>Besides his geological papers, Professor Rogers published,
+while at the University of Virginia, a number of
+important chemical contributions, relating chiefly to new
+and improved methods in chemical analysis and research.
+These papers were published in connection with his
+youngest brother, Robert E. Rogers, now become his
+colleague as Professor of Chemistry and Materia Medica
+in the University; and such were the singularly intimate
+relations between the brothers that it is often impossible
+to dissociate their scientific work. Among these were
+papers "On a New Process for obtaining Pure Chlorine";
+"A New Process for obtaining Formic Acid,
+Aldehyde, etc."; "On the Oxidation of the Diamond in
+the Liquid Way"; "On New Instruments and Processes
+for the Analysis of the Carbonates"; "On the Absorption
+of Carbonic Acid by Liquids"; besides the extended
+investigation "On the Decomposition of Minerals
+and Rocks by Carbonated and Meteoric Waters," to
+which we have referred above. There was also at this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+time a large amount of chemical work constantly on
+hand in connection with the Geological Survey, such as
+analyses of mineral waters, ores, and the like. Moreover,
+while at the University of Virginia, Professor
+Rogers published a short treatise on "The Strength of
+Materials," and a volume on "The Elements of Mechanics,"&mdash;books
+which, though long out of print, were very
+useful text-books in their day, and are marked by the
+clearness of style and felicity of explanation for which
+the author was so distinguished.</p>
+
+<p>The year 1853 formed a turning-point in Professor
+Rogers's life. Four years previously he had married
+Miss Emma Savage, daughter of Hon. James Savage, of
+Boston, the well-known author of the "New England
+Genealogical Dictionary," and President of the Massachusetts
+Historical Society. This connection proved to be
+the crowning blessing of his life. Mrs. Rogers, by her energy,
+her intelligence, her cheerful equanimity, her unfailing
+sympathy, became the promoter of his labors, the ornament
+and solace of his middle life, and the devoted companion
+and support of his declining years. Immediately
+after his marriage, June 20, 1849, he visited Europe with
+his wife, and was present at the meeting of the British
+Association for the Advancement of Science, held that
+year at Birmingham, where he was received with great
+warmth, and made a most marked impression. Return<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>ing
+home in the autumn, Professor Rogers resumed his
+work at the University of Virginia; but the new family
+relations which had been established led in 1853 to the
+transfer of his residence to Boston, where a quite different,
+but even a more important, sphere of usefulness
+surrounded him. His wide scientific reputation, as well
+as his family connection, assured him a warm welcome in
+the most cultivated circles of Boston society, where his
+strength of character, his power of imparting knowledge,
+and his genial manners, soon commanded universal respect
+and admiration. He at once took an active part in
+the various scientific interests of the city. From 1845
+he had been a Fellow of this Academy;<a name="FNanchor_J_10" id="FNanchor_J_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_J_10" class="fnanchor">[J]</a> and after taking
+up his residence among us he was a frequent attendant
+at our meetings, often took part in our proceedings, became
+a member of our Council, and from 1863 to 1869
+acted as our Corresponding Secretary. He took a similar
+interest in the Boston Society of Natural History. He
+was a member, and for many years the President, of the
+Thursday Evening Scientific Club, to which he imparted
+new life and vigor, and which was rendered by him an
+important field of influence. The members who were
+associated with him in that club will never forget those
+masterly expositions of recent advances in physical
+sci<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>ence; and will remember that, while he made clear their
+technical importance to the wealthy business men around
+him, he never failed to impress his auditors with the
+worth and dignity of scientific culture.</p>
+
+<p>During the earlier years of his residence in Boston,
+Professor Rogers occupied himself with a number of
+scientific problems, chiefly physical. He studied the
+variations of ozone (or of what was then regarded as
+ozone) in the atmosphere at the time when this subject
+was exciting great attention. He was greatly interested
+in the improvements of the Ruhmkorff Coil made
+by Mr. E. S. Ritchie; and in this connection published
+a paper on the "Actinism of the Electric Discharge in
+Vacuum Tubes." A study of the phenomena of binocular
+vision led to a paper entitled "Experiments disproving
+by the Binocular Combination of Visual Spectra
+Brewster's Theory of Successive Combinations of
+Corresponding Points." A paper discussing the phenomena
+of smoke rings and rotating rings in liquids
+appeared in the "American Journal of Science" for
+1858, with the description of a very simple but effective
+apparatus by which the phenomena would be readily
+reproduced. In this paper Professor Rogers anticipated
+some of the later results of Helmholtz and Sir William
+Thomson. In the same year an ingenious illustration
+of the properties of sonorous flames was exhibited to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+the Thursday Evening Club above mentioned, in which
+Professor Rogers anticipated Count Schafgottsch in the
+invention of a beautiful optical proof of the discontinuity
+of the singing hydrogen flame.</p>
+
+<p>In 1861 Professor Rogers accepted from Governor
+Andrew the office of Inspector of Gas and Gas-Meters
+for the State of Massachusetts, and organized a system
+of inspection in which he aimed to apply the latest
+scientific knowledge to this work; and in a visit he
+again made to Europe in 1864 he presented, at the
+meeting of the British Association at Bath, a paper
+entitled "An Account of Apparatus and Processes for
+Chemical and Photometrical Testing of Illuminating Gas."</p>
+
+<p>During this period he gave several courses of lectures
+before the Lowell Institute of Boston, which were
+listened to with the greatest enthusiasm, and served
+very greatly to extend Professor Rogers's reputation
+in this community. Night after night, crowded audiences,
+consisting chiefly of teachers and working-people,
+were spellbound by his wonderful power of exposition
+and illustration. There was a great deal more in Professor
+Rogers's presentation of a subject than felicity
+of expression, beauty of language, choice of epithets, or
+significance of gesture. He had a power of marshaling
+facts, and bringing them all to bear on the point
+he desired to illustrate, which rendered the relations<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+of his subject as clear as day. In listening to this
+powerful oratory, one only felt that it might have had,
+if not a more useful, still a more ambitious aim; for
+less power has moved senates and determined the destinies
+of empires.</p>
+
+<p>The interest in Professor Rogers's lectures was not
+excited solely, however, by the charm of his eloquence;
+for, although such was the felicity of his presentations,
+and such the vividness of his descriptions, that he could
+often dispense with the material aids so essential to
+most teachers, yet when the means of illustration were
+at his command he showed his power quite as much in
+the adaptation of experiments as in the choice of language.
+He well knew that experiments, to be effective,
+must be simple and to the point; and he also knew
+how to impress his audience with the beauty of the
+phenomena and with the grandeur of the powers of
+nature. He always seemed to enjoy any elegant or
+striking illustration of a physical principle even more
+than his auditors, and it was delightful to see the enthusiasm
+which he felt over the simplest phenomena
+of science when presented in a novel way.</p>
+
+<p>We come now to the crowning and greatest work
+of Professor Rogers's life, the founding of the Massachusetts
+Institute of Technology&mdash;an achievement so
+important in its results, so far-reaching in its prospects,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+and so complete in its details, that it overshadows all
+else. A great preacher has said that "every man's
+life is a plan of God's." The faithful workman can
+only make the best use of the opportunities which
+every day offers; but he may be confident that work
+faithfully done will not be for naught, and must trustingly
+leave the issue to a higher power. Little did
+young Rogers think, when he began to teach in Virginia,
+that he was to be the founder of a great institution
+in the State of Massachusetts; and yet we can
+now see that the whole work of his life was a preparation
+for this noble destiny. The very eloquence he so
+early acquired was to be his great tool; his work on
+the Geological Survey gave him a national reputation
+which was an essential condition of success; his life at
+the University of Virginia, where he was untrammeled
+by the traditions of the older universities, enabled him
+to mature the practical methods of scientific teaching
+which were to commend the future institution to a
+working community; and, most of all, the force of character
+and large humanity developed by his varied experience
+with the world were to give him the power,
+even in the conservative State of his late adoption, to
+mold legislators and men of affairs to his wise designs.</p>
+
+<p>It would be out of place, as it would be unnecessary,
+to dwell in this connection on the various stages in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+development of the Institute of Technology. The facts
+are very generally known in this community, and the
+story has been already well told. The conception was
+by no means a sudden inspiration, but was slowly
+matured out of a far more general and less specific plan,
+originating in a committee of large-minded citizens of
+Boston, who, in 1859, and again in 1860, petitioned the
+Legislature of Massachusetts to set apart a small portion
+of the land reclaimed from the Back Bay "for the use
+of such scientific, industrial, and fine art institutions as
+may associate together for the public good." The large
+scheme failed; but from the failure arose two institutions
+which are the honor and pride of Boston&mdash;the
+Museum of Fine Arts and the Institute of Technology.
+In the further development of the Museum of Fine Arts,
+Professor Rogers had only a secondary influence; but
+one of his memorials to the Legislature contains a most
+eloquent statement, often quoted, of the value of the fine
+arts in education, which attests at once the breadth of his
+culture and the largeness of his sympathies.</p>
+
+<p>Although the committee of gentlemen above referred
+to had failed to carry out their general plan, yet the discussions
+to which it gave rise had developed such an
+interest in the establishment of an institution to be devoted
+to industrial science and education that they determined
+upon taking the preliminary steps toward the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+organization of such an institution. A sub-committee
+was charged with preparing a plan; and the result was
+a document, written by Professor Rogers, entitled "Objects
+and Plan of an Institute of Technology." That
+document gave birth to the Massachusetts Institute of
+Technology, for it enlisted sufficient interest to authorize
+the committee to go forward. A charter with a conditional
+grant of land was obtained from the Legislature in
+1861, and the institution was definitely organized, and
+Professor Rogers appointed President, April 8, 1862.
+Still, the final plans were not matured, and it was not
+until May 30, 1864, that the government of the new
+institution adopted the report prepared by its president,
+entitled "Scope and Plan of the School of Industrial
+Science of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,"
+which Dr. Runkle has called the "intellectual charter"
+of the institution, and which he states "has been followed
+in all essential points to this very day." In striking
+confirmation of what we have written above, Dr.
+Runkle further says:</p>
+
+<p>"In this document we see more clearly the breadth,
+depth, and variety of Professor Rogers's scientific knowledge,
+and his large experience in college teaching and
+discipline. It needed just this combination of acquirements
+and experience to put his conceptions into working
+shape, to group together those studies and exercises<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+which naturally and properly belong to each professional
+course, and thus enable others to see the guiding-lines
+which must direct and limit their work in its relations to
+the demands of other departments....</p>
+
+<p>"The experimental element in our school&mdash;a feature
+which has been widely recognized as characteristic&mdash;is
+undoubtedly due to the stress and distinctness given to
+it in the 'Scope and Plan.' In our discipline we must
+also give credit to the tact and large-heartedness of Professor
+Rogers&mdash;in the fact that we are entirely free from
+all petty rules and regulations relating to conduct, free
+from all antagonism between teachers and students."</p>
+
+<p>The associates of Professor Rogers in this Academy&mdash;many
+of them his associates also in the Institute of Technology,
+or in the Society of Arts, which was so important
+a feature of the organization&mdash;will remember with
+what admiration they watched the indefatigable care
+with which its ever active president fostered the young
+life of the institution he had created. They know how,
+during the earlier years, he bore the whole weight of the
+responsibility of the trust he had voluntarily and unselfishly
+assumed for the public good; how, while by his
+personal influence obtaining means for the daily support
+of the school, he gave a great part of the instruction, and
+extended a personal regard to every individual student
+committed to his charge. They recall with what wis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>dom,
+skill, tact, and patience he directed the increasing
+means and expanding scope of the now vigorous institution,
+overcoming obstacles, reconciling differences, and
+ingratiating public favor. They will never forget how,
+when the great depression succeeded the unhealthy business
+activity caused by the civil war, during which the
+institution had its rise, the powerful influence of its great
+leader was able to conduct it safely through the financial
+storm. They greatly grieved when, in the autumn of
+1868, the great man who had accomplished so much, but
+on whom so much depended, his nerves fatigued by care
+and overwork, was obliged to transfer the leadership to
+a younger man; and ten years later were correspondingly
+rejoiced to see the honored chief come again to the
+front, with his mental power unimpaired, and with adequate
+strength to use his well-earned influence to secure
+those endowments which the increased life of the institution
+required; and they rejoiced with him when he
+was able to transfer to a worthy successor the completed
+edifice, well established and equipped&mdash;an enduring
+monument to the nobility of character and the consecration
+of talents. They have been present also on that
+last occasion, and have united in the acclamation which
+bestowed on him the title "Founder and Father perpetual,
+by a patent indefeasible." They have heard his
+feeling but modest response, and have been rejoicing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+though tearful witnesses when, after the final seal of
+commendation was set, he fell back, and the great work
+was done.</p>
+
+<p>We honor the successful teacher, we honor the investigator
+of Nature's laws, we honor the upright director
+of affairs&mdash;and our late associate had all these claims
+to our regard; but we honor most of all the noble manhood&mdash;and
+of such make are the founders of great institutions.
+In comparison, how empty are the ordinary
+titles of distinction of which most men are proud! It
+seems now almost trivial to add that our associate was
+decorated with a Doctor's degree, both by his own university
+and also by the University at Cambridge; that he
+was sought as a member by many learned societies; that
+he was twice called to preside over the annual meetings
+of the American Association for the Advancement of
+Science; and that, at the death of Professor Henry, he
+was the one man of the country to whom all pointed as
+the President of the National Academy of Science.
+This last honor, however, was one on which it is a satisfaction
+to dwell for a moment, because it gave satisfaction
+to Professor Rogers, and the office was one which
+he greatly adorned, and for which his unusual oratorical
+abilities were so well suited. He was a most admirable
+presiding officer of a learned society. His breadth of
+soul and urbanity of manner insensibly resolved the dis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>cords
+which often disturb the harmonies of scientific
+truth. He had the delicate tact so to introduce a speaker
+as to win in advance the attention of the audience, without
+intruding his own personality; and when a paper
+was read, and the discussion closed, he would sum up the
+argument with such clearness, and throw around the
+subject such a glow of light, that abstruse results of scientific
+investigation were made clear to the general comprehension,
+and a recognition gained for the author
+which the shrinking investigator could never have secured
+for himself. To Professor Rogers the truth was
+always beautiful, and he could make it radiant.</p>
+
+<p>It is also a pleasure to record, in conclusion, that Professor
+Rogers's declining years were passed in great comfort
+and tranquillity, amidst all the amenities of life;
+that to the last he had the companionship of her whom
+he so greatly loved; and that increasing infirmities were
+guarded and the accidents of age warded off with a watchfulness
+that only the tenderest love can keep. We delight
+to remember him in that pleasant summer home at
+Newport, which he made so fully in reality as in name
+the "Morning-side," that we never thought of him as
+old, and to believe that the morning glow which he so
+often watched spreading above the eastern ocean was the
+promise of the fuller day on which he has entered.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="VIII" id="VIII"></a>VIII.</h3>
+
+<h2>JEAN-BAPTISTE-ANDR&Eacute; DUMAS.<a name="FNanchor_K_11" id="FNanchor_K_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_K_11" class="fnanchor">[K]</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Jean-Baptiste-Andr&eacute; Dumas was born at Alais, in
+the south of France, July 14, 1800. His father belonged
+to an ancient family, was a man of culture, and held
+the position as clerk to the municipality of Alais. The
+son was educated at the college of his native place, and
+appears to have been destined by his parents for the
+naval service. But the anarchy and bloodshed which
+attended the downfall of the First Empire produced such
+an aversion to a military life that his parents abandoned
+their plan, and apprenticed him to an apothecary of the
+town. He remained in this situation, however, but a
+short time; for, owing to the same sad causes, he had
+formed an earnest desire to leave his home, and, his parents
+yielding to his wish, he traveled on foot to Geneva
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>in 1816, where he had relatives who gave him a friendly
+welcome, and where he found employment in the pharmacy
+of Le Royer.</p>
+
+<p>At that time Geneva was the center of much scientific
+activity, and young Dumas, while discharging his
+duties in the pharmacy, had the opportunity of attending
+lectures on botany by M. de Candolle, on physics by M.
+Pictet, and on chemistry by M. Gaspard de la Rive; and
+from these lectures he acquired an earnest zeal for scientific
+investigation. The laboratory of the pharmacy gave
+him the necessary opportunities for experimenting, and
+an observation which he made of the definite proportions
+of water contained in various commercial salts, although
+yielding no new results, gained for him the attention and
+friendship of De la Rive. Soon after we find the young
+philosopher attempting to deduce the volumes of the
+atoms in solid and liquid bodies by carefully determining
+their specific gravities, and thus anticipating a method
+which thirty years later was more fully developed by
+Hermann Kopp.</p>
+
+<p>About this time young Dumas had the good fortune
+to render an important service to one of the most distinguished
+physicians of Geneva, whose name is associated
+with the beneficial uses of iodine in cases of goitre. It
+had occurred to Dr. Coindet that burned sponge, then
+generally used as a remedy for that disease, might owe its<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+efficacy to the presence of a small amount of iodine;
+and on referring the question to Dumas, the young chemist
+not only proved the presence of iodine in the sponge,
+but also indicated the best method of administering what
+proved to be almost a specific remedy. It was in connection
+with this investigation that Dumas's name first
+appears in public. The discovery produced a great sensation,
+and for many years the manufacture of iodine
+preparations brought both wealth and reputation to the
+pharmacy of Le Royer.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after, Dumas formed an intimacy with Dr. J.
+L. Pr&eacute;vost, then recently returned from pursuing his
+studies in Edinburgh and Dublin, and was induced to
+undertake a series of physiological investigations, which
+for a time withdrew him from his strictly chemical studies.
+Several valuable papers on physiological subjects
+were published by Pr&eacute;vost and Dumas, which attracted
+the notice of Alexander von Humboldt, who on visiting
+Geneva, in 1822, sought out Dumas and awakened in him
+a desire to seek a wider field of activity than his present
+position opened to him. In consequence he removed to
+Paris in 1823, where the reputation he had so deservedly
+earned at Geneva won for him a cordial reception
+at what was then the chief center of scientific study in
+Europe. La Place, Berthollet, Vauquelin, Gay-Lussac,
+Thenard, Alexandre Brongniart, Cuvier, Geoffroy St.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+Hilaire, Arago, Amp&egrave;re, and Poisson, all manifested their
+interest in the young investigator. Dumas was soon appointed
+R&eacute;p&eacute;titeur de Chimie at the &Eacute;cole Polytechnique,
+and also Lecturer at the Athen&aelig;um, an institution
+founded and maintained by public subscription, for the
+purpose of exciting popular interest in literature and science;
+and from this beginning his advancement to the
+highest position which a man of science can occupy in
+France was extremely rapid.</p>
+
+<p>In 1826 he married Mdlle. Herminie Brongniart, the
+eldest daughter of Alexandre Brongniart, the illustrious
+geologist, an alliance which not only brought him
+great happiness, and at the time greatly advanced his
+social position, but also in after years made his house
+one of the chief resorts of the scientific society of Paris.
+The many who have shared its generous hospitality will
+appreciate how greatly, for more than half a century,
+Madame Dumas has aided the work and extended the
+influence of her noble husband.</p>
+
+<p>In 1828-'29 Dumas united with Th&eacute;odore Olivier and
+Eug&egrave;ne P&eacute;clet in founding the &Eacute;cole Centrale des Arts
+et Manufactures, an institution which met with great
+success, and in which, as Professor of Chemistry, Dumas
+rendered most efficient service for many years; and in
+1878 had the very good fortune to aid in celebrating the
+fiftieth anniversary of his own foundation, and to see it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+acknowledged as among the most important and efficient
+scientific institutions of the world. In 1832 Dumas succeeded
+Gay-Lussac as Professor at the Sorbonne; in 1835
+he succeeded Thenard at the &Eacute;cole Polytechnique; and
+in 1839 he succeeded Deyeux at the &Eacute;cole de M&eacute;decine.
+Thus before the age of forty he filled successively, and
+for some time simultaneously, all the important professorships
+of chemistry in Paris except one. This exception
+was that of the College of France, with which he was
+never permanently connected, although it was there that
+he delivered his famous course on the History of Chemical
+Philosophy, when temporarily supplying the place of
+Thenard.</p>
+
+<p>Dumas early recognized the importance of laboratory
+instruction in chemistry, for which there were no facilities
+at Paris when he first came to what was then the
+center of the world's science; and in 1832 founded a
+laboratory for research at his own expense. This laboratory,
+first established at the Polytechnic School, was removed
+to the Rue Cuvier in 1839, where it remained
+until broken up by the Revolution of 1848. The laboratory
+was small, and Dumas would receive only a few
+advanced students, and these on terms wholly gratuitous.
+Among these students were Piria, Stas, Melsens, Leblanc,
+Lalande, and Lewy, with whose aid he carried on
+many of his important investigations. By the Revolu<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>tion
+of 1848 Dumas's activities were for a time diverted
+into political channels; but under the Second Empire his
+laboratory was re-established at the Sorbonne, and in 1868
+was removed to the &Eacute;cole Centrale.</p>
+
+<p>The political episode of Dumas's life was the natural
+result of an active mind with wide sympathies, which
+recognizes in the pressing demands of society its highest
+duty. The political and social upheaval of 1848 seemed
+at the time to endanger the stability in France of everything
+which a cultivated and learned man holds most
+dear; and Dumas was not one to consider his own preferences
+when he felt he could aid in averting the calamities
+which threatened his country. Immediately
+after the Revolution of February, he accepted a seat in
+the Legislative Assembly offered him by the electors of the
+Arrondissement of Valenciennes. Shortly afterward
+the President of the Republic called him to fill the
+office of Minister of Agriculture and Commerce. During
+the Second Empire he was elevated to the rank of
+Senator, and shortly after his entrance into the Senate
+he became Vice-President of the High Council of Education.
+In order to reform the abuses into which many
+of the higher educational institutions of Paris had fallen,
+be accepted a place in the Municipal Council of Paris,
+over which he subsequently presided from 1859 to 1870.</p>
+
+<p>In 1868 Dumas was appointed Master of the Mint of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+France; but he retained the office only during a short
+time, for with the fall of the Second Empire, in 1870, his
+political career came to an abrupt termination. The Senate
+had ceased to exist, and in the stormy days which followed,
+the Municipal Council had naturally changed its
+complexion; and even at the Mint, the man who had
+held such a conspicuous position under the Imperial government
+was obliged to vacate his place. Some years
+previously he had resigned his professorships because his
+official positions were incompatible with his relations as
+teacher, and now, at the age of seventy, he found himself
+for the first time relieved from the daily routine of
+official duties, and free to devote his leisure to the noble
+work of encouraging research, and thus promoting the
+advancement of science. He had reached an age when
+active investigation was almost an impossibility, but his
+commanding position gave him the opportunity of exerting
+a most powerful influence, and this he used with
+great effect. In early life he had been elected, in 1832,
+a member of the Academy of Sciences in succession to
+Serullas; in 1868 he had succeeded Flourens as its Permanent
+Secretary; and in 1875 he was elected a member
+of the French Academy as successor to Guizot, a distinction
+rarely attained by a man of science.</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, as Permanent Secretary of the
+Academy of Sciences that Dumas exerted during the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+last years of his life his greatest influence. He was
+the central figure and the ruling spirit of this distinguished
+body. No important commission was complete
+without him, and on all public occasions he was the
+orator of the body, always graceful, always eloquent.
+In announcing Dumas's death to the Academy, M. Rolland,
+the presiding officer, said:</p>
+
+<p>"Vous savez la part consid&eacute;rable que Dumas prenait
+&agrave; vos travaux et vous avez bien souvent admir&eacute;, comme
+moi, la haute intelligence et la tact infini avec lesquels
+il savait imprimer &agrave; nos discussions les formes mod&eacute;r&eacute;es
+et courtoises inh&eacute;rentes &agrave; sa nature et &agrave; son caract&egrave;re.
+Sous ce rapport aussi la perte de Dumas est irr&eacute;parable
+et cr&eacute;e dans l'Acad&eacute;mie un vide bien difficile &agrave; combler.
+Aussi, longtemps encore nous chercherons, &agrave; la place
+qu'il occupait au Bureau avec tant d'autorit&eacute;, la figure
+sympathique et v&eacute;n&eacute;r&eacute;e de notre bienaim&eacute; Secr&eacute;taire
+perp&eacute;tuel."</p>
+
+<p>And while Dumas was still occupying his conspicuous
+position in the Academy, one of the most distinguished
+of his German contemporaries<a name="FNanchor_L_12" id="FNanchor_L_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_L_12" class="fnanchor">[L]</a> wrote of him:
+"An ever-ready interpreter of the researches of others,
+he always heightens the value of what he communi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>cates
+by adding from the rich stores of his own experience,
+thus often conveying lights not noticed even by
+the authors of those researches."</p>
+
+<p>When the writer last saw Dumas, in the winter of
+1881-'82, the great chemist had still all the vivacity
+of youth, and it was difficult to realize his age. He
+took a lively interest in all questions of chemical philosophy,
+which he discussed with great earnestness and
+warmth. There was the same fire and the same exuberance
+of fancy which had enchanted me in his
+lectures thirty years before. At an age when most men
+hold speculation in small esteem, I was much struck
+with his criticism of a contemporary, who, he said, had
+no imagination, although he spoke with the highest
+praise of his experimental skill. At that time Dumas
+showed no signs of impaired strength. But during the
+following year his health began to fail, and he died
+on the 11th of April, at Cannes, where he had sought
+a retreat from the severity of the winter climate of
+Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Dumas was one of the few men whose greatness can
+not be estimated from a single point of view. He was
+not only eminent as an investigator of nature, but even
+more eminent as a teacher and an administrator. Beginning
+the study of chemistry at the culmination of
+the epoch of the Lavoisierian system, and regarding,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+as he always did, the author of that system with the
+greatest admiration, he nevertheless was the first to
+discover the weak point in its armor and inflict the
+wound which led to its overthrow. Without attempting
+to detail Dumas's numerous contributions to chemical
+knowledge, we will here only refer to three important
+investigations, which produced a marked influence
+in the progress of chemical science.</p>
+
+<p>While still in Geneva, Dumas, as has been said,
+made numerous determinations of the densities of
+allied substances, with a view to discovering the relations
+of what he called their molecular or atomic
+volumes; and it is no wonder to us that the problem
+proved too complex to be solved at that time. After
+his removal to Paris he took up the much simpler
+problem which the relations of the molecular volumes
+of a&euml;riform substances present, and his paper "On Some
+Points of the Atomic Theory," which was published in
+the "Annales de Chimie et de Physique" for 1826,
+had an important influence in developing our modern
+chemical philosophy. Gay-Lussac had previously observed,
+not only that the relative weights of the several
+factors and products concerned in a chemical process
+bear to each other definite proportions, but also that,
+when the materials are a&euml;riform, the relative volumes
+preserve an equally definite and still simpler ratio.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+Moreover, on the physical side, Avogadro, and afterward
+Amp&egrave;re, had conceived the theory, that in the
+state of gas all molecules must have the same volume.
+It was Dumas who first saw that these principles furnished
+an important means of verifying the molecular
+and atomic weights.</p>
+
+<p>"I am engaged," he writes, "in a series of experiments
+intended to fix the atomic weights of a considerable
+number of bodies, by determining their density
+in the state of gas or vapor. There remains in this
+case but one hypothesis to be made, which is accepted
+by all physicists. It consists in supposing that, in all
+elastic fluids observed under the same conditions, the
+molecules are placed at equal distances, i. e., that they
+are present in them in equal numbers. An immediate
+consequence of this mode of looking at the question
+has already been the subject of a learned discussion
+on the part of Amp&egrave;re"&mdash;and Avogadro, as the author
+subsequently adds&mdash;"to which, however, chemists, with
+the exception perhaps of M. Gay-Lussac, appear to
+have given as yet but little attention. It consists in
+the necessity of considering the molecules of the simplest
+gases as capable of a further division&mdash;a division
+occurring in the moment of combination, and varying
+with the nature of the compound."</p>
+
+<p>Here, it is obvious, are the very conceptions which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+form the basis of our modern chemical philosophy;
+and at first we are surprised that they did not lead
+Dumas at once to the full realization of the consequences
+which the doctrine of equal molecular volumes
+involves in the interpretation of the constitution of
+chemical compounds, and to the clear distinction between
+"the physically smallest particles" and "the
+chemically smallest particles," or the molecules and the
+atoms, as we now call the physical and the chemical
+units. This distinction is implied throughout Dumas's
+paper already quoted, and is illustrated by a striking
+example in the introduction to his treatise on "Chemistry
+applied to the Arts," published two years later;
+but the ground was not yet prepared to receive the
+seed, and more than a quarter of a century must pass
+before the full harvest of this fruitful hypothesis could
+be reaped.</p>
+
+<p>There were, however, two important incidental results
+of this investigation from which chemical science
+immediately profited. One was a simple method of
+determining with accuracy the vapor densities of volatile
+substances which has since been known by Dumas's
+name. The other was a radical change in the formula
+of the silicates. On the authority of Berzelius, who
+based his opinion chiefly on the analogy between the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>silicates and the sulphates, the formula SiO<sub>3</sub>, had been
+accepted as representing the constitution of silica. But
+from the density of both the chloride and the fluoride
+of silicon Dumas concluded that the formula was SiO<sub>2</sub>,
+a conclusion which is now seen to be in complete harmony
+with the scheme of allied compounds. To Berzelius,
+however, the new views appeared wholly out of
+harmony with the system of chemistry which he had
+so greatly assisted in developing, and he opposed them
+with the whole weight of his powerful influence, and
+so far succeeded as to prevent their general adoption
+for many years. Still, "the new mode of looking at
+the constitution of silicic acid slowly but surely gained
+ground, and it is now so firmly rooted in our convictions,
+that the younger generation of chemists will
+scarcely understand the pertinacity with which this
+innovation was resisted."<a name="FNanchor_M_13" id="FNanchor_M_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_M_13" class="fnanchor">[M]</a></p>
+
+<p>But if this investigation of gas and vapor densities
+brought a great strain upon the dualistic system, the
+second of the three great investigations of Dumas, to
+which we have referred, led to its complete overthrow.
+The experimental results of this investigation would
+not be regarded at the present day as remarkable, and
+can not be compared either in breadth or intricacy with
+the results of numerous investigations of a similar character
+which have since been made. The most impor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>tant
+of these results were the substitution products
+obtained by the action of chlorine gas on acetic acid.
+They were published in a series of papers entitled
+"Sur les Types Chimiques," and the capital point made
+was that chlorine could be substituted in acetic acid
+for a large part of the hydrogen without destroying
+the acid relations of the product; and the inference
+was, that the qualities of a compound substance depend
+not simply on the nature of the elements of which it
+consists, but also on the manner or type according to
+which these elements are combined.</p>
+
+<p>To the chemists of the present day these results
+and inferences seem so natural that it is difficult to
+understand the spirit with which they were received
+forty years ago. But it must be remembered that at
+that time the conceptions of chemists were wholly
+molded in the dualistic system. It was thought that
+chemical action depended upon the antagonism between
+metals and metalloids, bases and acids, acid salts and
+basic salts, and that the qualities of the products resulted
+from the blending of such opposite virtues.
+That chlorine should unite with hydrogen was natural,
+for no two substances could be more unlike; but that
+chlorine should supply the place of hydrogen in a
+chemical compound was a conception which the dualists
+scouted as absurd. Even Liebig, the "father of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+organic chemistry," warmly controverted the interpretation
+which Dumas had given to the facts he had discovered.
+Liebig himself had successfully investigated
+the chemical relations of a large class of organic products.
+He had, however, worked on the lines of the
+dualistic system, showing that organic substances might
+be classed with similar inorganic substances, if we assume
+that certain groups of atoms, which he called
+"compound radicals," might take the place of elementary
+substances. In the edition of the organic part of
+Turner's "Chemistry" bearing his name, organic chemistry
+is defined as the "chemistry of compound radicals,"
+and the formulas of organic compounds are represented
+on the dualistic system. Liebig's conceptions
+were therefore naturally opposed to those advanced by
+Dumas; but it is pleasant to know that the controversy
+which arose never disturbed the friendly relations between
+these two noble men of science, who could approach
+the same truth from different sides, and yet
+have faith that each was working for the same great
+end. In his commemorative address on Pelouze, Dumas
+expresses toward Liebig sentiments of affectionate regard,
+and Liebig dedicates to Dumas, with equal warmth, the
+German edition of his "Letters on Chemistry."</p>
+
+<p>By the second investigation, as by the first, although
+Dumas gave a most fruitful conception to chemistry,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+he only took the first step in developing it. His conception
+of chemical types was very indefinite, and Laurent
+wrote of it, a few years later: "Dumas's theory is
+too general; by its poetic coloring, it lends itself to
+false interpretations; it is a programme of which we
+await the realization." Laurent himself helped toward
+this realization, and in his early death left the work to
+his associate and friend Gerhardt, who pushed it forward
+with great zeal, classifying chemical compounds according
+to the four types of hydrochloric acid, water, ammonia,
+and marsh-gas. Hofmann, Williamson, Wurtz,
+and many others, greatly aided in this work by realizing
+many of the possibilities which these types suggested;
+and thus modern Structural Chemistry gradually
+grew up, in which the types of Dumas and Gerhardt
+have been in their turn superseded by the larger views
+which the doctrine of quantivalence has opened out to
+the scientific imagination. It is a singular fact, however,
+that, while the growth began in France, the
+harvest has been chiefly reaped by Germans; and that,
+although in its inception the movement was strongly
+opposed in Germany, its legitimate conclusions are now
+repudiated by the most influential school of French
+chemists.</p>
+
+<p>The third great investigation of Dumas was his revision
+of the atomic weights of many of the chemical<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+elements, and in none of his work did he show greater
+experimental skill. His determination of the atomic
+weight of oxygen by the synthesis of water, and of
+that of carbon by the synthesis of carbonic dioxide,
+are models of quantitative experimental work. To this
+investigation, as to all his other work, Dumas was
+directed by his vivid scientific imagination. In his
+teaching, from the first, he had aimed to exhibit the
+relations of the elementary substances by classing them
+in groups of allied bodies; and at the meeting of the
+British Association in 1851 he had delighted the chemical
+section by the eloquence and force with which he
+exhibited such relations, especially triads of elementary
+substances; such as chlorine, bromine, and iodine;
+oxygen, sulphur, and selenium; phosphorus, arsenic,
+and antimony; calcium, barium, and strontium: in
+which not only the atomic weight, but also the qualities
+of the middle member of the triad, were the mean
+of those of the other two members. Later, he came
+to regard these triads as parts of more extended series,
+in each of which the atomic weights increased from
+the first to the last element of the series, by determinate,
+but not always by equal differences, the values
+being, if not exact multiples of the hydrogen atom according
+to the hypothesis of Prout, at least multiples
+of one half or one quarter of that weight. There can<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+be no doubt that these speculations were more fanciful
+than sound, and that Dumas did not do full justice
+to earlier theories of the same kind; but with him
+these speculations were merely the ornaments, not the
+substance of his work, and they led him to fix more
+accurately the constants of chemistry, and thus to lay
+a trustworthy foundation upon which the superstructure
+of science could safely be built.</p>
+
+<p>That exuberance of fancy to which we have referred
+made Dumas one of the most successful of teachers,
+and one of the most fascinating of lecturers. It was
+the privilege of the writer to attend the larger part
+of two of his courses of lectures given in Paris, in
+the winters of 1848 and 1851, and he remembers distinctly
+the impression produced. Besides the well-arranged
+material and the carefully prepared experiment,
+there was an elegance and pomp of circumstance which
+added greatly to the effect. The large theatre of the
+Sorbonne was filled to overflowing long before the
+hour. The lecturer always entered at the exact moment,
+in full evening dress, and held to the end of a
+two hours' lecture the unflagging attention of his audience.
+The manipulations were entirely left to the care
+of a number of assistants, who brought each experiment
+to a conclusion at the exact moment when the
+illustration was required. An elegance of diction, an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+appropriateness of illustration, and a beauty of exposition,
+which could not be excelled, were displayed
+throughout, and the enthusiasm of a French audience
+added to the animation of the scene.</p>
+
+<p>To the writer the lectures of Dumas were brought
+in contrast to those of Faraday. Both were perfect of
+their kind, but very different. Faraday's method was
+far more simple and natural, and he excelled Dumas
+in bringing home to young minds abstruse truths by
+the logic of well-arranged consecutive experiment. With
+Dumas there was no attempt to popularize science; he
+excelled in clearness and elegance of exposition. He
+exhausted the subject which he treated, and was able
+to throw a glow of interest around details which by
+most teachers would have been made dry and profitless.</p>
+
+<p>Two volumes of Dumas's lectures have been published;
+one comprises his course on the "Philosophy of
+Chemistry," delivered at the College of France in 1836;
+the other contains only a single lecture, accompanied by
+notes, entitled "The Balance of Organic Life," which
+was delivered at the Medical School of Paris, August 20,
+1841. In both these volumes will be found the beauty
+of exposition and the elegance of diction of which we
+have spoken, and they are models of literary style. But
+of course the sympathetic enthusiasm of the great man's
+presence can not be reproduced by written words.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The lecture on "The Balance of Organic Life" was
+probably the most remarkable of Dumas's literary efforts.
+It dealt simply with the relations which the vegetable
+sustains to the animal kingdom through the atmosphere,
+which, though now so familiar, were then not generally
+understood; and the late Dr. Jeffries Wyman, who
+heard the lecture, always spoke of it with the greatest
+enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>As might be expected, Dumas's oratory found an
+ample field in the Chamber of Deputies and in the Senate;
+and whether setting forth a project of recasting the
+copper coinage or a law of drainage, or ridiculing the
+absurd theories of hom&#339;opathy, he riveted the attention
+of his colleagues as completely as he had entranced the
+students at the Sorbonne.</p>
+
+<p>In the early part of his life, Dumas was a voluminous
+writer, and in 1828 published the "Trait&eacute; de Chimie
+appliqu&eacute;e aux Arts," in eight large octavo volumes, with
+an atlas of plates in quarto. But besides this extended
+treatise, the two volumes of lectures just referred to are
+his only important literary works. He published numerous
+papers in scientific journals, which, as we have seen,
+produced a most marked effect on the growth of chemical
+science. But the number of his monographs is not
+large compared with those of many of his contemporaries,
+and his work is to be judged by its importance and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+influence rather than by the extent of the field which
+it covers.</p>
+
+<p>In his capacity of President of the Municipal Council
+at Paris, of Minister of Agricultural Commerce, of
+Vice-President of the High Council of Education, and
+of Perpetual Secretary of the Academy of Sciences,
+Dumas had abundant opportunity for the exercise of his
+administrative ability, and no one has questioned his
+great powers in this direction; but in regard to his political
+career we could not expect the same unanimity of
+opinion. That he was a liberal under Louis Philippe,
+and a reactionist under Louis Napoleon, may possibly be
+reconciled with a fixed political faith and an unswerving
+aim for the public good; but his scheme for "civilian
+billeting" (by which wealthy people having rooms to
+spare in their houses would have been compelled to billet
+artisans employed in public works) leads one to infer that
+his statesmanship was not equal to his science. Nevertheless,
+there can be no question about his large-hearted
+charity. He instituted the "Cr&eacute;dit Foncier," which
+flourishes in great prosperity to this day; he also founded
+the "Caisse de R&eacute;traite pour la Vieillesse," and several
+other agricultural charities, which, though less successful,
+afford great assistance to aged workmen. Louis
+Napoleon used to say in jest that the whole of the War
+Minister's budget would not have been enough to realize<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+M. Dumas's benevolent schemes; and once, half-dazzled,
+half-amused, by one of the chemist's vast sanitary
+projects, he called him "the poet of hygiene."</p>
+
+<p>It was to be expected that a man working with such
+eminent success in so many spheres of activity, and at
+one of the chief centers of the world's culture, should be
+loaded with medals, and marks of distinction of every
+kind. It would be idle to enumerate the orders of
+knighthood, or the learned societies, to which he belonged,
+for, so far from their honoring him, he honored
+them in accepting their membership. It is a pleasure,
+however, to remember that he lived to realize his highest
+ambitions and to enjoy the fruits of his well-earned
+renown. France has added his name in the Pantheon</p>
+
+<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">Aux Grands Hommes la Patrie Reconnaissante.</span>"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="IX" id="IX"></a>IX.</h3>
+
+<h2>THE GREEK QUESTION.<a name="FNanchor_N_14" id="FNanchor_N_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_N_14" class="fnanchor">[N]</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>The question whether the college faculty ought to
+continue to insist on a limited study of the ancient Greek
+language, as an essential prerequisite of receiving the
+A. B. degree, has been under consideration at Cambridge
+for a long time; and, since the opinions of those with
+whom I naturally sympathize have been so greatly misrepresented
+in the desultory discussion which has followed
+Mr. Adams's Phi Beta Kappa oration, I am glad
+of the opportunity to say a few words on the "Greek
+question."</p>
+
+<p>This question is by no means a new one. For the
+last ten years it has been under discussion at most, if
+not at all, of the great universities of the world; and,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+among others, the University of Berlin, which stands in
+the very front rank, has already conceded to what we
+may call the new culture all that can reasonably be asked.</p>
+
+<p>Let me begin by asserting that the responsible advocates
+of an expansion of the old academic system do not
+wish in the least degree to diminish the study of the
+Greek language, the Greek literature, or the Greek art.
+On the contrary, they wish to encourage such studies by
+every legitimate means. For myself I believe that the
+old classical culture is the best culture yet known for the
+literary professions; and among the literary professions
+I include both law and divinity. Fifty years ago I
+should have said that it was the only culture worthy of
+the recognition of a university. But we live in the present,
+not in the past, and a half-century has wholly
+changed the relations of human knowledge. Regard
+the change with favor or disfavor, as you please, the
+fact remains that the natural sciences have become the
+chief factors of our modern civilization; and&mdash;which is
+the important point in this connection&mdash;they have given
+rise to new professions that more and more every year
+are opening occupations to our educated men. The professions
+of the chemist, of the mining engineer, and of
+the electrician, which have entirely grown up during the
+lifetime of many here present, are just as "learned"
+as the older professions, and are recognized as such<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+by every university. Moreover, the old profession of
+medicine, which, when, as formerly, wholly ruled by
+authority or traditions, might have been classed with the
+literary professions, has come to rest on a purely scientific
+basis.</p>
+
+<p>In a word, the distinction between the literary and
+the scientific professions has become definite and wide,
+and can no longer be ignored in our systems of education.
+Now, while they would accord to their classical
+associates the right to decide what is the best culture for
+a literary calling, the scientific experts claim an equal
+right to decide what is the best culture for a scientific
+calling. Ever since the revival of Greek learning in
+Europe the literary scholars have been working out an
+admirable system of education. In this system most of
+us have been trained. I would pay it all honor, and I
+would here bear my testimony to the acknowledged facts
+that in no departments of our own university have the
+methods of teaching been so much improved during the
+last few years as in the classical. I should resist as
+firmly as my classical colleagues any attempt to emasculate
+the well-tried methods of literary culture, and I
+have no sympathy whatever with the opinion that the
+study of the modern languages as polite accomplishments
+can in any degree take the place of the critical study of
+the great languages of antiquity. To compare German<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+literature with the Greek, or, what is worse, French
+literature with the Latin, as means of culture, implies,
+as it seems to me, a forgetfulness of the true spirit of
+literary culture.</p>
+
+<p>But literature and science are very different things,
+and "what is one man's meat may be another man's poison,"
+and the scientific teachers claim the right to direct
+the training of their own men. It is not their aim to
+educate men to clothe thought in beautiful and suggestive
+language, to weave argument into correct and persuasive
+forms, or to kindle enthusiasm by eloquence.
+But it is their object to prepare men to unravel the mysteries
+of the universe, to probe the secrets of disease, to
+direct the forces of nature, and to develop the resources
+of this earth. These last aims may be less spiritual,
+lower on your arbitrary intellectual scale, if you please,
+than the first; but they are none the less legitimate
+aims which society demands of educated men: and all we
+claim is that the astronomers, the physicists, the chemists,
+the biologists, the physicians, and the engineers, who
+have shown that they are able to answer these demands
+of society, should be intrusted with the training of those
+who are to follow them in the same work.</p>
+
+<p>Now, such is the artificial condition of our schools,
+and so completely are they ruled by prescription, that,
+when we attempt to lay out a proper course of training<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+for the scientific professions, we are met at the very outset
+by the Greek question. Greek is a requisition for
+admission to college, and the only schools in which a scientific
+training can be had do not teach Greek, and, what
+is more, can not be expected to teach it.</p>
+
+<p>This brings us to the root of the whole difficulty with
+which the teachers of natural science have been contending,
+and which is the cause of the present movement.
+We can not obtain any proper scientific training from the
+classical schools, and the present requisitions for admission
+to college practically exclude students prepared at
+any others. At Cambridge we have vainly tried to secure
+some small measure of scientific training in the
+classical schools: first, by establishing summer courses
+in practical science especially designed for training
+teachers, and chiefly resorted to by such persons; and,
+secondly, by introducing some science requisitions into
+the admission examinations. But the attempt has been
+an utter failure. The science requisitions have been simply
+"crammed," and the result has been worse than useless;
+because, instead of securing any training in the
+methods of science, it has in most cases given a distaste
+for the whole subject. True science-teaching is so utterly
+foreign to all their methods that the requisitions
+have merely hampered the classical schools, and the
+sooner they are abandoned the better. Both the meth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>ods
+and the spirit of literary and scientific culture are so
+completely at variance that we can not expect them to be
+successfully united in the same preparatory school.</p>
+
+<p>We look, therefore, to entirely different schools for
+the two kinds of preparation for the university which
+modern society demands&mdash;schools, which for the want
+of better distinctive names, we may call classical and
+scientific schools. In the classical school the aim should
+be, as it has always been, literary culture, and the end
+should be that power of clothing thought in words which
+awakens thought. Of course, the results of natural science
+must to a certain extent be taught; for even literary
+men can not afford to be wholly ignorant of the great
+powers that move the world. But the natural sciences
+should be studied as useful knowledge, not as a discipline,
+and such teaching should not be permitted in the
+least degree to interfere with the serious business of the
+place. In the scientific school, on the other hand, while
+language must be taught, it should be taught as a means,
+not as an end. The educated man of science must command
+at least French and German&mdash;and for the present
+a limited amount of Latin&mdash;as well as his mother-tongue,
+because science is cosmopolitan. But these languages
+should be acquired as tools, and studied no further than
+they are essential to the one great end in view, that
+knowledge which is the essential condition of the power<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+of observing, interpreting, and ruling natural phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>In such a course as this it is obvious that the study
+of Greek would have no place, even if there were time
+to devote to it, and we can not alter the appointed span of
+human life, even out of respect to this most honored and
+worthy representative of the highest literary culture.
+Of course, no one will question that the scholar who can
+command both the literary and scientific culture will be
+thereby so much the stronger and more useful man; and
+certainly let us give every opportunity to the "double
+firsts" to cultivate all their abilities, and so the more
+efficiently to benefit the world. But such powers are
+rare, and the great body of the scientific professions must
+be made up of men who can only do well the special
+class of work in which they have been trained; and, if
+you make certain formal and arbitrary requisitions, like
+a small amount of Greek, obstacles in the way of their
+advancement, or of that social recognition to which they
+feel themselves entitled as educated men, those requisitions
+must necessarily be slighted, and your policy will
+give rise to that cry of "fetich" of which recently we
+have heard so much.</p>
+
+<p>Now, all the schools which prepare students for Harvard
+College are classical schools. We do not wish to
+alter these schools in any respect, unless to make them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+more thorough in their special work. As I have already
+said, the small amount of study of natural science which
+we have forced upon them has proved to be a wretched
+failure, and the sooner this hindrance is got out of their
+way the better. We do not wish to alter the studies of
+such schools as the Boston and Roxbury Latin Schools,
+the Exeter and Andover Academies, the St. Paul's and
+the St. Mark's Schools, and the other great feeders of the
+college. No&mdash;not in the least degree! We do not ask
+for any change which in our opinion will diminish the
+number of those coming to the college with a classical
+preparation by a single man. We look for our scientific
+recruits to wholly different and entirely new sources.
+For, although we think that there are many students
+now coming to us through the classical schools who
+would run a better chance of becoming useful men if
+they were trained from the beginning in a different way,
+yet such is the social prestige of the old classical
+schools and of the old classical culture that, whatever
+new relations might be established, the class of students
+which alone we now have would, I am confident, all
+continue to come through the old channels.</p>
+
+<p>This is not a mere opinion; for only a very few men
+avail themselves of the limited option which we now
+permit at the entrance examinations&mdash;nine, at least, out
+of ten, offering what is called maximum in classics.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We look, then, for no change in the classical schools.
+Our only expectation is to affiliate the college with a
+wholly different class of schools, which will send us a
+wholly different class of students, with wholly different
+aims, and trained according to a wholly different method.
+At the outset we shall look to the best of our New
+England high-schools for a limited supply of scientific
+students, and hope by constant pressure to improve the
+methods of teaching in these schools, as our literary colleagues
+have within ten years vastly improved the methods
+in the classical schools. In time we hope to bring
+about the establishment of special academies which will
+do for science-culture what Exeter and St. Paul's are
+doing for classical culture. We expect to establish a set
+of requisitions just as difficult as the classical requisitions&mdash;only
+they will be requisitions which have a different
+motive, a different spirit, and a different aim; and all we
+ask is, that they should be regarded as the equivalents of
+the classical requisitions so far as college standing is concerned.
+We do not at once expect to draw many students
+through these new channels. To improve methods
+of teaching and build up new schools is a work of years.
+But we have the greatest confidence that in time we shall
+thus be able to increase very greatly both the clientage
+and the usefulness of the university.</p>
+
+<p>Is this heresy? Is this revolution? Is it not rather<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+the scientific method seeking to work out the best results
+in education as elsewhere by careful observation and
+cautious experimenting, unterrified by authority or superstition?
+Certainly, the philologist must respect our
+method; for of all the conquests of natural science
+none is more remarkable than its conquest of the philologists
+themselves. They have adopted the scientific methods
+as well as the scientific spirit of investigation; but,
+while thus widening and classifying their knowledge,
+they have rendered the critical study of language more
+abstruse and more difficult; and this is the chief reason
+why the time of preparation for our college has been so
+greatly extended during the last twenty-five years.
+Nominally, the classical schools cover no more ground
+than formerly, but they cultivate that ground in a vastly
+more thorough and scientific way.</p>
+
+<p>These increased requirements of modern literary culture
+suggest another consideration, which we can barely
+mention on this occasion. How long will the condition
+of our new country permit its youths to remain in pupilage
+until the age of twenty-three or twenty-four; on
+an average at least three years later than in any of the
+older countries of the civilized world? It is all very
+well that every educated man should have a certain acquaintance
+with what have been called the "humanities."
+But when your system comes to its present results, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+demands of the physician, the chemist, and the engineer&mdash;whose
+birthright is a certain social status, which by
+accident you temporarily control&mdash;that he shall pass
+fully four years of the training period of his life upon
+technicalities, which, however important to a literary
+man, are worthless in his future calling, is it not plain
+that your conservatism has become an artificial barrier
+which the progress of society must sooner or later sweep
+away? Is it not the part of wisdom, however much pain
+it may cost, to sacrifice your traditional preferences gracefully
+when you can direct the impending change, and not
+to wait until the rush of the stream can not be controlled?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="X" id="X"></a>X.</h3>
+
+<h2>FURTHER REMARKS ON THE GREEK
+QUESTION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In a former essay I endeavored to make prominent
+the essential difference between a system of education
+based on scientific culture and the generally prevailing
+system which is based on linguistic training. I maintained
+that there is not only a difference of subject-matter,
+but a difference of method, a difference of spirit,
+and a difference of aim; and I argued that, as the conditions
+of success under the two modes of culture are so
+unlike, there was no danger, even with the amplest freedom,
+that the study of the physical sciences would supplant
+or seriously interfere with linguistic studies. But,
+although the drift of my argument was plain, this
+essay has been quoted in order to show that not only
+Greek, but also all linguistic study, would be neglected
+by the students of natural science as soon as it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+ceased to be useful in their profession; and my attempt
+to point out a basis of agreement and co-operation has
+been made the occasion of reiterating the extreme doctrine
+that there can be no liberal education not based on
+the study of language. It has been thus assumed that
+scientific culture can not supply such a basis, and in this
+whole discussion the value of the study of Nature in
+education, except in so far as this study may yield a fund
+of useful knowledge, has been entirely ignored by the
+advocates of the old system. Not only has there been
+no recognition of the value of the study of material
+forms and physical phenomena as a mode of liberal culture,
+but it has been assumed throughout that&mdash;to use the
+now familiar form of words&mdash;"no sense for conduct"
+and "no sense for beauty" can be acquired except
+through that special type of linguistic training that has
+so long limited elementary education. Those who demand
+a place for science-culture certainly have not
+shown the same contemptuous spirit; and I venture to
+suggest that, if classical students were as familiar with
+the methods of natural science as are the students of
+Nature with philological and arch&aelig;ological study, they
+would be more charitable to those who differ with them
+on this subject.</p>
+
+<p>There are, of course, two distinct elements in a liberal
+education: the one the acquisition of useful knowl<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>edge,
+the other a training or culture of the intellectual
+faculties. The first should be made as broad as possible,
+the second, in the present state of knowledge, must unfortunately
+be greatly restricted. While in the passage
+referred to I have claimed that, in a system of education
+based upon science, languages should be studied simply
+as tools, Mr. Matthew Arnold, in a lecture which he has
+recently repeatedly delivered in this country, and whose
+constant refrain was the phrases I have already quoted,
+has claimed that, although scholars must use the results
+of science as so much literary material, they need have
+nothing to do with its methods. In my view, both positions
+are essentially sound. It has been said that the
+Greek departments in our colleges could do without the
+scientific students much better than scientific scholars
+could do without Greek, and this remark admits of an evident
+rejoinder. Certainly in this age no professional man
+can afford to be ignorant of the results of science, and he
+will constantly be led into error if he does not know something
+of its methods. It is perfectly well known that
+very few of the investigators, who have coined the scientific
+terms derived from the Greek, so often referred to,
+could read a page of Herodotus or Homer in the original;
+and it is equally true that Mr. Matthew Arnold,
+and his compeer, Lord Tennyson, who have shown such
+large knowledge of the results of science, could not in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>terpret
+the complex relations in which the simplest phenomena
+of Nature are presented to the observer. The
+greater number of the students of Nature can only know
+the beauties of Greek literature as they are feebly presented
+in translations, and so the greater number of literary
+students can only know of the wonders of Nature as
+they are inadequately described in popular works on science.
+If it requires years of study to enable a student
+to master the meaning of a Greek sentence, can we expect
+that in less time a student shall be able to unravel
+the intricacies of natural phenomena? It has been said
+that no Greek scholarship is possible for a student who
+begins the study of that language in college. Is it supposed
+that scientific scholarship is any more possible
+under such conditions?</p>
+
+<p>In order to teach successfully the <i>results</i> of science to
+college students, I have no desire that they should have
+any preliminary preparation. It has been my duty for
+more than thirty years to present the elements of chemistry
+to the youngest class in one of our colleges, and I
+have never had any reason to complain of their want of
+interest in the subject. Indeed, I regard it as a great
+privilege to be the first to point out to enthusiastic
+young men the wonderful vistas which modern science
+has opened to our view. So far as their temporary interest
+is concerned, I should greatly prefer that they had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+never studied the subject before coming to college. But
+even enthusiastic interest in popular lectures is not scientific
+culture. A few men in every class always have
+been, and will continue to be, so far interested as to
+make the cultivation of science the business of their
+lives. But such men always labor under the disadvantages
+resulting from a want of early training, and these
+obstacles repel a large number whose natural tastes and
+abilities would otherwise have fitted them for a scientific
+calling. The change from one system of culture to another,
+at the age of eighteen, has all the disadvantages of
+changing a profession late in life. Nevertheless, the
+college will always continue to educate a number of men
+of science in this way. Most of these men become
+teachers, and no one questions that their previous linguistic
+training makes them all the more forcible expositors
+of scientific truth. It is not for such persons that
+I desire any change. I am, however, most anxious that
+the university should do its part in educating that important
+class of men who are to direct the industries and
+develop the material resources of our country. Such
+men can be led to appreciate, and will give time to acquire,
+an elegant use of language, but they will not devote
+four or five years of their lives to purely linguistic
+training, and, if we do not open our doors to them, they
+will be forced to content themselves with such education<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+as high-schools, or, at best, technical schools, can offer.
+But, while they will thus lose the broader knowledge
+and larger scope which a university education affords,
+the university will also lose their sympathy and powerful
+support. Such students are now wholly repelled
+from the university, and, under a more liberal policy,
+they would form an important and clear addition to our
+numbers, and&mdash;as I have said in another place&mdash;without
+diminishing by a single man the number of those who
+come to college through the classical schools.</p>
+
+<p>But there is another class of young men with whom
+a system of education based on the study of Nature
+would, as I am convinced, be more successful than the
+prevailing system of linguistic culture: I refer to those
+who now come to college, some of them through the influence
+of family tradition, some of them through the
+expectation of social advantage, and a still larger number
+on account of the attractions of college-life. Many
+of these are men who, with poor verbal memories, or
+want of aptitude for recognizing abstract relations, can
+never become classical scholars with any exertion that
+they can be expected to make, but who can often be
+educated with success through their perceptive faculties.
+These men are the dunces of the classical department,
+they add nothing to its strength, and in every classical
+school are a hindrance to the better students; but some<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+of them may become able and useful men, if their interest
+can be aroused in objective realities. Of our present
+students, it is only this class that the proposed changes
+would really affect. Those who have tastes and aptitudes
+for linguistic studies would continue to come
+through the old channels, and of such only can classical
+scholars be made.</p>
+
+<p>I know very well it is said that, although the classical
+department would be glad to be rid of this undesirable
+element, yet the change could not be made
+without endangering the continuance of the study of
+Greek in many of our classical schools. But can the
+university be justified in continuing a requisition which
+is recognized to be opposed to the best interests of an
+important class of its patrons? And certainly it is not
+necessary to protect the study of Greek in this country
+by any such questionable means. I have a great deal
+more faith myself in the value of classical scholarship
+than many of my classical colleagues appear to possess.
+Never has one word of disparagement been heard from
+me. I honor true classical scholarship as much as I
+despise the counterfeit. To maintain that the class of
+classical dunces, to whom I have referred, appreciate
+the beauties of classical literature or derive any real
+advantage from the study is, in my opinion, to maintain
+a manifest absurdity. Fully as much do the con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>victs
+in a tread-mill enjoy the beauties of the legal code
+under which they are compelled to work; and if, as
+Chief-Justice Coleridge has recently maintained, in his
+speech at New Haven, classical scholarship is the best
+preparation for the highest distinctions in church and
+state, certainly its continuance does not depend on the
+minimum requisition in Greek of this university.<a name="FNanchor_O_15" id="FNanchor_O_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_O_15" class="fnanchor">[O]</a>
+The "new culture," although a much "younger industry,"
+does not ask for any such artificial protection.
+It only asks for an opportunity to show what it can
+accomplish, and this opportunity it has never yet had.
+Even if the largest liberty were granted, those who
+seek to promote a genuine education, based on natural
+science, would labor under the greatest disadvantages.
+Not only is the apparatus required for the new culture
+far more expensive than that of an ordinary classical
+school, but also more personal attention must be given
+to each scholar, and the ordinary labor-saving methods
+of the class-room are wholly inapplicable. In the face
+of such obstacles as these conditions present, the new
+culture can advance only very gradually; and, amid
+the rivalry of the old system, it can only succeed by
+maintaining a very high degree of efficiency. The new
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>way will certainly not offer any easier mode of admission
+to college than the old; and when it is remembered
+that the classical system has the control of all
+the endowed secondary schools, the prestige of past
+success, and the support of the most powerful social
+influence, it is difficult to understand on what the opposition
+to the free development of the "new education"
+is based. Are not gentlemen, who have been
+talking of a revolution in education, taking counsel of
+their fears rather than of their better judgment; and
+are they not forgetting that the teachers of natural
+science have the same interest in upholding the principles
+of sound education as have their classical colleagues?
+Certainly there can be no question that, in
+the future as in the past, they will ever seek to maintain
+the integrity of all the great departments of the
+university unimpaired. It has happened before this
+that the judgment, even of intelligent men, has been
+warped by their class relations or supposed interests;
+but as, in this country, the learned class has no control
+of government patronage, we may at least hope that
+the discussion of the Greek question will never assume
+with us the great bitterness that a similar controversy
+has aroused in Germany.</p>
+
+<p>There has been a great deal said in this discussion
+about the "humanities," and it has been assumed that,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+while the analysis of the Greek verb is "humanizing,"
+the analysis of the phenomena of Nature is "materializing."
+I can discover nothing humanizing in the one
+or the other, except through the spirit with which
+they are studied, and I know by experience that the
+spirit with which the study of the Latin and Greek
+grammars is often enforced is most demoralizing.
+Those who have been born with a facility for language
+may laugh at this statement; but a boy who has been
+held up to ridicule for the want of a good verbal memory,
+denied him by his Creator, long remembers the
+depressing effect produced, if not the malignity aroused,
+by the cruelty. Many are the men, now eminent in
+literature as well as science, who have experienced the
+tyranny of a classical school, so graphically described
+in the Autobiography of Anthony Trollope; and many
+are the boys who might have been highly educated if
+their perceptive faculties had been cultivated, whose
+career as scholars has been cut short by the same tyranny.</p>
+
+<p>Again, a great deal has been said about specialization
+at an early age, as if the study of Nature were
+specializing while the study of Latin metres and Greek
+accents was liberalizing. But how could specialization
+be more strikingly illustrated than by a system which
+limits a boy's attention between the ages of twelve and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+twenty to linguistic studies to the almost entire exclusion
+of a knowledge of that universe in which his life
+is to be passed, and which so limits his intellectual
+training that his powers of observation are left undeveloped,
+his judgments in respect to material relations
+unformed, and even his natural conceptions of
+truth distorted? Now, although a special culture which
+has such mischievous results as these may be necessary
+in order to command that power over language which
+marks the highest literary excellence, and although a
+university should foster this culture by all legitimate
+means, yet to enforce it upon every boy who aspires
+to be a scholar, whatever may be his natural talents, is
+as cruel as the Chinese practice of cramping the feet
+of women in order to conform to a traditional ideal
+of beauty. Indeed, an instructor in natural science has
+very much the same difficulty in training classical
+scholars to observe that a dancing-master would have
+in teaching a class of Chinese girls to waltz.</p>
+
+<p>Again, it has been said that while the opportunities
+for scientific culture in college are ample, no one
+will oppose such a modification of the requisitions
+for admission as the conditions of this culture demand,
+provided only we label the product of such culture
+with a descriptive name. Call the product of your
+scientific culture Bachelors of Science, we have been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+told, and you may arrange the requisites of admission
+to your own courses as you choose. I am forced to
+say that this argument, however specious, is neither
+ingenuous nor charitable. If you will label the product
+of a purely linguistic culture with an equally descriptive
+name; if, following the French usage, you
+will call such graduates Bachelors of Letters, we shall
+not object to the term Bachelors of Science; or, without
+making so great an innovation, I, for one, should
+have no objection to a distinction between Bachelors of
+Arts in Letters and Bachelors of Arts in Science. But
+it is perfectly well understood that in this community
+the degree of Bachelor of Arts is for most men the
+one essential condition of admission to the noble fraternity
+of scholars, to what has been called the "Guild
+of the Learned." To refuse this degree to a certain
+class of our graduates is to exclude them from such associations
+and from the privileges which they afford;
+and this is just what is intended. Hence I say that
+the argument is not ingenuous, and it is not charitable
+because it implies that a class of men who profess to
+love the truth as their lives are seeking to appear under
+false colors. To cite examples from my own profession
+only, I have always maintained that such men
+as Davy, Dalton, and Faraday were as truly learned, as
+highly cultivated, and as capable of expressing their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+thoughts in appropriate language, as the most eminent
+of their literary compeers, and I shall continue to
+maintain this proposition before our American community,
+and I have no question that sooner or later
+my claim will be allowed, and the doors of the "Guild
+of the Learned" will be opened to all scholars who
+have acquired by cultivation the same power which
+these great men held in such a pre-eminent degree by
+gift of Nature.</p>
+
+<p>Lastly, I am persuaded that in a large body politic
+like this it is unwise, and in the long run futile, to
+attempt to protect any special form of culture at the
+expense of another. If one member suffers, all the
+members suffer with it; and what is for the interest
+of the whole is in the long run always for the interest
+of every part. I would welcome every form of culture
+which has vindicated its efficiency and its value,
+and in so doing I feel that I should best promote the
+interests of the special department which I have in
+charge.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="XI" id="XI"></a>XI.</h3>
+
+<h2>SCIENTIFIC CULTURE;</h2>
+
+<h3>ITS SPIRIT, ITS AIM, AND ITS METHODS.<a name="FNanchor_P_16" id="FNanchor_P_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_P_16" class="fnanchor">[P]</a></h3>
+
+
+<p>I assume that most of those whom I address are
+teachers, and that you have been drawn here by a desire
+to be instructed in the best methods of teaching
+physical science. It has therefore seemed to me that
+I might render a real service, in this introductory address,
+by giving the results of my own experience and
+reflection on this subject; and my thoughts have been
+recently especially directed to this topic by the discussion
+in regard to the requisites for admission, which
+during the past year have actively engaged the attention
+of the faculty of this college.</p>
+
+<p>At the very outset of this discussion we must be
+careful to make a clear distinction between instruction<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+and education&mdash;between the acquisition of knowledge
+and the cultivation of the faculties of the mind. Our
+knowledge should be as broad as possible, but, in the
+short space of human life, it is not, as a rule, practicable
+to cultivate, for effective usefulness, the intellectual
+powers in more than one direction.</p>
+
+<p>Let me illustrate what I mean from that department
+of knowledge which is at once the most fundamental
+and the most essential. I refer to the study
+of language. No person can be regarded as thoroughly
+educated who has not the power of speaking and writing
+his mother-tongue accurately, elegantly, and forcibly;
+and scholars of the present day must also command,
+to a considerable extent, both the French and
+the German languages. These three languages, at
+least, are the necessary tools of the American scholar,
+whatever may be the special field of his scholarship,
+and his end is gained if he has acquired thorough
+command of these tools. But if he goes further, and
+studies the philology of these languages, their structure,
+their derivation, their literature, the study may
+occupy a lifetime, and be made the basis of severe
+intellectual training. More frequently, and as most
+scholars think more effectually, such linguistic training
+is obtained by the study of the ancient languages, especially
+the Latin and the Greek, and no one questions<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+the value and efficiency of this form of mental discipline.
+But obviously such a preparation is not necessary
+for the use of the modern languages as tools, or
+in order to acquire a knowledge of ancient history,
+of the modes of ancient life, or the results of ancient
+thought. In recent discussions a great deal has been
+said about the value of classical learning, and it has
+been argued that no man could be regarded as thoroughly
+educated who had never heard of Homer or
+Virgil, of Marathon or Cann&aelig;, of the Acropolis of
+Athens or the Forum of Rome. Certainly not. But
+all this knowledge can be acquired without spending
+six years in learning to read the Latin and Greek
+authors in the original, or in writing Latin hexameters
+or Greek iambics. The discipline acquired by this
+long study is undoubtedly of the highest value, but its
+value depends upon the intellectual training which is
+the essential result, and not upon the knowledge of
+ancient life and thought, which is merely an incident.</p>
+
+<p>Now, this same distinction, which I have endeavored
+to illustrate on familiar ground, must not be forgotten
+in considering the relations of physical science
+to education. Physical science may also be studied
+from two wholly different points of view: First, to
+acquire a knowledge of facts and principles, which
+are among the most important factors of modern life;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+secondly, as a means of developing and training some
+of the most important intellectual faculties of the mind&mdash;for
+example, the powers of observation, of conception,
+and of inductive reasoning.</p>
+
+<p>The experimental sciences must often be studied
+chiefly from the first point of view. If no man can
+be regarded as thoroughly educated who is ignorant of
+the outlines of Roman and Greek history: one who
+knows nothing of the principles of the steam-engine,
+or of the electric telegraph, is certainly equally deficient.
+I do not question that in our high-schools
+the physical sciences must be taught, for the most
+part, as funds of useful knowledge, and in regard to
+such teaching I have only a few remarks to make.
+Assuming that information is the end to be attained,
+the best method of securing the desired result is to
+present the facts in such a way as will interest the
+scholar, and thus secure the retention of these facts
+by his memory. I think it a very serious mistake to
+attempt to teach such subjects by <i>memoriter</i> recitations
+from a text-book, however well prepared. This method
+at once makes the subject a task; and, if in addition
+the preparation for an examination is the great end
+in view, it is wonderful how small is the residuum
+after the work is done. Such subjects can always be
+made intensely interesting if presented by lectures, with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+the requisite illustrations, and I do not believe that
+the cramming process required to pass an examination
+adds much to the knowledge previously gained. Many
+teachers, finding that the parrot-like learning of a text-book
+is unprofitable, attempt to make the exercise more
+valuable by means of problems&mdash;usually simple arithmetical
+problems&mdash;depending upon principles of physics
+or chemistry. And there can be no doubt that
+such problems do serve to enforce the principles they
+illustrate; but I am afraid they also more frequently,
+by disgusting the student, stand in the way of the acquisition
+of the desired knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>It must not be forgotten, in studying the results of
+science, that the facts are never fully learned unless the
+learner is made to understand the evidence on which the
+facts rest. The child who reads in his physical geography
+that the world revolves on its axis, learns what to
+him is a mere form of words, until he connects this astronomical
+fact with his own observation that the sun rises
+in the east and sets in the west; and so the scholar who
+reads that water is composed of oxygen and hydrogen
+has acquired no real knowledge until he has seen the evidence
+on which this fundamental conclusion rests. Let,
+then, the sciences be taught as they have been in schools,
+as important parts of useful knowledge, but let them
+so be taught as to engage the interest of the scholar,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+and to direct his attention to the phenomena of Nature.</p>
+
+<p>All this, however, is not scientific culture, in the
+sense in which I have constantly used the term, and does
+not afford any special training for the intellectual faculties.
+For myself, I do not desire any study of natural
+history, chemistry, or physics from this point of view as
+a preparation for college; simply because, with the large
+apparatus of the university, all these subjects can be presented
+more effectively, and be made more interesting,
+than is possible in the schools. What I desire to see
+accomplished by our schools is a training in physical science,
+comparable in extent and efficiency with that which
+they now accomplish in the ancient languages. And
+this brings me to another topic, namely, scientific culture
+as a system of mental training.</p>
+
+<p>Before attempting to state in what scientific culture
+consists, we shall do well, even at the expense of some
+repetition, to show that what often passes for scientific
+culture is far different from the system of education
+which we have so constantly advocated. The acquisition
+of scientific knowledge, however extensive, does not in
+itself constitute scientific culture, nor is the power of
+reproducing such knowledge, at a competitive examination,
+any test of real scientific power. Nevertheless, the
+examination papers which have been published by the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+universities of England and of this country show that
+this is the sole test of scientific scholarship on which
+most of these universities rely, in awarding their highest
+honors to students in physical science. The power of so
+mastering a subject as to be able to reproduce any portion
+of it with accuracy, completeness, and elegance, at
+a written examination, is the normal result of literary,
+not of scientific, culture, and the power is of the same
+order, whether the subject-matter be philology, literature,
+art, or science. Indeed, scientific are, as a rule,
+much less adapted than literary subjects to the cultivation
+of this power. Moreover, it is also true that scholars,
+having attained to a very high degree of scholarship,
+may not possess this power of stating clearly and concisely
+the knowledge they actually possess. We have
+all of us known eminent men, possessing in a very high
+degree the power of investigating Nature, who have
+been wholly unable to state clearly the knowledge they
+have themselves discovered. Great harm has been done
+to the cause of scientific culture by attempting to adapt
+the well-tried methods of literary scholarship to scientific
+subjects: for, as I have said in another place, competitive
+examinations are no test of real attainment in
+physical science.</p>
+
+<p>Let me not be understood as disparaging the retentive
+memory and power of concentration which enable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+the student to reproduce acquired information with accuracy,
+rapidity, and elegance. This is a power of the
+very highest order, and is the result of the cultivation
+to a high degree of many of the noblest faculties of the
+mill. And I wish to enforce is, that success in such examinations
+is no indication of scientific culture, properly
+so called.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, are the tests of true scientific scholarship?
+The answer can be made perfectly plain and intelligible.
+The real test is the power to study and interpret
+natural phenomena. As in classical scholarship the
+true test of attainment is the power to interpret the delicate
+shades of meaning expressed by the classical authors,
+so in science the true test is the power to read and interpret
+Nature; and this last power, like the other, can as
+a rule only be acquired by careful and systematic training.
+As some men have a remarkable facility for acquiring
+languages, so also there are men who seem to be born
+investigators of Nature; but by most men such powers
+can only be acquired through a careful training and exercise
+of the faculties of the mind, on which success depends.
+No man would be regarded as a classical scholar,
+however broad and extended his knowledge, if that
+knowledge had been acquired solely by reading English
+translations of the classical authors, however excellent.
+So, no man can be regarded as a scientific scholar whose<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+knowledge of Nature has been solely derived from books.
+In either case the real scholar must have been to the
+fountain-head and drawn his knowledge from the original
+sources. In order, then, to discover how scientific
+culture must be gained, we must consider the conditions
+on which the successful study and interpretation of Nature
+depend.</p>
+
+<p>Of the powers of the mind called into exercise in the
+investigation of Nature, the most obvious and fundamental
+is the power of observation. By power of observation
+is not meant simply the ability to see, to hear,
+to taste, or to smell with delicacy, but the power of so
+concentrating the attention on what we observe as to
+form a definite and lasting impression on the mind.
+There are undoubtedly great differences among men in
+the acuteness of their sensations, but successful observation
+depends far less upon the acuteness of the senses
+than on the faculty of the mind which clearly distinguishes
+and remembers what is seen and heard. We
+say of a man that he walks through the world with his
+eyes shut, meaning that, although the objects around him
+produce their normal impression on the retina of his
+eye, he pays no attention to what he sees. The power
+of the naturalist to distinguish slight differences of form
+or feature in natural objects is simply the result of a
+habit, acquired through long experience, of paying atten<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>tion
+to what he sees, and the want of this power in students
+who have been trained solely by literary studies
+is most marked.</p>
+
+<p>An assistant, who was at the time conducting a class
+in mineralogy, once said to me: "What am I to do?
+One of my class can not see the difference between this
+piece of blende and this piece of quartz" (showing me
+two specimens which bore a certain superficial resemblance
+in color and general aspect). My answer was,
+"Let him look until he can see the difference." And,
+after a while, he did see the difference. The difficulty
+was not lack of vision, but want of attention.</p>
+
+<p>The power of observation, then, is simply the power
+of fixing the attention upon our sensations, and this
+power of fixing the attention is the one essential condition
+of scholarship in all departments of learning. It
+is a power which ought to be cultivated at an early age,
+and in a system of scientific culture the sciences of mineralogy
+and botany afford the best field for its culture,
+and I should therefore place them among the earliest
+studies of a scientific course. Minerals and plants may
+be profitably studied in the youngest classes of our secondary
+schools, but they should be studied solely from
+specimens, which the scholar should examine until he
+can distinguish all the characteristics of form, feature,
+or structure. I am told that in many of our secondary<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+schools both mineralogy and botany are studied with
+great success and interest in the manner I have indicated.
+But a mistake is frequently made in attempting
+to do too much. With mineralogy or botany as classificatory
+sciences, our secondary schools should have nothing
+to do. The discrimination between many, even of the
+commonest, species of minerals or plants depends upon
+delicate distinctions which are quite beyond the grasp of
+young minds, and the study of botany frequently loses
+all its value, through the ambition of the teacher to embrace
+so much of systematic botany as will enable scholars
+"to analyze plants."</p>
+
+<p>If a child, twelve or fourteen years of age, is made
+to observe the characteristic qualities of a few common
+minerals so as to enable it to recognize them in the rocks,
+and is likewise led to examine the structure of a few
+familiar flowers, not only will a new power have been
+acquired, but a new interest will have been added to
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, the faculty of observation thus early exercised
+in childhood only attains the highest degree of
+development after long experience and continued practice.
+The acuteness which practice gives is frequently
+very remarkable, and rude men often surprise us by the
+extent to which their power of observation has been
+cultivated in certain special directions. The sailor who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+recognizes the outlines of to him a well-known coast,
+where the ordinary traveler sees nothing but a bank of
+clouds, or the miner who recognizes in the rock indications
+of valuable ores, are illustrations which may give
+a clearer conception of the nature of the power we have
+been attempting to describe.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally following the power of observation in the
+order of education is the power of conception with the
+cognate power of abstraction; that is, the power of forming
+in the mind distinct and accurate images of objects,
+and relations, which have been previously apprehended
+either by direct observation, or through description; and
+also the power of confining the attention to certain features
+which these images may present to the exclusion
+of all others. This is a power which depends very
+greatly on the imagination and is capable of being
+cultivated to a very high degree. There is no study
+which is so well suited to the training both of the
+powers of conception and of abstraction as the study of
+geometry.</p>
+
+<p>To this end the study of geometry should be begun
+at an early period in school-life, and it should be studied
+at first not as a series of propositions logically connected,
+but as a description of the properties and relations of
+lines, surfaces, and solids&mdash;what has sometimes been
+called "the science of form." A text-book prepared on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+this idea by Mr. G. A. Hill forms an admirable introduction
+to the study.</p>
+
+<p>I esteem very highly the system of geometry of Euclid,
+either in its original form or as it has been modified
+by modern writers, as a means of developing the logical
+faculty. The completeness of the proof of the successive
+propositions and their mutual dependence by means
+of which, as on a series of steps, we mount from simple
+axiomatic truths to the most complex relations, furnish
+an admirable discipline for the reasoning power; but too
+often the whole value of this discipline is lost by the
+failure of the pupil to form a clear conception of the
+very relations about which he is reasoning, and the study
+becomes an exercise of the memory and nothing more.
+Often have I seen a conscientious and faithful student
+draw an excellent figure, and write out an accurate
+demonstration, without noticing that the two were not
+mated; and in a recent meeting of teachers of our best
+secondary schools it was gravely asserted that solid geometry
+is the most difficult study with which the teachers
+had to deal. In solid geometry, however, the reasoning
+is no more difficult than in plane geometry, but the
+conceptions are far more complex, and, if the teacher
+insisted that the pupil should not take a single step until
+his conceptions were perfectly clear, all the difficulties
+would disappear. Of this I am fully persuaded, for I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+have had to encounter the same difficulties over and over
+again in teaching crystallography. In beginning the
+study of geometry, of course the power of conception
+should be helped in every possible way. Let your pupil
+find out by actual measurement that the sum of the angles
+of a triangle is equal to two right angles, and he
+will easily discover the proof of the proposition himself.
+So, also, if he actually divides with his knife a triangular
+prism made from a potato or an apple into three triangular
+pyramids, he will find no difficulty in following the
+reasoning on which the measurement of the solid contents
+of a sphere depends. Let me assure teachers that
+the study of geometry, taught as I have indicated, is a
+most valuable introduction to the study of science. But,
+as it has been usually taught as a preparation for college,
+it is almost worthless in this respect, however valuable it
+may be as a logical training.</p>
+
+<p>I consider practice in free-hand drawing from natural
+objects a most valuable means of training both the power
+of observation and the power of conception, besides giving
+a skill in delineation which is of the greatest importance
+to the scientific student. Accuracy of drawing
+requires accuracy in observation, and also the ability to
+seize upon those features of the object which are the
+most prominent and characteristic. Hence, in a course
+of scientific training, the importance of practice in draw<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>ing
+can hardly be exaggerated, and it should be made
+one of the most important objects of school-work from
+an early period.</p>
+
+<p>To the scientific student the powers of observation
+and conception are not sought as ends in themselves, but
+as means of studying Nature. The precise portions of
+this wide field to which the attention of the student shall
+be directed will be determined by many circumstances,
+and it is not our purpose in this address to lay down a
+plan of study. To most students the natural history subjects
+offer the most attractive field; but all, I think, will
+admit that the experimental sciences should form a considerable
+portion, at least, of the course of all scientific
+students, whatever specialty may subsequently be chosen.
+That on which I desire particularly to dwell is the spirit
+in which all these studies should be pursued; and I can
+best illustrate what I mean by confining my remarks to
+that subject in which I am most interested, and in regard
+to which I have the greatest experience.</p>
+
+<p>In a course of scientific study, chemistry can not be dissociated
+from physics, and the two sciences ought to be
+studied to a great extent in connection with each other.
+Not only does the philosophy of chemistry rest upon physical
+conceptions; but, moreover, chemical methods involve
+physical principles. There is, however, a distinction to
+be made; for, while some of the departments of physics<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+are best studied as a preparation for chemistry, there are
+other subjects which are best deferred until the student
+has some knowledge of chemical facts. Among the
+preliminary subjects we should mention elementary mechanics,
+including hydrostatics and pneumatics, and also
+thermotics; while electricity, acoustics, and optics, including
+the large subject of radiant energy, may well be
+deferred until after the study of chemistry.</p>
+
+<p>In the study both of chemistry and physics there are
+of course two definite objects to be kept in view: In the
+first place, a knowledge of the facts of the science is to be
+acquired; in the second place, the student must learn by
+experience how these facts have been discovered. It
+would be obvious, from a moment's reflection, that a
+knowledge of the circumstances under which the facts of
+Nature are revealed to the student is essential to a complete
+apprehension of the facts themselves. The child
+who is taught that the earth moves in an elliptical orbit
+around the sun in one year does not in the least grasp
+the wonderful fact thus stated, and will not come to
+realize it until he connects the statement with the nightly
+procession of the stars in the heavens. And it is just
+such a connection as this which the teacher must seek
+to establish in all scientific teaching. In experimental
+science such a connection is most readily established in
+the mind of the student by means of a series of well<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>-arranged
+experiments, which each one repeats for himself
+at the laboratory table. Obviously, however, it is impossible,
+in a limited course of teaching, to go over the
+whole ground of chemistry and physics in this way, or
+even over that small portion of the ground with which
+the average scientific student can expect to become acquainted.
+Nor is this necessary; for, after one has
+realized the connection between phenomena and conclusion
+in a number of instances, the mind will fully comprehend
+that a similar connection exists in other cases,
+and will understand the limitations with which scientific
+conclusions are to be received.</p>
+
+<p>Hence, it seems to me that, in teaching chemistry or
+physics, it is best to combine a course of lectures which
+should give a broad view of the whole ground with a
+course of laboratory instruction, which must necessarily
+be more or less restricted. Experimental lectures are, I
+am convinced, much the best way of presenting these
+subjects as systematic portions of knowledge. It is not
+necessary that the lectures should be formal, but it is all-important
+that they should be given in such a way that
+the interest of the student should be awakened, and that
+they should be fully illustrated by specimens and experiments.
+What we read in a book does not make one half
+the impression that is produced by the words of a living
+teacher, nor can we realize the facts unless we see the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+phenomena described. There is undoubtedly an advantage
+to be gained in subsequently reviewing the subject
+as presented in a good text-book, and such a book
+may be of great use in preparation for an examination.
+But how far examinations are of value in enforcing the
+acquisition of knowledge of an experimental science is a
+question on which I feel a grave doubt. Certainly their
+value is very small if, as is too frequently the case, they
+lead the student to defer all effort to make his own the
+knowledge presented in the lectures, until a final cram.</p>
+
+<p>The management of lectures, text-books, and examinations,
+will not, however, offer nearly so great difficulties
+to the teacher as the management of the parallel experimental
+course of laboratory teaching. In the last the
+methods are less well tried and demand of the teacher a
+very considerable amount of invention and experimental
+skill. To follow mechanically any text-book would result
+in a loss of the proper spirit with which the course
+should be conducted and which constitutes its chief
+value. No experiments are so good as those which have
+been devised by the teacher, or, still better, by the pupils
+themselves. A mere repetition of a process, according
+to a definite description, has no more value than a repetition
+of a form of words in an ordinary school recitation.
+The teacher must make sure that the student fully understands
+what he is about, and comprehends all the con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>nections
+between observations and conclusions which it
+is his aim to establish. Moreover, he must constantly
+encourage his students to think and work for themselves,
+and direct them in the methods of inductive reasoning.
+The failure of an experiment may be made most instructive
+if the student is led to discover the cause of the
+failure. A leak in his apparatus may be turned to a similar
+profit if the student is shown how to discover the
+leak, by carefully eliminating one part after another
+until the weak point is made evident.</p>
+
+<p>The direction of an experimental laboratory is no
+easy task. The teacher must make each man's work his
+own, and follow his processes of thought as well as his
+experiments with the most careful attention. With large
+classes much time can be saved by going through each
+process on the lecture-room table and giving the directions
+to the class as a whole; but this does not supersede
+the personal attention and instruction which each student
+requires at the laboratory table. Moreover, in laboratory
+teaching the teacher must rely, as we have said, on his
+own resources, and but few aids can be given. There
+are books, however, which will help the teacher to prepare
+himself for his work, and I am happy to say that a
+book entitled "The New Physics," prepared by my colleague,
+Professor Trowbridge, is now being printed,
+which I hope will greatly promote the laboratory teach<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>ing
+of physics. Nichols's abridgment of Eliot and
+Storer's Manual has long served a similar valuable
+purpose in chemistry, and there are many excellent
+works on "Qualitative Analysis," a study which is admirably
+adapted to develop the power of inductive reasoning.</p>
+
+<p>There is, however, a danger with all laboratory manuals,
+which must be sedulously avoided, and the danger is
+generally greater the more precise the descriptions. They
+are apt to induce mechanical habits which are fatal to the
+true spirit of laboratory teaching. Not long ago I asked
+a student, who was working in our elementary laboratory,
+what he was doing. He answered that he was
+doing No. 24, and immediately went to find his book to
+see what No. 24 was. I fear that a great deal of laboratory
+work is done in a way which this anecdote illustrates,
+and, if so, it is a mere waste of time.</p>
+
+<p>When teaching qualitative analysis it was always with
+me a constant struggle to prevent just such a result, and
+many of the excellent tables which have been prepared
+to facilitate analysis simply encourage the evil practice.
+It is an error to which college students, with their exclusively
+literary preparation, are especially liable, and I
+have no question that the proper conduct of our laboratories
+would be made much easier if the students came
+with a previous scientific training.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Thus far I have dealt solely with generalities, and
+my object has been not so much to give definite directions
+as to make suggestions which might lead to better
+systems of teaching. The details of these systems may
+vary widely, and yet all may lead to the desired result if
+only the true spirit of scientific teaching is preserved,
+and a teacher's own system is generally the best system
+for him. This leads me to explain my own system of
+teaching chemistry&mdash;which presents some novelties that
+may be of interest, and, although it has been worked out
+in detail in the revised edition of the "New Chemistry,"
+just published, still a few words of explanation may be
+of value at this time in setting forth its salient points.</p>
+
+<p>Chemistry has been usually defined as the science
+which treats of the composition of bodies, and in most
+text-books the aim has been to develop the scheme of the
+chemical elements, and to show that, by combining these
+elements, all natural and artificial substances may be prepared.
+In the larger text-books, which aim to cover the
+whole ground and to describe all known substances, such
+a method is both natural and necessary. But, as an educational
+system, this mode of presenting the subject is,
+as a rule, profitless and uninteresting. The student becomes
+lost amid details which he can only very imperfectly
+grasp, and the great principles of the science, as
+well as their relations to cognate departments of knowl<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>edge,
+are lost sight of. Moreover, the system is unphilosophical,
+because it presents the conclusions of chemistry
+before the observations on which they are based. Any
+one who has attempted to teach chemistry from the ordinary
+elementary text-books must have experienced the
+truth of what I have said.</p>
+
+<p>A student learns a lesson about sodium and the various
+salts of this metal, and, after glibly reciting the
+words of the text-book, how much more does he know
+of the real relations of these bodies than he did before?
+Thus: "Chloride of sodium, symbol NaCl. Crystallizes
+in cubes. Soluble in water. Solubility only slightly increased
+by heat. Generally obtained by evaporation of
+sea-water in pans. Also found in beds in certain geological
+basins, from which it is extracted by mining. When
+acted upon by sulphuric acid, hydrochloric acid is evolved
+and sodic sulphate is formed, according to the following
+reaction," and so on. I have known a student to recite
+all this and a great deal more, without ever dreaming
+that he had been eating chloride of sodium on his food,
+three times a day at least, since he was born.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the rational system of teaching chemistry is
+first to present to the scholar's mind the phenomena
+of Nature with which the science deals. Lead him to
+observe these phenomena for himself; then show him
+how the conclusions which together constitute that sys<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>tem
+of knowledge we call chemistry have been deduced
+from these fundamental facts. My plan is to develop
+this system in the lecture-room in as much detail as
+the time allotted will permit; to illustrate all the points
+by experiment, and in addition to explain more in
+detail carefully selected fundamental experiments, which
+the student subsequently repeats in the laboratory himself.
+Thus I make the lecture-room instruction and
+the laboratory demonstration go hand in hand as complementary
+parts of a single course of teaching.</p>
+
+<p>I begin by directing the student to observe for
+himself the properties of bodies by which substances
+are distinguished. I place in his hands a bit of roll-brimstone.
+He first notices the color, the hardness, the
+brittleness, and the electrical excitability of this material.
+He next determines its density, its melting-point, its
+point of ignition, and, if practicable, its boiling-point.
+Then he treats the brimstone with various solvents,
+and finds that, while insoluble in water or alcohol, it
+dissolves readily in sulphide of carbon. Afterward he
+evaporates the solution thus made, and obtains definite
+crystals, whose forms he studies, and compares with the
+forms of the crystals of the same material which he
+also makes by fusion. Lastly, he observes the remarkable
+change which follows when fused brimstone is
+heated above its melting-point, and also the peculiar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+plastic condition which the material assumes when the
+thickened mass is poured into water. He will thus
+be led to see that the same material may assume different
+states, and gain a clear conception of the substance
+we call sulphur. After this I give the student
+pieces of two metals which externally resemble each
+other, like lead and tin, in order that, after making
+another series of observations and experiments, he may
+come to understand on what comparatively slight differences
+of properties the distinction between substances
+is frequently based. A comparison is next made of the
+properties of two closely-allied liquids, like methylic
+and ethylic alcohol; and by this time the student attains
+sufficient skill in experimenting to make a comparison
+between two a&euml;riform substances, like oxygen
+gas and carbonic dioxide.</p>
+
+<p>After more or less of such preliminary work, we
+are prepared to take up the subject-matter of chemistry.
+In the broad fields of Nature what portion does this
+science cover? Natural phenomena may obviously be
+divided into two great classes: First, those changes
+which do not involve a transformation of substance;
+and, secondly, those changes whose very essence consists
+in the change of one or more substances into other
+substances having distinctive properties. The science
+of physics deals with the phenomena of the first class;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+the science of chemistry with those of the last. Any
+phenomenon of Nature which involves a change of substance
+is a chemical change, and in every chemical
+change one or more substances, called the factors, are
+converted into another substance or into other substances
+called the products. The first point to be made
+in teaching chemistry is, that a student should realize
+this statement, and a number of experiments should be
+shown in the lecture-room and repeated in the laboratory
+illustrating what is meant by a chemical change.</p>
+
+<p>Here, of course, arises a difficulty in finding examples
+which shall be at once simple and conclusive,
+for in almost all natural phenomena there is a certain
+indefiniteness which obscures the simple process. The
+familiar phenomena of combustion are most striking
+examples of this fact, and men were not able to penetrate
+the mist which obscured them until within a hundred
+years. To find chemical processes whose whole
+course is obvious to an unpracticed observer, we are
+obliged to resort to unfamiliar phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>A very simple example of a chemical process is a
+mixture of sulphur and zinc in atomic proportions,
+which, when lighted with a match, is rapidly converted
+into white sulphide of zinc, with appearance of flame.
+Another example, a mixture of sulphur and fine iron-filings,
+which, when moistened with a little water,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+rapidly changes into a black sulphide of iron. Then
+some copper-filings, which, when heated on a saucer
+in the open air, slowly change into black oxide of copper.
+Then a bit of phosphorus, burned in dry air
+under a glass bell, yielding a white oxide. Next, some
+zinc, dissolved in diluted sulphuric acid, yielding
+hydrogen gas and sulphate of zinc. Then, a solution
+of chloride of barium added to a solution of sulphate
+of soda, giving a precipitate of sulphate of baryta, and
+leaving in solution common salt, which can be recovered
+by evaporating the filtrate.</p>
+
+<p>In all these examples the student should be made
+to see and handle all the factors and all the products
+of each process, and the experiments should be selected
+so that he may become familiar with the different conditions
+under which substances appear, and with various
+kinds of chemical processes. He should also be
+made clearly to distinguish between the essential features
+of the process and the different accessories, which
+may be more or less accidental&mdash;such, for example, as
+the water used in determining the combination of iron
+and sulphur, or the flame which accompanies combustion.</p>
+
+<p>After a clear conception has been gained of a
+chemical process, with its definite factors and definite
+products, we are prepared for the next important<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+step. Every chemical process obeys three fundamental
+laws:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The Law of Conservation of Mass.</p>
+
+<p>The Law of Definite Proportions.</p>
+
+<p>The Law of Definite Volumes.</p></div>
+
+<p>According to the first law, the sum of the weights
+of the products of a chemical process is always equal
+to the sum of the weights of the factors. This law
+must now be illustrated by experiments, and approximate
+quantitative determinations should be introduced
+thus early into the course of study. All that is required
+for this purpose is a common pair of scales,
+capable of weighing two or three hundred grammes,
+and turning with a decigramme. We use in our laboratory
+some platform-scales, made by the Fairbanks
+Company, which are inexpensive, and serve a very useful
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>A very satisfactory illustration of the law of conservation
+of mass can be obtained by inserting in a
+glass flask a mixture of copper-filings and sulphur in
+atomic proportions. The glass flask is first balanced
+in the scale-pan; then removed and gently heated until
+the ignition which spreads through the mass shows that
+chemical combination has taken place. The flask is
+lastly allowed to cool, and on reweighing is found not
+to have altered in weight.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For a second experiment, a bit of phosphorus may,
+with the aid of some simple contrivance, be burned
+inside a tightly-corked glass flask, of sufficient volume
+to afford the requisite supply of oxygen. Of course,
+on reweighing the flask, after the chemical change has
+taken place, and the bottom of the flask covered with
+the white oxide formed, there will be no change of
+weight, and this experiment may be made to enforce
+the truth that, in this example of combustion at least,
+the chemical process is attended with no loss of material.
+Open now the flask, and air will rush in to supply
+the partial vacuum, proving that in the process of
+combustion a portion of the material of the air has
+united to form the white product.</p>
+
+<p>Make now a third experiment as an application of the
+general principle which has been illustrated by the previous
+experiments. Burn some finely divided iron (iron
+reduced by hydrogen) on a scale-pan, and show that
+the process is attended by an increase of weight. What
+does this mean? Why, that some material has united
+with the iron to form the new product. Whence has
+this material come? Obviously from the air, for it could
+come from nowhere else. And thus, besides illustrating
+the first of the above laws, this experiment may be made
+to furnish an instructive lesson in regard to the relations
+of the oxygen of the atmosphere to chemical processes.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The second law declares that in every chemical process
+the weights of the several factors and products bear
+each to the others a definite proportion. This law must
+next be made familiar by experimental illustrations.
+A weighed amount of oxide of silver is placed in a
+glass tube connected with a pneumatic trough. The
+tube is gently heated until the oxide is decomposed
+and the oxygen gas collected in a glass bottle of sufficient
+size. The metallic silver remaining in the tube
+is now reweighed, and the volume of the oxygen gas in
+the bottle measured, and from the volume of the gas
+its weight is deduced. The measurement is easily made
+by simply marking with a gummed label the level at
+which the water stands in the bottle. If, now, the bottle
+is removed from the pneumatic trough and the
+weight of water found which fills the bottle to the same
+height, the weight of the water in grammes will give
+the volume of the gas in cubic centimetres, and, knowing
+the weight of a cubic centimetre of oxygen, we
+easily calculate the weight of this gas resulting from
+the chemical process. We have now the weights of
+the oxide of silver, the silver, and the oxygen, the one
+factor and the two products of the chemical process,
+and, by comparing the results of different students
+making the same experiment, the constancy of the proportion
+will be made evident to the class.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For a second illustration of the same law, the solution
+of zinc in dilute sulphuric acid, yielding sulphate
+of zinc and hydrogen gas, may be selected, and the
+weight of the hydrogen, estimated as in the previous
+example, shown to sustain a definite relation to the
+weight of the zinc dissolved.</p>
+
+<p>Again, silver may be dissolved in nitric acid, and
+the weight of the nitrate of silver obtained shown
+to sustain a definite relation to the weight of the
+metal.</p>
+
+<p>Or, still further, as an experiment of a wholly different
+class, a known weight of chloride of barium may
+be dissolved in water, and, after precipitation with
+sulphuric acid, the baric sulphate collected by filtration
+and weighed, when the definite relation between the
+weight of the precipitate and the weight of the chloride
+of barium will appear.</p>
+
+<p>For a last experiment let the student neutralize a
+weighed amount of dilute hydrochloric acid with aqua
+ammonia, noting approximately the amount of ammonia
+required. Let him now evaporate the solution on a
+water-bath, and weigh the resulting saline product;
+taking next the same quantity of hydrochloric acid as
+before, and, having added twice the previous quantity
+of ammonia, let him obtain and weigh the resulting salammoniac
+as before. A third time let him begin with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+half the quantity of hydrochloric acid, and, adding as
+much ammonia as in the first case, again repeat the
+process. It is obvious what the result of these experiments
+must be; but without telling the student what he
+is to expect, it will be a good exercise to ask him to
+draw his own inferences from the results. Of course,
+he must previously have so far been made acquainted
+with the properties of hydrochloric acid and ammonia
+as to know that the excess of either would escape when
+the saline solution is evaporated over a water-bath.
+But with this limited knowledge he will be able to
+deduce the law of definite proportions from the experimental
+results thus simply obtained.</p>
+
+<p>The third of the fundamental laws of chemistry
+stated above (generally known as the law of Gay-Lussac)
+declares that, when two or more of the factors or
+products of a chemical process are a&euml;riform, the volumes
+of these gaseous substances bear to each other a
+very simple ratio. Here, again, numerous experiments
+may be contrived to illustrate the law. Water, when
+decomposed by electricity, yields hydrogen and oxygen
+gases whose volumes bear to each other the ratio of
+two to one. When hydrochloric-acid gas is decomposed
+by sodium amalgam, the volume of the original gas bears
+to that of the residual hydrogen the ratio also of two
+to one. When ammonia is decomposed by chlorine,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+the volume of the resulting nitrogen gas is one third
+of that of the chlorine gas employed.</p>
+
+<p>Having illustrated these three general laws, attention
+should be directed to the fact that the nature of a
+chemical process and the laws which it obeys are results
+of observation and involve no theory whatsoever.
+On these facts the science of chemistry is built. The
+modern system of chemistry, however, assumes what is
+known as the molecular theory, and by means of this
+theory attempts to explain all these facts and show
+their mutual relations. Here the distinction between
+fact and theory must be insisted upon, and also the
+value of theory for classifying facts and directing observation.</p>
+
+<p>A molecule is now defined, and, if the student has
+not studied physics sufficiently to become acquainted
+with the outlines of the kinetic theory of gases, this
+theory must be developed sufficiently to give the student
+a knowledge of the three great laws of Mariotte, of
+Charles, and of Avogadro. He must be made to understand
+how molecules are defined by the physicist, and
+how their relative weights may be inferred by a comparison
+of vapor densities. He should then be made
+to compare the relative molecular weights, deduced by
+physical means, with the definite proportions he has
+observed in chemical processes. He will thus himself<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+be led to the conclusion that these definite proportions
+are the proportions of the molecular weights, and that
+the constancy of the law arises from the fact that in
+every chemical process the action takes place between
+molecules, and that the products of the process are
+new molecules, preserving always, of course, their definite
+relative weights. The student will thus be brought
+to the chemical conception of the molecule as the smallest
+mass of any substance in which the qualities inhere,
+and he will come to regard a chemical process as always
+taking place between molecules.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far nothing has been said about the composition
+of matter. A chemical process has been defined
+simply as certain factors yielding certain products, but
+nothing has been determined about the relations of these
+several substances except in so far as they are defined by
+the three laws illustrated above. But now it must be
+shown that a study of different chemical processes compels
+us to conclude that in some cases two or more substances
+unite to form a compound, while in other cases
+a compound is broken up into simpler parts. Thus,
+when copper-filings are heated in the air, it is evident
+that the material of the copper has united with that portion
+of the air we call oxygen to form the black product
+we call oxide of copper; and again, when oxide of silver
+is heated, it is evident that the resulting silver and oxy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>gen
+gas were formerly portions of the material of the
+oxide. So, when water is decomposed by electricity,
+the conditions of the experiment show that the resulting
+oxygen and hydrogen gases must have come from
+the material of the water, and could have come from
+nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>Experiments should now be multiplied until the student
+has a perfectly clear idea of the nature of the evidence
+on which our knowledge of the composition of
+bodies depends. The decomposition of chlorate of potash
+by heat, yielding chloride of potassium and oxygen
+gas; the decomposition of nitrate of ammonium by heat,
+yielding nitrous oxide and water; the decomposition of
+this resulting nitrous oxide, when the gas is passed over
+heated metallic copper; and, lastly, the decomposition
+already referred to, of water by electricity&mdash;are all striking
+experiments by which the evidence of chemical composition
+may be enforced.</p>
+
+<p>The distinction between elementary and compound
+substances having been clearly defined by the course of
+reasoning already given in outline, the next aim should
+be to lead the student to comprehend how substances are
+analyzed and their composition expressed in percents.
+The reduction of oxide of copper by hydrogen gives
+readily the data for determining the composition of
+water, which is thus shown to contain in one hundred<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+parts 11&middot;11 per cent of hydrogen and 88&middot;89 per cent of
+oxygen.</p>
+
+<p>Another substance whose analysis can be very readily
+made by the student is carbonate of magnesia. By igniting
+pure carbonate of magnesia in a crucible (not of
+course the "magnesia alba" of the shops), the proportions
+of carbonic acid and magnesia can be readily determined.
+Then, by burning magnesium ribbon, and
+weighing the product, the student easily finds the relative
+weight of magnesium and oxygen in the oxide.
+And, lastly, the proportion of carbon and oxygen in carbonic
+dioxide is easily deduced from the burning of a
+weighed amount of carbon. Here the result may be
+expressed either in percents of oxide or magnesium and
+carbonic dioxide, or else in percents of the elementary
+substances, carbon, magnesium, and oxygen.</p>
+
+<p>After making a few analyses like these, the student
+will be prepared to comprehend the actual position of
+the science. All known substances have been analyzed,
+and the results tabulated, so that it is unnecessary to repeat
+the work except in special cases.</p>
+
+<p>The teacher is now prepared to take a very important
+step in the development of the subject. If the molecule
+is simply a small particle of a substance in which
+the qualities of the substance inhere, then it follows, of
+course, that the composition of the molecule is the same<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+as the composition of the substance. The percentage
+results of the analysis of water, or of carbonate of magnesia,
+indicate the composition of a molecule of water or
+a molecule of carbonate of magnesia. Thus, 11&middot;11 per
+cent of every molecule of water consists of hydrogen,
+while 88&middot;89 per cent consists of oxygen. Hence it follows
+that, in a chemical process, the molecules must be
+divided, and these elementary parts of molecules which
+analysis reveals are the atoms of chemistry. Moreover,
+as we know the weights of molecules, both by physical
+and chemical means, chemical analysis now gives us the
+weights of the atoms. We have no time to dwell on the
+details of this reasoning, but the general course to be followed
+will be evident, and it must be enforced by numerous
+examples.</p>
+
+<p>Assuming that the student fully comprehends the
+distinction between molecules and atoms&mdash;that is, between
+the physically smallest particles and the chemically
+smallest particles&mdash;he is prepared to master the
+symbolical nomenclature of chemistry, with a very few
+words of explanation. The initial letters of the Latin
+names are selected to represent the atoms of the seventy
+known elementary substances, and these letters stand for
+the definite atomic weights which are tabulated in all
+chemical text-books. The symbols of the atoms are simply
+grouped together to form the symbols of the mole<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>cules
+of the various substances; the number of atoms of
+each kind entering into the composition of the molecule
+being indicated by a subscript numeral. Lastly, in order
+to represent chemical processes, the symbols of the molecules
+of the factors are written on one side and the symbols
+of the molecules of the products are written on the
+other side of an equation, the number of molecules of
+each substance involved being indicated by numerical
+coefficients.</p>
+
+<p>The atomic symbols, as we have seen, stand for definite
+weights. In the same way, the molecular symbols
+stand for definite weights, which are the sums of the
+weights of the atoms of which each consists, and in every
+chemical equation the weights of the molecules represented
+on one side must necessarily equal the weights of
+the molecules represented on the other. The chemical
+process consists merely in the breaking up of certain
+molecules, and the rearrangement of the same constituent
+atoms to form new molecules. Again, as the molecular
+symbols represent definite weights, the equation also
+indicates that a definite proportion by weight is preserved
+between the several factors and products of the
+process represented.</p>
+
+<p>Again, since every molecular symbol represents the
+same volume when the substance is in an a&euml;riform condition,
+it follows that the relative gas volumes are pro<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>portional
+to the number of molecules of the a&euml;riform
+substances involved in the reaction. Thus it is that
+these chemical equations or reactions are a constant declaration
+of the three great fundamental laws of chemistry.</p>
+
+<p>In order to enforce the above principles, a great number
+of examples should now be given which should be
+so selected as to illustrate familiar and important chemical
+processes, including the all-important phenomena of
+combustion. In each case, the student, having made the
+experiment, should write the equation or reaction which
+represents the process, and should be made to solve a
+sufficient number of stochio-metrical problems, involving
+both weights and volumes, to give him a complete mastery
+of the subject. Such questions as these will test the
+completeness of his knowledge:</p>
+
+<p>Why is the symbol of water H<sub>2</sub>O? What information
+does the symbol CO<sub>2</sub> give in regard to carbonic-dioxide
+gas? Write the reaction of hydrochloric acid on
+sodic carbonate, and state what information the equation
+gives in regard to the process which it represents.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, such questions may be greatly multiplied,
+and I cite these three only to call attention to the features
+of the method of instruction I have been endeavoring
+to illustrate.</p>
+
+<p>But, besides teaching the general principles of chem<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>ical
+science, it is important to give the student a more or
+less extended knowledge of chemical facts and processes&mdash;especially
+such as play an important part in daily life,
+or in the arts&mdash;and such knowledge can readily be given
+in this connection. Beyond this I do not deem it desirable
+to go in an elementary course of instruction. The
+way, however, is now opened to the most advanced fields
+of the science. A comparison of symbols and reactions
+leads at once to the doctrine of quantivalence, and to the
+results of modern structural chemistry which this doctrine
+involves. Among these results there is of course
+much that is fanciful, but there is also a very large substratum
+of established truth; and if the student thoroughly
+comprehends the symbolical language of chemistry,
+and understands the facts it actually represents, he
+will be able to realize, so far as is now possible, the
+truths which underlie the conventional forms.</p>
+
+<p>The study of the structure of molecules naturally
+leads to the study of their stability, and of the conditions
+which determine chemical changes, and thus opens the
+recently explored field of thermo-chemistry. To be able
+to predict the order and results of possible conditions of
+association of materials, or of chemical changes under all
+circumstances, is now the highest aim of our science, and
+we have already made very considerable progress toward
+this end.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But I have detained you too long, and I must
+refer to the "New Chemistry" for a fuller exposition of
+this subject. My object has been gained if I have been
+able to make clear to you that it is possible to present
+the science of chemistry as a systematic body of truths
+independent of the mass of details with which the science
+is usually encumbered, and make the study a most
+valuable means of training the power of inductive reasoning,
+and thus securing the great end of scientific culture.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="XII" id="XII"></a>XII.</h3>
+
+<h2>"NOBLESSE OBLIGE."</h2>
+
+
+<p>In the former essays of this volume I have earnestly
+maintained that scientific culture, rightly understood,
+is a suitable basis for a liberal education; and I
+have maintained this thesis without in any way attempting
+to disparage that literary culture hitherto
+so generally regarded as the only basis on which the
+liberal arts could be built. While, however, I have
+argued that, in the present condition of the world, there
+is more than one basis of true scholarship, I have fully
+admitted that for far the larger number of scholars,
+including all those whose lives are to be occupied with
+literary pursuits, the old system of education is still
+the best. Moreover, I have endeavored to point out
+that scientific culture in no way conflicts with literary
+culture; that it has a different spirit, a different method,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+and a different aim; and I have only recommended it
+as suitable to those who are distinctly preparing themselves
+for a scientific calling; but I have maintained
+that for such men scientific studies, rightly followed,
+may lead to a broad, a noble, and in the truest sense
+a liberal education.</p>
+
+<p>I have used the term scientific culture <i>rightly understood</i>
+in order to mark a distinction; because a great
+deal that passes for scientific scholarship in the world
+does not imply true scientific culture. In all departments
+of learning, and not less in scientific than in literary
+studies, erudition does not necessarily imply a
+high degree of culture. We all value the labors of
+the lexicographer, and the work may be so done as to
+task the noblest intellectual power; but there is a higher
+form of literary culture than that which dictionary-making
+usually implies. So also in science, no amount
+of book-learning constitutes what we have called scientific
+culture rightly understood. For example, the ability
+to pass an examination on the facts and principles
+of science is no test whatever of the form of culture
+we are advocating. Not that we underrate the value
+of such tests, or of the knowledge they imply; but the
+ability to master a subject as presented in a text-book,
+and to state that knowledge in a concise and accurate
+form, is the normal result of literary, not of scientific<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+culture. The power to do something well is involved
+in the very idea of culture, and the scholar who can
+pass a successful written examination has acquired a
+power which literary culture chiefly gives, and that
+this power may be applied to scientific as well as literary
+subjects is obvious. Here is a most important distinction
+in connection with our subject. Culture implies
+the acquisition of some power of the mind in an
+eminent degree, and such power is constantly associated
+with erudition, simply because it leads to erudition.
+But when we see erudition without such power,
+as we often do in every department of scholarship, we
+perceive at once upon how much lower a level it stands.
+What very different things are classical scholarship and
+classical erudition; and is not the power which the great
+classical scholars possess of interpreting the thoughts
+of the classical authors, and of reproducing their
+life, the great element of difference between the
+two?</p>
+
+<p>So scientific culture implies the ability to interpret
+Nature, to observe her phenomena, and to investigate
+her laws. The scholar, to whom Nature presents merely
+an orderly succession of facts and phenomena, knows
+nothing of true scientific culture. As there is a spirit
+in the great writers of classical antiquity which ennobles
+the study of the forms in which the thoughts of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+these authors were expressed, so also is there a spirit
+in Nature without which facts and phenomena, however
+well classified, create no intellectual elevation.
+The last century of the world's history has been marked,
+more than by anything else, by the increase of our
+knowledge of Nature, and it will be known in history
+as the age of great discoveries; but valuable as the
+facts and principles of science certainly are, greatly as
+they have promoted the well-being of mankind, and
+important, therefore, as the knowledge of these facts
+and principles must be to man, yet nevertheless I
+should never urge the claims of physical science as a
+basis of liberal education if they could be defended on
+no other grounds than these. It is here as elsewhere
+"the spirit which giveth life"; and the power to interpret
+Nature, and to commune with the intelligence that
+rules the universe, is the one acquisition which, above
+all others, gives worth and dignity to the form of
+culture we have endeavored to advocate in these
+essays.</p>
+
+<p>Those who regard science simply as utilitarianism,
+and who value scientific studies solely because they teach
+men how to build railroads, to explore mines, to extract
+the useful metals from their ores, or to increase the yield
+of agriculture, have an even more imperfect conception
+of what is meant by scientific culture than those to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+whom science is merely a valuable erudition. It is true
+that physics and chemistry may be studied as arts rather
+than as sciences, and we have no desire to underrate the
+importance of such technical education; but the difference
+between the two modes of study is as wide as
+the difference between the artisan and the scholar. In
+asserting this we do not forget that the occupations of
+the engineer, the electrician, and the analytical chemist
+demand a very large amount of knowledge, judgment,
+and skill, and are rightly regarded as learned professions.
+But let it not be supposed that skill in such professions
+is the end or aim of scientific culture; any more
+than legal skill is the end or aim of literary culture. If
+literary scholars regard the study of science solely from
+this point of view, it is no wonder that they think that
+the tone of scholarship would be lowered if it rested
+solely on such a utilitarian basis; and, on the other hand, if
+they could once realize the sublimity of Nature, as
+Copernicus, Newton, Faraday, and unnumbered others
+have realized it, this fear that devotion to science must
+degrade scholarship would disappear.</p>
+
+<p>We are well aware that practical men frequently
+regard with undisguised contempt the students of theoretical
+science, and that the greater number of persons
+seeking a scientific education must look for employment
+to the practical professions in which this tone too often<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+prevails. But, certainly, a narrow technical spirit prevails
+quite as often in the professions in which literary
+scholars chiefly find employment; and the new scientific
+professions are even more closely dependent on the discussion
+of theoretical and abstract principles than those
+which have hitherto been exclusively regarded as liberal.
+It is an admitted fact, as we have shown in another
+place, that all the great advances in practical science, all
+the great inventions, which during the last century have
+so wonderfully increased the power of man over Nature,
+may be traced directly to the results of theoretical study.
+For this reason, if on no higher ground, we have claimed
+that it is both the interest and the duty of the State to
+foster and reward scientific investigation. The time is
+not far distant, if it is not already at hand, when the
+scientific culture of a people will be one of the chief
+factors in determining its position among the nations of
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>We can not leave this subject without giving prominence
+to another thought, which has been ever present
+with us while writing these pages, if not hitherto distinctly
+stated. Culture, as we have seen, implies power, and
+the possession of power also involves corresponding obligations.
+Among the many blessings which Christianity
+and its attendant civilization have brought to mankind,
+the recognition of this principle is most plainly marked.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+The principle is assumed in almost every relation of life,
+even when not distinctly acknowledged; and happily it
+can rarely now be disregarded without incurring the
+odium of mankind. It leads the possessors of great
+wealth to devote no inconsiderable share of their fortunes
+to the public good; it stigmatizes as miserly any neglect
+of this obligation; and the best hope of preserving our
+modern civilization against the destructive agencies of
+socialism is to be found in the increasing recognition
+and enforcement of this saving grace.</p>
+
+<p>But while this principle is, to a greater or less degree,
+acted upon in all relations of life, it is enforced by public
+opinion with special strictness upon those who assume
+to be the servants of the people. In political life
+the obligations it imposes are already very generally recognized;
+and still more strongly are they felt by the
+ministers of religion. The politician who uses his high
+position to promote his personal interests may sometimes
+escape his just deserts; but the clergyman who prostitutes
+his influence for private gains is universally condemned.
+So true is this, that a clergyman is debarred by his profession
+from many of the industries and occupations of
+life which are regarded as perfectly honorable callings
+for other men. A clergyman who speculated in stocks,
+or even engaged in a mercantile pursuit, would, with
+good reason, lose the respect of the very men who had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+gained their wealth by the same ways which they deny
+to him. He may not, like the members of the elder religious
+fraternities, take the vow of poverty, but still he
+is held to a very strict rule of life; and on this is based
+his claim to an adequate support from the people to
+whom he ministers. Because "appointed to sow spiritual
+things," the clergy are entitled "to reap worldly things"
+which they have not sown nor gathered; and evil will be
+the days when this claim is disallowed.</p>
+
+<p>Now, we hold that the profession of a scientific
+teacher implies an obligation not less binding than that
+which rests on the clergyman; and this is especially true
+if the teacher has been placed in a conspicuous and responsible
+position before the world. The teacher has
+been set apart as truly as the clergyman, and, if he uses
+the influence of his office merely as a means of accumulating
+wealth, he is not loyal to the profession which he
+has voluntarily assumed. Let me not be misunderstood.
+There are a thousand legitimate ways of earning a livelihood
+and acquiring wealth by means of the knowledge
+which scientific study gives; and a man has a right to
+use scientific knowledge for his worldly advancement as
+freely as any other knowledge. But the man who has
+accepted the post of a teacher, and receives the support
+to which his position entitles him, is bound to do the
+work of a teacher to the best of his ability, and to devote<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+his whole energies to extending the knowledge of the
+science which he professes to teach. It is of the utmost
+importance that the community should be educated up to
+this point, and should hold its teachers to their trusts and
+obligations as strictly as it does its clergy. Indeed, the
+scientific even more than the religious teacher requires
+the aid of a correct public sentiment to maintain the
+tone of his profession. Scientific knowledge and acumen,
+when centered on business relations, has often discovered
+direct avenues to wealth; the temptation to
+make use of the opportunities thus offered is of course
+very great, and in most of the relations of life the career
+so opened may be perfectly legitimate and honorable.
+But no one can expect to succeed in any business career
+without devoting his whole energy to the work, and
+there are conditions under which such a course would involve
+the betrayal of a trust. Nor are the words betrayal
+of a trust too strong; for it is sometimes the
+case that, besides neglecting his appropriate work, the
+scientific teacher sells the reputation of his position,
+and commands a higher price because he barters the
+good name of the institution with which he is connected.</p>
+
+<p>I am well aware that there is another side to this
+question. In many of our colleges the professor has an
+inadequate support, and is expected or even invited to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+supplement his income by what is technically called
+"commercial work." Of course, in such cases the man
+can not be blamed; but public opinion should be such as
+to prevent a respectable institution from offering, or a
+respectable professor from accepting, such a position.
+The workman is worthy of his hire, and the same sentiment
+which demands from the scientific professor a
+whole-hearted devotion to his work, demands also from
+the community for which he works an adequate support.</p>
+
+<p>It is undoubtedly in consequence of the inadequate
+support which scientific teachers generally receive in this
+country that public sentiment tolerates with them practices
+which sober judgment must condemn; and it must
+be remembered that under these circumstances a teacher,
+if he is faithful to the routine of his office, may devote
+his remaining energies to commercial work, not only
+without any consciousness of wrong-doing, but even with
+the approbation of his associates. Hence, it is the more
+important to establish firmly in the public mind the well-founded
+opinion that the endowed professorships of our
+higher institutions of learning are offices of public trust,
+to be administered solely for the public good. There is
+no hardship in this position; since perfectly legitimate
+and honorable avenues are opened to the scientific scholar,
+on which he may expend his business energies, and,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+at the same time, use his scientific knowledge; and for
+many men these avenues lead in the directions in which
+they can not only most effectually advance themselves in
+worldly prosperity, but also most benefit their fellows.
+Among the men of practical ability who have developed
+a new industry, or introduced a new invention, and who
+have acquired wealth thereby, are to be found some of
+the greatest benefactors of their race; and far would it
+be from me to institute a comparison between the practical
+men and the scholars. All we claim is that the men
+of affairs should resign the endowments intended for the
+maintenance of scholars to those whose zeal is sufficient
+to induce them to make gladly the sacrifices which the
+advancement of knowledge usually entails.</p>
+
+<p>These considerations will appear still more forcible
+if viewed in relation to the interest of the community
+in scientific culture to which we have already referred.
+This interest has not been overlooked, and in recent
+years a great many projects have been discussed for
+what is termed the "endowment of research"; and already
+very considerable funds are held by learned societies
+of the Old World, and smaller amounts by several
+societies of this country, which have been devoted to this
+object. But although means are thus furnished to a limited
+extent to pay the expenses of scientific investigations,
+and very considerable prizes are offered for the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+solution of important problems, yet it must be confessed
+that as yet the results have been meager and have not
+answered the expectations of the founders of the endowments;
+and the reason of the small fruitage is not far to
+seek. A certain order of scientific results can be purchased
+like other professional work for a price which is
+to some extent proportionate to the skill required to
+obtain them. Such, for example, are the daily observations
+at an astronomical or a meteorological station;
+such also are chemical analyses and assays of various
+kinds; such, again, is much of the routine work of a
+physical laboratory. But the highest order of scientific
+results, such as leave a permanent impress on the records
+of science&mdash;like Newton's law of gravitation, Young's
+theory of light, Faraday's theory of electricity, or Bunsen's
+methods of spectrum analysis&mdash;can no more be had
+to order than could "Paradise Lost" or "In Memoriam"
+have been purchased by the foot. Moreover, scientific
+progress follows a necessary law of continuity, and important
+advances can not be made until the time is ripe.
+The most that can be done with the direct endowments
+for research is, to multiply trustworthy observations, and
+thus prepare the way for discovery; and more than this
+can not be expected.</p>
+
+<p>A more efficient means of cultivating science, and
+one which is certain, in the long run, to yield a far more<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+abundant and richer harvest, is to secure the conditions
+which are known to be favorable to scientific discoveries,
+and to hold in honor such discoveries when made; and I
+think there will be little difference of opinion among
+competent scientific authorities that the one essential condition
+above all others is a certain atmosphere which
+results from the association of men who are engaged in
+scientific study.</p>
+
+<p>An association of scholars acts in many ways to favor
+either literary or scientific production. In the first place,
+it leads to competition, which, although a low motive, is
+a very potent one in all forms of human activity. In
+the second place, the contact of minds engaged in similar
+studies leads the student to take a broader view of
+his subject, and to see it from the various points of
+view which the criticism of his associates may point out.
+Above all, work done in such associations is not done
+without observation, and there are present witnesses to
+attest the results, and publish them with the authority
+which is required to insure for them general acceptance.
+A great deal of scientific work is lost to the world because
+done in a corner, and buried in the transactions of
+local societies, from which it is not disinterred until the
+work has been repeated. The advantages of such association
+are only too evident to the numerous workers in science
+at the isolated colleges of this country, who are<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+forced to compare their opportunities with those of their
+compeers in the great capitals of Europe; and the want
+of scientific productiveness in the United States which
+we so greatly lament is due chiefly to the want of the
+stimulus which combined action so greatly gives. Happily,
+however, the conditions favorable for scientific investigation
+are multiplying at home, and already there
+are several centers at which the productiveness is rapidly
+increasing, and gives great promise of the future. Moreover,
+this growth gives us a good indication as to the
+points at which we can most advantageously apply aid;
+and I am confident that there is no way in which we
+can so effectively encourage scientific investigation as by
+establishing at the institutions of learning, which are at
+present the chief centers of scientific activity, more professorships
+and fellowships, in order to give support to
+those who are ready to devote their lives to scientific
+study.</p>
+
+<p>The teaching which a professorship implies, instead
+of being a hindrance, ought to be a great stimulus to scientific
+investigation. Of course, this influence is greatly
+impaired if, as in many of our colleges, the available
+energies of the teacher are exhausted by the daily routine
+of instruction, or by the outside work required to
+supplement his meager salary. But, if the teaching is
+only moderate in amount and in the direction of the pro<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>fessor's
+own work, there is no stimulus so great as that
+which the association with a class of earnest students
+supplies.</p>
+
+<p>Were it necessary to sustain the opinions here advanced
+by further illustrations, we need only point to
+the Royal Institution of Great Britain, which holds
+foundations like those we have advocated; for the names
+of Davy, Young, Faraday, Tyndal, and Dewar, are a
+conspicuous memorial of the very great success of such
+endowments in advancing physical science.</p>
+
+<p>It is obvious, however, that the endowment of professorships
+and fellowships will be of no value to the community
+unless it is understood that the incumbents are
+set apart for their special work; and the suggestion that
+such positions could be used to favor private ends, or as
+the basis of mercantile transactions, is sufficient to show
+how inconsistent such a practice is with the true conception
+of scientific culture.</p>
+
+<p>Our patent laws have a very marked and not altogether
+a beneficial influence on the scientific culture of
+the country. It is true that they foster mechanical ingenuity
+and inventive talent in certain directions, but
+they also set before the people a very low and mercenary
+standard of scientific attainment, upon which the popular
+notion of the utilitarian tendency of scientific studies is
+to a great extent based. No one can question that the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+discoverer of a new process, or the inventor of a new
+machine, has a right to keep his knowledge to himself,
+and to make the best use he can of his good fortune to increase
+his wealth. But certainly the motto at the head of
+this essay points to a more excellent way, and it is at least
+an open question whether it is for the interest of the
+community at large to encourage by its laws the more
+selfish course. The argument by which the patent laws
+are usually defended by legal writers&mdash;that it is for the
+benefit of the community to encourage and therefore
+to protect inventive talent&mdash;is by no means so unanswerable
+as it appears <i>prima-facie</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, it may be questioned whether, in
+the present condition of our patent laws, they do not hinder
+more than they foster invention. Any one who has
+attempted to perfect a machine, or improve a chemical
+process, knows to what extent he is hampered on
+every side by patent rights, which often have no value
+to the holders except that which the new improvement
+may give to them.</p>
+
+<p>Again, the inventions which the patent laws foster are
+only those having an immediate pecuniary value, and it
+is often exceedingly simple contrivances&mdash;like the needle
+of a sewing-machine or a gaudy toy&mdash;which yield the
+greatest return; simply because they have been accommodated
+to present emergencies or to passing popular<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+fancy. Such contrivances usually manifest no extended
+knowledge and no special talent, and the inventor owes
+his good luck to the sole circumstance that he was in a
+position to recognize the want.</p>
+
+<p>Now, every scientific investigator knows that the
+ordinary work of a physical or chemical laboratory frequently
+demands inventive ability of a high order, and
+that few important scientific results have been reached
+that have not involved inventions as worthy of admiration
+as the sewing-machines and power-looms which are
+so frequently cited as examples of the beneficent influence
+of our patent laws; and the question arises, is it for
+the interest of the community to promote one class of
+inventions more than the other? Certainly, if we consider
+either the sacrifice involved, or the ultimate good
+which eventually results to the community, there can
+not be a moment's question which class is the most valuable
+or most worthy of commendation. Yet the patent
+laws not only give their immense prizes solely to inventions
+of immediate utility, but also tend to raise a
+false estimate of the intrinsic value of such inventions
+in the public mind.</p>
+
+<p>Some writers have gone to the extreme of claiming
+that a man has the same right in his inventions or discoveries
+that an author has in his books; but this claim will
+not bear analysis. The first duty of a government is to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+protect its citizens in the enjoyment of the results of
+their lawful labor, and certainly any one who has written
+a book knows that it is just as much the product of day-labor
+as any article of merchandise. On the other hand,
+an invention or discovery may be the result of a fortunate
+accident, and, although it may be the fruit of superior
+knowledge and intelligence, it can not be regarded
+in the same sense as a direct product of labor. It is
+much more frequently a free gift of Nature.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, it is seldom if ever the case that a useful
+invention, meeting a popular want, and therefore having
+a large commercial value, is in any sense the product of
+one man. As a general rule, the patentee who enjoys the
+right to the invention has actually added to the old stock
+only a single detail. It may be that this detail was the
+one thing required to make the invention practically useful;
+but it is certain that the addition could never have
+been made if the previous knowledge had not existed,
+and it is at least an open question whether the community
+ought to grant to the last man an exclusive right to
+the whole inheritance. Volta discovered&mdash;invented, if
+you please&mdash;the mode of generating a current of low-tension
+electricity, which has been ever since, with certain
+modifications, in general use; Oersted and Amp&eacute;re
+discovered the magnetic effects of this electrical
+current; Faraday, again, learned how to produce an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+electric current from a magnet, and invented the original
+dynamo-machine; Henry discovered the conditions
+under which the magnetic effects of an electric current
+might be produced at great distances from the source of
+the power. All these men were inventors of the highest
+order, whose inventions have never been excelled either
+in the ingenuity displayed, or in the influence exerted
+on the welfare of mankind. Moreover, these
+far-reaching inventions were a willing contribution to
+the world's knowledge, for which no pecuniary compensation
+was either asked or received. Is it not,
+then, a question if any man of the present day has a
+right to the exclusive use of these inventions; for writing
+messages at a distance, for transmitting sound over
+wires, or for any purpose whatsoever?</p>
+
+<p>There is of course another side to the question, and I
+freely admit the difficulty of the problem which our patent
+laws present; but I feel that in their present condition
+they do more harm than good, and do injustice
+more frequently than they protect right. I greatly
+doubt if it is safe to grant by statute property in any invention
+or discovery beyond the definite mechanical contrivance
+in which it is for the time embodied. To grant
+the sole use of a well-known power of Nature to produce
+a specific effect, although the effect be a novel one; to give
+the monopoly of a process of Nature to the man who was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+the first to claim it; above all, to grant the sole right to
+make a specified mixture of materials&mdash;is certainly a
+policy which directly encourages vast monopolies, that
+tax the public without rendering a corresponding
+benefit.</p>
+
+<p>In this connection it must be remembered that the
+discoverer or inventor himself rarely reaps the fruit of
+his sagacity or skill; but his rights, frequently purchased
+for a song, are made the basis of great business enterprises
+in which he has little or no share. On such a
+slender basis have frequently been built up huge monopolies,
+in which the patent laws have been made the instruments
+of oppressive exactions, and have become the
+nucleus of a most complex system of usages and
+legal decisions, by which the original intent of the
+laws has been wholly overlaid, and to a great extent
+nullified.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly, there ought to be some limit to the inventor's
+claims on a grateful people. Admit to the utmost
+the inventor's merit; rank him in the fore front of the
+long procession of the great benefactors of the human
+race; rank him before Faraday, before Volta, and before
+Newton; rank him before Washington and the Fathers
+of the Republic; rank him before the patriots and martyrs
+who have died in the defense of human rights, or in
+attestation of the truth: and yet, in virtue of these tran<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>scendent
+merits, should he or his representatives be authorized
+to tax his countrymen millions on millions of
+dollars a year? Surely, there could not be a greater travesty
+of our motto, "Noblesse Oblige"; and a system
+which gives a legal sanction to such abuses will soon
+force on the public mind that most convincing of all
+proofs of perversion, the <i>reductio ad absurdum</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It is not, however, our intention to discuss the abuses
+of the patent laws, much less to suggest the required
+remedies. We clearly see the difficulties of the subject,
+and we perceive that it involves questions, both of political
+economy and of jurisprudence, with which we are
+not competent to deal. Our interest is solely to maintain
+the dignity of scientific culture, and to demand for
+it the respect to which it is entitled; but which is seriously
+compromised by the mercenary and utilitarian
+spirit that the patent laws encourage and make prominent.
+We are most anxious that the intelligence of our
+people should fully recognize the fact that, among the
+students of science in this practical age, there is such a
+thing as devotion to the truth for the truth's sake; that
+throughout the length and breadth of these United
+States may be found many an earnest student of Nature
+who, under great disadvantages, and often at great personal
+sacrifice, is devoting the noblest intellectual power,
+and the highest inventive skill, to the sole end of ad<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>vancing
+knowledge: and we rejoice to believe that the
+time will come when it will be plainly seen by all that
+these silent workers have been laying broad and deep-enduring
+foundations, on which national greatness can
+securely rest.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="XIII" id="XIII"></a>XIII.</h3>
+
+<h2>THE SPIRITUAL LIFE.<a name="FNanchor_Q_17" id="FNanchor_Q_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_Q_17" class="fnanchor">[Q]</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>We have reached the end of our long journey, and
+now we are ready to turn back and start for home.</p>
+
+<p>The Reis is at his helm, the great sail is furled and
+bound closely to the long yard; for, as the wind during
+the early spring blows here constantly from the north,
+we must depend on the rapid current of the Nile to
+bear us back to civilization: a river which, flowing
+through so many generations of men from the unknown
+to the unlimited, not unfitly typifies the course of history;
+and as, in imagination, we drift with this historical
+stream, we can not fail to learn the lesson which
+the associations and the scenes are so calculated to teach.
+That lesson is the grandeur, the glory, and the immortality
+of the spiritual life of man.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span></p><p>We go back six thousand years, and find the Sphinx,
+as to-day, looking toward the rising sun, and pondering
+the problem of human destiny.</p>
+
+<p>The pyramid-builders come, and erect those neighboring
+piles to preserve their bodies when dead for that
+glorious destiny in which they trust.</p>
+
+<p>The long procession of the Pharaohs passes, and
+each inscribes indelibly on rocky walls his faith in the
+great God who holds human destiny in his hands.</p>
+
+<p>Moses comes, and leads out of Egypt the chosen
+people to prepare the way for the expected Messiah.</p>
+
+<p>The Assyrians and the Persians come, and, while
+seeking to read their destiny in the courses of the stars,
+pay homage to the same great hope.</p>
+
+<p>The Greeks come, and, even amid gross licentiousness
+and idolatry, erect magnificent temples, in attestation
+of a belief in human destiny which, however degraded,
+still survived.</p>
+
+<p>The Romans come, and in this mystic land lay aside
+their legal codes, and add their testimony to the same
+great truth.</p>
+
+<p>The Christian hermits come, and make the storied
+stones of the Pharaohs re-echo with their triumphant
+songs.</p>
+
+<p>The Arab comes, and, as morning and evening he
+gazes into the East, sees visions of the glorious Mecca<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+of his hopes for which the Sphinx has looked so
+long.</p>
+
+<p>Last of all, the modern traveler comes, and he
+journeys in vain if he does not recognize in all this aspiration
+and all this yearning the attestation of those
+spiritual truths which to him the risen Christ has
+revealed.</p>
+
+<p>As in material nature every unemployed organ distinctly
+points to a previous use or to a future fruition:
+so, in the spiritual world, every striving is a promise of
+a possible good; and these yearnings of humanity, which
+have come down through the ages, are as truly a promise
+of the Eternal as were the words spoken to Abraham
+on the plains of Mamre.</p>
+
+<p>Coming home from the East, we can not fail to see,
+more clearly than before, how artificial are most of the
+conventionalities of our modern civilization, and how
+greatly such cares of the world tend to obscure the
+great distinction between the spiritual and the material
+which is ever present to Oriental thought; and this is
+especially true in our own country, where the demands
+of material nature are so pressing, and where the physical
+wants, which our highly artificial life entails, so
+completely engross the attention of us all.</p>
+
+<p>It is well to go away at times, that we may see
+another aspect of human life, which still survives in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
+East, and to feel that influence which led even the
+Christ into the wilderness to prepare for the struggle
+with the animal nature of man.</p>
+
+<p>We need something of the experience of the anchorites
+of Egypt to impress us with the great truth that
+the distinction between the spiritual and the material
+remains broad and clear, even if with the scalpel of
+our modern philosophy we can not completely dissect
+the two; and this experience will give us courage to
+cherish our aspirations, keep bright our hopes, and hold
+fast our Christian faith until the consummation comes.</p>
+
+<p>My young friends, there are many who will tell
+you that the Sphinx has merely propounded a riddle to
+the ages; and that the yearnings of your young lives&mdash;like
+those of the early Egyptians, who set up this
+memorial of their hopes&mdash;are merely a delusion and a
+snare.</p>
+
+<p>Do not believe in any such pessimism.</p>
+
+<p>It is merely the dying gasp of your animal nature!
+But give your utmost efforts that these aspirations be
+not smothered by the cares and trials which must come
+to you as they come to all.</p>
+
+<p>Have faith in the Eternal who implanted those cravings
+in your nature; and remember that all knowledge
+rests on the assurance that the Eternal can not be false.
+Be loyal to the truth of that witness in your hearts,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+and advancing years will only bring you increased reliance
+on the promises he ever whispers to those who
+trust him; and he will certainly lead you, at last&mdash;as
+he has led the faithful in all ages&mdash;into the clear light
+of the perfect day.</p>
+
+<p>My fellow-students, if these fleeting pictures of
+scenes which have given me fresh courage, shall aid
+any of you in the conflict of life, my object in these
+lectures will be gained, and however incongruous with
+the associations of physical science such scenes may have
+appeared, you will bear me witness that the great lesson
+they teach has constantly been enforced in this place.
+The spiritual life of man recognizes its exalted intellectual
+likeness in the life of Nature, and it is this
+vision of the Omniscient which distinguishes and
+ennobles mental culture, whether it be in the fields
+of science, of literature, or of art.</p>
+
+
+<h4>THE END.</h4>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> As some of the readers of this volume may be interested to compare
+these values, we reproduce the "Table of Molecular Data" from Professor
+Clerk Maxwell's lecture on "Molecules," delivered before the British Association
+at Bradford, and published in "Nature," September 25, 1873.</p>
+<p class="center"><i>Molecular Magnitudes at Standard Temperature and Pressure, 0&deg; C. and
+76 c. m.</i></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="1" rules="cols" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><th class="bbox">RANK ACCORDING TO ACCURACY OF KNOWLEDGE.</th><th class="bbox">Hydrogen.</th><th class="bbox">Oxygen.</th><th class="bbox">Carbonic Oxide.</th><th class="bbox">Carbonic Dioxide.</th></tr>
+<tr><td class='tdsc'><br />Rank I.</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Relative mass</td><td align='right'> 1</td><td align='right'> 16</td><td align='right'> 14</td><td align='right'> 22</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Velocity in metres per second</td><td align='right'> 1,859</td><td align='right'> 465</td><td align='right'> 497</td><td align='right'> 396</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tdsc'><br />Rank II.</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mean path in ten billionths (10<sup>-10</sup>) of a metre</td><td align='right'> 965</td><td align='right'> 560</td><td align='right'> 482</td><td align='right'> 379</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Collisions each second&mdash;number of millions</td><td align='right'> 17,750</td><td align='right'> 7,646</td><td align='right'> 9,489</td><td align='right'> 9,720</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tdsc'><br />Rank III.</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Diameter in hundred billionths (10<sup>-11</sup>) of a metre</td><td align='right'> 58</td><td align='right'> 76</td><td align='right'> 83</td><td align='right'> 93</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mass in ten million million million millionths (10<sup>-25</sup>) of a gramme</td><td align='right'> 46</td><td align='right'> 736</td><td align='right'> 644</td><td align='right'> 1,012</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p>
+Number of molecules in one cubic centimetre of every gas is nineteen
+million million million on 19 (10<sup>18</sup>).
+</p><p>
+Two million hydrogen molecules side by side measure a little over one
+millimetre.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_B_2" id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> <i>See</i> Professor Maxwell's lecture, <i>loc. cit.</i>; also, Appletons' "Cyclop&aelig;dia,"
+article "Molecules."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> There is an obvious distinction between the free and the disturbed
+path of a molecule, and we can not overlook in our calculations the perturbations
+which the collisions necessarily entail. Such considerations greatly
+complicate the problem, which is far more difficult than would appear from
+the superficial view of the subject that can alone be given in a popular
+lecture.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_D_4" id="Footnote_D_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_D_4"><span class="label">[D]</span></a> See notice of these investigations by the author of this article, in
+"American Journal of Science and Arts," September, 1877 (3), xiv, 231.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_E_5" id="Footnote_E_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_E_5"><span class="label">[E]</span></a> The reader will, of course, distinguish between the differential action
+on the opposite faces of the vanes of the radiometer and the reaction between
+the vanes and the glass which are the heater and the cooler of the
+little engine. Nor will it be necessary to remind any student that a popular
+view of such a complex subject must be necessarily partial. In the
+present case we not only meet with the usual difficulties in this respect, but,
+moreover, the principles of molecular mechanics have not been so fully developed
+as to preclude important differences of opinion between equally
+competent authorities in regard to the details of the theory. To avoid misapprehension,
+we may here add that, in order to obtain in the radiometer a
+reaction between the heater and the cooler, it is not necessary that the
+space between them should actually be crossed by the moving molecules.
+It is only necessary that the momentum should be transferred across the
+space, and tide may take place along lines consisting of many molecules
+each. The theory, however, shows that such a transfer can only take place
+in a highly rarefied medium. In an atmosphere of ordinary density, the
+accession of heat which the vanes of a radiometer might receive from a
+radiant source would be diffused through the mass of the inclosed air.
+This amounts to saying that the momentum would be so diffused, and
+hence, under such circumstances, the molecular motion would not determine
+any reaction between the vanes and the glass envelope. Indeed, a dense
+mass of gas presents to the conduction of heat, which represents momentum,
+a wall far more impenetrable than the surrounding glass, and the diffusion
+of heat is almost wholly brought about by convection currents which
+rise from the heated surfaces. It will thus be seen that the great
+non-conducting power of air comes into play to prevent not only the transfer of
+momentum from the vanes to the glass, but also, almost entirely, any direct
+transfer to the surrounding mass of gas. Hence, as stated above, the heated
+molecules bound back and forth on the vanes without change of condition,
+and the mass of the air retains its uniform tension in all parts of the
+bulb, except in so far as this is slowly altered by the convection currents
+just referred to. As the atmosphere, however, becomes less dense, the diffusion
+of heat by convection diminishes, and that by molecular motion (conduction)
+increases until the last greatly predominates. When, now, the
+exhaustion reaches so great a degree that the heat, or momentum, is rapidly
+transferred from the heater to the cooler by an exaggeration, or, possibly,
+a modification, of the mode of action we call conduction, then we have
+the reaction on which the motion of the radiometer wheel depends.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_F_6" id="Footnote_F_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_F_6"><span class="label">[F]</span></a> "Nature," No. 22, March 31, 1870.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_G_7" id="Footnote_G_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_G_7"><span class="label">[G]</span></a>
+</p>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'>For example, the native crystals of sulphur have &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;</td><td align='left'><i>a</i> : <i>b</i> : <i>c</i> = 1 : 2&middot;340 : 1&middot;233.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Crystals of gypsum have</td><td align='left'><i>a</i> : <i>b</i> : <i>c</i> = 1 : 0&middot;413 : 0&middot;691.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Crystals of tin-stone have</td><td align='left'><i>a</i> : <i>b</i> : <i>c</i> = 1 : 1 : 0&middot;6724.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>And crystals of common salt have</td><td align='left'><i>a</i> : <i>b</i> : <i>c</i> = 1 : 1 : 1.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_H_8" id="Footnote_H_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_H_8"><span class="label">[H]</span></a> The origin of the axes is always taken as the center of the sphere of
+projection.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_I_9" id="Footnote_I_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_I_9"><span class="label">[I]</span></a> "Obituary Notices from the Proceedings of the Royal Society," No.
+206, 1880, to which the writer has been indebted for several biographical
+details.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_J_10" id="Footnote_J_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_J_10"><span class="label">[J]</span></a> This notice is reprinted from the Proceedings of the American
+Academy of Arts and Sciences, vol. xviii, 1882-'83.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_K_11" id="Footnote_K_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_K_11"><span class="label">[K]</span></a> Reprinted from the Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts
+and Sciences, vol. xix, 1883-'84.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_L_12" id="Footnote_L_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_L_12"><span class="label">[L]</span></a> A. W. Hofmann, in "Nature," February 6, 1880, to whose admirable
+and extended biography the writer is indebted for much of the material
+with which this notice has been prepared.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_M_13" id="Footnote_M_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_M_13"><span class="label">[M]</span></a> Hofmann, <i>loc. cit.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_N_14" id="Footnote_N_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_N_14"><span class="label">[N]</span></a> Remarks made at the dinner of the Harvard Club of Rhode Island,
+Newport, August 25, 1883.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_O_15" id="Footnote_O_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_O_15"><span class="label">[O]</span></a> This article was written and read to the Faculty of Harvard College
+shortly after Lord Coleridge's visit to the United States, in the autumn of
+1883.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_P_16" id="Footnote_P_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_P_16"><span class="label">[P]</span></a> An address delivered at the opening of the Summer School of Chemistry
+at Harvard College, July 7, 1884.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_Q_17" id="Footnote_Q_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_Q_17"><span class="label">[Q]</span></a> An Address to College Students at the close of a course of lectures on
+Egypt and her Monuments. Illustrated by lantern photographs.</p></div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<div class="sblockquot">
+<h2><a name="SCIENTIFIC_LECTURES_AND_ESSAYS" id="SCIENTIFIC_LECTURES_AND_ESSAYS"></a>SCIENTIFIC LECTURES AND ESSAYS.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Popular Lectures on Scientific Subjects.</span> By H.
+<span class="smcap">Helmholtz</span>, Professor of Physics in the University of Berlin. First
+Series. Translated by E. <span class="smcap">Atkinson</span>, Ph. D., F. C. S. With an Introduction
+by Professor <span class="smcap">Tyndall</span>. With 51 Illustrations. 12mo.
+Cloth, $2.00.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>CONTENTS.</i>&mdash;On the Relation of Natural Science to Science in General.&mdash;On
+Goethe's Scientific Researches.&mdash;On the Physiological Causes of Harmony in
+Music.&mdash;Ice and Glaciers.&mdash;Interaction of the Natural Forces.&mdash;The Recent Progress
+of the Theory of Vision.&mdash;The Conservation of Force.&mdash;Aim and Progress
+of Physical Science.</p></div>
+
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Popular Lectures on Scientific Subjects.</span> By H.
+<span class="smcap">Helmholtz</span>. Second Series. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>CONTENTS.</i>&mdash;Gustav Magnus.&mdash;In Memoriam.&mdash;The Origin and Significance
+of Geometrical Axioms.&mdash;Relation of Optics to Painting.&mdash;Origin of the Planetary
+System.&mdash;On Thought in Medicine.&mdash;Academic Freedom in German Universities.</p>
+
+<p>"Professor Helmholtz's second series of 'Popular Lectures on Scientific Subjects'
+forms a volume of singular interest and value. He who anticipates a dry
+record of facts or a sequence of immature generalization will find himself happily
+mistaken. In style and method these discourses are models of excellence, and,
+since they come from a man whose learning and authority are beyond dispute,
+they may be accepted as presenting the conclusions of the best thought of the
+times in scientific fields."&mdash;<i>Boston Traveler.</i></p></div>
+
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Science and Culture, and other Essays.</span> By Professor
+<span class="smcap">T. H. Huxley</span>, F. R. S. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Of the essays that have been collected by Professor Huxley in this volume,
+the first four deal with some aspect of education. Most of the remainder are expositions
+of the results of biological research, and, at the same time, illustrations
+of the history of scientific ideas. Some of these are among the most interesting
+of Professor Huxley's contributions to the literature of science."&mdash;<i>London Academy.</i></p>
+
+<p>"It is refreshing to be brought into converse with one of the most vigorous
+and acute thinkers of our time, who has the power of putting his thoughts into
+language so clear and forcible."&mdash;<i>London Spectator.</i></p></div>
+
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Scientific Culture, and other Essays.</span> By <span class="smcap">Josiah
+Parsons Cooke</span>, Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy in Harvard
+College. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>These essays are an outcome of a somewhat large experience in teaching
+physical science to college students. Cambridge, Massachusetts, early set the
+example of making the student's own observations in the laboratory or cabinet
+the basis of all teaching, either in experimental or natural history science; and
+this example has been generally followed. "But in most centers of education,"
+writes Professor Cooke "the old traditions so far survive that the great end of
+scientific culture is lost in attempting to conform even laboratory instruction to
+the old academic methods of recitations and examination. To point out this
+error, and to claim for science-teaching its appropriate methods, was one object
+of writing these essays."</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h2>WORKS ON ASTRONOMY.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Elements of Astronomy.</span> By <span class="smcap">Robert Stowell Ball</span>, LL. D.,
+F. R. S., Andrews Professor of Astronomy in the University of Dublin,
+Royal Astronomer of Ireland. With Illustrations. 16mo. Cloth,
+$2.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Elementary Lessons in Astronomy.</span> By J. <span class="smcap">Norman
+Lockyer</span>, F. R. S. Richly illustrated, and embracing the Latest Discoveries.
+American edition. Adapted to the Schools and Academies
+of the United States. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Outlines of Astronomy.</span> By Sir J. J. W. <span class="smcap">Herschel</span>. With
+Plates and Woodcuts. Eleventh edition. 8vo. Cloth, $4.00.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">The Sun.</span> By C. A. <span class="smcap">Young</span>, Ph. D., LL. D., Professor of Astronomy
+in the College of New Jersey. With numerous Illustrations. 12mo.
+Cloth, $2.00.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Professor Young is an authority on 'The Sun,' and writes from intimate
+knowledge. He has studied that great luminary all his life, invented and improved
+instruments for observing it, gone to all quarters of the world in search
+of the best places and opportunities to watch it, and has contributed important
+discoveries that have extended our knowledge of it."&mdash;<i>Popular Science Monthly.</i></p></div>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Spectrum Analysis, in its Application to Terrestrial
+Substances, and the Physical Constitution
+of the Heavenly Bodies.</span> Familiarly explained
+by Dr. H. <span class="smcap">Schellen</span>, Director der Realschule I. O. Cologne. Translated
+from the second enlarged and revised German edition by <span class="smcap">Jane</span>
+and <span class="smcap">Caroline Lassell</span>. Edited, with Notes, by <span class="smcap">William Huggins</span>,
+LL. D. With numerous Woodcuts, Colored Plates, and Portraits;
+also, Angstr&ouml;m's and Kirchhoff's Maps. 8vo. Cloth, $6.00.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"This admirable work does credit to, or should we say is worthy of, the
+author, the translators, and the editor. The first part treats on the artificial
+sources of high degrees of heat and light; the second on Spectrum Analysis in
+its application to the heavenly bodies. We must approve the method followed
+in the translation and by the editor. In many translations the views of the
+author are suppressed, in order that the views of the translator or editor may be
+expounded; but here Dr. Huggins, however leniently such a fault might have
+been looked upon with him, has permitted the author's views to remain intact,
+clearly stating his own and wherein lies the difference."&mdash;<i>The Chemical News.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, as regards mere knowledge, the 'Spectrum Analysis' has let us
+into many secrets of the physical universe which Newton and Laplace would have
+declared impossible for man's intellect to attain. The science is still in its infancy,
+but it is prosecuted by some of the ablest, most patient, and most enthusiastic
+observers, and some of the keenest thinkers, at present existing on our
+little, insignificant physical globe."&mdash;<i>Boston Globe.</i></p></div>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Studies in Spectrum Analysis.</span> By J. <span class="smcap">Norman Lockyer</span>,
+F. R. S., Correspondent of the Institute of France, etc. With Sixty
+Illustrations. 12mo. Cloth, $2.50.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"The study of spectrum analysis is one fraught with a peculiar fascination,
+and some of the author's experiments are exceedingly picturesque in their results.
+They are so lucidly described, too, that the reader keeps on, from page
+to page, never flagging in interest in the matter before him, nor putting down
+the book until the last page is reached."&mdash;<i>New York Evening Express.</i></p></div>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Origin of the Stars, and the Causes of their Motions
+and their Light.</span> By <span class="smcap">Jacob Ennis</span>. 12mo. Cloth,
+$2.00.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Astronomy and Geology Compared.</span> By Lord <span class="smcap">Ormathwaite</span>.
+18mo. Tinted paper. Cloth, $1.00.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">The Expanse of Heaven.</span> A Series of Essays on the Wonders
+of the Firmament. By R. A. <span class="smcap">Proctor</span>. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"'The Expanse of Heaven' can not fail to be of immense use in forwarding
+the work of education, even when it is read only for amusement, so forcible is the
+impression it makes on the mind from the importance of the subjects treated of,
+while the manner of treatment is so good."&mdash;<i>Boston Traveller.</i></p></div>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">The Moon:</span> Her Motions, Aspect, Scenery, and Physical Conditions,
+with Two Lunar Photographs and many Illustrations. By R. A.
+<span class="smcap">Proctor</span>. New edition. 12mo. Cloth, $3.50.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Other Worlds than Ours;</span> the Plurality of Worlds, studied
+under the Light of Recent Scientific Researches. By R. A. <span class="smcap">Proctor</span>.
+With Illustrations, some colored. 12mo. Cloth, $2.50.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Our Place among Infinities.</span> A Series of Essays contrasting
+our Little Abode in Space and Time with the Infinities around us.
+To which are added Essays on the Jewish Sabbath and Astrology.
+By R. A. <span class="smcap">Proctor</span>. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h2>WORKS ON GEOLOGY, Etc.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Principles of Geology; or, The Modern Changes
+of the Earth and its Inhabitants, considered
+as illustrative of Geology.</span> By Sir <span class="smcap">Charles Lyell</span>,
+Bart. Illustrated with Maps, Plates, and Woodcuts. A new and
+entirely revised edition. 2 vols. Royal 8vo. Cloth, $8.00.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The "Principles of Geology" may be looked upon with pride, not only as a
+representative of English science, but as without a rival of its kind anywhere.
+Growing in fullness and accuracy with the growth of experience and observation
+in every region of the world, the work has incorporated with itself each established
+discovery, and has been modified by every hypothesis of value which has
+been brought to bear upon, or been evolved from, the most recent body of facts.</p></div>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Text-Book of Geology, for Schools and Colleges.</span>
+By H. <span class="smcap">Alleyne Nicholson</span>, M. D. 12mo. Half roan,
+$1.30.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">The Ancient Life-History of the Earth.</span> A Comprehensive
+Outline of the Principles and Leading Facts of Pal&aelig;ontological
+Science. By H. <span class="smcap">Alleyne Nicholson</span>, M. D. With numerous
+Illustrations. Small 8vo. Cloth, $2.00.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Elements of Geology.</span> A Text-Book for Colleges and for the
+General Reader. By <span class="smcap">Joseph Le Conte</span>, LL. D., Professor of Geology
+and Natural History in the University of California. With
+upward of 900 Illustrations. Revised and enlarged edition. 12mo.
+Cloth, $4.00.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Town Geology.</span> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Charles Kingsley</span>, F. L. S., F. G. S.,
+Canon of Chester. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">The Study of Rocks.</span> An Elementary Text-Book in Petrology.
+With Illustrations. By <span class="smcap">Frank Rutley</span>, of the English Geological
+Survey. 16mo. Cloth, $1.75.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Great Ice Age, and its Relation to the Antiquity
+of Man.</span> By <span class="smcap">James Geikie</span>. With Maps and Illustrations.
+12mo. Cloth, $2.50.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Volcanoes:</span> What they Are and what they Teach. By J. W. <span class="smcap">Judd</span>,
+Professor of Geology in the Royal School of Mines (London).
+With 96 Illustrations. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Climate and Time in their Geological Relations:</span>
+A Theory of Secular Changes of the Earth's Climate. By <span class="smcap">James
+Croll</span>, of H. M. Geological Survey of Scotland. With Maps and
+Illustrations. 12mo. Cloth, $2.50.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ft20">Geology.</span> By Professor <span class="smcap">Archibald Geikie</span>, F. R. S. ("Science
+Primers.") 18mo. Flexible cloth, 45 cents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 80%;" />
+<p class="center"><i>For sale by all booksellers; or sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of price.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">New York: D. APPLETON &amp; CO., 1, 3, &amp; 5 Bond Street.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<div class="notebox">
+<h3>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES</h3>
+<p>1. Footnotes have been reindexed and moved from the end of the page to
+the end of the text.</p>
+
+<p>2. The following misprints have been corrected:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">
+ "<sup>1</sup>&frasl;<sub>0000</sub>" corrected to "<sup>1</sup>&frasl;<sub>1000</sub>" (page 111)<br />
+ "strucure" corrected to "structure" (page 139)<br />
+ "fevric" corrected to "ferric" (page 141)<br />
+ "d'antorit&eacute;" corrected to "d'autorit&eacute;" (page 188)<br />
+ "resourses" corrected to "resources" (page 206)<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>3. Other than the corrections listed above, printer's inconsistencies in
+spelling, punctuation, and ligature usage have been retained.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Scientific Culture, and Other Essays, by
+Josiah Parsons Cooke
+
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+</pre>
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