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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50170 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50170)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philosophy Which Shows the Physiology
-of Mesmerism and Explains the Phenomenon of Clairvoyance, by T. H. Pasley
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Philosophy Which Shows the Physiology of Mesmerism and Explains the Phenomenon of Clairvoyance
-
-Author: T. H. Pasley
-
-Release Date: October 10, 2015 [EBook #50170]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHYSIOLOGY OF MESMERISM ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Emmanuel Ackerman and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE PHILOSOPHY
-
-WHICH SHOWS THE
-
-PHYSIOLOGY OF MESMERISM,
-
-AND EXPLAINS THE
-
-PHENOMENON OF CLAIRVOYANCE.
-
-BY
-
-T. H. PASLEY.
-
-To form a just opinion of a novel mode of philosophising, we should
-study the subject, and not condemn without being able to prove it
-erroneous.
-
-He is not an Esculapian who is unacquainted with the Philosophy of the
-Animal Economy.
-
-LONDON:
-LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, AND LONGMANS.
-
-1848.
-
-TYLER & REED,
-PRINTERS,
-BOLT-COURT, FLEET STREET.
-
-
-
-
-DEDICATION.
-
-
-The following trite sketch of the Philosophy of Nature, dedicates
-itself to the most noble Champions of Mesmerism, Doctor ELLIOTSON
-and Doctor ASHBURNER of London, and Doctor ESDAILE of Calcutta, in
-compliment and grateful acknowledgment for having rescued from the
-fangs of ignorance, envy, and self-conceit, the science of health and
-knowledge--the science of Mesmerism, which unfolds the hitherto unknown
-wonders of the Animal system; and will unfold the wonders of the entire
-universe, when the telescope and microscope are familiarly used by the
-Clairvoyant.
-
-
-
-
-ADVERTISEMENT.
-
-
-It is not the intention of the present work, that what is herein
-described should be received as the philosophy of Nature according to
-the precision of Nature; but, through exemplification, on principles
-deduced from the Natural Inertia of Matter, to point out the mode by
-which the philosophy, which should govern all illustration of physical
-phenomena, is discoverable,--the Philosophy of Mechanical Nature.
-
- JERSEY, _July 1, 1848_.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
- DEDICATION iii
- ADVERTISEMENT v
- TABLE OF CONTENTS vii
- MESMERISM AND ESTABLISHED PHILOSOPHY 1
- ATTRACTION 10
- PHILOSOPHY, EXPERIMENTAL 13
- PHYSIOLOGY AND FUNCTION OF THE SENSES 15
- MATTER 23
- MOTION 24
- MEDIUM OF SPACE 28
- MINUS-PRESSURE MATTER 31
- FIRE 34
- MEDIUM OF FIRE 37
- EXPANSION 39
- OXYGEN AIR 41
- THE USE OF OXYGEN IN PROMOTING COMBUSTION 42
- COMBUSTION 43
- WATER 47
- SOLVENCY 53
- GASTRIC SOLVENCY 54
- USE OF THE INSPIRED OXYGEN WITHIN THE SYSTEM 56
- SPLEEN, ITS USE 59
- DIAPHRAGM, HOW RAISED 60
- CORRELATIVE ELEMENTS 61
- MAGNETISM 62
- NATURAL SLEEP 65
- COMATOSE FLOW 66
- MESMERIC SLEEP 68
- VISION 70
- TRANSPARENCY 77
- OPACITY 77
- THE NERVOUS FLUID 78
- CLAIRVOYANCE 81
- LONG VISION 82
- OPAQUE VISION 83
- RIGIDITY 86
- PAIN 86
- MESMERISM, CURATIVE 87
- ETHERS 87
- REPORT 88
- VOLUNTARY DE-ELECTRISATION 91
- WILL, THE NATURE AND POWER OF 92
- APPLICATION OF MESMERISM 95
- CONTINUOUS MOTION 97
- ASCENDING AND DESCENDING MOTION 99
- CENTRIPETAL FLOW 99
- FORMATION OF A PLANET 100
- ---- AND USE OF A COMET 103
- TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
-
-
-
-
-PHILOSOPHY,
-
-ETC., ETC.
-
-
-
-
-MESMERISM AND ESTABLISHED PHILOSOPHY.
-
-
-Long as clairvoyance has remained the riddle, jest and wonder of the
-world, it is questioned by none why the established philosophy of
-this superiorly enlightened age is incompetent to account for this
-or any other mesmerically produced phenomenon, or afford the least
-glimmer of light by which it were possible to arrive at the physiology.
-Why the philosophy of Aristotle, Bacon, Newton, Des Cartes, Davy,
-Liebig--honoured names, and most justly, as the ancient and modern
-fathers in science--can afford no scintillation whereby to lessen the
-obscurity in which this most interesting subject is involved, should
-appear strange and unaccountable to all lovers of philosophy. By
-Professors the question should be answered. To consider it unworthy
-of being looked into, would be a tacit confession that Professors are
-indifferent to the natural truth; which proves all such to be but half
-reasoners, and not philosophers, notwithstanding all their mathematical
-learning and experimental experience.
-
-It should have been questioned long since, whether the philosophy be
-not untrue which leaves all mankind in the dark, in a mere physical
-case, however mysterious the psychological result, the effect of manual
-application, and in the power of almost every person to produce. The
-mesmerising operation and effect includes nothing of necromancy or
-trick; is openly performed, and produced mechanically; and although the
-passes make a living being appear as if in a novel state of existence,
-the immediate effect, polarisation of the extremities of the body, is
-the same precisely as is effected on the iron bar when passed along
-the poles of a loadstone. This, and numerous other physical phenomena,
-which to the present day remain unexplained, and as if inexplicable,
-afford much reason for at least the conjecture, that modern philosophy
-is not the philosophy of physical nature; which, if not, it must be
-false and misleading, inasmuch as there can be but one philosophy,
-by reason of there being but one species of matter throughout all
-nature, and but one cause of action,--_the general pressure_. From
-which it follows, that as the philosophy of nature is that of matter
-universally, there can be no physical phenomenon which it does not
-explain. Therefore, the phenomena which modern philosophy has neither
-laws nor rules competent to explain, are so many proofs that the
-established philosophy of the age is false philosophy; which is
-provable throughout all its particulars, however rash and adventurous
-may appear the announcement. Besides, at the present day, there are
-several different philosophies maintained; every profession has its
-own; which is proof of the strongest nature that not one is true,
-dissent from the truly natural being impossible, so universally is it
-applicable. Eventually it will be admitted that the philosophy of the
-nineteenth century is founded on the crude ideas of the imperfectly
-learned in the earliest days of science, ever since adopted, and
-never investigated, instead of being deduced solely from the INERT
-NATURE OF MATTER, the only true basis. On modern philosophy, Davy
-makes the shrewd remark, that "it is no better than a mere compilation
-of isolated facts and circumstances, differently accounted for, and
-leading to no general theory:" such is not the philosophy of nature.
-
-That matter is _inert_, is made manifest in there being nothing
-whatever throughout the whole of inanimate nature which can act or
-move of itself. Matter does nothing, cannot act; it is the passive
-patient of the general pressure, which alone can act; and pressure is
-universal, because of matter being _inert_. Matter is not only _inert_,
-but _unalterable_; on which principles the constancy of the order
-and laws of nature depend. Inert, unalterable matter can suffer no
-change but of a local nature--change of place, which implies motion,
-for which there is no analogous cause but impulsive pressure. These
-unquestionable physical truisms are stated in advance, from being
-intimately connected with every physical change, in order to serve as a
-standard of comparison from which to form an opinion while canvassing
-the principles and laws by which the scientific world has been for
-centuries not only governed, but misled.
-
-Newton admits the _principle_ of _inertia_, but considers it an innate
-_passive_ power, which _enables_ a body to resist against being moved;
-and when in motion, enables it _to resist_ that which would put it
-out of motion. _Inertia_, a passive power, is as death, being passive
-animation; and _inertia enabling_ a body to _act_ against force, is
-nothing short of _active inertia_, or _vis inertiæ_, which means the
-force of inability. This monstrous perversion of a natural fundamental
-principle, and by such high authority, pervades the whole of the
-established philosophy. It makes the planets, which are but clumps of
-deadly inert matter, gravitate themselves through space; and makes
-_inert_ atoms competent to perform attraction on each other wherever
-they exist. A more absurd article of _belief_ has no place in the
-Athanasian code of mind-perverting dogmas; yet admitted as true by
-the most eminently talented and highly learned of the present age.
-While such inconsistent principles of common-place use are gravely
-defended, the _known facts_ of mesmerism are obstinately and ignorantly
-denied; and only because of not being understood; that, were it not
-for the good sense and philanthropic perseverance of the enlightened,
-noble-minded Elliotsons, Ashburners, and Esdailes, of the British
-empire--honourable, heroic champions and victors in the cause of truth,
-humanity and science, in despite of the self-conceit which affects
-the knowledge of the limits of possibility; that, were it not for the
-magnanimity of those superiors belonging to the learned profession,
-this heaven-bestowed boon, carrying healing on the wing to suffering
-humanity, would have been contemptuously received, ungratefully
-acknowledged, and long since consigned to the rubbish of oblivion. Yet
-all have claim to the common apology, _false scientific education_,
-excepting those who have assented to what they have seen with wonder,
-and afterwards denied their admission.
-
-The established philosophy cannot account for the boy's marble going
-farther through the air than the fullest extent of the impelling
-thumb. The proposition may appear trifling and insignificant, yet is
-it worthy the consideration of the Chair of Knowledge, from which it
-has never been explained nor there understood, as involving the cause
-of planetary motion; for, _in all nature there are not two causes of
-motion_. That the marble "_partakes_" of the _force_, and "partakes" of
-the _motion_ of that by which it is impelled, is an absurd idea; the
-force and motion of a body were not, and cannot become, the force and
-motion of any other body.
-
-The established philosophy cannot account for the splinters of a stone
-having motion out of the direction of impulse, nor for having motion
-in every direction but that of the stone-breaker's impelling hammer,
-which appears at variance with the natural, immutable dynamic law,
-which says, that _as a body cannot move itself_, so must it have motion
-in the direction only of that by which it is being moved. Neither is
-there any philosophy extant, which explains why the stone at Texteth of
-one hundred tons should rise, as if of itself, six inches in the air,
-under which the quarrymen could have shoved a hand and withdrawn it
-safely, before the immense mass fell crushingly on the former bed.
-
-On the other hand, what the established philosophy undertakes to
-explain, it explains erroneously. Beside maintaining the transfer of a
-local casualty, in accounting for continuous motion, it teaches that
-the power of steam consists in heat, and that cold congeals water:
-whereas heat and cold have no physical existence; each is a sensation,
-anything similar to which it is impossible for either fire or water to
-possess. So that to the present day the power of steam, the cause of
-combustion and of congelation has in each instance remained unknown.
-
-So simple is nature, so few her laws, that were any one of her
-phenomena known throughout all its bearings, it would be found that
-the knowledge includes the philosophy of the whole of matter. Of this
-Aristotle was aware when announcing, that he who is unacquainted with
-motion, is ignorant of all things in true philosophy. Motion being the
-_only effect_ producible on _inert, unalterable matter_, the knowledge
-of the phenomenon includes that of all effect. The substance of all
-things being of the same species, and the power of Nature consisting
-in universal pressure, the formations in general nature and in the
-laboratory of art can have but the same principles, laws, theory, and
-philosophy. Paul may plant and Apollos water; nature germinates, the
-weather or climate grows and fructifies. The chymist's fire does
-not burn itself; in the absence of air and its pressure there is no
-combustion; neither is there growth, respiration, nor life.
-
-According to the philosophy of the astronomer, the earth has projectile
-motion, from "impulse once impressed, at the beginning, and not since
-renewed;" which is effect six thousand times, at least, greater
-than the cause. Then, again, as motion must be in the direction of
-impulse and cease out of that direction, the earth, from "impulse
-once impressed," goes round the sun without being impelled; or of
-its own accord, and should be centripetally attracted to the sun, if
-solar attraction were possible. It needs no mathematical calculation
-to prove, that, from such philosophy being wholly independent of all
-consideration of natural cause, it is untrue, and at variance with
-common sense.
-
-The philosophy of the chymist is of every-day make. It assumes
-different species of matter; chymical matter and matter not chymical;
-attractions innumerable, such as chymical, electric, galvanic,
-capillary, and attraction of cohesion; likewise magnetic forces,
-chymical affinities, and affections of matter--"while as yet there
-is none of them"--matter being _inert_ naturally. To mechanical
-nature the entire is useless and foreign, and their value lies solely
-in being terms of professional application in the highly important
-chymical art; but to the discovery of true philosophy they are an
-insurmountable obstacle. How chymical matter differs from the common
-matter of the world, no chymist can say or conceive; nor is there any
-difference in the substance and nature of inert matter: as well might
-it be maintained that motion is not always mechanical, but sometimes
-chymical. The true philosophy of chymistry is dynamic, the basis
-inertia, the laws those of quantity and relative position.
-
-The philosophy of the anatomist and physiologist is semi-natural,
-semi-spiritual, mechanical and vital. Life, throughout all belonging
-to the frame, does not suffice; the heart and blood have each an
-imputed, distinct, living principle; the nerves are sensitive, the
-muscles irritable; the flesh has its susceptibility, according to
-the modern physiology. The sainted health-preserver shudders at the
-irreligious notion of the economy being philosophised on at all; more
-especially according to the laws of hydrostatics; it being "impious
-beyond measure" to reason on the work of God's own hand, formed after
-his own image and likeness, (malformations excepted,) as on human
-mechanism. Yet, where are any of these vitalities and living principles
-when respiration is suddenly stopped? Verily, these professionals
-endow, most gratuitously, the animal frame with as many vitalities
-and living principles as the lives bestowed on the tailor's--so much
-the more unfortunate--cat. As every organ of the body is inert; no
-organ, of itself, performs the function; every function is mechanically
-performed, and every effect analogous to impulsive pressure, whether
-consisting in formation, intermixture, or dissolution, all depend
-on elementary local change. The contrary is not in the power of the
-anatomist and physiologist to prove of inert, unalterable, atomic
-substance; nor should more causes be assumed than what are natural,
-common, sufficient, and analogous to effects. Spiritual principles for
-mechanical purposes are as little requisite for animal organism as for
-the steam-engine, or the performances of a watch.
-
-
-The last on the list of professional philosophies is that of the
-Therapeutist; the least misleading, from being the most concise. The
-word ACTION includes the whole. There is no inquiry to which the word
-_action_ is not the deeply-learned significant reply; being indefinite,
-it stands for a dead-stop silencer. The doctor knows best--with much
-room for knowing better. The doctor knows, and assures from his own
-certain knowledge, that the _action_ of the dose on the stomach
-upheaves the sac; but rather than be thought positive, allows that the
-effect may be from the _action_ of the stomach on the dose. The good
-easy man of M.D. celebrity, or mediocrity, has to learn, that the dose
-is as _inert_ as when in the tea-cup, and the stomach as _inert_ as
-when it has arrived at the predicted destiny, the dissecting table.
-Again, the _action_ of the pain prevents the _action_ of the physic,
-otherwise the cure would have been immediate. Such philosophy is
-harmless, if so to the patient; from its insignificance it corrupts
-neither pathology, osteology, nor dynamics. Not so the learning,
-published on high surgical authority, to enlighten ward-walking
-noviciates--that "pain may exist in the _flesh_ and bones without
-being felt, owing to the _insensible_ sensibility of the part,"
-which amounts to an excruciating, painless toothache, and, the being
-unconscious of excited consciousness. Pain is not in the diseased or
-wounded part, being the consequence of cerebral excitement; pain is one
-of the objects of perception belonging to the scenery of the sensorium,
-from which it cannot migrate. The disorganised part is but the apparent
-place of pain; and wisely such, or else all remedial applications
-would be to the brain. As to the dose and stomach _action_, it stands
-corrected by the diagnosis; the stomach is lifted in consequence of
-the equilibrium of pressure being destroyed by means of the dose,
-notwithstanding its additional weight, within the stomach. Chymical
-action of the dose and self-lifting muscles are all of Esculapian
-surmise. The faculty should cease to identify feeling, pain, sensation,
-with organic ailments and disorganization of the flesh.
-
-
-
-
-ATTRACTION.
-
-
-Attraction is the all-pervading, all-perverting sin of the established
-philosophy, the scape-goat, on which the blunders of illustration
-are heaped. Newtonians endow every atom of matter with not only an
-attracting property, but another, as if to neutralise it--repulsion,
-which renders both useless; as if to make matter both active and inert,
-naturally, and as if Nature were planned on principles of complexity,
-from having double the number of powers the universe is possessed of
-atoms. One steam power would suffice for the whole of England, all
-appendages being feasible. How is solidity either maintainable or
-attainable, while attracting atoms are repelling atoms? The free,
-uncombined condition of the atoms of the atmosphere, as well as their
-_inertia_, proclaim their inability to attract each other; and the mere
-crack in a pane of glass, that between bodies there is no attraction.
-While it is left to be conceived by the so-taught rising generation,
-that the atoms of a bar of iron are busily employed in attracting
-one another, and as busily in repelling each other at the same time;
-and that the same atoms are inert, the long-denounced aspersion
-stands good, that there is no absurdity, however great, into which
-philosophers have not fallen; which is removable only by Philosophers,
-Professors and Teachers coalescing to reform the erroneous doctrines
-universally promulgated, which cannot stand the test of rational
-investigation, and for which, as National Instructors, they are morally
-responsible.
-
-Terrestrial attraction, attenuated on arriving at the moon,
-and there sufficiently strong to prevent the satellite having
-tangential flight, should be at the surface of the globe at least
-two-hundred-and-forty-thousand times stronger; yet here a puff of the
-breath drives the dust into the air, and the smallest winged insect
-is not restrained by the attraction of the enormous magnet the earth
-is considered, from escaping off the surface of the globe. There is
-philosophy in mists, as well as "sermons in stones." Rain should come
-down from above the clouds, if terrestrial attraction hold fast the
-moon: mists and exhalations, by quitting the earth, solve the problem;
-but we are ignorant of the philosophy, ways, and expressions of simple
-nature; hence, ours is foreign philosophy.
-
-In attributing the fall of bodies to the ground to attraction, it is
-overlooked that the earth's greater attraction has to be exceeded by
-the minor muscular, or explosive force, which caused the ascent. The
-foregoing plain facts, although demonstrations to the contrary are on
-record in the royalized TRANSACTIONS, but without reference to the
-inability of inert matter to attract, are certain proof that attraction
-is founded on a guess-work basis. Hence, that all learning is not
-knowledge is a moral certainty; and that the nature of cause is not to
-be arrived at by demonstrating the properties of lines and angles, time
-has sufficiently proved.
-
-Had the fall of Newton's apple been an effect of terrestrial
-attraction, there should have been some stronger attraction from
-somewhere above the tree, to make the juices of which the apple was
-formed ascend from the ground, and capillary cannot be said to be
-stronger than terrestrial attraction. There is nothing but puzzle,
-contradiction, and inconsistency, in human opinion, where the natural
-truth is unknown. Oh! apples, apples, why for discord sent? the first
-cut short eternal life on earth; another turned "heaven-born reason" to
-inventing dreams;--that heaven-born reason which tells us every day of
-its yesterday's mistakes.
-
-
-
-
-EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHY.
-
-
-The Baconian precept, to "torture Nature out of her secrets," has been,
-and ever must be, abortive of the good intended. Nature is performing
-freely and openly every hour, without making us wiser, and as little
-while she is operating in our own experiments. Her language, of which
-_inertia_ and _pressure_ are the alpha and omega, is not studied;
-nor does it mislead or flatter like our own. Experiments innumerable
-have been performed; the _experimentum crucis_ resorted to; the screw
-applied to the utmost pinch, without either confession or concealment
-on Nature's part. Hence, the experimenter is left to make his own
-philosophy of the case, of which the next operator makes a different;
-and all are falsely interpreted that violate the principle of inertia,
-which all do. Aristotle, Bacon, Newton, Black, Reid, Davy, Des Cartes,
-experimented indefatigably under the most favourable auspices,--exalted
-talent, and the institutions of the world at command; but all on
-false principles; yet Nature, tortured or not, left them to their own
-mis-interpretations. Aristotle, true in his opinion of motion, was
-himself ignorant of the cause of continuous motion, or all would not
-be so at present. Bacon recommended experiment, without teaching the
-natural mode of interpretation. Newton spent his valuable time, to the
-world's great loss, in experimenting on light, in ascertaining and
-describing its properties, as if there were material light; instead of
-which, light is a mere sensible effect; hence, a physical nonentity.
-Black and Reid called to their assistance all the powers of numbers,
-to ascertain and prove the quantity of heat in the animal system, and
-of cold in ice; but could not torture Nature out of the information,
-that heat and cold do not belong to matter or bodies, as a knowledge of
-the function of the senses could have informed them. Davy travelled to
-Skehallean to find from the size of the hill, a ratio of attraction,
-whence to calculate the quantity of attraction in the entire globe of
-the earth: at home, correctly sought, he would have found, without
-numerical assistance and the pendulum, that the amount is zero. The
-deflection of the pendulum was caused by the pressure on one side of
-the bulb being greater than on the side facing the hill; which, from
-varying hourly with the sun's altitude, should have told him that the
-deflection is a mere weather-deviating circumstance.
-
-On the other hand, who perceives the natural truths elicited by even
-his own experiments! That truly great philosopher, Priestly, remained
-ignorant that his own experiments on blood and air brought to light
-the principle on which the blood is arterialized, without coming in
-contact with the air in the lungs; of which experiments the faculty are
-reprehensibly ignorant at present; also the principle of congelation
-without cold. It is a general error that men must be philosophers
-because they are mathematicians and first-rate experimenters, yet do
-not know what keeps the blood in motion, nor how water becomes ice.
-
-What experiment was ever so absurdly illustrated as that of ice formed
-in the midst of fire; which is explained by, "evaporation generating
-cold in a red-hot crucible," and while maintaining that cold is only
-the absence of heat. The _rationale_ is: the oxygen of water is the
-hindrance to congelation, which the evaporation carries off, and the
-remaining elements of the water are compressed into ice. What are the
-elementary constituents of water, has yet to be learned. Misled by
-false-directing philosophy, the analysis of a rotten potato, in quest
-of the cause of the vegetable epidemic, is as wise as were the same
-scientific procedure taken on the contents of a pustule to discover the
-cause of the small pox: the result in both cases must be a complete
-new formation; and in the former, the result could be no preventive
-information whatever to the planter. To convince planters and remove
-all timidity, every garden owner should plant an experimental patch
-with potato _peelings_, each having an eye; the crop is certain and
-good, and supplies the cottager with the next year's seed at no
-expense. The _cutting_ for seed may be of exhausted vegetating power,
-while the peeling of even the same potato may be as sound as ever. The
-badly grown potatoes of the previous crop caused those of the following
-to be of imperfect growth and perishable: hence the general potato-rot.
-
-
-
-
-PHYSIOLOGY AND FUNCTION OF THE SENSES.
-
-
-By the popular expression, "Evidence of the Senses," is universally
-understood, the perception, or seeing external bodies by the organs of
-sense: yet externals are invisible and the senses insentient. This
-mistake, common among the fathers of every age, has corrupted the
-prevalent false philosophy tenfold.
-
-The eye is not possessed of sight; neither is colour a property
-of matter, or it must be indestructible by fire and every other
-means. The senses should be considered as but mechanical agents for
-exciting the brain; by which means it is we have our knowledge, the
-particulars of the whole of which are mental, confined to the brain,
-and consist, solely, in the cerebral excited scenery of the sensorium.
-We have no other kind or means of acquiring knowledge, that is,
-mental information. By the mere organs of sense we know nothing. The
-knowledge we have by means of the senses exciting the brain, consists
-in sensations or sensible effects, and, _we know nothing but our
-knowledge_, whatever may be thought of externals being objects and
-immediate objects of our knowledge.
-
-In describing what we know, it is imagined the description is of
-external bodies, their appearance, qualities, and properties; which,
-however harmless the mistake throughout busy-life affairs,--as all
-abide, judge, and are directed by the same kind of evidence,--not so
-is it in philosophy, which is a description of nature's own mode of
-procedure; and although it is impossible to describe invisible things,
-as they are really, they should not be philosophised and reasoned
-on, _as they are not_; they are not according to what we know, and
-can have no resemblance in any manner to sensations, which are all
-we know by means of them. Instead of knowing by the senses what
-bodies are, we know only what they _are not_; modern philosophy is
-regardless, totally heedless of this most instructive most pointedly
-directing information, instead of making the just allowance for mental
-appearances, it materializes every sensation, and imputes the whole
-to the bodies outside of our own, of which all we can possibly know
-is but inferential knowledge: it considers our sensations as being
-qualities of bodies or properties of matter, and maintains that some
-are physical causes by which certain physical effects are produced.
-Such may be considered some of the principal reasons why _clairvoyance_
-is unintelligible to all the most learned; and so must it ever remain,
-or until a truer philosophy arises and rescues the great subject from
-the darkness and errors of a perverting philosophy, the whole of
-which has to be abandoned before the mind is fitted for the reception
-of natural truths. We must cease to identify sensations with their
-unseen, unknown, and but _promoting_, material causes. In proof of the
-foregoing, a short review of the senses, their physiology, function,
-result of the function and use of the result, must prove satisfactory
-and convincing.
-
-The _physiology_ of a sense, consists in an external organ,--as the
-eye or ear, its nerves of sensation which spread through the brain,
-and, the nervous fluid. To each of the senses there belongs a distinct
-cerebral organ, which, if deducted, leaves nothing to constitute the
-physiology, but the external organ, the nerves, and nervous fluid;
-such may be considered the physiology of all the senses, so far as the
-exciting mental perception is concerned.
-
-The _function of a sense_ is, to act on and excite the cerebral organ,
-when the nervous fluid is put into an acting state through external
-circumstances.
-
-The _result of the function_, is a sensation, of which we have
-immediate cognizance, by reason of a sensation being _a recent change
-in consciousness_. The nervous fluid, not the tubular nervous _striæ_,
-is that by which the brain is excited.
-
-The _use of the sensation_ is manifold. Emanating from the wonderful
-Economy, is the law, that, _the sensation which an external body
-promotes, shall, to ourself, seem to belong to that body_.
-
-The law is imperative. The sensation being apparently at, and belonging
-to, the external object or body, it is imagined the body is visible,
-seen by the eyes, and of the colour, flavour, or odour known by the
-sensation. The apparent place of the sensation directs to where the
-body is situated.
-
-No person thinks, when a rose promotes the sensation of colour, that
-the object perceived is within himself: without the sensation there
-is no perception of red, and with it, nothing is perceived or seen of
-colour or of the flower; so that, were the object coloured or not, it
-is to the spectator invisible; and as the sensation would be useless
-were the object coloured and seen, it is obvious that the flower is
-uncoloured, therefore is not seen: the seeing an uncoloured object is a
-physical absurdity. So is it with all sensations; they constitute the
-only objects of perception with which we are acquainted; and, such as
-they are in any respect, the outward objects are in no respect. Sound
-is a sensation; a sense has been provided that we should have knowledge
-of sound; there is nothing of sound or noise in the air; the function
-of the sense is not to hear, but excite the auditory cerebral organ,
-and the sensation, in which alone sound consists, _seems_ to be outside
-of us, and _seems_ to come from a bell, but which has nothing of the
-kind to part with; yet it is imagined that sound enters the ear. Thus
-is it supposed that the sensation externally exists, and is sound heard
-by the ear. The philosopher so instructed, calculates the velocity of
-the physical nonentity sound.
-
-Luminousness, light, colour, sound, heat, cold, flavour, odour, are
-sensations,--each of the entire is traceable from the function of the
-senses to the sensorium: deduct these, there is nothing perceived or to
-perceive; by means of the senses, respectively, we have knowledge of
-each,--and by the senses exciting the brain are the whole produced, as
-sensible effects. Outward bodies can have nothing the same or similar
-to sensible effects; and therefore nothing of the whole belongs to
-matter or bodies, or to physical philosophy. To mechanical nature the
-whole would be useless; to sensitive beings only are they useful; to us
-they are substitutes for Nature's deficiency in these respects; and the
-whole present a convincing proof of the wise, the strict economy of the
-Great Architect in his works.
-
-The objection is unfounded, that the external object should be like
-the sensation, in order to produce such sensation. But where is
-there sound in musical string or in the metal of a bell to promote
-the sensation; or yellow in the snowdrop to promote the sensation
-of yellow, when the eyes are jaundiced or a stained lens is before
-them: the sensation of pain is not the effect of pain; it and pain
-are one. That which in health promotes the sensation known as sweet,
-promotes that of bitter in sickness; the object is the same, the
-sensation changeable. In reason it cannot be said that fire is like
-the sensation, or the latter should be burning hot in the brain, where
-it is excited; neither is any material thing outside of us like a
-sensation of the brain; nor does the sensation inform us of anything
-but itself, excepting that it has a remote external cause. The common
-show-box exhibits the same landscape picture under the different
-aspects of summer, autumn, winter, and spring, according to the stained
-lens before the eyes; the picture has not all these colours, nor any,
-it is a mere black and white print, in which the stained lenses make no
-alteration. Nothing can be like a sensation but a sensation.
-
-That the objects we perceive and their remote cause are distinct
-things, is proved by the perception being that of a coin of the
-half-crown size, when the eyes are directed to a shilling and a convex
-lens before the face; if the lens be red, yellow, or blue, so is the
-perceived object, which is not the white shilling. We are invisible to
-each other; what is imagined to be a man's appearance, may be described
-as, various sensations of different colours symmetrically arranged,
-and constituting a single optically-excited mental effect. Neither
-is it the likeness of the sitter that the canvass exhibits, but the
-excited perception within the sensorium of the limner; for the renewal
-of which it is that he directs his eyes so frequently to the sitter's
-face, which is invisible to the limner, although he feels certain that
-he sees every feature.
-
-Those who imagine the eye-balls look and see, and that externals and
-the perceptions they promote are the same, should, upon reflection,
-attribute sight to their spectacles; for, as sight is nothing bettered
-when the glasses are removed, so should the temporary improvement be
-referred to the spectacles having sight as well as the eyes.
-
-In consequence of all mankind being similarly organised, that which
-seems coloured, sonorous, hot, acid, or aromatic to one person, is so
-to every one else with sane eyes and senses; by which unanimity of
-opinion, in these respects, prevails throughout the great family of
-man, in the worldly concerns of active life, and the social compact is
-maintained indissoluble.
-
-The all-wise, benevolent dispensation of the senses, by which man's
-existence is supplied with enjoyments not in all nature otherwise
-to bestow; and his intellectual faculties provided with means of
-contemplating the attributes of his Maker through his knowledge, such
-as it is, of the creation, which makes known to us not only God's
-regard for his creatures, but his supreme omniscience in the economy
-made manifest throughout all his works. Were bodies coloured as we
-imagine, there should be an element of each red, yellow, and blue
-atoms; elements of sound, heat, and cold; elements of flavour and
-odour innumerable: whereas, by the substitution of sensations, matter
-without any such qualities, or any whatever, excepting that of being
-everlasting, is made subservient to the formation of a universe of
-worlds, teeming with beauty, harmony, and wonders; all contributing to
-the comfort, enjoyment, happiness, edification, and future hope of its
-sojourning inhabitants.
-
-Now, when from the established philosophy we deduct gravitation,
-attraction and repulsion, which are as foreign to inert matter as
-vitality to the dead,--the host of chymicals, so repugnant to the
-principle of _inertia_,--the imaginary living principles, erroneously
-imputed to the mechanical organs of the animal system,--the sensations
-of luminousness, light, colour, sound, heat, cold, acidity, and of
-flavours and odours,--when the entire of these unphysical, mere
-nominals, are deducted from modern philosophy, there remains nothing
-whatever to produce action, physical change, or motion, excepting
-_pressure_, which has been always looked upon as a mere adjunct to the
-imagined numerous powers of nature. When common sense has rejected the
-whole, then will the philosophy of the Fathers be valued by the world,
-as would be a garment with more holes than threads.
-
-
-
-
-MATTER
-
-
-As a general term, _matter_, means substance; with scientific
-precision, the term is confined to the elementary state, in
-contradistinction to the term _body_, applied to matter consolidated
-into solids and fluids.
-
-Matter consists of atoms, which are hard, opaque, _unalterable_, of
-homogeneous substance, of the spheric shape, and naturally _inert_,
-therefore of inactive essence; being _inert_, various species of
-substance would be useless. The spherical shape admits immediate atomic
-contact, and leaves interstices uniformly throughout all bodies.
-There cannot be either communication or alteration of the essence of
-inert matter; and what the essence of unalterable matter may be, is
-impossible, and would be useless, to know.
-
-An element is any volume of atoms of the same size. There is no
-difference between elements but in the size of their atoms.
-
-Every element is a rarer medium to every other element of larger atoms;
-the minor is as a partial vacuum to the major, which involves the
-principle of _inequality_, on which motion depends.
-
-Correlative elements are any two, the atoms of one of which are fitted
-for the interstices of the other, and for no other interstices. Such
-elements will naturally be together. On the correlative principle
-magnetism depends.
-
-All bodies consist of several elements; there is nothing simple, but
-an element. Bodies are divisible, matter is not.
-
-All bodies include a portion of _elementary_ or _electric_ matter,
-which is removed without injury to their general texture.
-
-Matter can suffer no change but change of place.
-
-Weight is an accident of matter, the effect of motion: all _effect_
-consists in motion; there is no result until effect has ended in rest.
-
-Rest being natural to inert matter, is no effect, has no cause.
-
-_There is no power but impulsive pressure_; nor is there any effect
-whatever attributable to _inertia_.
-
-The fundamental principle of _inertia_ is that only from which the
-philosophy of nature is deducible: all philosophy is false which is not
-consistent throughout with this universal, all-directing principle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Note._--The terms _electric_ and _elementary_ are of the same
-signification, which is, _highly rare_: quality and power to act are
-wholly out of the question with the inert atoms of the elements of
-bodies and matter.
-
-
-
-
-MOTION.
-
-
-Motion admits of no definition, from being but a local casuality of
-transitory endurance; motion is the same in all things, from an atom to
-a planet, against which all difference in velocity and direction makes
-no exception.
-
-Impulsive pressure is the only cause analogous to the mechanical
-effect motion; pressure is universal because matter is inert.
-
-Motion is not natural to _inert_ matter: the term is expressive of the
-local condition of a body, while the body is prevented remaining where
-it is, and while the body is being passed through contiguous portions
-of space.
-
-THERE IS NO CAUSE OF MOTION BUT PHYSICAL IMPULSE.
-
-As effect and cause are necessarily equal, so is motion the measure of
-impulse, in time. Therefore as long as a body is in motion it is being
-impelled, however insensible the impelling cause. Motion must be in the
-direction of impulse; for, as a body cannot move itself, and is the
-passive patient of impulse, so must its direction be the same as that
-of impulse; therefore when the direction of motion is changed, it must
-be by a novel impulse in the novel direction.
-
-From all matter being in motion, and all effect consisting in motion,
-and because like effects everywhere are attributable to the like
-or same cause, so must there be a cause of motion as universal as
-matter; rather than that there should be a distinct impelling cause
-for every individual motion following after the body, to put and keep
-it in motion. In all philosophic research the golden rule of nature
-should be held in mind, which prescribes "the shortest mode and fewest
-materials:" _to mistake on the side of simplicity is more wise than
-censurable in the search after natural physical truths_.
-
-A universal cause of motion, it would seem, can be no other than a
-universal medium, a medium of pressure, one occupying the regions of
-planetary space, competent to keep the planets in interminable motion
-and effect all terrestrial minor motion: only by such means is it
-conceivable how the earth can be under endless, ever-varying impulse,
-productive of ever-changing direction. When impulsively pressed into
-motion by such a medium, the direction of a planet must be orbicular,
-on account of the pressure on the solar side being always less than
-on the opposite, by which the projectile direction is diverted from
-rectilinear to curvilinear.
-
-Newton imagined that a medium, and however rare, occupying the regions
-of space, must retard, in time destroy, and eventually require the hand
-of Deity to restore the primeval order of planetary motion: no very
-bright idea of the great mathematician, considering the Omniscience of
-the Projector of a _self-going_, _self-regulating_ Universe. Whereas
-a medium as dense as molten gold, could produce no such disorder as
-long as impulse is greater than resistance; which the long-continuance
-and order of planetary motion strongly seem to indicate is the case.
-Were there no medium in space, the planets must be at rest; one could
-not possibly affect another but by its shadow: Uranus being agitated
-by the greatly remote presence of Neptune, is proof of there being a
-connecting medium between. Gravitation is supposed to move the body
-possessed of the property, forwards,--why not every way?--to the sun or
-towards some neighbouring planet, but not to send that body or planet
-an agitating warning of its presence. How is gravitation within one
-planet to keep another in a state of agitation; which agitation being
-motion--a mechanical effect--is proof of there being a medium by which
-mediate connection is maintained between the two, Uranus and Neptune.
-Without a planetary medium there could be no _system_ of planets.
-Suppose the existence of such a medium, then its sudden removal,--must
-not every subordinate system, which makes part of the universal system,
-become disjointed the same instant? Besides, from the laws of vision,
-rather of optics, there is equal proof that space contains a medium.
-There is no light to come from a star to the eye; there is nothing of
-sight belonging to the eye-balls; and there must be something between
-a star and the sense to connect the star with the sense; or how is the
-sense or brain to be so affected by the star, as that the perception
-or sensation shall be always the same when the eye-ball lenses are
-directed to the same star; and only by a universal medium can all the
-stars of the hemisphere be in connection with the eye at the same
-time, or the time of a few winks of the eye. Therefore until it is
-proved that constant planetary motion can be without constant and equal
-corresponding impulse, as to direction; and that a star can affect
-the sense of itself, immediately or with nothing between, all denial
-of planetary space being occupied by a medium of pressure, is utterly
-untenable.
-
-
-
-
-THE MEDIUM OF SPACE.
-
-
-Pressure being obviously the cause of planetary motion, so is it of all
-terrestrial motion. To produce atomic motion and transfer generally, it
-is necessary, only, that the atoms of the medium of space should be of
-less size than the minutest interstices in bodies.
-
-A universal medium must be of universal service, (as would be
-conceived, were the universe involved in a medium of water,) to be
-in accordance with nature's economy: to keep the planets and matter
-in motion, to retain atoms together, and effect their separation
-occasionally, include the whole of action required by its service; more
-in this respect it cannot effect; nor is the common general procedure
-otherwise effected. Therefore in pressure, by the medium of space,
-consists the PRIMUM MOBILE: the beginning and end of all physical cause
-of action and of all physical effect.
-
-Pressure is nothing assumed, hypothetic, or unproven, like attraction
-and gravitation,--the justly dethroned imbecile usurpers of the
-imperial chair of philosophy for ages past.
-
-On barometric evidence alone, that pressure exists all round the globe
-is fully proved; and that it is indispensable to the maintenance of
-the existing general order, all must readily grant who reflect for an
-instant on the fatal consequences which the cessation of the general
-pressure, for only a few minutes, must cause. Hence it is no immediate
-question how the general pressure originated, how maintained, what
-the confining boundaries or _point d'appui_. Most likely it is the
-consequence of the motion of the planets themselves, surging through
-the ocean of space. As every performance of nature has some ulterior
-object in view, it is probable that the effect of the motion of a
-planet on the medium of space is tributary to the motion of another
-planet, and that the motion of the whole is a means of preventing
-the cessation of motion of any of the parts. Most likely the medium
-of space was not in a state of pressure at first; that planetary
-motion, however commenced, effected the state of pressure necessary
-for its continuance, and which would be useless beyond the precincts
-of planetary evolution: where pressure is not needed, of a certainty
-there is none. Hence the conclusion is warrantable, that the general
-pressure, however commenced, is maintained by not only the motion of
-the planets individually but in systems, through the ocean of space.
-
-The earth may be said to swim through the medium of space, and to be
-soaked with it as a submerged sponge is with water, and the portion
-within the globe of the earth, is continuous with the like medium in
-space generally. By which all parts of the interior of the globe are
-under the general pressure equally as the surface, and all terrestrial
-bodies subject to its vicissitudes.
-
-By such means, only, is the great earthquake to be accounted for on
-dynamic principles. Far as the subterraneous grumbling extends, the
-physical cause must be present, and in a state of force equal to the
-awful result. No pent-up air suddenly set free, or suddenly exploded
-gas,--both naturally forceless,--subject to attenuation and obstruction
-in the passage from the source--is competent to burst the globe and
-hurl whole cities into the engulfing chasm: nor is fire any assistant,
-judging from the absence of flame, smoke, cinders, and ashes. Dreadful
-as is the catastrophe, it is but a natural casuality and in perfect
-accordance with the laws of matter. An extraordinary rushing into the
-body of the earth of medium of space, preceded by an equal efflux of
-elementary matter atmospherically induced, are the cause and promoting
-means of the extraordinary, terrific phenomenon.
-
-All things being under the general pressure, and elementary atoms
-of all sizes everywhere present, the interstices of bodies cannot
-remain empty. From all interstices being formed by spherical atoms,
-and the atoms of the medium of space the smallest, there are always
-interstitial spaces for medium of space to enter, pass through or
-remain within, and which _is not insulated_, but continuous with the
-outward source. Thus, has the medium of space access to every atom, and
-by the pressure from without, is enabled to act _centrifugally_ within
-the body, as a kind of back-spring against each and the whole of its
-constituent atoms, to produce expansion, dissolution, and elementary
-dispersion according to the medium or circumstances in which the body
-may be placed. These general principles admit of repetition, in order,
-that, by repeated showing, to prove their validity, against others
-more generally known and adopted, although unfounded in nature, sense,
-or reason.
-
-
-
-
-MINUS-PRESSURE MATTER.
-
-
-Taking the maximum of pressure as a fixed quantity, or, as not being
-subject to increase, and assuming the degree to be not less than
-equal to the tenacity of steel, there must of necessity be means of
-mitigating the maximum, so that in the scale of descent every degree
-of force should be attainable; and more, to keep the equilibrium in
-a state of disturbance, without which all things must be, and remain
-in the rest of death. Were there no minus-pressure means, the solid,
-or perhaps aëriform state of matter would exist everywhere, and of
-motion there could be none. Such means for promoting motion are amply
-supplied, and without any addition of matter to the measured quantity
-sufficient for the formation of bodies and service of nature generally,
-in the elements themselves, of matter.
-
-As the body which is involved in a medium of air is under less pressure
-than in a medium of water, and still less within a medium of elementary
-matter, so is elementary matter, and the elements generally, the
-natural means of mitigating the maximum of pressure on and within
-bodies. All bodies within and on the surface of the earth, possess
-removable elementary matter, which prevents superficial contact, and
-excludes medium of space proportionally from their interior; and
-because the medium of space is the cause of pressure, in being thus
-rendered discontinuous, so is its force, as it were, intercepted
-or lessened. For instance, a polished needle floats on water, but
-when wetted or smoked is precipitated, from having its electric or
-minus-pressure atmosphere removed; from which it is obvious that with
-the minus-pressure atmosphere, the needle is under less pressure than
-when without it; and the same atmosphere it is which makes the bed in
-the water so much larger every way than the needle.
-
-The minus-pressure principle is well exemplified in the rise of water
-within a tube over which fire is situated. When the fire is removed,
-the water falls. The fire must be in the state of combustion--mere
-ignition does not answer. The elements forced out of the combustible,
-as combustion proceeds, cover the orifice of the tube, and intercept
-the general pressure, notwithstanding they are under the general
-pressure. By such minus-pressure means is the equilibrium destroyed,
-and by the unaltered pressure on the water outside the lower orifice
-of the tube, the water is forced upwards. So is it that the water of
-the sea is raised to the minus-pressure, elementary matter descending
-from a cloud in the shape of an inverted cone, and known as the
-water-spout. Astronomers can best say whether the sun and moon be not
-minus-pressure means in promoting the rise of the ocean, productive of
-the tides; a miniature representation of which is effected by holding
-a charged jar over a surface of water, to which the water rises in a
-small cone,--which cone follows every motion of the jar, and falls when
-the jar is discharged. Capillary ascent is promoted by the interposed
-minus-pressure electric matter which fills the caliber of the tube: the
-same matter prevents the horizontal flow of water through such tubes;
-but when the tubes are de-electrised, the flow is free and constant:
-boiling water, or fire de-electrises all such tubes. The electric
-matter on a bar of iron is a hinderance to water running down, but
-when removed by means of fire, the water runs down the bar freely. The
-atmosphere is a minus-pressure medium to the earth, and on the general
-principle that _interposed elementary matter renders discontinuous_ the
-medium of pressure, which is the medium of space.
-
-Minus-pressure means exist in other than the elementary form,
-as in blotting-paper, candle-wick, pledgets of lint. Within the
-cupping-glass, which is empty of air only, it is the minus-pressure
-matter obtained from flame which promotes the rise of blister.
-Within the vessels of the vascular system, as mucilaginous lining,
-minus-pressure matter assists the circulation of fluids, on the
-foregoing capillary principle. The slime on deep-water fish, seems
-provided to lessen the pressure of the water on the inhabitants of
-those seas. Minus-pressure matter on one side only of a body, destroys
-the equilibrium, and promotes the motion of the body; and generally,
-the partial action, implied by motion, of the medium of space on bodies
-or their parts, is promoted by interposed minus-pressure matter in
-every instance of physical change. Only in minus-pressure means, which
-serve as a partial vacuum in some cases, to disturb the equilibrium
-of pressure, is motion, or change of place of the elements of bodies,
-or of bodies themselves promoted: without such means there is nothing
-to promote the blowing of a wind, or to put the medium of space into
-action. Cause being given, the _General Pressure_ in the production
-of every physical effect, the sole province of philosophy consists in
-tracing out the minus-pressure means which promote the occasional and
-partial action of the medium of pressure.
-
-
-
-
-FIRE.
-
-
-Fire is not hot, although it burns the flesh and promotes pain.
-Matter, which is unalterable, cannot be made hot or cold, neither
-is there anything to make it so. If a limb be made rigid, or the
-nerves of sensation be removed, or the function of the nervous fluid
-be obstructed, the limb may be burned off unconsciously. Heat is a
-sensation effected through excitement of the brain; out of the brain
-there is neither excitement nor heat. The fire does not excite the
-brain, but the nervous fluid; and although the sensation is not hot, it
-is imagined that the cause must be hot, which is false reasoning. The
-chymist finds heat creviced in all things, even those which he admits
-are destroyed by heat--gunpowder and ice. How can flame be hot, when
-just obtained from the gases of decomposed ice water? or, if hot, _sui
-generis_, it must have been hot frozen flame in the original ice.
-
-Modern philosophy adopts different kinds of heat,--_animal, culinary,
-and latent heat_. The first is our own feeling excited by means of
-fire in the sensitive centre, the brain; also by exercise and disease,
-in the absence of fire. How is the spark from the flint or from the
-steel to saturate a bushel of coal with heat? How, again, does "heat
-come to an equilibrium in all surrounding bodies," when some portion
-of the coal may be black cold, and others red hot--using the popular
-terms--in the fire-place, at the same time, and while the air in the
-chamber is indexing zero? _Latent heat_ is of the philosopher's own
-peculiar making; and on the "_great discovery_" the most unbounded
-praise is still bestowed. Latent heat, "which all bodies possess
-without being heated," which, "heats nothing," and is not hot, is
-cold heat, and should be nomenclatured such, or, absurd heat. Are not
-Instructors less than half-reasoners and unnatural philosophers, who
-abide by and teach such consummate nonsense: on a par with which is
-the discovery of "latent dark light"--"of black being formed by the
-intermixture of two luminous rays at the point of intersection in
-the spectrum," which is the same as feelable darkness; after which,
-there only remains for "_new discovery_," latent sound, for inking
-on, thence vibrating from, a sheet of music-paper; and latent motion,
-to keep a stone at rest, the quantity of motion in the world having
-been already ascertained arithmetically to a fraction; the last-day
-discovery, the quantity of right reason, is the small remaining trifle
-to be discovered. Radiation of heat and cold by fire and ice, being
-inconsistent with the _inertia_ of _matter_, is an erroneous and
-greatly-misleading assumption, although proved through the nicest
-experiments, according to the experimenter's ideas.
-
-Instead of fire communicating anything to bodies, _fire promotes loss
-to everything_ in its neighbourhood. The bars of stoves, iron pokers,
-steam-boilers; all culinary vessels; coal, wood, candles, paper, linen,
-all suffer loss by means of fire; cinders, charcoal, tinder, are but
-remains: to which it is no exception that some bodies acquire substance
-and weight in becoming oxydes; because, previous to acquiring oxygen
-from the air, they must have lost elementary matter to the fire to make
-spaces for the oxygen to enter, otherwise the open air should oxydize
-equally, in the absence of fire.
-
-The loss, or matter of loss which fire promotes to fluids, appears as
-air-beads on the sides and bottom within the vessel on the fire, before
-the water comes to ebullition: these beads cannot be made to rise in
-the water by any manner of agitation, which is proof they have not
-come from the fire, and through the rigid bottom, or ascent and escape
-are inevitable. When the bottom has been sufficiently de-electrised by
-the fire, they are pressed through it to the fire; or if the vessel be
-removed and placed on the ground, they become dispersed through the
-water insensibly. The like spherules collect on an egg while boiling,
-which cannot be anything issued from the fire to the surface of the
-water, then precipitated on the egg. On the bottom of a glass-retort
-suspended over a lamp, the like spherules collect, from which it is
-supposed that water never touches the bottom of any containing vessel;
-it must touch that which it wets.
-
-That air suffers loss to fire, is made evident by the air being
-deprived of, or losing its oxygen during combustion; and from both fire
-and flame becoming extinguished in a limited quantity of respirable
-air, in consequence of having lost its oxygen to the combustible, while
-in the state of fire.
-
-Solids, as polished metals and glass, when they experience no change
-of weight, lose to the fire imponderable elementary matter only. So is
-it when the hand is presented to the fire, it loses electric matter,
-and the loss it suffers promotes the sensation of heat: when the hand
-afterwards touches a body, supposed to be cold, it acquires elementary
-matter from that which is touched. In every instance the body, solid or
-fluid, supposed to be _heating_, is losing elementary matter; and that
-which is said to be _cooling_, is acquiring the like matter; the hand
-_loses_ to the former and _receives_ from the latter electric matter.
-
-
-
-
-THE MEDIUM OF FIRE.
-
-
-A peculiar medium is formed within a fire, towards the composition of
-which the fuel contributes more or less of its elements; which is made
-manifest in a piece of wood or paper when held within the fire, being
-brought to the state of combustion, and without touching the fuel,
-(heat, be it remembered, is no more physical than shadow.) The like
-medium is formed from the elements contributed by flame, and whatever
-of elementary matter the atmosphere may contribute beside. High above
-the flame of a lamp combustion and fusion are effected the same as
-within, or in contact with the flame. Between the cupped hands this
-medium is receivable, and may be carried from the flame of a candle to
-the wick of a different candle just blown out, which it re-illumines.
-There being little or none of the medium of fire attendant on a
-detached ignited body, favours the conjecture that the fuel during
-combustion contributes somewhat of its elements towards the formation
-of the medium of fire. Hence, although not included in the nomenclature
-of chymistry or any other, the medium of fire should have place on the
-list of realities.
-
-As all bodies include more or less of free elementary matter, which
-excludes its equal in volume of the medium of space, so to admit medium
-of space in order to cause change in the constitution of a body, the
-body must undergo previous de-electrisation: the law is general.
-
-The medium of space being the expanding and decomposing cause, by
-means of its centrifugal pressure within bodies, to prevent its being
-in excess and effecting such changes spontaneously, productive of the
-decomposition of all things, all bodies are protected or retained in
-their present condition by the electric matter within them, which
-excludes the decomposing cause.
-
-Within the medium of fire all kinds of bodies become de-electrised;
-all suffer loss of electric matter, which is succeeded by influent
-medium of space, the centrifugal pressure of which affects the several
-changes to which bodies are liable previous to ultimate dissolution
-into the elementary state. In promoting the de-electrisation of every
-kind of body, and to the extreme, which no other individual medium or
-menstruum can effect, consists the universal utility of the medium of
-fire.
-
-
-
-
-EXPANSION.
-
-
-The theory of expansion is of easy comprehension; it consists in
-previous de-electrisation, succeeded by influent medium of space,
-which, by acting with centrifugal pressure, produces the phenomenon of
-expansion. The general pressure is the expanding cause, by reason of
-the portion of medium of space within all bodies being continuous with
-the medium of pressure in general space.
-
-A bar of iron placed within the medium of fire suffers
-de-electrisation; then acquires medium of space, by which the bar is
-expanded. When taken from the fire, it acquires electric matter similar
-to that of which it had suffered loss, which displaces the expanding
-medium, and now becomes contracted by external pressure. The olden
-philosophy has no contracting cause, the imputed attraction having
-been destroyed by the imputed heat of the fire, as the same philosophy
-states of the imputed attraction of magnets being destroyed by the heat
-of fire, which leaves the bar to contract itself.
-
-A piece of lead on the fire becomes de-electrised and expanded. The
-portion of medium of space it has acquired separates the atoms of
-the lead by which the state of solidity is subverted; it remains as
-one of the constituents of the lead, and is as a menstruum to the
-metal, and the atoms of the metal may be said to swim in it as the
-globules of blood in the serum. Further de-electrisation and additional
-increments of medium of space are productive of complete dispersion of
-the atoms of the metal, and of a kind of efflorescent result, which
-is a subsequent formation. The air in a corked bottle before the
-fire loses electric matter to the medium of fire; and by the medium
-of space which enters the vacated interstices, the cork is exploded.
-In the partially exhausted air-pump receiver, that decrease in the
-quantity of air should increase the expansive power of the remainder,
-and that the atoms should fly asunder with exploding force, is most
-unreasonable and impossible. The physical fact is, the more the air
-is reduced, the greater is the quantity of influent medium of space,
-consequently of expanding and exploding force. In the condensing of
-air, as is the expression, by the piston of the syringe, the quantity
-is reduced from being forced out through the pores of the syringe; and
-pressure on the bottom of the piston springs it up when the depressing
-power is removed. Under the general pressure the atoms of air must
-be in contact; and the volume being reduced, implies reduction of
-quantity: hard unalterable atoms are incompressible beyond contact;
-and as to their being elastic, it is physically impossible; medium
-of space being forced out and re-entering, is what makes the air be
-considered elastic. Let the syringe be worked under water, and the
-matter displaced appears escaping as air-bubbles, and as air-beads on
-the outside of the syringe.
-
-
-
-
-OXYGEN AIR.
-
-
-All airs are compounds. Medium of space is the most voluminous
-constituent of every aëriform body, which accounts for an air or gas
-and steam being of so much greater volume than that from which it had
-been obtained; steam has fifteen hundred times the volume of the water
-it was produced from.
-
-Oxygen air is decomposed in converting it with hydrogen to water:
-there is no oxygen or hydrogen air in water; their _elements_ are
-the constituents of water. Oxygen is decomposed by respiration; when
-inspired, it is not expired, but nitrogen, which must have been one
-of its constituents, and from there being nothing to constitute the
-expiration but the previous inspiration the proposition is proved.
-
-The constituents of oxygen are--nitrogen, _a highly rare imponderable
-element_ and medium of space. The first is the most ponderable element
-of nitrogen air; its atoms are the largest of all others of the
-elements of matter, and, it may be said, they constitute the substance
-of the framework of all ponderable or gross formations. Davy says,
-"the properties of nitrogen are altogether negative;" the same applies
-to every other kind of air, all being constituted of _inert_ atomic
-substance, consequently of inactive essence; and all being alike in
-every respect but in the size of their atoms. The imponderable element
-being highly evanescent, is never found alone, and is always connected
-with nitrogen; hence simple nitrogen is obtainable only from bodies, or
-by deoxygenating atmospheric air. Atmospheric air is nitrogen, plus the
-imponderable element; and when the nitrogen is saturated with the same
-element, the air is oxygen: hence, whichever is inspired, nitrogen is
-expired.
-
-From nitrogen being evolved copiously from water in vacuo, and from
-ice being convertible to nitrogen, according to Priestley, so is
-nitrogen a constituent of water, also of the gases into which water is
-decomposable; but as it cannot belong to the hydrogen, owing to its
-superior levity, it must to the oxygen; which is confirmation of the
-above, that nitrogen is a constituent of oxygen air or gas.
-
-
-
-
-THE USE OF OXYGEN IN PROMOTING COMBUSTION.
-
-
-How oxygen supports combustion no Elementary Treatise explains; but
-leaves it to be imagined, that oxygen is somewhat of a burnable nature,
-or that it generates heat when blown into a fire. The fact is, it
-supports combustion only mechanically. The centrifugal pressure, by
-the medium of space, decomposes the fuel; electric matter, entering
-the ignited fuel, displaces medium of space, and the fire goes out;
-oxygen prevents the entrance of electric matter, and permits the medium
-of space to enter the fuel freely, the pressure from without gives
-centrifugal force. In this twofold manner of service oxygen promotes
-the continuance of the kind of decomposition known as combustion. A
-live coal is greatly _deficient_ of electric matter; when just fallen
-from the fire it is said to be red and hot, after a few minutes black
-and cold; all of which are but mental effects. On the hearth the coal
-acquires electric matter from the air, which displaces medium of space,
-and becomes extinguished; so would the fire were there no oxygen in the
-surrounding air. Hence it would seem, that the interstices of oxygen
-are too diminutive for electric matter to enter, but are sufficiently
-large for those of the medium of space to pass through, thence into
-the fuel. Should the utility of the nitrogen of oxygen in combustion
-be questioned, because nitrogen alone puts an end to the combustion
-of a candle; it may be answered, that, as the imponderable element of
-oxygen air, from being highly evanescent, is not obtainable without
-the nitrogen, and as by the service of both together combustion is
-increased, so may both be considered supporters of combustion; the
-grosser element serving as a carrier to the minor, and, as it were,
-giving it momentum sufficient to penetrate beyond the surface of the
-half-decomposed, or previously ignited fuel.
-
-
-
-
-COMBUSTION.
-
-
-A piece of wood, like everything else when placed within the medium
-of fire, suffers de-electrisation and acquires medium of space: this
-twofold procedure continuing, the wood becomes split or burst asunder,
-and its elements gradually forced out by the centrifugal pressure;
-some of which are precipitated, some contribute to the medium of fire,
-others are recombined differently and exist for a short space of time
-as flame, and others, with matter from the air, form soot. Such is the
-most rational theory of combustion, consistent with the _inertia_ of
-matter and the absence of heat.
-
-Friction rubs away electric matter, percussion forces it out,
-combustion and ignition follow, and without being promoted by either
-heat or fire. The kindling matter of a coal-laid fire requires
-the de-electrising spark at first, and the de-electrised kindling
-de-electrises the coal; the wood fire, effected by means of friction,
-is independent of even the spark of fire for its commencement, from
-having been otherwise de-electrised at first. Within the fire, one part
-de-electrises another, and the centrifugal pressure decomposes the
-whole.
-
-Animal combustion is consequent on the internal organs and flesh being
-de-electrised, the stomach first, by means of spirituous liquors,
-which, like fire in so doing, promote the sensation of heat. The
-stomach and adjacent organs, from being thus de-electrised, are
-prepared to receive the decomposing medium; and from oxygen, to exclude
-electric matter, being absent, the flesh is brought to the state of
-smothered combustion and charred: it may now be considered in the light
-of a _mortuum caput_.
-
-The spontaneous combustion of greasy clothes, damp hay and other
-things, is promoted by the limited quantity of air in which such
-articles are confined. To the hand the air seems warm before
-combustion has commenced, which indicates deficiency of electric
-matter, but which, in time, the air acquires from greasy clothes, and
-from damp hay, the removal of which is succeeded by the destroying
-medium, by which the elements of the combustible become separated, set
-free, and dispersed.
-
-In summer, when the atmosphere is greatly deficient of what may
-be termed winter electric matter, all woodwork is in a desiccated
-condition; and the slight friction of limb against limb is sufficient
-to make space for medium of space to enter in excess, and convert to
-fire, tree after tree, the whole of a forest.
-
-The combustion of a candle is well worthy the philosopher's attention.
-The candle while burning, comprises a series of the simplest
-operations, and far beyond the powers of art to effect or otherwise
-imitate; yet from indifference to the familiar, and the paucity of
-skill required in the construction, there is nothing less noticed
-with philosophic acumen. The mechanism and materials to be wrought
-are the same; which consist in a slender, compact, portable cylinder
-of tallow, within which is included an equal length of wick. The
-various operations of de-electrising, fluidifying, and gas-making,
-are performed in silent, regular succession, unretarded by friction
-and unincumbered with containing vessels, Nature furnishes the power.
-The wick answers the purpose of service-pipes, through which the
-half-wrought materials are conveyed in a gaseous form to the refining
-fire, within which they remain as in a gasometer of supply, to be
-gradually diffused through the surrounding flame, and there receive
-the finishing lustrous polish. The new formation is now a refinery to
-the work in progress, and is curiously situated over the materials
-where only it could serve the numerous requisite purposes. Nor does the
-gradual consumption of the machinery derange the order of operation,
-work and wear being carried on simultaneously to the end. The
-many-coloured tissue wrought, of starlight shine and of expanded base,
-is tastefully tapered as if to please in appearance, as well as lighten
-our darkness. Thus by natural means, operating on almost uncostly
-materials, mankind are supplied with that by which darkness is turned
-to day--the candle flame.
-
-All combustion is on the same principle, previous de-electrisation
-the commencement, and, by the same cause continued, the centrifugal
-pressure, which is on the increase from being derived from the general
-pressure. Flame, or the electric spark, de-electrises the gases, oxygen
-and hydrogen, before their conversion to water takes place; compression
-effects the same. The inflammable air in mines becomes exploded from
-the de-electrising consequence of flame, when inadvertently exposed;
-and at times the de-electrisation is effected by the atmosphere, as in
-spontaneous combustion. The mine explosion, promoted by the atmosphere,
-is a case of spontaneous detonation, if not combustion, which, from sad
-experience taught, should be anticipated by the application of a rocket
-fired by a train. The foul air should be got rid of timely, not left
-to accumulate, and the weather dictates when. "The Davy" may be said
-to insulate the flame of the lamp from the electric matter of the air
-within the mine. The flame, when exposed, de-electrises the foul air,
-and in fluent medium of space causes the explosion.
-
-
-
-
-WATER.
-
-
-Water is the most compound of fluids, although when pure it promotes
-little or no sensation, which is owing to the certain proportion of its
-elements to each other. It seems to have, as constituents, a portion
-of each of the general elements; of which, when any are in excess or
-deficiency, the fluid differs from common pure water, but still is
-an aqueous fluid. All aqueous fluids which differ from pure water,
-do so from elementary disproportion in their constitution. Ancient
-philosophers considered water the parent of all things, because it
-contributes matter of substance and increase, they said, to all kinds
-of bodies, and because there is nothing elementary belonging to bodies
-which is not obtainable, by one means or other, from water or its
-productions. It contributes increase to the whole of the vegetable
-kingdom, and through vegetable matter to the increase of animal flesh.
-From the vegetable world are obtainable, by means of art, earths,
-metals, salts, acids, alkalies, even flame; the primitives of which
-are of the same kind as the initials of water; also of the atmosphere,
-which is convertible to water, but is not water, by reason of not only
-elementary disproportion, but the enormous excess of medium of space
-in which its elements are involved.
-
-The constitution of water being unknown, and supposed to consist of
-only the gases, hydropathy is condemned, like mesmerism, through the
-ignorance and intolerance of professionals, themselves falsely educated
-at best. As alimentary, water is the most wholesome drink under
-heaven; as medicinal, far beyond comparison with extracts from metals
-and minerals, from which deduct the water, the remainder kills. The
-hydropathic perspiration cleanses the flesh from head to foot; physic,
-the intestines and stomach only. Water is the elixir of both body and
-mind; witness the persons who are teetotallers. A patient declared to
-the present writer, he would rather have run naked into the street,
-were he not bound up by the wet sheets, than endure the fog and stench
-from his body by the cold water perspiration. Yet doctors insist that
-hydropathy is not medicinal or curative, or why not adopt the practice?
-
-Water is formed by detonating the gases, oxygen and hydrogen, by which
-their _elements_ become combined in the form of water; which is the
-only formative mode pursued in the laboratory of art; whereas, in that
-of nature, it is variously formed: the number of elements determines
-the number of modes. Suppose six the number of the natural elements,
-then any five and the remaining one, any four and the remaining two,
-or any three and the other three, met and compressed within the
-atmosphere, the product is water. On the meeting of certain clouds,
-where _the gases_ could not have equal elevation, water is formed;
-and on walls and wainscots, under cover, in humid weather, it is
-formed from the electric matter on their surface and the complement of
-elements contributed by the atmosphere: the same walls, in the same
-weather, would have no water, if kept de-electrised by stoves. It is
-formed similarly on furs, woollens, and the spider's web, all of which
-are retainers of electric matter; and on the leaves of plants as _dew_,
-but on the side only which is covered with the like electric matter.
-Dew-water is neither a precipitation nor exhalation, but a formation on
-that where it is found.
-
-Water is formed on glass and metallic vessels, however closely covered,
-as long and no longer than the included water gives out electric matter
-through the pores of the vessel. In the air of the tropics, the dew or
-water running down the outside of covered and uncovered vessels, cannot
-be considered humidity of the air condensed by cold. In proof of the
-foregoing, the hitherto unexplained experiment is opportune.
-
-A plate of glass, covered on one side with tin foil, has much dew on
-the naked side when uppermost, and none, when the covered side is
-uppermost, of equal dewy nights. The foil acquires electric matter from
-the ground, which the glass or naked upper side receives and retains;
-but when the naked side is next the ground, the portion of electric
-matter it acquires is conducted off by the foil at top; and as where
-there is no electric matter there is no dew, the upper coated side
-is dry, and under circumstances which would have left much dew on the
-glass side if uppermost.
-
-Within the animal system various aqueous fluids and humidities are
-formed, and, as in the former instances, without oxygen and hydrogen
-being present; namely, hydrocephalus, the stomach juices, liquor
-pericardium, water of blister, milk, tears: to these add the juices
-of fruit, the chymists' aqueous fluids, together with the variety
-of formative modes, and the complex constitution of water remains
-unquestionable. Lavoisier's experiments proved the same, by the endless
-variety in the residue and product, from decomposing and recomposing
-the same water several times. Davy states, that, when experimenting on
-different substances, water frequently appeared, when there was nothing
-sensibly present to which it could be attributed, if not to nitrogen,
-which disappeared simultaneously with the water appearing: electric
-matter is everywhere present, although not sensibly discoverable.
-
-From which it is obvious that the alchymists of old mistook the road
-to _El Dorado_. Instead of aiming at turning the grosser metals into
-gold, they should have alchymised on water, taking its elements as the
-money-changer does those of the numeration table, and by the rules of
-transposition made the valueless stand in the place of most value.
-
-Water in the boiler loses electric matter to the fire beneath, and is
-expanded by influent medium of space; the excess of the latter throws
-out the elements of the superior stratum, which, with an enormous
-influx of medium of space, are the constituents of steam and the power
-of steam. The so-acquired medium of space, by the pressure from without
-which it is under, is the cause of the elasticity and force of steam.
-Steam is not water, nor is it ever condensed by "cold." It consists
-in the elements of water, less that which the water lost to the fire:
-both, with a reduced or proportional quantity of medium of space, make
-the original stratum of water. What but electric matter can steam
-receive from the pipes it may be passed through, and is discharged from
-as water? Insulated, "centrifugally repellant heat," without fulcrum,
-is a most inconsiderable substitute for _the pressure of nature_ by
-the all-pervading medium of space, and but a shadowy substitute in
-accounting for the powerful effects of steam. There is no repellant
-force in the flame of a candle; and what but influent medium of space
-can make a pint of water fill and overflow a quart vessel.
-
-Water loses its fluidity and is made solid or congealed, upon losing
-the imponderable oxygenating element. Priestley through his experiments
-made the discovery, that, "air, purer than atmospheric, is given out
-by water at the instant of congelation,"--which must be oxygen air.
-From which we learn, that oxygen is the natural hinderance against the
-waters of the globe being solid; with which experimental practice and
-experience agree, it being well known that oxygen added to a freezing
-solution, retards congelation; and that, to facilitate the freezing
-of water, a smart tap is given to the side of the vessel, hitherto
-unknown why, but seems as if to shake out the oxygen. The following
-observed circumstances exhibit the congelation of water throughout all
-its stages. The air in a chamber being favourable for the reception of
-oxygen from water, the water in a cylindrical earthen pitcher became
-frozen; a plate of ice was formed, which equalled the area of the
-vessel, and firmly fixed to the sides one full inch higher than the
-water had been at first. The bottom of the vessel was blown out, the
-sides remained whole, and the ice not broken or moved.
-
-The circumstances of the case admits of the following illustration.
-Medium of space, by its pressure, forced out the oxygen; additional
-increments of the same medium entered, collapsed the elements of the
-deoxydated stratum of water, and so forcibly expanded the rest of the
-water as to make it explode the bottom of the vessel, all at the same
-instant. As all excess of medium of space retired from the water, the
-latter sunk to the original height; and had not the water escaped, it
-would have been an inch separate from the plate of ice. A river thus
-frozen, flows freely beneath the ice from the same circumstances. The
-bomb-shell at Hudson Bay was exploded by the expanded water, not by
-the newly-formed ice; or else the sides, not the bottom of the earthen
-vessel, would have been exploded.
-
-Ice is deoxygenated water, and abounds with electric matter, hence it
-floats; and ice-water is at the minimum of density from being deficient
-of oxygen. Ice, in a Florence flask, hung over a lamp, yields
-abundance of electric matter, towards the formation of lamp-black
-on the outside of the bottom of the flask, which, to the miniature
-painter may be preferable, from being the freest of grit. In all cases
-of combustion, the elements of lamp-black are present; so that, in
-combustion of the diamond, the same kind of soot being formed, affords
-no information of the constituents of this highly-prized crystal.
-With more reason than that of pure carbon, (which is but another name
-for the electric matter which is the principal constituent of ice,
-and lamp-black) being the base of diamond, it may be assumed, that,
-diamond is a crystalized oxyde of water. The electrician's opposite
-characteristics of the two, diamond and ice, accord with the suggestion.
-
-
-
-
-SOLVENCY.
-
-
-The menstruum is supposed to _act_ by "chymical attraction," from
-having "chymical affinity" on the involved "chymical solid," which
-enables it to draw out the elementary atoms of the solid: whereas the
-_inert_ menstruum does nothing; it is but an interstitial recipient for
-the atoms to be forced into, as they become centrifugally forced out
-of the solid. And because the atoms of a body are of different sizes,
-some make novel interstices, and thus expedite the dissolution. Only by
-increasing the number and kind of interstices, can diluting a menstruum
-with water increase what is imagined to be its solvency. Neither
-chymical properties, nor chymical strength of a fluid, if it had any
-such, could be increased by dilution, and the stronger should dissolve
-that which the weaker is said to dissolve. The contrary supposes that
-the force which breaks a stone is too strong to break a nutshell.
-Mechanical dissolution by the centrifugal pressure is independent of
-_chymicalities_.
-
-
-_Gastric solution_ is effected similarly: the juice has none of the
-chymical properties of Liebig, nor does ingestion stand in need of the
-living principle of Coombe; the former are imaginary, the latter is
-denied from gastric solution taking place in a tea-cup. The gastric
-juice is an interstitial receiver of the elements of the pulp, when
-forced out by the centrifugal pressure into the gastric menstruum,
-as those of soap into water. The pulp and its _striæ_ are disunited,
-mechanically decomposed, not abraded: some of its elements escape
-into the air within the stomach, which, by disturbing the equilibrium
-within, promote irregularity of pressure on the outside of the sac,
-which causes the _pliæ_ to be in the peristaltic motion, supposed to be
-caused by the stomach stimulating itself. The same circumstances take
-place within and without the intestines. The whole process of digestion
-is dynamic, in which the only stimulant is pressure.
-
-Of the various conjectures on the origin of the gastric juice, there
-cannot be any more unreasonable than that which considers it a fluid
-_sui generis_, and as having origin out of the stomach. All fluids are
-compounds; and those belonging to the body may be said to be formed
-out of, or by commixture with others. To suppose for an instant, that
-a fluid, which is _destructive of all flesh_, should have existence
-out of the stomach, and remain harmless in some _fleshy_ vessel as
-long as the stomach is empty of food, or until food is required to
-"stimulate" its flow from without through the _papillæ_ of the villous
-lining into the stomach, is a most strange physiologic oversight. Why
-not rather conclude at once, that the flesh-destroying juice exists
-only where it is required and for immediate service, and where only
-there are preventive means, the peristaltic motion, against it proving
-injurious to the flesh of the stomach; and to the vessels of secretion
-it would be injurious, hence, not as the juice but chyme it is passed
-out of the stomach into the system. Under such circumstances, the
-suggestion is nothing unreasonable, that, _there is no gastric juice
-out of the stomach, nor within, but while there is food present to
-contribute one or more of its elements to the other juices, including
-the saliva, towards effecting its completion as a fit interstitial
-gastric menstruum, for receiving the elementary constituents of the
-pulp under mechanical decomposition by the centripetally disuniting
-pressure of the medium of space_. Like the all de-electrising medium
-of fire, which exists only where and while it is being formed, the
-gastric juice should be looked upon as if _designed to be of difficult
-formation_; made more so by depending on the food for its completion,
-which is not a matter of "observation" within the stomach, or in the
-tea-cup: neither is the perfect juice, which may be sponged or syringed
-from the bottom of the stomach, any proof that as such precisely it
-came from the _papillæ_, as some suppose. As to the papillary flow
-being _stimulated_ by the food, with as bad philosophy it might be
-said, charmed; or that clockwork is _stimulated_ by the weights. The
-flow is promoted by the pulp, as were the latter a piece of sponge. And
-that the papillary flow is but a constituent, not the flesh-destroying
-juice, in promoting ingestion, is evident from the hunger pain it
-promotes while harmlessly accumulating out of the stomach, indicating
-the stomach being empty; and the relief experienced at its source when
-discharged into the stomach, it is, which has given rise to the idea,
-that certain organs _sympathise_ with the stomach.
-
-Such metaphorical expressions may pass for the poetry of pathology, but
-hitherto have stood in the way of deep research. Ingestion is expedited
-by sleep, in consequence of the accumulation of minus-pressure matter
-in the gastric region and stomach at the time; and sleep is promoted
-by imperfect mastication causing a deficiency of saliva in the stomach
-which is compensated by minus-pressure matter of the thus provoked
-comatose flow. The pollparrot masticates but little, if at all, and
-sleeps regularly after breakfast.
-
-
-
-
-USE OF THE INSPIRED OXYGEN WITHIN THE SYSTEM.
-
-
-There is none of the inspired oxygen returned to the lungs by the
-circulation. What becomes of it, or what its use within the system, has
-not been written for our learning. It is not retained in the blood,
-nor is it animalised; nothing yields less oxygen than animal matter.
-To convey "carbon" out of the system, and somehow purify the blood, is
-the supposed service; but if so, should it not be included in every
-expiration and of the inspiration quantity? but which is not the case.
-
-Harvey proved that the blood circulates, but left undiscovered what
-keeps in motion the _inert_ fluid, except the systole, which the
-_inert_ heart cannot effect on itself. No organ can do anything of
-itself, the whole being composed of inert substance, and nothing else;
-even the life of the body, whatever it may be, leaves the function of
-every organ, not excepting that of the brain, dependent on the general
-pressure.
-
-By the general pressure the air is forced into, but not through or
-beyond the lungs which it inflates, and inflates nothing else. Within
-the blood-vessels it would prove fatal; and although from it the blood
-derives that by which it becomes arterialised, yet the blood and air do
-not come in contact, extravasation and pulmonary rupture must happen,
-did the lungs permit the blood and air coming together, or in immediate
-contact. Of the air of an inspiration, the oxygenating imponderable
-element only can permeate the pulmonary tissue. This element it
-is which imponderably arterialises the blood; the nitrogen of the
-inspiration constitutes the immediate succeeding exspiration.
-
-The oxygenating element promotes the circulation on the same principle
-that it promotes combustion; its diminutive interstices exclude
-electric matter, which coagulates, and admits the propelling force,
-medium of space, which is the only cause of motion, to enter the blood.
-The oxygenated blood being propelled, or pressed, by the medium of
-space it includes, from the lungs into the ventricle, the collapse, or
-systole, takes place, and the blood is forced out of the ventricle,
-through the auricle, into the aorta, thence through the several
-branches of the arterial system, to and through the capillaries, into
-the veins. Thus, from the medium of space within the blood being
-continuous with the medium of space generally, it is manifest that the
-blood is circulated not by the systole, but by the general pressure. To
-produce the systole, there is nothing but the normal pressure on the
-outside surface of the heart; nor, to lessen the normal pressure on the
-parietes of the ventricle, is there anything but the arterialising,
-minus-pressure, imponderable element of the blood just received into
-the ventricle.
-
-Throughout the entire of the arterial flow, the blood is losing the
-arterialising minus-pressure matter to the different organs, as the
-means by which the functional action of each is promoted. Without
-such means, there is nothing to disturb the equilibrium of pressure
-on an organ to produce organic motion, action, or function. Hence, it
-appears, that the use of the inspired oxygen consists in promoting the
-circulation of the blood and the functional motion or action of the
-different organs within the frame.
-
-Before entering the veins the blood is fully deoxygenated; within
-them it acquires gradually electric matter, productive of the livid
-or coagulating appearance; at the same time the blood-propelling
-medium is lessening in quantity; but which is compensated in the
-mucilaginous lining of the veins, which assists the venous flow on the
-minus-pressure capillary principle; capillary attraction would collapse
-the vessels. The electric matter collected by the venous blood is got
-rid of in the lungs, and expired with the nitrogen and a remnant of the
-oxygenating element of the last inspiration; hence the small portion of
-carbonic acid gas obtained from the expiration.
-
-After all organic service, the arterialising minus-pressure matter
-is insensibly transpired, which is inferable from the supply being
-continued through respiration; which, although constant, yet, from
-being intermitting, might, perhaps, cause corresponding stoppings in
-the round of organic action; hence it would seem that, against such
-intervals or interruptions taking place, the liver has been designed to
-collect for casual distribution a portion of the same minus-pressure
-matter. The great surface of the liver may stand comparison with the
-plate, or cylinder, of the electrifying machine, and the organs as jars
-which receive electric matter from it, as each stands in need.
-
-
-_Use of the Spleen._--The SPLEEN, from being an organ common to
-the human frame, must have an allotted service to supply; although
-considered useless by some, to all of unknown utility, it may be _a
-lateral channel of arterial blood direct from the heart, to supply the
-vessels lying in a portion of the body not traversed by the arteries
-belonging to the great arterial system_; those of the diaphragm
-first; thence through the umbilical cord to the fetus, in which the
-circulation is indispensable, from being the only means of conveying
-and dispersing throughout the body, in the absence of respiration,
-the minus-pressure matter which the organism of the fetus requires
-to promote the several functions, without which life would become
-extinct if commenced. In this supply of motion promoting elementary
-matter, consists all that can be considered _aeration_ of the blood,
-and all that the blood of both the fetus and the _adult_ requires,
-or can possibly receive. In the chirping chick, while within the yet
-unbroken shell, aeration is _prevented_ by incubation of the mother
-bird; but the arterialising elementary matter is amply provided within
-the larger, apparently empty, end of the shell. To keep out electric
-matter, which would exclude the blood-moving medium, is the object of
-the hen sitting on the eggs, and oven-hatching is effected on the same
-principle.
-
-
-_How the Diaphragm Is Raised._--The _diaphragm_ cannot rise of itself,
-and has no self-acting, self-lifting nerves or muscles, all flesh being
-composed of _inert_ atoms. The rise is proof positive that pressure is
-greater on the posterior than anterior surface of the membrane, and the
-unchanged normal pressure beneath indicates reduced pressure above; the
-latter is promoted by minus-pressure matter imparted by the splenic
-blood to the diaphragm, while passing through the vessels of the
-diaphragm. This arterialising matter being highly evanescent, escapes
-from the diaphragm and upwards, and during the escape mitigates the
-pressure, intercepts it in some degree from the superior surface; then,
-by the normal pressure beneath, the rise of the diaphragm is effected.
-As the escape, or separation, is becoming complete, the equilibrium is
-being restored, and the diaphragm depressed to the normal level. If
-this be not the rationale of diaphragmatic motion, it will be little
-improved by the substitution of muscular energy, leverage, or muscular
-vitality, while leaving out _muscular inertia_, which should not be
-omitted, but included, in accounting for every muscular action and
-motion.
-
-
-
-
-CORRELATIVE ELEMENTS.
-
-
-Any pair of the general elements, the interstices of one of which are
-the only interstices for receiving and retaining the atoms of the
-other, or that can be occupied by the atoms of any other of the general
-elements, such elements are correlatives.
-
-Elementary co-relation is conspicuous in the opposite polarities
-of the loadstone, magnet, and crystals, and all bodies subject to
-polarization, which includes the animal frame. Similar co-relation is
-evinced between the galvanic fluids, those of the pile, and those named
-electricity; likewise between oxygen and hydrogen, the oxygenating
-element and nitrogen, acids and alkalies and all mutually neutralizing
-substances. Still it is not meant that all the general elements are so
-paired; doubtless, there are several ratios of size between the atoms
-of the different elements, for the purpose of multiplying variety among
-formations, the substance of which is of the same species throughout.
-Possibly the correlative principle gave rise to the ideal scale of
-_chymical affinities_, subsequently refined to _affections of matter_.
-Naturally, correlative elements will be found together, as are nitrogen
-and the imponderable element; also the magnetic fluids common to iron.
-
-
-
-
-MAGNETISM.
-
-
-Were attraction a property of the atomic substance of the loadstone, it
-could be neither transferable, receivable, nor liable to be destroyed
-by fire. A magnet is a work of art, the substance is inert, it can
-no more attract than think. Magnetism is an accident of matter; it
-consists in the correlatives of an iron bar having become separated,
-and drawn one to each end of the bar: separation and transition to
-the extremities of the bar, are what the rubbing on the poles of the
-loadstone effects.
-
-Two paving-stones hanging a short distance asunder and touched by
-nothing but the tranquil air, remain at rest; but should attract
-each other had "every atom in creation" the property. Were a vacuum,
-partial vacuum or air much rarer than atmospheric, now placed between
-the suspended stones, each would be in motion towards the other the
-same instant. Here both _causes_, the general pressure, and the
-minus-pressure, or motion _promoting_ means, are given; the latter are
-sensibly present, and the absence of attraction is as evident as the
-inutility of anything of the kind to effect the mutual approach of the
-two bodies. Not so is the approach of two magnets understood, because
-the intermediate minus-pressure means _present_ are not sensible. That
-iron magnets do not move together by attraction, or that attraction is
-not the cause of the phenomena imputed to it, is proved in the case of
-iron-filings dropping from a bar, when the connection of the bar with
-the galvanic battery is broken; and it will not be contended that the
-galvanic current is attraction.
-
-In order to arrive at a knowledge of wherein consists the means which
-subvert the equilibrium between two suspended magnets, reference
-has to be made to the artizan's mode of operating in converting the
-unmagnetised bar to a magnet. He holds the bar in the middle, and
-draws one half along the pole of a loadstone; then draws the other
-half along the other pole, and after a few such alternate _rubbings_
-against the poles, the bar is a polarized magnet. From which it was
-formerly supposed, that iron contains a magnetic fluid which the
-loadstone rubbings divide, and draw half to each end of the bar. But
-were such the fact, the ends or poles should be _equals_, whereas they
-are magnetic opposites. Now, with more reason, it is considered that
-iron includes two different, removable elements, (correlatives,) which,
-by the manipulation on the loadstone, are drawn one to each end of the
-bar, and there remain as polar atmospheres, and constitute what are
-termed the polarities, or opposite polarities of the bar; the latter
-opinion is somewhat confirmed by the corresponding manner in which iron
-filings, while being scattered on a sheet of paper, become arranged
-round the poles of a magnet lying under the paper.
-
-The magnetic relation, which the polar atmospheres of any iron magnet
-bear to those of every iron magnet, being the same as exists between
-the polar atmospheres of every individual magnet, makes manifest, that
-a certain pair of correlative elements is common to all magnetisable
-iron; but without concluding that, by the same kind of correlatives,
-the polarities are produced in bodies not ferruginous, which, if the
-physical fact, so may the animal correlatives be different in some
-instances. From which it follows, that no one mesmeriser can affect
-mesmerically every person, nor any one person be so affected by all
-mesmerisers. Neither are all persons "nervous" alike, which should
-moderate the war cry against mesmerism generally because of failure in
-some cases; and should awaken the philosophic mesmeriser, willing to
-make perfect the science, to investigate the cause of exceptions and
-difficulties.
-
-Now, as respects the interposed minus-pressure means or matter, which,
-by destroying the equilibrium, promote the approaching motion of two
-suspended magnets; there is nothing whatever to refer to, but the
-magnets themselves, that is, their polar atmospheres, which, together
-or facing one another, make a rare or minus-pressure medium between
-the proximate ends, into which both magnets are moved by the greater
-pressure on their remotest ends. It lies with the previously-instructed
-patient, while clairvoyant, through questioning by the mesmeriser,
-to make close observation, and report all circumstances respecting
-the magnetic lights; also, those attached to and proceeding from
-the mesmeriser, towards elucidating this most of all recondite
-subjects--magnetism, in the philosophy of physics. The mesmeriser
-should hold in mind, that, probably the air between the facing ends of
-two magnets is magnetically affected, that is, made a magnet in the
-series by the other two; which seems to be the case when the patient is
-magnetised at a distance from the mesmeriser by means of the pointed
-finger, and by the _effect_ of will at a much greater distance.
-
-
-
-
-NATURAL SLEEP.
-
-
-That sleep is not at the command of will is certain, or why undergo
-the tedium of a restless night? Before the state of sleep can obtain,
-the body has to experience an _electro-physico_ change, by which
-the extremities are left polarised and the body an animal or living
-magnet. That the extremities are polarised during sleep, is admitted
-by all physiologists; for the effecting of which there must be a pair
-of correlative elements concerned. While the elementary transfer,
-productive of the polarities, is taking place, so is drowsiness; when
-sleep has obtained, the natural magnetising procedure has terminated;
-hence from the degree of polarity, the mesmeriser can determine the
-stage to which the patient has been brought between the comatose and
-clairvoyant states, and know the capability of his patient for being
-made clairvoyant or not; this polar index should be well noticed.
-
-
-_Comatose Flow._--It must have been observed by many persons while
-dozing and the body in a sitting or leaning posture, that an agreeable
-warm glow arises in the chest, which increases while passing sensibly
-through the pectoral towards the gastric region, and which terminates,
-insensibly, in the consummation of sleep; from the feet upwards a
-similar, but less perceptible, flow takes place. Of this twofold
-_comatose flow_, the immediate consequence is polarisation of the
-extremities; sleep is a remote, but not the remotest consequence,
-when effects similar to those by the flow are mesmerically effected.
-Thus it appears that the theory of sleep and magnetism is the same.
-The magnetising procedure, however, has this difference; the magnetic
-correlatives are drawn from the middle to and out of the extremities of
-the bar; those of the body of the patient recede from the extremities
-to the central region, leaving one, the correlative of the other, at
-each extremity, in both cases.
-
-The foregoing theory of sleep is described from immediate personal
-observation. While leaning over a table, the doze heavy, the comatose
-flow distinctly felt in its agreeable downward progress through
-the chest, when, just at the instant of forgetfulness, the violent
-slam of a door drove away all chance of sleep under the following
-circumstances: a sensible and sudden revulsion upwards, a few seconds
-of giddiness, and a smart painful stroke on the stomach took place,
-all in quick succession; which may be accounted for thus: the slam
-prevented the correlative fluids from the opposite extremities meeting
-centrally; each gushed irregularly back, and depolarized its extremity,
-the suddenness of which caused the giddiness. The stroke is the true
-electric shock, inflicted by the medium of space suddenly rushing
-or falling on the stomach, from which the matter of the comatose
-flow had been as suddenly displaced. Taking all circumstances into
-consideration, it is manifest that the state of sleep is the result of
-a natural magnetizing operation.
-
-Before the fire, while reading, the superior extremity loses electric
-matter to the fire, which leaves it polarized and promotes the
-comatose flow. The lower extremity becomes polarized simultaneously
-with the upper as a correlative consequence. Sleep is supposed to be
-expedited by heat; hence the afternoon's nap is seconded by a silk
-handkerchief thrown over the head, but which is only a hindrance to
-electric matter, similar to that of the comatose flow entering from
-the air and depolarizing the extremity. The handkerchief, from being a
-non-conductor, only prevents the coming sleep being retarded; it could
-neither generate nor multiply heat.
-
-Naturally it might be questioned, why the body should become somnolent
-daily; and, by what means the comatose flow is naturally effected;--of
-itself it could not take place. The languor removed, and renovation
-of muscular strength through sleep, may satisfy in the first instance.
-Next, it would seem, that, as the functions of the several organs
-depend on the presence of minus-pressure matter for unequalising
-the pressure on each organ, so must there be waste, loss, and daily
-deficit of minus-pressure matter; which, from being made good by means
-of sleep, leaves it inferable, that the daily quantity derived from
-respiration may be little more than sufficient for the continuance
-of animation under the minimum of bodily exercise; but as man is
-necessitated to follow laborious avocations, so is it designed,
-that the loss by service and waste shall be the means whereby the
-necessary re-supply is to be furnished. The loss leaves the extremities
-polarized; and as greater waste towards total exhaustion approaches,
-the matter of the comatose flow becomes needed and is employed in
-prolonging the functions of the different organs, and before exhaustion
-is complete the body is in the state of sleep; during which, from
-every inspiration being far more lengthy than ordinary, the body is
-resupplied to repletion with the respirable minus-pressure matter,
-by which the extremities are depolarized, and the sleeper is awake,
-refreshed and invigorated. From which it may be said, that a man toils
-himself to sleep, and sleeps himself awake; and that, not "balmy
-sleep," but respiration, is "tired Nature's sweet restorer."
-
-
-_Mesmeric sleep_ may be considered forced sleep. It is effected
-with little or no comatose flow, which renders replenishing by
-long breathing unnecessary; and the patient, on being awakened by
-demagnetising the extremities, is rather debilitated than refreshed.
-
-Every finger of the mesmeriser is a magnet to the magnetic correlatives
-within the extremities of the patient; and the passes polarize after
-the manner of the comatose flow in the case of natural sleep. From
-there being no mesmerically-effected comatose flow, there is reason to
-infer, that _the contents of the nerves of sensation only are what the
-passes polarize_ and what only are polarized in natural sleep, although
-expressed by the word, _extremities_.
-
-Repetition of the passes separates, or de-electrises more completely
-the nerves of the extremities, than for the production of natural sleep
-is requisite. Hence it may be said, that the body of the _mesmerised_
-patient is in magnetic advance, and hence the series of surprising
-consequences which bring to light more and more the wonders of the
-economy.
-
-The passes should be conducted on magnetising principles; that is, from
-the extremities to the gastric region to bring on somnolency, and from
-the same region to the head and feet or extremes to awaken; from head
-to foot is unscientific, and might be prejudicial; the central region
-of the body should be considered _the mesmeric insuperable line_. Cross
-passes having been found efficient are not anomalous, by reason of the
-nerves and branches lying in all directions.
-
-
-
-
-VISION.
-
-
-According to the popular opinion, which governs the philosopher,
-and with which the established philosophy agrees, vision is an act
-performed by the eye, which is said to be endowed with the faculty of
-sight, by which it is enabled to look into, through space, and see
-external bodies made visible when covered with solar or day light;
-nothing of which is true. The eyeball is not possessed of sight; to
-see is not the function of the sense; externals are not visible; there
-is no material light; light is a sensible or mental effect consequent
-on the chromatic organ of the brain being excited by the fluid of the
-optic nerve. All we know by means of the optic sense, consists in the
-sensation of light or coloured light, accompanied with the idea of
-form. The object which promotes the sensation being, seemingly, the
-place of the sensation, all imagine the sensation is the colour of the
-object to which the eye is directed, and hence, that the object or
-body is seen by the eyes. These general mistakes are made evident and
-stand corrected by reference to the sense itself, its physiology and
-function, as previously stated and advised.
-
-The medium of space is the visual medium; not, however, for looking
-through, as is supposed, but by reason of it forming the link or
-intermediate means by which the object is connected with the sense.
-Now, as the medium of space is present everywhere, and as it promotes
-visual or optic perception, the question naturally arises, why do we
-not see in the night as well as day, in all places and at all times; in
-a word, why do we not see in the dark? The clairvoyant does "see" in
-the dark.
-
-The nervous fluid excites the sensation of colour; the medium of space
-connects mediately the object with the nervous fluid, which fluid
-acts on the optic cerebral organ by pressure and degrees of pressure.
-The nervous fluid, nor anything else, acts essentially, that is, by
-means of properties and qualities; and its acting on the brain is
-caused by external agency, the fluid itself being _inert_. It may
-well be supposed that the exquisite construction of the brain, from
-being competent to produce psychologic effects, although excited by
-material agency, requires but the most simple means, such as a simple
-impulse or impression, to be actuated into excitement; and as the
-portion or line of the medium of space which is continuous from the
-external object, through the pupil, to the nervous fluid within the
-retina, is that which puts the nervous fluid into functional action on
-the brain, it is fairly assumable that only by pressure, degrees, and
-changes of pressure, the nervous fluid can by possibility act on and
-excite the brain; which equally applies to the nervous fluid of all
-the senses. Taking, then, the maximum of optic pressure as productive
-of no sensation; so, from there being no object to perceive, it is
-imagined we are surrounded with darkness; and taking the minimum as
-exciting the sensation recognised as luminous, light, or white, to
-intermediate degrees of cerebral pressure are to be attributed the
-sensations of red, yellow, blue and of colours generally. According to
-these terms of the colorific scale, all optically-excited perceptions
-are consequent on the cerebral pressure being in degrees on the scale
-of descent from the maximum.
-
-For the reduction of optic pressure, there are different minus-pressure
-means, namely, the sun, flame, electricity, phosphoric substances;
-and the daily electric matter, which is constant in the atmosphere at
-the eastern hemisphere of the globe, and which keeps pace with the
-sun; because the rarest elements of the atmosphere will be in greater
-quantity on the side facing the sun. As this daily electric matter
-emerges before the sun is above the horizon, the general optic pressure
-excites the sensation supposed to be the light of day-break; and while
-following, after sunset, the sensation is known as twilight. Any such
-minus-pressure matter lying in the visual direction, shortens the
-visual line, and intercepts the continuity of that line of the medium
-of space which makes one with the axis of the eye, and thus effects the
-reduction of optic pressure.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Note._--The terms here made use of, from being unknown in the olden
-philosophy, need explanation.--_Axis line_: that line of the medium
-of space which is as the axis of the eye produced to, and terminated
-by the external object. _Visual line_, the same. _Visual continuity_;
-the line which is continuous _angularly_ with the termination of the
-axis line. From the termination of this _continuous_ line, there may
-be another angular continuity or _line_, as from mirror to mirror.
-All lines continuous from the axis line and terminated by _the
-object_ supposed to be seen, and however irregular, are _lines_ of
-_vision_: the angular point, _the point of_ (first, second, or third)
-_continuity_. The reader should make a diagram for each case as he
-proceeds.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Within the window-closed room, a lighted candle is supposed to fill
-the entire space with light radiated from the flame: the perception is
-named light, and is thus wise excited. When the axis line is terminated
-by the flame, the pressure on the nervous fluid is lessened to the
-degree which promotes the sensation of luminousness, which seems to be
-the physical appearance of the flame itself. Again; when, in the same
-room, the eye is directed to a mirror the like perception is excited,
-because the visual line is continuous from the point of continuity, or
-termination of the axis line, to the flame as before. When the axis
-line is terminated by a piece of furniture, the point of continuity
-being imperfect and the visual continuity thence to the flame irregular
-or indirect, the optic pressure on the brain by the axis line excites
-the sensation of colour, which is imputed to the object, chair, or
-table.
-
-In the celebrated OPTICS, the visual lines are mistaken for rays of
-light radiated from the flame, and reflected from the other objects;
-which rays are supposed to enter the eye, and (as if possessed of
-intelligence) arrange themselves on the back of the eye or on the
-retina, in the precise form, but of a different size, of the object
-to which the eyes are directed, as the means by which externals are
-seen before the face. In cases wherein the visual line is indirect,
-as when lying through media of unequal density, the supposed rays are
-said to be refracted: and, because the curtained iris excludes the
-visual medium, except through the pinhole pupil, thence along the axis
-through the lenses of the eyeball, the _optics_ inculcate, that the
-eye has been formed to see only in straight lines. Finally, by Dr.
-Reed it is taught, that the use of the sensation and of the image on
-the _back_ of the eye, is to make the external object _opposite the
-face_ be seen; all which has to be rejected and forgotten in being
-guided by the natural, real function of the sense, against which there
-is no appeal. There are no rays concerned; the medium of vision is
-quiescent; there can be neither radiation, reflection, nor refraction
-effected by passive inert bodies; there is no image on any part of the
-eye or retina; and externals could not be made visible, or seen by
-their images. Such absurdities, all of which are maintained in modern
-philosophy, have prevented, more than any thing else, the science and
-phenomena of Mesmerism being understood.
-
-According to the interstitial composition of the surface of a body,
-so is the point of visual continuity at or beneath the surface; which
-determines the degree of pressure on the axis line; which determines
-what shall be the resulting sensation, or apparent colour of the
-surface of the object to which the pupil of the eyeball is directed.
-Through a pane of glass, or through the clear atmosphere, the axis line
-may be said to be uninterruptedly continuous, and the perception is as
-if the glass were away. Through an ignited sheet of iron the visual
-continuity is imperfect, and may be said to be continuous only halfway
-through the sheet. An ignited bar, at first, is said to be brown, then
-ignited to redness: colours are sensations. Within the bar the axis
-line is continuous in zig-zag order, which causes the optic pressure
-to excite the sensation of red: it is a prismatic case. The _spectra_,
-by means of the prism, are only in the sensorium; the skreen itself is
-unseen. When the direct axis line terminates at the apparent red on the
-skreen, the continuity thence is maintained through some particular
-part of the prism; when terminated by the yellow, through a different
-part; when by the blue, through another different part; and through
-each part the continuity is somewhat curvilinear, hence the pressures
-and perceptions are different. Through the air, when the perception is
-of the many-coloured rainbow, the visual continuity is as through the
-prism: there is no coloured bow out of the sensorium.
-
-Where there are no minus-pressure means for lessening the optic
-pressure, as in mines, caves, and window-closed rooms, there can be no
-perceptions of light and colour. From the sensation ceasing the same
-instant the last window-shutter is closed, it would seem, that, the
-_daily_ minus-pressure matter is in constant flow eastward through the
-globe. The rheumatic sufferer fears sun-down, as if the daily matter
-enters and protects the nerves from the nightly. The meteorologist has
-to resolve the problem for the philosopher in tracing the magnetic
-meridian.
-
-The objection is unfounded against pressure being the cerebral exciting
-cause. It is objected, that, from two stars equally distant, one
-considered red, the other blue, the pressure cannot be changed along
-the visual lines in the small space of time the eye takes to direct
-itself from one to the other star. There is no changing of pressure on
-either line. The existing pressure on the sense by each is different,
-and what it is, depends on the constitution of the external object, as
-in every other instance, and just as on that of the ignited bar already
-stated. The imputed colours of the stars being different, so is the
-continuity of axis line beneath the surface of the atmosphere of each
-star, also the degree of pressure and the sensitive result.
-
-Neither is it maintainable that the medium of space cannot be the
-medium of vision, because "from being all-pervading, it should excite
-vision through all kinds of bodies, as through a block of rock crystal,
-but does not through so thin a substance as a leaf of blotting-paper."
-By clairvoyance it is proved that the visual continuity is maintained
-through stone walls; and by reason of the _visual and auditory_ medium
-being the same, that is, medium of space, the "hearing" through
-stone walls, makes the "seeing" possible. The bell must be connected
-mediately with the auditory sense, as is the object with the visual
-sense; and through stone walls there is nothing continuous but the
-medium of space. Sound is no more a transmissible object than colour;
-neither belongs to the external object. In all such cases of sensations
-which are different, although the promoting means are the same for all
-the senses, that the organs of sense may not be equally susceptible,
-or capable of being put into functional service by the same degree of
-cerebral pressure, should be held in mind, or else it might be asked
-why all the senses are not excited at the same time.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSPARENCY.
-
-
-A transparent body, is one through which the visual line is
-uninterruptedly continuous from an object to the sense. The materials
-for glass-making are opaque, and the natural opacity of their
-elementary atoms is unalterable. Hence in some novel arrangement of
-the atoms towards promoting the direct continuity of the medium of
-space through them, consists the object of vitrifying and principle of
-transparency.
-
-
-
-
-OPACITY.
-
-
-The principal obstacle to transparency is interposed electric matter.
-In the earliest stages of glass-making an immense volume of electric
-matter is got rid of by means of the furnace fire, which becomes sooty
-smoke while ascending and passing through the furnace funnel; and to
-prevent all return of the like, it is, that solid oxygen is added to
-the materials when fused, the interstices of which, in the vitrified
-mass, secure the direct continuity of the visual medium. Priestley
-made black wax and brass filings transparent, by only removing all
-interposed electric matter. The body of a living man, by being
-de-electrised, has been made transparent. In these instances the
-transparency is of short continuance, and the opacity is restored by
-returning electric matter. Fire, in de-electrising gems and crystals,
-destroys all partial opacity. The clearest water is made cloudy on
-receiving the charge from the electrifying jar; by uncustomary electric
-matter, the atmosphere is made foggy, and is transparent again when the
-electric matter becomes a constituent of rain-water. These instances
-show, that, electric matter lying in the way of the medium of space
-and vision, interrupts its regular continuity, consequently, its
-direct pressure; yet not wholly,--clairvoyance and sound make manifest
-that the continuity is maintained through the most opaque bodies. The
-principle bears strongly on the physiology of clairvoyance.
-
-
-
-
-THE NERVOUS FLUID.
-
-
-Were there a distinct fluid belonging to the nerves of sensation, and
-insulated, it could not be affected by external circumstances, nor
-its cerebral excitement be productive in the least of any knowledge,
-relative or inferential of external bodies. Were the fluid not
-insulated, it should be subject to waste like the lachrymal fluid, and
-must excite the brain differently at different times, even under equal
-circumstances; which must make it impossible to identify the same body
-after its removal out of the axis-of-vision direction.
-
-A distinct fluid, not insulated, has to be in contact with the line of
-medium of space which the external object terminates, which adds to the
-difficulty of waste, in the possibility of the nerves becoming flooded
-with an abnormal fluid, medium of space. Much more likely is it,
-that, _the cerebral exciting fluid, of the nerves generally, consists
-in medium of space_, received from without through the cuticular
-insertions and orifices of the nerves as streamlets from the great
-ocean of space, subject to neither ebb nor flow, and liable to change
-of pressure occasioned by external agency. According to this idea, the
-object and brain are the terms of the visual line; and medium of space,
-continuous from the object through the nerves to the brain, is the
-connecting link.
-
-Further; although medium of space is the nervous fluid and immediate
-cerebral exciting cause, (which entitles it to be named the TRUE
-_nervous fluid_,) there are strong grounds for concluding that, with
-the true fluid, the nerves include a pair of correlative elements.
-Because of the mesmeric effected polarities being without the comatose
-flow, which leaves nothing to look to for the polarizing means but the
-contents of the nerves. Next, as clairvoyance is a cerebral effect,
-something connected with the nervous fluid must be concerned in its
-production, or why not clairvoyance take place without the magnetic
-passes. Finally, the true fluid, or any single fluid, is incapable
-of being polarized; and the true fluid might be rendered immovable
-at times, were there no electric or minus-pressure matter within
-the nerves, also to prevent its increase, and to retain the normal
-quantity of the true fluid. All extremes being prevented, and the
-polarities of the extremities productive of increased lucidity, are
-consistent with idea of the nerves including magnetising correlatives,
-which, beside, serve as an elastic break against the fluid exciting the
-brain indistinctly, irregularly, or exquisitely; and only, as it were,
-muffled, to prevent the sensibility of the cerebral organs being worn
-out prematurely.
-
-Another object may be attained by the included electric correlatives,
-namely, restricting the exciting pressure to certain degrees, so that
-the sensation shall be defined and directing, but otherwise useless
-and misleading. Another may be, that of regulating the degrees of
-pressure on such a scale, as that, by the same senses, sensations shall
-be excited as different from each other as those of red, yellow, and
-blue by the optic sense, heat and cold by the feeling sense, sweet and
-bitter by the gustory sense. To which the conjecture may be added, for
-the purpose of anatomic and physiologic inquiry, that, as not even an
-elementary interstice is without design, so may the orifices of the
-retina be of regulated diameters, to ensure such definite degrees of
-pressure on the brain as shall excite the sensations recognised as
-primitive colours.
-
-On the principle that the nervous fluid is derived from without, the
-question is decided as to the cuticular termination of the nerves,
-which is objected to by some, in consequence of a few of the nerves
-being observed to have "inward bending." And is it not a matter of
-common observation, that "feeling is most sensible at the tips of the
-fingers" or apparent place of the sensation.
-
-
-
-
-CLAIRVOYANCE.
-
-
-All mesmerically-produced phenomena are the consequence of the passes.
-The immediate effect of the passes is de-electrisation of the nerves,
-that is, of their contents, which leaves them polarised (as is the
-case in natural sleep), but more intensely than is effected by the
-comatose flow. In the ordinary condition, the contents of the nerves
-may be likened to milky water in a barometer tube; in natural sleep, to
-the same, with a less degree of milkiness--the latter subsiding from
-the ends to the middle portion of the water; and in the clairvoyant
-condition of the nerves, to the milkiness having so completely
-subsided as to leave the water above and below the middle of the tube
-transparent. In the ordinary condition, the nervous fluid is clogged,
-as it were, with intermixed electric matter, which, by marring the
-regular continuity of the fluid from without to the brain, reduces in
-some degree the exciting pressure on the brain, which prevents the
-function of the fluid being employed to its utmost. In this encumbered
-state, the fluid may be said to act on the brain, as the clapper when
-muffled on a bell. Still the excited pressure is sufficiently strong,
-and the mental result sufficiently distinct for all human purposes.
-When to the clairvoyant degree the nerves have been denuded of impeding
-electric matter, the nervous fluid is enabled to act on the brain as
-if unmuffled; and as its continuity from the orifices of the retina
-through space is not in any manner altered, so, to the altered electric
-condition, mesmerically effected, on the contents of the nerves between
-their orifices and the brain, we must attribute all mesmerically
-produced phenomena; and without supposing that the brain is quickened
-into a higher degree of sensibility, or that any one of its various
-organs has acquired some exalted degree of psychologic ability.
-
-That _long vision_ and _opaque vision_ should be consequences of
-cleansing, as it were, the nerves of intercepting minus-pressure
-matter, is nothing surprising, it is as removing dust from the window
-to better our vision: the physiology is traceable, and the psychology
-not more incomprehensible than its hourly occurrence in a minor degree,
-to which, as sensible effects, we are indebted for all we know, and by
-which we abide, without inquiry into their nature or origin; so perfect
-is the design of Nature in our make for supplying all that is requisite
-to the comfort and enjoyment of man in his present state of existence.
-
-
-_Long vision_, during the clairvoyant state, or the recognition of
-objects greatly remote by the sensation each promotes, has its wonder
-much more in the _nature of the medium of space_ than in the familiar
-mental effect. The optically promoted sensation is proof that the
-external object, were it at the antipodes, is in mediate connection
-with not only the nervous fluid of the retina, but the brain. Long
-and ordinary vision have the same theory: in both states the same
-chromatic cerebral organ is excited by the nervous fluid; in both the
-nervous fluid is continuous from the brain to the external body; and in
-both the object perceived is the sensation of colour. That the eye-ball
-lenses are concerned in long and opaque, as in short vision, however
-in the two former, the eyes may be bandaged (to satisfy the desire of
-spectators, otherwise useless, if not worse,) is obvious, from the
-knowledge of form being connected with the sensation, as in every
-instance of optically-excited perception.
-
-By the passes, the nervous fluid is freed from the visual intercepting
-electric matter; which matter, like the colouring matter in stained
-glass, renders the continuity of the visual medium or fluid within the
-optic nerve impaired.
-
-To account for the phenomenon of much longer than ordinary vision,
-there is nothing in the mesmeric case to effect the difference, or
-refer to, but the de-electrised condition of the nervous fluid. From
-which it would seem that the visual line from the most remote object,
-is always as continuous to the brain as from one within arm's length
-before the face; and that the degree of cerebral exciting pressure
-on the longer line is rendered equally efficacious, _now_, that the
-electric impediment has been removed from the nervous fluid; hence,
-that the normal intermixed quantity of electric matter with the nervous
-fluid prevents us being clairvoyant at all times, is reasonable to
-conclude.
-
-
-_Opaque vision_, or the "seeing through opaque bodies," is not the
-absurdity so generally imagined when judged and reasoned on according
-to the true principles of visual perception: the facts of clairvoyance
-place the absurdity on the denier.
-
-As the medium of space furnishes all the nerves with the true and only
-cerebral exciting fluid, which is necessarily all-pervading, and proved
-to be so by the auditory sense, or "hearing through stone walls,"
-the possibility of seeing through such bodies is made manifest, and
-_clairvoyantly_, has been proved. Misled by the idea that the eye-balls
-look through solid glass, yet cannot look through a stone, to doubt and
-deny is pardonable; yet nothing else is requisite, than that the visual
-medium shall be continuous from the object to the brain, no matter how
-many opaque objects lie between, for the perception being excited, and
-promoted by the remote object: the object perceived is the sensation
-of this or that colour, as in transparent vision. It is no ordinary
-circumstance, that of "seeing through opaque bodies;" neither is it
-an ordinary circumstance, the extreme de-electrised condition of the
-nervous fluid, _on which the extra-ordinary of the phenomenon depends_.
-In removing the partial opacity of a crystal by means of fire, the
-hindrance to the visual continuity, electric matter, is displaced;
-but as no such electric displacement from a stone wall is effected or
-practicable, while to the clairvoyant the continuity is as were there
-no electric impediment in the wall, is proof additional that the medium
-of space, the common cerebral exciting cause, pervades all things, the
-human body included, and hence the being in _Report_.
-
-Now that mesmeric practice and proof have stifled all open opposition,
-by the influential ignorant, to the surprising truths of the science,
-that all persons cannot be mesmerised to the clairvoyant stage, is in
-nowise prejudicial to mesmerism, or to the SCIENCE OF THE ECONOMY being
-intimately connected with medical practice; neither are occasional
-failures by the clairvoyant, especially in trial tests, some of which
-exhibit samples of complicated confusion, as if for the purpose of
-suppression, instead of laudably exalting the all-important science of
-mesmerism. Had the very liberal offer of a hundred pounds been under
-less complicated conditions, the bank-note most certainly would have
-been deciphered and changed hands. Had the note been spread open,
-while enclosed between two plates of sheet-iron, and then read by the
-clairvoyant, the test would have been sufficient to convince the most
-steady, sturdy, staunch unbeliever, and the _dénouement_ affirmative
-to every dispassionate observer. But from being folded line upon line,
-letter on letter, at least three deep, the misarrangement destroyed
-most effectually all reading order. A Newtonian would say, that,
-"the commixed rays proceeding from the several overlaid typographic
-characters, and from the lines placed tier over tier, could never
-form the image of even a single letter on the retina, with anything
-resembling legible clearness;" therefore the trial must fail most
-inevitably.
-
-
-
-
-RIGIDITY.
-
-
-None deny that rigidity of the limbs can be effected mesmerically;
-but all mistake who impute the phenomenon to muscular ability,
-irritability, or energy. All flesh is _inert_; all muscular fibrine is
-flexible, bends from its own weight when held horizontally, and over
-it the will has neither power nor influence. Then, how is a muscle or
-nerve to stiffen itself, and where is the mechanical arrangement within
-for such purpose? The power is derived from without, and consists in
-medium of space. The de-electrising passes make entrance-room for
-influent medium of space, which is the cause of the limbs becoming
-rigid. As in Bramah's pump, water serves the purpose of an iron piston,
-so, within the nerves and muscles, medium of space in excess and under
-the general pressure, is an equally rigid piston, and the cause of all
-muscular strength and of rigidity. The depolarizing passes bring back
-electric matter, which displaces all excess of medium of space, and
-with it the physical cause of rigidity.
-
-
-
-
-PAIN.
-
-
-Pain is not removed but prevented by means of the passes. It is not
-excited in the mesmerised patient during severe surgical operations,
-because the movements of the brain, as is said of a watch with the
-finger on a wheel, are stopped.
-
-General insensibility being effected by pressure of the surgeon's
-finger on the brain of a fractured skull, so is it mesmerically
-effected by the nervous fluid, which has suffered increase as the
-nerves have been de-electrised by the passes.
-
-
-_Curative Mesmerism._--The curative principle of mesmerism seems to
-consist in correcting occasional irregularities in the _electric
-circulation_. By the passes, electric matter in excess is removed,
-which, from being noxious to the part, might contribute to the
-formation of mucus to become concrete, or otherwise injurious to the
-flesh: or, the passes may transfer the excess to supply deficiency
-elsewhere,--as in the case of gout, a disease of the sufferer's own
-making, from excess of de-electrising food and drink, which uncoats
-and unlines the nerves, and thus leaves the nervous fluid, from casual
-circumstances, to almost lacerate the brain. Stomach coating aliment,
-not denuding physic, is the cure: as electric matter may become a
-constituent of the humidities of the different organs, so may it of the
-serous fluid, which is indispensable to wholesome flesh. In all such
-cases mesmerism is curative.
-
-
-_Ethers._--From inhaled _ethers_, producing insensibility without
-rigidity, it would seem that they contribute a kind of electric matter
-to the interior of the nerves, but which, from being uncongenial,
-is happily soon displaced. All excess being the more prejudicial,
-the quicker the displacement the better. Any ether imparted to the
-fluids of the nerves, may effect reduction in the quantity of the true
-fluid through the cuticle orifices; or make breaks in what is left,
-so as to leave the nervous fluid incompetent to produce excitement
-of the brain; hence the insensibility of the patient, if that can be
-considered insensibility, when there is nothing of pain of which to be
-insensible.
-
-Etherising by external application, but which may not amount to
-mesmerizing, is nothing new. A Dublin apothecary, sixty years since,
-cured the poor daily of nervous complaints, headaches especially, by
-pressing a folded handkerchief on the forehead, taken from a wide-mouth
-jar, concealed with professional delicacy, behind the counter, but
-long since discontinued; the learned in the laws of life and living,
-considering that short-hand work is a forbidden practice,--that
-something newest in the last _Pharmacopoeia_ is better than the best,
-for all parties. Tobacco-smoking brings on a degree of insensibility,
-and mesmerically conduces to sleep, which exertion frustrates. The
-smoke of the fire in London stayed the plague in the year 1666. The
-subject is worthy of consideration by the mesmerizing physician, in
-case of epidemics especially.
-
-
-
-
-REPORT.
-
-
-The being in report one with another, the mesmerised with the
-mesmeriser, is proved possible, and from being effected by the passes
-is proved also to be natural,--not satanic or supernatural, the weakest
-of all ideas. Within Nature there can be nothing supernatural; nor out
-of Nature, or of the other worlds, anything in the power of living man
-or poor human nature to command or imitate. However, as believers
-are not reasoners, except in the arithmetic of funds, to the reformer
-_Time_, must be left the conversion to Reason.
-
-Throughout the whole of Nature there is nothing insulated, not even
-an atom. Involved in a universal medium of pressure, all things must
-be in contact, mediate or immediate. The atmosphere is a universal
-connecting link. As by the sea the most distantly-situated islands are
-in mediate connection, so are all mankind by means of the atmosphere.
-Still this atmospheric connection is limited to margin with margin,
-surface with surface. By the all-pervading medium of space, the
-interior of all living beings is in mediate connection, equally as the
-interior of submerged sponges by the water. As "light" would pervade
-and connect our bodies were they glass, so does the medium of space.
-But were mankind so left, it is difficult to conceive how the organic
-functions could possibly take place, and impossible to say how personal
-individuality could be, as at present, an independent animal privilege.
-
-Although the medium of space is continuous through all bodies, the
-regular continuity is impaired by the elements of the atmosphere
-between each. The atmosphere not only protects all living bodies
-against the maximum and all excess of pressure, but in some
-considerable degree insulates the bodies of persons from each other,
-just as fog and small snow intercept the visual continuity and would
-render "rays of light" interruptedly continuous; so do the intermixed
-atoms of the atmosphere the regular continuity of the medium of space
-between person and person, as respects surfaces. Within the body,
-insulation is still more complete: here, electric matter and air
-abound to the exclusion of all excess of medium of space; by which the
-different organs remain, in a manner disconnected, or so far, as that
-the functional action of each organ has its distinct period, instead of
-the action of the whole being simultaneously performed. Beside these
-means and degrees of insulation, the non-conducting coating and lining
-of the nerves insulate more completely their elementary contents, by
-which the nerves are not only tubes of separation but insulation, and
-are direct conducting channels of the nervous fluid through the body
-from its external source to the brain.
-
-Although man is thus isolated from man, the isolating means do not
-prevent the medium of space being continuous through all, and from one
-to another; which is manifested by the clairvoyant, who has the like
-of the sensation excited in the brain of the mesmeriser repeated or
-excited in his own brain; as when the mesmeriser masticates and the
-sensation of the same flavour is known by the mesmerised. The sensation
-is nothing transferable; taste is not by the tongue; hence, by the
-sensation being excited in succession in the brain of each person,
-is the only conceivable mode, in reason, why the second should know
-what the first is masticating. The nervous fluid of the two may be
-supposed to be derived from the medium of space between them; then,
-by the medium of space lying between, the nervous fluids of the two
-are rendered continuous one with the other, and is so at all times,
-but only when the nervous fluid is mesmerically de-electrised is it
-productive of clairvoyant perceptions. Community of sensation, or
-the _same_ sensation being perceived by different persons, is an
-impossibility. The first sensation is only where it has been excited,
-in the brain of the mesmeriser; and supposing the matter of the nervous
-fluid continuous direct from his brain to that of the patient, in
-it, what has the latter to perceive?--nothing; neither is perception
-separable in idea from the result of cerebral excitement. It is to
-be hoped that the desultory ideas here advanced may tend to a better
-knowledge on this singular mesmeric discovery. Even the foregoing may
-be objected to with apparent reason, on consideration of what is termed
-"community of thought," wherein there is no previous sensation to be
-repeated. To account for which requires more cerebral information than
-has as yet been brought to light; when satisfactorily known it may
-show, whether or not community in dreaming may be effected. Report
-would be impossible were there not intimate connection of brain with
-brain.
-
-
-
-
-VOLUNTARY DE-ELECTRISATION.
-
-
-Every motion of the limbs being effected by pressure, to promote the
-local change minus-pressure matter has to be displaced. That the assent
-of will is indispensable is evident, inasmuch as there is no _ordinary_
-limb motion, if not previously assented to by the will. Yet will is no
-mechanical power, nor anything having a distinct existence. Will seems
-to be, the mutual accordance of the cerebral organs to act together
-so as to effect, or rather assist, the accomplishing of a present
-intention. The act may be likened to that of suction, voluntarily
-performed by the brain to de-electrise itself, in order to make room
-for and receive that which lies in the way of the desired object being
-effected. The voluntary act by the brain cannot be on anything far
-away, or not in contact with the brain, and that which is acted on
-must be continuous to the place of the removable impediment. If, then,
-the brain does de-electrise itself, and that by so doing it receives
-electric matter from the nerves which are continuous from the limb
-to the brain, such removal of electric matter is effected within the
-nerves of the limb, as makes space for medium of space to enter in the
-requisite quantity to move the limb according to the required velocity.
-It is not to be overlooked, that, previous to the self de-electrisation
-of the brain, thought may be concerned in promoting the cerebral
-de-electrising act. So far as the foregoing may be true, the like
-circumstances take place when the mesmeriser wills into report with
-himself the far-off patient, the electric matter in the space between
-being affected with as much facility, as the transfer of similar matter
-from the trough to the utmost extent of the galvanic wire, which may be
-considered instantaneous, considering the hundreds of miles distance
-between.
-
-
-_The Nature and Power of Will._--The power of effecting, voluntarily,
-the transfer of electric matter from one part of the interior of the
-body to a different, seems to belong, in some necessary degree, to
-all bodies possessed of life. The object is to make space for medium
-of space to enter, and by its pressure to put the animal in a state
-of locomotion. The snake, worm, and snail do so to be pressed onward
-along the ground; the oyster, to have the shells firmly collapsed; the
-limpit, to be pressed against the rock; and each, cerebrally wills
-the replacement of electric matter to displace the cause of pressure,
-medium of space, for the grovelling reptile to be at rest--the oyster,
-that the shells may be opened; the limpit, when willing to fall into
-the water. The fly, lizard, and walrus, so de-electrise the body, as to
-reverse the direction of what is supposed to be their natural weight,
-by which means each becomes pressed upwards, and walks with the back
-downwards--which, to be consistent with the established philosophy,
-should be considered _repellent gravitation_. The goat voluntarily
-de-electrises his body to have it pressed with double force against
-the slippery rock; the lynx, to have mesmeric long vision; the cat, to
-have opaque vision, or "see through the dark;" the fire-fly, to effect
-reduction of the optic pressure productive of sensations of colour. The
-carrier-pigeon effects self de-electrisation to the clairvoyant degree,
-by which the external object, the turret at Constantinople, promotes
-the sensation which indicates at once the shortest direction of flight
-from London to the birth-place of the bird. The eagle de-electrises
-itself inwardly, the same as if by the mesmeric passes, to promote
-olfactory lucidity, by which to ascertain the presence of carrion on
-the ground. Fishes effect internal de-electrisation, somehow by means
-of the contents of the swim, for influent medium of space to propel
-the body with a velocity superior to the power of the short, flexible
-fins. The flight of birds is not effected by wing motion, or wing
-powers. The crow, eagle, and kite sail in all directions on extended
-motionless wing, and the odd wing-flap now and then given, is only
-to assist in keeping the body in the necessary electric condition.
-The swallow is darted most rapidly through the air with closed
-wing, and changes acutely, without way, the direction of flight, by
-changing instantaneously the direction of impulse. With the greatest
-wing-agitation the hawk remains at times stationary in the air. The
-fish, bird, and bullet are impelled by the same cause, pressure, by the
-medium of space on the de-electrised rear.
-
-The cow and goat voluntarily de-electrise the cud, for medium of space
-to enter and press it upwards through the food-passage which the cud
-presses against, instead of being raised by nerves or muscles of the
-esophagus. In parturition also, and the discharge of the feces, the
-same principles are maintained. The "throes of Nature" are consequent
-on the natural pressure being made intermitting, by electric matter
-returning to and escaping from the birth at intervals. The physiologist
-may refer to muscular action; but where are the delivery muscles? The
-stage-dancer makes de-electrising efforts to receive medium of space,
-by which to be lifted above the boards and supported a few seconds
-in the air. Muscles at full stretch in opposite directions, and the
-fulcrum, if any, being carried by them, is out of all dynamic rule. All
-persons make a de-electrising effort previous to the leap-spring, and
-while continuing to stand or run and tiptoe, without being aware of
-the reason; and the fatigue is not muscular, but in keeping the body
-fittingly de-electrised.
-
-The _gymnotus electricus_ kills the distant prey instantaneously, which
-receives nothing whatever of missile from the enemy; nor could the
-latter be accessary to the death-stroke, were there nothing between to
-connect one with the other: nothing passing and no connecting means,
-no outstretched arm or instrument touching that which is to be acted
-on, is a mechanical absurdity, and is attributing an effect to that
-which, it may be said, is an absent cause. The eel voluntarily performs
-the cerebral operation on the electric matter which is continuous from
-itself through the air to the marked prey, which effects instantaneous
-removal of the same matter from the prey; which permits medium of space
-at the same instant to give the de-electrised part the death-blow.
-
-
-
-
-APPLICATION OF MESMERISM.
-
-
-First. A National Asylum, to be named, THE BRITISH MESMERIC
-INSTITUTION, should be founded and endowed. England should take the
-lead. A Professorship of Magnetism should be founded. All Sanatory
-Asylums to be obliged to furnish their experience periodically, and
-be under control of the Institution, which should be possessed of
-power to undiploma the medical practitioner who refuses to mesmerise.
-Self-mesmerising to Clairvoyance, to be taught, which is as teachable
-as ventriloquism; the principle is the same of both,--the theory is
-that of sound.
-
-Through self-mesmerising, the blind and eyeless would be extricated
-occasionally from the shadow leading to the valley of death and
-be enabled to follow some useful calling. Some blind, illiterate
-clairvoyant, may have superior _connoisseurship_, entitling him to fill
-the academic chair. Through mesmerism the resuscitating process can be
-brought under rules of science. Through clairvoyance the geography of
-the globe may yet be improved; the northern passage discovered; the
-astronomer assisted in his stellar speculations beyond the possibility
-of mere telescopic discovery. On ship-board, the voluntary clairvoyant
-may make discovery of the haze-hidden lighthouse and wave-hidden shoal.
-In the hands of the clairvoyant the telescope and microscope, will, in
-time, make us acquainted with other worlds, other beings, and other of
-the wonderful works of the GREAT GOD OF NATURE!
-
-The Seeker after God from the book of God's own composing, the holy
-volume of his own works, through voluntary clairvoyance, will feel
-himself in the enjoyment of a second nature, the fit inhabitant of
-an intellectual world, in which the powers of thought are without
-limits. And who can say what discovery of abstract truths may not be
-elicited from the conversation of two or more clairvoyants in mutual
-report, all of exalted talent and superior education? Other worlds,
-ere this be past, may open to our view, and their inhabitants become
-clairvoyantly familiar to human observation. The idea is pregnant
-with hope; it presumes that we are not inhabitants of only the earth,
-but the universe; which may be considered a natural, _never_-dying
-hope. Why, then, should the science be opposed which has already been
-so beneficial to our species, and promises to make known the never
-yet discovered wonders of the animal economy? Surely they will be
-yet ashamed of having done those things, the fruit of which is the
-bitterness of remorse.
-
-
-
-
-CONTINUOUS MOTION.
-
-
-The motion which continues after the body has ceased to be in contact
-with the _sensible_ impelling cause, is named continuous motion. The
-body impelled receives neither force nor motion from the impelling
-cause: neither force nor motion is anything transferrable or anything
-communicable; forcible velocity and change of place are but accidents
-of matter, and but local, casual circumstances of bodies. Being
-_inert_, the body cannot move itself. Motion, therefore, is but a
-physical effect, and must have a cause equal to the duration of the
-effect: motion after impulse has ceased, would be effect without
-cause--which is an absurdity and impossibility; therefore impulse
-is constant as motion, however insensible the impelling cause.
-These dynamic principles cannot be too frequently brought to mind,
-considering the general erroneous opinion on the subject which
-maintains, that "a body continues in motion because it cannot stop
-itself;" which is effect without its equal of cause.
-
-A body in motion is under unequal pressure on opposite sides, greater
-on the rear than front. The air in front resists, that in the rear
-may be said to recede from the body; therefore neither impels the
-projectile. Under such circumstances there remains but the alternative,
-that of the electric constitution of the body being changed by the
-previous impulse, by which medium of space accumulates on one side,
-or decreases on the opposite. The phenomenon admits of being thus
-illustrated:
-
-The first, previous or sensible impulse, effects de-electrisation of
-the body on the rear or side of impulse; influent medium of space
-immediately occupies the vacated rear, and by its pressure impels the
-body through the air. The velocity of the previous impulse, gives
-momentum to the body greater than the included freely-removable
-elementary matter can obtain; of consequence the latter is left behind
-in the air, and the pressure of the acquired medium of space in the
-rear, is the continuous impelling cause. Thus is the mistake of Dugald
-Stuart made evident, that "motion is the immediate and only effect of
-impulse."
-
-It is not the air's resistance which makes the motion of a projectile
-decline and end. Taking impulse as ten, resistance four, there remains
-six degrees of unresisted impulse, which should impel the body for
-ever through the atmosphere. The decline and cessation of impulse is
-that which brings the projectile to rest.
-
-From the instant the body has ceased to be in contact with the sensible
-impelling cause, electric matter is re-entering the rear, which
-displaces gradually the impelling medium; and as are the increments of
-the former, so are the decrements of the latter, and so is the decline
-of motion.
-
-
-_Ascending and Descending Motion._--The rear of the vertically-impelled
-body becomes vacated of minus-pressure matter, and replaced with medium
-of space; by the latter, and general pressure, the body is forced
-upwards as a cork by water. While ascending, the rear is acquiring
-electric matter and losing the impelling medium,--the velocity of
-course declines; and when at the highest, the body is at rest in the
-air for an instant, then is precipitated to the ground. During the
-entire of the descent, electric matter is vacating the rear and medium
-of space entering, consequently the fall is accelerated. Now as the
-body cannot fall of itself; as descending motion is of increasing
-velocity, while motion in every other direction is retarded; and,
-because all descent has the same _centripetal_ direction, so should
-there be some distinct cause to produce these conspicuous effects,
-which, to trace, suggest the following hypothesis:
-
-
-_Centripetal Flow._--The different motions of the globe affect all
-bodies on its surface, so as to appear to the inhabitants as if the
-whole were at rest; supposing thence, that the centre of the earth
-is the centre of motion, the following may be considered probable
-consequences:--The general pressure being less at the centre and axis
-than on the surface of the earth, obliges the medium of space to
-flow through the atmosphere and entire surface, _centripetally_, to
-the centre, thence along the axis, carrying with it electric matter,
-and has exit at the poles, which polarizes the globe and produces
-the boreales. The centripetal flow retains the atmosphere to the
-earth; precipitates bodies from the air in a centripetal direction;
-accelerates the descent; and retards all motion not in its own
-direction: it prevents vertical ascent being equal to impulse, the
-difference being employed in bearing against the flow. The flow makes
-bodies ponderate or have weight, causes the dip and direction of the
-compass-needle.
-
-
-
-
-FORMATION OF A PLANET.
-
-
-That cannot be considered a chaotic state from which the eternal order
-sprung; nor that a created body, the substance of which previously
-existed, which was and is common to all bodies. Hence it may be
-concluded that a planet is a natural production, equally as the
-instantly-formed ponderous atmospheric aërolite, supposed to have come
-from the moon.
-
-From the elementary to the aëriform, thence the aqueous state, seems
-the simplest and primeval order of atomic combination. Hence it is
-conceivable, that, were an immense volume of the general elements
-collected together in the regions of space, and subjected to extreme
-pressure, the result would be an aqueous sphere, with an attached
-residue of the same elements to serve as a primeval atmosphere to
-receive increase from future mists and exhalations. While aqueous
-and with one side only of the sphere facing the sun, the elements of
-the water cannot avoid being in a state of constant disturbance and
-transfer, productive of combinations, formations, and precipitations
-until the equilibrium has obtained, leaving ultimately the solid masses
-so formed, as they would now appear were the ocean away: the original
-water, from having contributed the elements of the newly-formed solids,
-being reduced in quantity and changed in quality, is left as the ocean
-is at present, saline. During the intermediate plastic state, and as
-induration increased, the endowed fertility may have produced _kinds_,
-many of which have become extinct.
-
-It may be further assumed, that deep within the planet the elements
-abound in neither kind nor quantity as at the surface and in the
-atmosphere; and if the imponderable oxygen element be absent, an
-immense mass of ice would form the nucleus of the earth, the occasional
-melting at the surface of which, in the neighbourhood of sulphurous and
-ferruginous masses, may cause those volcanic eruptions from which no
-region of the earth is free. Thus it would seem that a planet may be
-the natural formation of an instant, requiring time for completion, and
-may be an everyday circumstance in space.
-
-The strict inquirer into terrestrial magnetism has to ascertain,
-whether the non-conducting central ice be not the means, some how,
-of separating the correlative fluids which the centripetal flow
-carries with it along the axis through the Poles, and which make the
-Poles magnetic opposites; or, whether, of these fluids, one only is
-transmissible through ice.
-
-A planet may be subject to wear and the fertility to decrease, thence
-to be uninhabitable, as Herschel describes the very probable condition
-of the moon, owing to the rapid motion through space, solar effects
-and cultivation. The idea is neither gloomy nor a threatened dread.
-Man was born to leave this world, and live where GOD has pleased. Some
-anticipate the night, when we shall see "our God in terror, and our
-world on fire!"--"undoing all, as all had never been," or made in vain.
-But He who blessed and never cursed his works, whose mercy and goodness
-endureth for ever, and who will "save both man and beast," is not a God
-of terror!
-
-Why the planets are moved round the sun, all in the same direction,
-excites speculation in the absence of demonstration. Let it be supposed
-that the inequalities in a newly-formed planet prevent the body being
-at rest under the general pressure; in which case the planet is put
-into its primeval motion, and in the direction of the strongest
-impulsive pressure. But as the like inequalities precisely, cannot
-present in every new planet, neither could the motion of all be in
-the same direction, which gives room for conceiving the probability
-that the portion of the medium, however extensive, in which the
-solar system is involved, revolves round the sun, or round the orbit
-of the sun, and that its motion is promoted by the sun in the solar
-orbit,--which orbit may probably be promoted by the rarity of the
-elements in the solar regions. The medium of space so revolving,
-determines the direction of all the planets, which by the hypothesis
-must be the same as that of the revolving medium.
-
-By some such means only is it conceivable how solar matter can arrive
-at Neptune, the Earth, or even Mercury,--the _inert_ sun being
-incapable of radiating anything from itself, and solar atoms requiring
-a physical impelling cause, in motion, and acting on the rear of each
-from the sun to the extreme of planetary space. A circulating medium of
-constantly-increasing radius, appears indispensably necessary for the
-purpose of conveying solar matter through the regions of space, and for
-the maintaining all planetary motion in the same uniform direction. The
-subject is open to all, and worthy of notice: what is now advanced will
-be passed over, from having no mathematical appendage, but which, makes
-even false causes pass for the demonstrated truth. The mathematical
-science has not to this day demonstrated the cause of planetary
-motion,--a subject wholly indifferent to modern astronomy, in which the
-false, self-gravitation, in connection with _inertia_, satisfies all as
-long as the astronomer remains self-satisfied.
-
-
-_Formation and Use of a Comet._--A _Comet_ may have been a planet by
-formation, and impelled, before completion, immeasurably far beyond
-the sun. The tail is probably the primitive atmosphere, left behind and
-pressed after the body as towards a sheltering wall; the _coma_ may be
-electric matter collected on the front, and subject to increase, which,
-by lessening pressure on the side facing the direction of motion,
-and without increased pressure on the opposite side, may cause the
-velocity of the planet to be subject to acceleration, or prevent the
-motion being equitable: the reticulated tail may serve to collect all
-redundant solar matter in space, after planetary use, for deposit in
-the solar regions, or the sun as the heart of the system, for future
-circulation. Were the tail to approach the earth sufficiently near,
-the waters of the sea would be pressed upwards as towards an immense
-water-spout; in which case the rivers must become drained; and as the
-Comet recedes from the earth, the fall of the immense column would
-produce _another general deluge_ over one hemisphere, at least, of the
-globe! The deposits from a comet's tail may occasion those nebulocities
-named solar spots.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE END.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Tyler and Reed, Printers, Bolt-court, London.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE.
-
-
-Archaic, dialectical and unusual spellings and usage have been
-maintained. Obvious typos have been fixed as detailed below.
-
-Table of Contents entries with no corresponding centered title in the
-original book have been indented and the titles have been inserted
-inline.
-
-
- Page vii:
- DEDICATION iii
- ADVERTISEMENT v
- TABLE OF CONTENTS vii
- MESMERISM AND ESTABLISHED PHILOSOPHY 1
- In the original book:
- PHILOSOPHY, THE ESTABLISHED 9
-
- Page vii: THE USE OF OXYGEN IN PROMOTING COMBUSTION 42
- In the original book: ----, ITS USE IN COMBUSTION 42
-
- Page vii: USE OF THE INSPIRED OXYGEN WITHIN THE SYSTEM 56
- In the original book: USE OF OXYGEN IN RESPIRATION 56
-
- Page vii:
- NATURAL SLEEP 65
- COMATOSE FLOW 66
- MESMERIC SLEEP 68
- In the original book:
- SLEEP, NATURAL 65
- ----, MESMERIC 68
- COMATOSE FLOW 66
-
- Page viii:
- TRANSPARENCY 77
- OPACITY 77
- In the original book:
- TRANSPARENCY AND OPACITY 77
-
- Page viii:
- MESMERISM, CURATIVE 87
- ETHERS 87
- In the original book:
- ETHERS 87
- MESMERISM, CURATIVE 87
-
- Page viii: TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
- In the original book: (inserted)
-
- Page 10: an excruciating, painless toothache, and,
- In the original book: an excruciating, painless toothach, and,
-
- Page 24: velocity and direction makes no exception.
- In the original book: velocity and direction makes no exeption.
-
- Page 41: constituent of every aëriform body
- In the original book: constituent of every acriform body
-
- Page 42: In this twofold manner of service
- In the original book: In this two-fold manner of service
-
- Page 43: suffers de-electrisation and acquires medium
- In the original book: suffers de-electrisation and acquiries medium
-
- Page 55: within the stomach, or in the tea-cup
- In the original book: within the stomach, or in the teacup
-
- Page 56: the accumulation of minus-pressure matter in
- In the original book: the accumulation of minus pressure-matter in
-
- Page 56: which is compensated by minus-pressure matter
- In the original book: which is compensated by minus pressure-matter
-
- Page 58: the arterialising, minus-pressure, imponderable
- In the original book: the arterialising, minus pressure, imponderable
-
- Page 58: losing the arterialising minus-pressure matter
- In the original book: losing the arterialising minus pressure matter
-
- Page 59: the venous flow on the minus-pressure capillary
- In the original book: the venous flow on the minus pressure capillary
-
- Page 59: _Use of the Spleen._--The SPLEEN, from being an
- In the original book: The SPLEEN, from being an
-
- Page 60: _How the Diaphragm Is Raised._--The _diaphragm_
- In the original book: The _diaphragm_
-
- Page 66: _Comatose Flow._--It must have been observed by
- In the original book: It must have been observed by
-
- Page 72: above the horizon, the general optic
- In the original book: above the horiozn, the general optic
-
- Page 87: _Curative Mesmerism._--The curative principle of
- In the original book: The curative principle of
-
- Page 87: _Ethers._--From inhaled _ethers_, producing
- In the original book: From inhaled _ethers_, producing
-
- Page 88: Pharmacopoeia
- In the original book the oe ligature was used.
-
- Page 92: _The Nature and Power of Will._--The power of
- In the original book: The power of
-
- Page 103: _Formation and Use of a Comet._--A _Comet_ may
- In the original book: A _Comet_ may
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philosophy Which Shows the
-Physiology of Mesmerism and Explains the Phenomenon of Clairvoyance, by T. H. Pasley
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- </title>
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philosophy Which Shows the Physiology
-of Mesmerism and Explains the Phenomenon of Clairvoyance, by T. H. Pasley
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Philosophy Which Shows the Physiology of Mesmerism and Explains the Phenomenon of Clairvoyance
-
-Author: T. H. Pasley
-
-Release Date: October 10, 2015 [EBook #50170]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHYSIOLOGY OF MESMERISM ***
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h1 class="p2">THE PHILOSOPHY<br /><br />
-
-<span class="sizep5">WHICH SHOWS THE</span><br /><br />
-
-PHYSIOLOGY OF MESMERISM,<br /><br />
-
-<span class="sizep5">AND EXPLAINS THE</span><br /><br />
-
-PHENOMENON OF CLAIRVOYANCE.<br /><br /></h1>
-
-<p class="center ptitle">BY<br />
-
-<span class="author">T. H. PASLEY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center ptitle">To form a just opinion of a novel mode of philosophising, we should study
-the subject, and not condemn without being able to prove it erroneous.</p>
-
-<p class="center">He is not an Esculapian who is unacquainted with the Philosophy of the
-Animal Economy.</p>
-
-<p class="center size1p25 ptitle">LONDON:<br />
-LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, AND LONGMANS.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center size1p25">1848.
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center">
-TYLER &amp; REED,<br />
-PRINTERS,<br />
-BOLT-COURT, FLEET STREET.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii"></a>
-
-<h2><a name="DEDICATION" id="DEDICATION"></a>DEDICATION.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The following trite sketch of the Philosophy of
-Nature, dedicates itself to the most noble Champions
-of Mesmerism, Doctor <span class="smcap">Elliotson</span> and Doctor
-<span class="smcap">Ashburner</span> of London, and Doctor <span class="smcap">Esdaile</span> of
-Calcutta, in compliment and grateful acknowledgment
-for having rescued from the fangs of ignorance,
-envy, and self-conceit, the science of health and
-knowledge&mdash;the science of Mesmerism, which unfolds
-the hitherto unknown wonders of the Animal
-system; and will unfold the wonders of the entire
-universe, when the telescope and microscope are
-familiarly used by the Clairvoyant.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-
-<a name="Page_v" id="Page_v"></a>
-
-<h2><a name="ADVERTISEMENT" id="ADVERTISEMENT"></a>ADVERTISEMENT.</h2>
-
-
-<p>It is not the intention of the present work, that
-what is herein described should be received as the
-philosophy of Nature according to the precision
-of Nature; but, through exemplification, on principles
-deduced from the Natural Inertia of Matter,
-to point out the mode by which the philosophy,
-which should govern all illustration of physical
-phenomena, is discoverable,&mdash;the Philosophy of
-Mechanical Nature.</p>
-
-
-<p class="pad2"><span class="smcap">Jersey</span>, <i>July 1, 1848</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-
-<a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii"></a>
-<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table id="ToC" summary="Table of Contents">
-<tr><td></td><td class="tdr">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#DEDICATION">DEDICATION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_iii">iii</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#ADVERTISEMENT">ADVERTISEMENT</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_v">v</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#CONTENTS">TABLE OF CONTENTS</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_vii">vii</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#PHILOSOPHY_OF_MESMERISM"><span class="correction" title="Inserted by transcriber.">MESMERISM AND ESTABLISHED PHILOSOPHY</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#ATTRACTION">ATTRACTION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#EXPERIMENTAL_PHILOSOPHY">PHILOSOPHY, EXPERIMENTAL</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#PHYSIOLOGY_AND_FUNCTION_OF_THE_SENSES">PHYSIOLOGY AND FUNCTION OF THE SENSES</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#MATTER">MATTER</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#MOTION">MOTION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_24">24</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#THE_MEDIUM_OF_SPACE">MEDIUM OF SPACE</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_28">28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#MINUS-PRESSURE_MATTER">MINUS-PRESSURE MATTER</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#FIRE">FIRE</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_34">34</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#THE_MEDIUM_OF_FIRE">MEDIUM OF FIRE</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#EXPANSION">EXPANSION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#OXYGEN_AIR">OXYGEN AIR</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#THE_USE_OF_OXYGEN_IN_PROMOTING_COMBUSTION"><span class="correction" title="In the original book: ----, ITS USE IN COMBUSTION">THE USE OF OXYGEN IN PROMOTING COMBUSTION</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#COMBUSTION">COMBUSTION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#WATER">WATER</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#SOLVENCY">SOLVENCY</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#GASTRIC_SOLVENCY">GASTRIC SOLVENCY</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_54">54</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#USE_OF_THE_INSPIRED_OXYGEN_WITHIN_THE_SYSTEM"><span class="correction" title="In the original book: USE OF OXYGEN IN RESPIRATION">USE OF THE INSPIRED OXYGEN WITHIN THE SYSTEM</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#SPLEEN">SPLEEN, ITS USE</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#DIAPHRAGM">DIAPHRAGM, HOW RAISED</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#CORRELATIVE_ELEMENTS">CORRELATIVE ELEMENTS</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#MAGNETISM">MAGNETISM</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#NATURAL_SLEEP"><span class="correction" title="In the original book: SLEEP, NATURAL">NATURAL SLEEP</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#COMATOSE_FLOW"><span class="correction" title="Entry out of order in original book.">COMATOSE FLOW</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii"></a>[Pg viii]</span><a href="#MESMERIC_SLEEP"><span class="correction" title="In the original book: ----, MESMERIC; and the entry was out of order.">MESMERIC SLEEP</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#VISION">VISION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_70">70</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#TRANSPARENCY"><span class="correction" title="In the original book: TRANSPARENCY AND OPACITY">TRANSPARENCY</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#OPACITY"><span class="correction" title="In the original book: TRANSPARENCY AND OPACITY">OPACITY</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#THE_NERVOUS_FLUID">THE NERVOUS FLUID</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#CLAIRVOYANCE">CLAIRVOYANCE</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#LONG_VISION">LONG VISION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#OPAQUE_VISION">OPAQUE VISION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#RIGIDITY">RIGIDITY</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#PAIN">PAIN</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#CURATIVE_MESMERISM"><span class="correction" title="Entry out of order in the original book.">MESMERISM, CURATIVE</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#ETHERS"><span class="correction" title="Entry out of order in the original book.">ETHERS</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#REPORT">REPORT</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#VOLUNTARY_DE-ELECTRISATION">VOLUNTARY DE-ELECTRISATION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#WILL">WILL, THE NATURE AND POWER OF</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#APPLICATION_OF_MESMERISM">APPLICATION OF MESMERISM</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#CONTINUOUS_MOTION">CONTINUOUS MOTION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#ASCENDING_AND_DESCENDING_MOTION">ASCENDING AND DESCENDING MOTION</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#CENTRIPETAL_FLOW">CENTRIPETAL FLOW</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#FORMATION_OF_A_PLANET">FORMATION OF A PLANET</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toc2"><a href="#COMET">&mdash;&mdash; AND USE OF A COMET</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#TN">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE</a></td><td></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<a name="Page_1" id="Page_1"></a>
-
-
-<p class="ph2"><a name="PHILOSOPHY" id="PHILOSOPHY"></a>PHILOSOPHY,<br />
-
-ETC., ETC.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h2><a name="PHILOSOPHY_OF_MESMERISM" id="PHILOSOPHY_OF_MESMERISM"></a>MESMERISM AND ESTABLISHED PHILOSOPHY.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Long as clairvoyance has remained the riddle, jest
-and wonder of the world, it is questioned by none
-why the established philosophy of this superiorly
-enlightened age is incompetent to account
-for this or any other mesmerically produced phenomenon,
-or afford the least glimmer of light by
-which it were possible to arrive at the physiology.
-Why the philosophy of Aristotle, Bacon, Newton,
-Des Cartes, Davy, Liebig&mdash;honoured names, and
-most justly, as the ancient and modern fathers in
-science&mdash;can afford no scintillation whereby to lessen
-the obscurity in which this most interesting subject
-is involved, should appear strange and unaccountable
-to all lovers of philosophy. By Professors the
-question should be answered. To consider it unworthy
-of being looked into, would be a tacit confession
-that Professors are indifferent to the natural
-truth; which proves all such to be but half reasoners,
-and not philosophers, notwithstanding all their
-mathematical learning and experimental experience.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2"></a>[Pg 2]</span></p>
-
-<p>It should have been questioned long since, whether
-the philosophy be not untrue which leaves all
-mankind in the dark, in a mere physical case, however
-mysterious the psychological result, the effect
-of manual application, and in the power of almost
-every person to produce. The mesmerising operation
-and effect includes nothing of necromancy or
-trick; is openly performed, and produced mechanically;
-and although the passes make a living being
-appear as if in a novel state of existence, the immediate
-effect, polarisation of the extremities of the
-body, is the same precisely as is effected on the iron
-bar when passed along the poles of a loadstone.
-This, and numerous other physical phenomena,
-which to the present day remain unexplained, and
-as if inexplicable, afford much reason for at least
-the conjecture, that modern philosophy is not the
-philosophy of physical nature; which, if not, it
-must be false and misleading, inasmuch as there
-can be but one philosophy, by reason of there being
-but one species of matter throughout all nature,
-and but one cause of action,&mdash;<i>the general pressure</i>.
-From which it follows, that as the philosophy of
-nature is that of matter universally, there can be
-no physical phenomenon which it does not explain.
-Therefore, the phenomena which modern philosophy
-has neither laws nor rules competent to
-explain, are so many proofs that the established
-philosophy of the age is false philosophy; which is
-provable throughout all its particulars, however
-rash and adventurous may appear the announcement.
-Besides, at the present day, there are several<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></a>[Pg 3]</span>
-different philosophies maintained; every profession
-has its own; which is proof of the strongest nature
-that not one is true, dissent from the truly natural
-being impossible, so universally is it applicable.
-Eventually it will be admitted that the philosophy
-of the nineteenth century is founded on the crude
-ideas of the imperfectly learned in the earliest days
-of science, ever since adopted, and never investigated,
-instead of being deduced solely from the
-<span class="smcap">inert nature of matter</span>, the only true basis. On
-modern philosophy, Davy makes the shrewd remark,
-that "it is no better than a mere compilation
-of isolated facts and circumstances, differently accounted
-for, and leading to no general theory:"
-such is not the philosophy of nature.</p>
-
-<p>That matter is <i>inert</i>, is made manifest in there
-being nothing whatever throughout the whole of
-inanimate nature which can act or move of itself.
-Matter does nothing, cannot act; it is the passive
-patient of the general pressure, which alone can
-act; and pressure is universal, because of matter
-being <i>inert</i>. Matter is not only <i>inert</i>, but <i>unalterable</i>;
-on which principles the constancy of the
-order and laws of nature depend. Inert, unalterable
-matter can suffer no change but of a local nature&mdash;change
-of place, which implies motion, for which
-there is no analogous cause but impulsive pressure.
-These unquestionable physical truisms are stated
-in advance, from being intimately connected with
-every physical change, in order to serve as a
-standard of comparison from which to form an opinion
-while canvassing the principles and laws by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></a>[Pg 4]</span>
-which the scientific world has been for centuries
-not only governed, but misled.</p>
-
-<p>Newton admits the <i>principle</i> of <i>inertia</i>, but considers
-it an innate <i>passive</i> power, which <i>enables</i> a
-body to resist against being moved; and when in
-motion, enables it <i>to resist</i> that which would put it
-out of motion. <i>Inertia</i>, a passive power, is as death,
-being passive animation; and <i>inertia enabling</i> a
-body to <i>act</i> against force, is nothing short of <i>active
-inertia</i>, or <i>vis inertiæ</i>, which means the force of
-inability. This monstrous perversion of a natural
-fundamental principle, and by such high authority,
-pervades the whole of the established philosophy.
-It makes the planets, which are but clumps of
-deadly inert matter, gravitate themselves through
-space; and makes <i>inert</i> atoms competent to perform
-attraction on each other wherever they exist. A
-more absurd article of <i>belief</i> has no place in the
-Athanasian code of mind-perverting dogmas; yet
-admitted as true by the most eminently talented
-and highly learned of the present age. While such
-inconsistent principles of common-place use are
-gravely defended, the <i>known facts</i> of mesmerism
-are obstinately and ignorantly denied; and only
-because of not being understood; that, were it not
-for the good sense and philanthropic perseverance
-of the enlightened, noble-minded Elliotsons, Ashburners,
-and Esdailes, of the British empire&mdash;honourable,
-heroic champions and victors in the
-cause of truth, humanity and science, in despite of
-the self-conceit which affects the knowledge of the
-limits of possibility; that, were it not for the magna<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></a>[Pg 5]</span>nimity
-of those superiors belonging to the learned
-profession, this heaven-bestowed boon, carrying
-healing on the wing to suffering humanity, would
-have been contemptuously received, ungratefully
-acknowledged, and long since consigned to the rubbish
-of oblivion. Yet all have claim to the common
-apology, <i>false scientific education</i>, excepting those
-who have assented to what they have seen with
-wonder, and afterwards denied their admission.</p>
-
-<p>The established philosophy cannot account for
-the boy's marble going farther through the air than
-the fullest extent of the impelling thumb. The
-proposition may appear trifling and insignificant,
-yet is it worthy the consideration of the Chair of
-Knowledge, from which it has never been explained
-nor there understood, as involving the cause of
-planetary motion; for, <i>in all nature there are not two
-causes of motion</i>. That the marble "<i>partakes</i>" of
-the <i>force</i>, and "partakes" of the <i>motion</i> of that by
-which it is impelled, is an absurd idea; the force
-and motion of a body were not, and cannot become,
-the force and motion of any other body.</p>
-
-<p>The established philosophy cannot account for
-the splinters of a stone having motion out of the
-direction of impulse, nor for having motion in every
-direction but that of the stone-breaker's impelling
-hammer, which appears at variance with the natural,
-immutable dynamic law, which says, that <i>as a body
-cannot move itself</i>, so must it have motion in the
-direction only of that by which it is being moved.
-Neither is there any philosophy extant, which explains
-why the stone at Texteth of one hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></a>[Pg 6]</span>
-tons should rise, as if of itself, six inches in the air,
-under which the quarrymen could have shoved a
-hand and withdrawn it safely, before the immense
-mass fell crushingly on the former bed.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, what the established philosophy
-undertakes to explain, it explains erroneously.
-Beside maintaining the transfer of a local
-casualty, in accounting for continuous motion, it
-teaches that the power of steam consists in heat,
-and that cold congeals water: whereas heat and
-cold have no physical existence; each is a sensation,
-anything similar to which it is impossible for either
-fire or water to possess. So that to the present
-day the power of steam, the cause of combustion
-and of congelation has in each instance remained
-unknown.</p>
-
-<p>So simple is nature, so few her laws, that were
-any one of her phenomena known throughout all
-its bearings, it would be found that the knowledge
-includes the philosophy of the whole of matter.
-Of this Aristotle was aware when announcing, that
-he who is unacquainted with motion, is ignorant of
-all things in true philosophy. Motion being the
-<i>only effect</i> producible on <i>inert, unalterable matter</i>,
-the knowledge of the phenomenon includes that of
-all effect. The substance of all things being of the
-same species, and the power of Nature consisting in
-universal pressure, the formations in general nature
-and in the laboratory of art can have but the same
-principles, laws, theory, and philosophy. Paul may
-plant and Apollos water; nature germinates, the
-weather or climate grows and fructifies. The chy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></a>[Pg 7]</span>mist's
-fire does not burn itself; in the absence of
-air and its pressure there is no combustion; neither
-is there growth, respiration, nor life.</p>
-
-<p>According to the philosophy of the astronomer,
-the earth has projectile motion, from "impulse
-once impressed, at the beginning, and not since
-renewed;" which is effect six thousand times, at
-least, greater than the cause. Then, again, as
-motion must be in the direction of impulse and
-cease out of that direction, the earth, from "impulse
-once impressed," goes round the sun without
-being impelled; or of its own accord, and should be
-centripetally attracted to the sun, if solar attraction
-were possible. It needs no mathematical calculation
-to prove, that, from such philosophy being
-wholly independent of all consideration of natural
-cause, it is untrue, and at variance with common
-sense.</p>
-
-<p>The philosophy of the chymist is of every-day
-make. It assumes different species of matter; chymical
-matter and matter not chymical; attractions
-innumerable, such as chymical, electric, galvanic,
-capillary, and attraction of cohesion; likewise magnetic
-forces, chymical affinities, and affections of
-matter&mdash;"while as yet there is none of them"&mdash;matter
-being <i>inert</i> naturally. To mechanical nature
-the entire is useless and foreign, and their value
-lies solely in being terms of professional application
-in the highly important chymical art; but to the
-discovery of true philosophy they are an insurmountable
-obstacle. How chymical matter differs
-from the common matter of the world, no chymist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></a>[Pg 8]</span>
-can say or conceive; nor is there any difference in
-the substance and nature of inert matter: as well
-might it be maintained that motion is not always
-mechanical, but sometimes chymical. The true philosophy
-of chymistry is dynamic, the basis inertia,
-the laws those of quantity and relative position.</p>
-
-<p>The philosophy of the anatomist and physiologist
-is semi-natural, semi-spiritual, mechanical and vital.
-Life, throughout all belonging to the frame, does
-not suffice; the heart and blood have each an imputed,
-distinct, living principle; the nerves are
-sensitive, the muscles irritable; the flesh has its
-susceptibility, according to the modern physiology.
-The sainted health-preserver shudders at the irreligious
-notion of the economy being philosophised
-on at all; more especially according to the laws of
-hydrostatics; it being "impious beyond measure" to
-reason on the work of God's own hand, formed
-after his own image and likeness, (malformations
-excepted,) as on human mechanism. Yet, where
-are any of these vitalities and living principles
-when respiration is suddenly stopped? Verily,
-these professionals endow, most gratuitously, the
-animal frame with as many vitalities and living
-principles as the lives bestowed on the tailor's&mdash;so
-much the more unfortunate&mdash;cat. As every organ
-of the body is inert; no organ, of itself, performs the
-function; every function is mechanically performed,
-and every effect analogous to impulsive pressure,
-whether consisting in formation, intermixture, or
-dissolution, all depend on elementary local change.
-The contrary is not in the power of the anatomist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></a>[Pg 9]</span>
-and physiologist to prove of inert, unalterable,
-atomic substance; nor should more causes be assumed
-than what are natural, common, sufficient,
-and analogous to effects. Spiritual principles for
-mechanical purposes are as little requisite for
-animal organism as for the steam-engine, or the
-performances of a watch.</p>
-
-<p>The last on the list of professional philosophies is
-that of the Therapeutist; the least misleading, from
-being the most concise. The word <span class="smcap">action</span> includes
-the whole. There is no inquiry to which the word
-<i>action</i> is not the deeply-learned significant reply;
-being indefinite, it stands for a dead-stop silencer.
-The doctor knows best&mdash;with much room for
-knowing better. The doctor knows, and assures
-from his own certain knowledge, that the <i>action</i> of
-the dose on the stomach upheaves the sac; but
-rather than be thought positive, allows that the effect
-may be from the <i>action</i> of the stomach on the dose.
-The good easy man of M.D. celebrity, or mediocrity,
-has to learn, that the dose is as <i>inert</i> as when in the
-tea-cup, and the stomach as <i>inert</i> as when it has
-arrived at the predicted destiny, the dissecting table.
-Again, the <i>action</i> of the pain prevents the <i>action</i> of
-the physic, otherwise the cure would have been
-immediate. Such philosophy is harmless, if so to
-the patient; from its insignificance it corrupts
-neither pathology, osteology, nor dynamics. Not so
-the learning, published on high surgical authority,
-to enlighten ward-walking noviciates&mdash;that "pain
-may exist in the <i>flesh</i> and bones without being felt,
-owing to the <i>insensible</i> sensibility of the part," which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></a>[Pg 10]</span>
-amounts to an excruciating, painless <span class="correction" title="In the original book: toothach">toothache</span>, and,
-the being unconscious of excited consciousness.
-Pain is not in the diseased or wounded part, being
-the consequence of cerebral excitement; pain is one
-of the objects of perception belonging to the scenery
-of the sensorium, from which it cannot migrate.
-The disorganised part is but the apparent place of
-pain; and wisely such, or else all remedial applications
-would be to the brain. As to the dose and
-stomach <i>action</i>, it stands corrected by the diagnosis;
-the stomach is lifted in consequence of the equilibrium
-of pressure being destroyed by means of the
-dose, notwithstanding its additional weight, within
-the stomach. Chymical action of the dose and self-lifting
-muscles are all of Esculapian surmise. The
-faculty should cease to identify feeling, pain, sensation,
-with organic ailments and disorganization of
-the flesh.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2><a name="ATTRACTION" id="ATTRACTION"></a>ATTRACTION.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Attraction is the all-pervading, all-perverting sin
-of the established philosophy, the scape-goat, on
-which the blunders of illustration are heaped. Newtonians
-endow every atom of matter with not only
-an attracting property, but another, as if to neutralise
-it&mdash;repulsion, which renders both useless; as if
-to make matter both active and inert, naturally, and
-as if Nature were planned on principles of complexity,
-from having double the number of powers
-the universe is possessed of atoms. One steam
-power would suffice for the whole of England, all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></a>[Pg 11]</span>
-appendages being feasible. How is solidity either
-maintainable or attainable, while attracting atoms
-are repelling atoms? The free, uncombined condition
-of the atoms of the atmosphere, as well as their
-<i>inertia</i>, proclaim their inability to attract each other;
-and the mere crack in a pane of glass, that between
-bodies there is no attraction. While it is left to be
-conceived by the so-taught rising generation, that
-the atoms of a bar of iron are busily employed in
-attracting one another, and as busily in repelling
-each other at the same time; and that the same
-atoms are inert, the long-denounced aspersion
-stands good, that there is no absurdity, however
-great, into which philosophers have not fallen;
-which is removable only by Philosophers, Professors
-and Teachers coalescing to reform the erroneous
-doctrines universally promulgated, which cannot
-stand the test of rational investigation, and for
-which, as National Instructors, they are morally
-responsible.</p>
-
-<p>Terrestrial attraction, attenuated on arriving at
-the moon, and there sufficiently strong to prevent
-the satellite having tangential flight, should be at
-the surface of the globe at least two-hundred-and-forty-thousand
-times stronger; yet here a puff of the
-breath drives the dust into the air, and the smallest
-winged insect is not restrained by the attraction of
-the enormous magnet the earth is considered, from
-escaping off the surface of the globe. There is philosophy
-in mists, as well as "sermons in stones."
-Rain should come down from above the clouds,
-if terrestrial attraction hold fast the moon: mists<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></a>[Pg 12]</span>
-and exhalations, by quitting the earth, solve the problem;
-but we are ignorant of the philosophy, ways,
-and expressions of simple nature; hence, ours is
-foreign philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>In attributing the fall of bodies to the ground to
-attraction, it is overlooked that the earth's greater
-attraction has to be exceeded by the minor muscular,
-or explosive force, which caused the ascent.
-The foregoing plain facts, although demonstrations
-to the contrary are on record in the royalized
-<span class="smcap">Transactions</span>, but without reference to the inability
-of inert matter to attract, are certain proof that
-attraction is founded on a guess-work basis. Hence,
-that all learning is not knowledge is a moral certainty;
-and that the nature of cause is not to be
-arrived at by demonstrating the properties of lines
-and angles, time has sufficiently proved.</p>
-
-<p>Had the fall of Newton's apple been an effect of
-terrestrial attraction, there should have been some
-stronger attraction from somewhere above the tree,
-to make the juices of which the apple was formed
-ascend from the ground, and capillary cannot be
-said to be stronger than terrestrial attraction. There
-is nothing but puzzle, contradiction, and inconsistency,
-in human opinion, where the natural truth is
-unknown. Oh! apples, apples, why for discord
-sent? the first cut short eternal life on earth; another
-turned "heaven-born reason" to inventing
-dreams;&mdash;that heaven-born reason which tells us
-every day of its yesterday's mistakes.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></a>[Pg 13]</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="EXPERIMENTAL_PHILOSOPHY" id="EXPERIMENTAL_PHILOSOPHY"></a>EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHY.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The Baconian precept, to "torture Nature out of
-her secrets," has been, and ever must be, abortive
-of the good intended. Nature is performing freely
-and openly every hour, without making us wiser,
-and as little while she is operating in our own
-experiments. Her language, of which <i>inertia</i> and
-<i>pressure</i> are the alpha and omega, is not studied;
-nor does it mislead or flatter like our own. Experiments
-innumerable have been performed; the <i>experimentum
-crucis</i> resorted to; the screw applied to
-the utmost pinch, without either confession or concealment
-on Nature's part. Hence, the experimenter
-is left to make his own philosophy of the case, of
-which the next operator makes a different; and all
-are falsely interpreted that violate the principle of
-inertia, which all do. Aristotle, Bacon, Newton,
-Black, Reid, Davy, Des Cartes, experimented
-indefatigably under the most favourable auspices,&mdash;exalted
-talent, and the institutions of the world at
-command; but all on false principles; yet Nature,
-tortured or not, left them to their own mis-interpretations.
-Aristotle, true in his opinion of motion,
-was himself ignorant of the cause of continuous
-motion, or all would not be so at present. Bacon
-recommended experiment, without teaching the
-natural mode of interpretation. Newton spent his
-valuable time, to the world's great loss, in experimenting
-on light, in ascertaining and describing its
-properties, as if there were material light; instead
-of which, light is a mere sensible effect; hence, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></a>[Pg 14]</span>
-physical nonentity. Black and Reid called to their
-assistance all the powers of numbers, to ascertain
-and prove the quantity of heat in the animal system,
-and of cold in ice; but could not torture Nature out
-of the information, that heat and cold do not belong
-to matter or bodies, as a knowledge of the function
-of the senses could have informed them. Davy
-travelled to Skehallean to find from the size of the
-hill, a ratio of attraction, whence to calculate
-the quantity of attraction in the entire globe of
-the earth: at home, correctly sought, he would
-have found, without numerical assistance and the
-pendulum, that the amount is zero. The deflection
-of the pendulum was caused by the pressure on one
-side of the bulb being greater than on the side
-facing the hill; which, from varying hourly with
-the sun's altitude, should have told him that the
-deflection is a mere weather-deviating circumstance.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, who perceives the natural
-truths elicited by even his own experiments! That
-truly great philosopher, Priestly, remained ignorant
-that his own experiments on blood and air brought
-to light the principle on which the blood is arterialized,
-without coming in contact with the air in the
-lungs; of which experiments the faculty are reprehensibly
-ignorant at present; also the principle of
-congelation without cold. It is a general error that
-men must be philosophers because they are mathematicians
-and first-rate experimenters, yet do not
-know what keeps the blood in motion, nor how
-water becomes ice.</p>
-
-<p>What experiment was ever so absurdly illustrated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></a>[Pg 15]</span>
-as that of ice formed in the midst of fire; which is
-explained by, "evaporation generating cold in a
-red-hot crucible," and while maintaining that cold
-is only the absence of heat. The <i>rationale</i> is: the
-oxygen of water is the hindrance to congelation,
-which the evaporation carries off, and the remaining
-elements of the water are compressed into ice.
-What are the elementary constituents of water, has
-yet to be learned. Misled by false-directing philosophy,
-the analysis of a rotten potato, in quest of
-the cause of the vegetable epidemic, is as wise as
-were the same scientific procedure taken on the
-contents of a pustule to discover the cause of the
-small pox: the result in both cases must be a
-complete new formation; and in the former, the
-result could be no preventive information whatever
-to the planter. To convince planters and
-remove all timidity, every garden owner should
-plant an experimental patch with potato <i>peelings</i>,
-each having an eye; the crop is certain and good,
-and supplies the cottager with the next year's seed
-at no expense. The <i>cutting</i> for seed may be of
-exhausted vegetating power, while the peeling of
-even the same potato may be as sound as ever. The
-badly grown potatoes of the previous crop caused
-those of the following to be of imperfect growth and
-perishable: hence the general potato-rot.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="PHYSIOLOGY_AND_FUNCTION_OF_THE_SENSES" id="PHYSIOLOGY_AND_FUNCTION_OF_THE_SENSES"></a>PHYSIOLOGY AND FUNCTION OF THE SENSES.</h2>
-
-
-<p>By the popular expression, "Evidence of the
-Senses," is universally understood, the perception,
-or seeing external bodies by the organs of sense:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></a>[Pg 16]</span>
-yet externals are invisible and the senses insentient.
-This mistake, common among the fathers of every
-age, has corrupted the prevalent false philosophy
-tenfold.</p>
-
-<p>The eye is not possessed of sight; neither is
-colour a property of matter, or it must be indestructible
-by fire and every other means. The
-senses should be considered as but mechanical
-agents for exciting the brain; by which means it is
-we have our knowledge, the particulars of the whole
-of which are mental, confined to the brain, and
-consist, solely, in the cerebral excited scenery of
-the sensorium. We have no other kind or means
-of acquiring knowledge, that is, mental information.
-By the mere organs of sense we know
-nothing. The knowledge we have by means of the
-senses exciting the brain, consists in sensations or
-sensible effects, and, <i>we know nothing but our knowledge</i>,
-whatever may be thought of externals being
-objects and immediate objects of our knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>In describing what we know, it is imagined the
-description is of external bodies, their appearance,
-qualities, and properties; which, however harmless
-the mistake throughout busy-life affairs,&mdash;as all
-abide, judge, and are directed by the same kind of
-evidence,&mdash;not so is it in philosophy, which is a
-description of nature's own mode of procedure;
-and although it is impossible to describe invisible
-things, as they are really, they should not be philosophised
-and reasoned on, <i>as they are not</i>; they are
-not according to what we know, and can have no
-resemblance in any manner to sensations, which are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></a>[Pg 17]</span>
-all we know by means of them. Instead of knowing
-by the senses what bodies are, we know only
-what they <i>are not</i>; modern philosophy is regardless,
-totally heedless of this most instructive
-most pointedly directing information, instead of
-making the just allowance for mental appearances,
-it materializes every sensation, and imputes the
-whole to the bodies outside of our own, of which all
-we can possibly know is but inferential knowledge:
-it considers our sensations as being qualities of
-bodies or properties of matter, and maintains that
-some are physical causes by which certain physical
-effects are produced. Such may be considered
-some of the principal reasons why <i>clairvoyance</i> is
-unintelligible to all the most learned; and so must
-it ever remain, or until a truer philosophy arises
-and rescues the great subject from the darkness and
-errors of a perverting philosophy, the whole of
-which has to be abandoned before the mind is fitted
-for the reception of natural truths. We must cease
-to identify sensations with their unseen, unknown,
-and but <i>promoting</i>, material causes. In proof of
-the foregoing, a short review of the senses, their
-physiology, function, result of the function and use
-of the result, must prove satisfactory and convincing.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>physiology</i> of a sense, consists in an external
-organ,&mdash;as the eye or ear, its nerves of sensation
-which spread through the brain, and, the nervous
-fluid. To each of the senses there belongs a distinct
-cerebral organ, which, if deducted, leaves
-nothing to constitute the physiology, but the exter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></a>[Pg 18]</span>nal
-organ, the nerves, and nervous fluid; such may
-be considered the physiology of all the senses, so
-far as the exciting mental perception is concerned.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>function of a sense</i> is, to act on and excite
-the cerebral organ, when the nervous fluid is put
-into an acting state through external circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>result of the function</i>, is a sensation, of which
-we have immediate cognizance, by reason of a sensation
-being <i>a recent change in consciousness</i>. The
-nervous fluid, not the tubular nervous <i>striæ</i>, is that
-by which the brain is excited.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>use of the sensation</i> is manifold. Emanating
-from the wonderful Economy, is the law, that, <i>the
-sensation which an external body promotes, shall, to
-ourself, seem to belong to that body</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The law is imperative. The sensation being apparently
-at, and belonging to, the external object or
-body, it is imagined the body is visible, seen by the
-eyes, and of the colour, flavour, or odour known by
-the sensation. The apparent place of the sensation
-directs to where the body is situated.</p>
-
-<p>No person thinks, when a rose promotes the
-sensation of colour, that the object perceived is
-within himself: without the sensation there is no
-perception of red, and with it, nothing is perceived
-or seen of colour or of the flower; so that, were the
-object coloured or not, it is to the spectator invisible;
-and as the sensation would be useless were
-the object coloured and seen, it is obvious that the
-flower is uncoloured, therefore is not seen: the seeing
-an uncoloured object is a physical absurdity.
-So is it with all sensations; they constitute the only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a>[Pg 19]</span>
-objects of perception with which we are acquainted;
-and, such as they are in any respect, the outward
-objects are in no respect. Sound is a sensation; a
-sense has been provided that we should have knowledge
-of sound; there is nothing of sound or noise
-in the air; the function of the sense is not to hear,
-but excite the auditory cerebral organ, and the sensation,
-in which alone sound consists, <i>seems</i> to be
-outside of us, and <i>seems</i> to come from a bell, but
-which has nothing of the kind to part with; yet it
-is imagined that sound enters the ear. Thus is it
-supposed that the sensation externally exists, and is
-sound heard by the ear. The philosopher so instructed,
-calculates the velocity of the physical nonentity
-sound.</p>
-
-<p>Luminousness, light, colour, sound, heat, cold,
-flavour, odour, are sensations,&mdash;each of the entire is
-traceable from the function of the senses to the sensorium:
-deduct these, there is nothing perceived or
-to perceive; by means of the senses, respectively,
-we have knowledge of each,&mdash;and by the senses exciting
-the brain are the whole produced, as sensible
-effects. Outward bodies can have nothing the same
-or similar to sensible effects; and therefore nothing
-of the whole belongs to matter or bodies, or to physical
-philosophy. To mechanical nature the whole
-would be useless; to sensitive beings only are they
-useful; to us they are substitutes for Nature's deficiency
-in these respects; and the whole present a
-convincing proof of the wise, the strict economy of
-the Great Architect in his works.</p>
-
-<p>The objection is unfounded, that the external<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></a>[Pg 20]</span>
-object should be like the sensation, in order to produce
-such sensation. But where is there sound in
-musical string or in the metal of a bell to promote
-the sensation; or yellow in the snowdrop to
-promote the sensation of yellow, when the eyes are
-jaundiced or a stained lens is before them: the sensation
-of pain is not the effect of pain; it and pain
-are one. That which in health promotes the sensation
-known as sweet, promotes that of bitter in sickness;
-the object is the same, the sensation changeable.
-In reason it cannot be said that fire is like the
-sensation, or the latter should be burning hot in the
-brain, where it is excited; neither is any material
-thing outside of us like a sensation of the brain; nor
-does the sensation inform us of anything but itself,
-excepting that it has a remote external cause. The
-common show-box exhibits the same landscape picture
-under the different aspects of summer, autumn,
-winter, and spring, according to the stained lens
-before the eyes; the picture has not all these colours,
-nor any, it is a mere black and white print, in which
-the stained lenses make no alteration. Nothing can
-be like a sensation but a sensation.</p>
-
-<p>That the objects we perceive and their remote
-cause are distinct things, is proved by the perception
-being that of a coin of the half-crown size,
-when the eyes are directed to a shilling and a
-convex lens before the face; if the lens be red,
-yellow, or blue, so is the perceived object, which is
-not the white shilling. We are invisible to each
-other; what is imagined to be a man's appearance,
-may be described as, various sensations of different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></a>[Pg 21]</span>
-colours symmetrically arranged, and constituting a
-single optically-excited mental effect. Neither is it
-the likeness of the sitter that the canvass exhibits,
-but the excited perception within the sensorium of
-the limner; for the renewal of which it is that he
-directs his eyes so frequently to the sitter's face,
-which is invisible to the limner, although he feels
-certain that he sees every feature.</p>
-
-<p>Those who imagine the eye-balls look and see,
-and that externals and the perceptions they promote
-are the same, should, upon reflection, attribute
-sight to their spectacles; for, as sight is nothing
-bettered when the glasses are removed, so should
-the temporary improvement be referred to the
-spectacles having sight as well as the eyes.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of all mankind being similarly
-organised, that which seems coloured, sonorous,
-hot, acid, or aromatic to one person, is so to every
-one else with sane eyes and senses; by which
-unanimity of opinion, in these respects, prevails
-throughout the great family of man, in the worldly
-concerns of active life, and the social compact is
-maintained indissoluble.</p>
-
-<p>The all-wise, benevolent dispensation of the
-senses, by which man's existence is supplied with
-enjoyments not in all nature otherwise to bestow;
-and his intellectual faculties provided with means
-of contemplating the attributes of his Maker
-through his knowledge, such as it is, of the creation,
-which makes known to us not only God's regard for
-his creatures, but his supreme omniscience in the
-economy made manifest throughout all his works.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></a>[Pg 22]</span>
-Were bodies coloured as we imagine, there should
-be an element of each red, yellow, and blue atoms;
-elements of sound, heat, and cold; elements of
-flavour and odour innumerable: whereas, by the
-substitution of sensations, matter without any such
-qualities, or any whatever, excepting that of being
-everlasting, is made subservient to the formation of
-a universe of worlds, teeming with beauty, harmony,
-and wonders; all contributing to the comfort,
-enjoyment, happiness, edification, and future
-hope of its sojourning inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>Now, when from the established philosophy we
-deduct gravitation, attraction and repulsion, which
-are as foreign to inert matter as vitality to the dead,&mdash;the
-host of chymicals, so repugnant to the principle
-of <i>inertia</i>,&mdash;the imaginary living principles,
-erroneously imputed to the mechanical organs of
-the animal system,&mdash;the sensations of luminousness,
-light, colour, sound, heat, cold, acidity, and of
-flavours and odours,&mdash;when the entire of these unphysical,
-mere nominals, are deducted from modern
-philosophy, there remains nothing whatever to produce
-action, physical change, or motion, excepting
-<i>pressure</i>, which has been always looked upon as a
-mere adjunct to the imagined numerous powers of
-nature. When common sense has rejected the whole,
-then will the philosophy of the Fathers be valued
-by the world, as would be a garment with more
-holes than threads.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></a>[Pg 23]</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="MATTER" id="MATTER"></a>MATTER</h2>
-
-
-<p>As a general term, <i>matter</i>, means substance; with
-scientific precision, the term is confined to the elementary
-state, in contradistinction to the term <i>body</i>,
-applied to matter consolidated into solids and fluids.</p>
-
-<p>Matter consists of atoms, which are hard, opaque,
-<i>unalterable</i>, of homogeneous substance, of the spheric
-shape, and naturally <i>inert</i>, therefore of inactive
-essence; being <i>inert</i>, various species of substance
-would be useless. The spherical shape admits immediate
-atomic contact, and leaves interstices uniformly
-throughout all bodies. There cannot be
-either communication or alteration of the essence
-of inert matter; and what the essence of unalterable
-matter may be, is impossible, and would be useless,
-to know.</p>
-
-<p>An element is any volume of atoms of the same
-size. There is no difference between elements but
-in the size of their atoms.</p>
-
-<p>Every element is a rarer medium to every other
-element of larger atoms; the minor is as a partial
-vacuum to the major, which involves the principle
-of <i>inequality</i>, on which motion depends.</p>
-
-<p>Correlative elements are any two, the atoms of
-one of which are fitted for the interstices of the
-other, and for no other interstices. Such elements
-will naturally be together. On the correlative principle
-magnetism depends.</p>
-
-<p>All bodies consist of several elements; there is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></a>[Pg 24]</span>
-nothing simple, but an element. Bodies are
-divisible, matter is not.</p>
-
-<p>All bodies include a portion of <i>elementary</i> or
-<i>electric</i> matter, which is removed without injury to
-their general texture.</p>
-
-<p>Matter can suffer no change but change of place.</p>
-
-<p>Weight is an accident of matter, the effect of
-motion: all <i>effect</i> consists in motion; there is no
-result until effect has ended in rest.</p>
-
-<p>Rest being natural to inert matter, is no effect,
-has no cause.</p>
-
-<p><i>There is no power but impulsive pressure</i>; nor is
-there any effect whatever attributable to <i>inertia</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The fundamental principle of <i>inertia</i> is that only
-from which the philosophy of nature is deducible:
-all philosophy is false which is not consistent
-throughout with this universal, all-directing principle.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Note.</i>&mdash;The terms <i>electric</i> and <i>elementary</i> are of
-the same signification, which is, <i>highly rare</i>: quality
-and power to act are wholly out of the question
-with the inert atoms of the elements of bodies and
-matter.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="MOTION" id="MOTION"></a>MOTION.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Motion admits of no definition, from being but a
-local casuality of transitory endurance; motion is
-the same in all things, from an atom to a planet,
-against which all difference in velocity and direction
-makes no <span class="correction" title="In the original book: exeption">exception</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Impulsive pressure is the only cause analogous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></a>[Pg 25]</span>
-to the mechanical effect motion; pressure is universal
-because matter is inert.</p>
-
-<p>Motion is not natural to <i>inert</i> matter: the term
-is expressive of the local condition of a body, while
-the body is prevented remaining where it is, and
-while the body is being passed through contiguous
-portions of space.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There is no cause of motion but physical
-impulse.</span></p>
-
-<p>As effect and cause are necessarily equal, so is
-motion the measure of impulse, in time. Therefore
-as long as a body is in motion it is being impelled,
-however insensible the impelling cause. Motion
-must be in the direction of impulse; for, as a body
-cannot move itself, and is the passive patient of
-impulse, so must its direction be the same as that
-of impulse; therefore when the direction of motion
-is changed, it must be by a novel impulse in the
-novel direction.</p>
-
-<p>From all matter being in motion, and all effect
-consisting in motion, and because like effects everywhere
-are attributable to the like or same cause,
-so must there be a cause of motion as universal as
-matter; rather than that there should be a distinct
-impelling cause for every individual motion following
-after the body, to put and keep it in motion.
-In all philosophic research the golden rule of nature
-should be held in mind, which prescribes "the
-shortest mode and fewest materials:" <i>to mistake on
-the side of simplicity is more wise than censurable
-in the search after natural physical truths</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A universal cause of motion, it would seem, can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></a>[Pg 26]</span>
-be no other than a universal medium, a medium of
-pressure, one occupying the regions of planetary
-space, competent to keep the planets in interminable
-motion and effect all terrestrial minor motion:
-only by such means is it conceivable how the earth
-can be under endless, ever-varying impulse, productive
-of ever-changing direction. When impulsively
-pressed into motion by such a medium, the
-direction of a planet must be orbicular, on account
-of the pressure on the solar side being always less
-than on the opposite, by which the projectile direction
-is diverted from rectilinear to curvilinear.</p>
-
-<p>Newton imagined that a medium, and however
-rare, occupying the regions of space, must retard,
-in time destroy, and eventually require the hand of
-Deity to restore the primeval order of planetary
-motion: no very bright idea of the great mathematician,
-considering the Omniscience of the Projector
-of a <i>self-going</i>, <i>self-regulating</i> Universe. Whereas
-a medium as dense as molten gold, could produce
-no such disorder as long as impulse is greater than
-resistance; which the long-continuance and order of
-planetary motion strongly seem to indicate is the
-case. Were there no medium in space, the planets
-must be at rest; one could not possibly affect
-another but by its shadow: Uranus being agitated by
-the greatly remote presence of Neptune, is proof of
-there being a connecting medium between. Gravitation
-is supposed to move the body possessed of
-the property, forwards,&mdash;why not every way?&mdash;to
-the sun or towards some neighbouring planet,
-but not to send that body or planet an agitating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></a>[Pg 27]</span>
-warning of its presence. How is gravitation within
-one planet to keep another in a state of agitation;
-which agitation being motion&mdash;a mechanical effect&mdash;is
-proof of there being a medium by which mediate
-connection is maintained between the two, Uranus
-and Neptune. Without a planetary medium there
-could be no <i>system</i> of planets. Suppose the existence
-of such a medium, then its sudden removal,&mdash;must
-not every subordinate system, which makes
-part of the universal system, become disjointed the
-same instant? Besides, from the laws of vision,
-rather of optics, there is equal proof that space
-contains a medium. There is no light to come from
-a star to the eye; there is nothing of sight belonging
-to the eye-balls; and there must be something
-between a star and the sense to connect the star
-with the sense; or how is the sense or brain to be
-so affected by the star, as that the perception or
-sensation shall be always the same when the eye-ball
-lenses are directed to the same star; and only
-by a universal medium can all the stars of the
-hemisphere be in connection with the eye at the
-same time, or the time of a few winks of the eye.
-Therefore until it is proved that constant planetary
-motion can be without constant and equal corresponding
-impulse, as to direction; and that a star
-can affect the sense of itself, immediately or with
-nothing between, all denial of planetary space being
-occupied by a medium of pressure, is utterly untenable.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></a>[Pg 28]</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_MEDIUM_OF_SPACE" id="THE_MEDIUM_OF_SPACE"></a>THE MEDIUM OF SPACE.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Pressure being obviously the cause of planetary
-motion, so is it of all terrestrial motion. To produce
-atomic motion and transfer generally, it is
-necessary, only, that the atoms of the medium of
-space should be of less size than the minutest
-interstices in bodies.</p>
-
-<p>A universal medium must be of universal service,
-(as would be conceived, were the universe
-involved in a medium of water,) to be in accordance
-with nature's economy: to keep the planets
-and matter in motion, to retain atoms together,
-and effect their separation occasionally, include the
-whole of action required by its service; more in
-this respect it cannot effect; nor is the common
-general procedure otherwise effected. Therefore
-in pressure, by the medium of space, consists the
-<span class="smcap">primum mobile</span>: the beginning and end of all
-physical cause of action and of all physical effect.</p>
-
-<p>Pressure is nothing assumed, hypothetic, or unproven,
-like attraction and gravitation,&mdash;the justly
-dethroned imbecile usurpers of the imperial chair
-of philosophy for ages past.</p>
-
-<p>On barometric evidence alone, that pressure
-exists all round the globe is fully proved; and
-that it is indispensable to the maintenance of the
-existing general order, all must readily grant who
-reflect for an instant on the fatal consequences which
-the cessation of the general pressure, for only a few
-minutes, must cause. Hence it is no immediate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></a>[Pg 29]</span>
-question how the general pressure originated, how
-maintained, what the confining boundaries or <i>point
-d'appui</i>. Most likely it is the consequence of the
-motion of the planets themselves, surging through
-the ocean of space. As every performance of
-nature has some ulterior object in view, it is probable
-that the effect of the motion of a planet on
-the medium of space is tributary to the motion of
-another planet, and that the motion of the whole
-is a means of preventing the cessation of motion
-of any of the parts. Most likely the medium of
-space was not in a state of pressure at first; that
-planetary motion, however commenced, effected
-the state of pressure necessary for its continuance,
-and which would be useless beyond the precincts of
-planetary evolution: where pressure is not needed,
-of a certainty there is none. Hence the conclusion
-is warrantable, that the general pressure, however
-commenced, is maintained by not only the motion
-of the planets individually but in systems, through
-the ocean of space.</p>
-
-<p>The earth may be said to swim through the
-medium of space, and to be soaked with it as a
-submerged sponge is with water, and the portion
-within the globe of the earth, is continuous with the
-like medium in space generally. By which all parts
-of the interior of the globe are under the general
-pressure equally as the surface, and all terrestrial
-bodies subject to its vicissitudes.</p>
-
-<p>By such means, only, is the great earthquake to
-be accounted for on dynamic principles. Far as the
-subterraneous grumbling extends, the physical cause<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></a>[Pg 30]</span>
-must be present, and in a state of force equal to
-the awful result. No pent-up air suddenly set free,
-or suddenly exploded gas,&mdash;both naturally forceless,&mdash;subject
-to attenuation and obstruction in the
-passage from the source&mdash;is competent to burst
-the globe and hurl whole cities into the engulfing
-chasm: nor is fire any assistant, judging from the
-absence of flame, smoke, cinders, and ashes. Dreadful
-as is the catastrophe, it is but a natural casuality
-and in perfect accordance with the laws of matter.
-An extraordinary rushing into the body of the
-earth of medium of space, preceded by an equal
-efflux of elementary matter atmospherically induced,
-are the cause and promoting means of the extraordinary,
-terrific phenomenon.</p>
-
-<p>All things being under the general pressure, and
-elementary atoms of all sizes everywhere present,
-the interstices of bodies cannot remain empty. From
-all interstices being formed by spherical atoms, and
-the atoms of the medium of space the smallest, there
-are always interstitial spaces for medium of space
-to enter, pass through or remain within, and which
-<i>is not insulated</i>, but continuous with the outward
-source. Thus, has the medium of space access to
-every atom, and by the pressure from without, is enabled
-to act <i>centrifugally</i> within the body, as a kind
-of back-spring against each and the whole of its
-constituent atoms, to produce expansion, dissolution,
-and elementary dispersion according to the medium
-or circumstances in which the body may be placed.
-These general principles admit of repetition, in
-order, that, by repeated showing, to prove their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></a>[Pg 31]</span>
-validity, against others more generally known and
-adopted, although unfounded in nature, sense, or
-reason.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="MINUS-PRESSURE_MATTER" id="MINUS-PRESSURE_MATTER"></a>MINUS-PRESSURE MATTER.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Taking the maximum of pressure as a fixed
-quantity, or, as not being subject to increase, and
-assuming the degree to be not less than equal to
-the tenacity of steel, there must of necessity be
-means of mitigating the maximum, so that in the
-scale of descent every degree of force should be
-attainable; and more, to keep the equilibrium in a
-state of disturbance, without which all things must
-be, and remain in the rest of death. Were there no
-minus-pressure means, the solid, or perhaps aëriform
-state of matter would exist everywhere, and of
-motion there could be none. Such means for promoting
-motion are amply supplied, and without
-any addition of matter to the measured quantity
-sufficient for the formation of bodies and service of
-nature generally, in the elements themselves, of
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>As the body which is involved in a medium of air
-is under less pressure than in a medium of water,
-and still less within a medium of elementary matter,
-so is elementary matter, and the elements generally,
-the natural means of mitigating the maximum of
-pressure on and within bodies. All bodies within and
-on the surface of the earth, possess removable elementary
-matter, which prevents superficial contact,
-and excludes medium of space proportionally from
-their interior; and because the medium of space is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></a>[Pg 32]</span>
-the cause of pressure, in being thus rendered discontinuous,
-so is its force, as it were, intercepted
-or lessened. For instance, a polished needle floats
-on water, but when wetted or smoked is precipitated,
-from having its electric or minus-pressure
-atmosphere removed; from which it is obvious that
-with the minus-pressure atmosphere, the needle is
-under less pressure than when without it; and the
-same atmosphere it is which makes the bed in the
-water so much larger every way than the needle.</p>
-
-<p>The minus-pressure principle is well exemplified
-in the rise of water within a tube over which fire is
-situated. When the fire is removed, the water falls.
-The fire must be in the state of combustion&mdash;mere
-ignition does not answer. The elements forced out
-of the combustible, as combustion proceeds, cover
-the orifice of the tube, and intercept the general
-pressure, notwithstanding they are under the general
-pressure. By such minus-pressure means is the
-equilibrium destroyed, and by the unaltered pressure
-on the water outside the lower orifice of the tube,
-the water is forced upwards. So is it that the water
-of the sea is raised to the minus-pressure, elementary
-matter descending from a cloud in the shape
-of an inverted cone, and known as the water-spout.
-Astronomers can best say whether the sun
-and moon be not minus-pressure means in promoting
-the rise of the ocean, productive of the
-tides; a miniature representation of which is effected
-by holding a charged jar over a surface of water, to
-which the water rises in a small cone,&mdash;which cone
-follows every motion of the jar, and falls when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></a>[Pg 33]</span>
-jar is discharged. Capillary ascent is promoted by
-the interposed minus-pressure electric matter which
-fills the caliber of the tube: the same matter prevents
-the horizontal flow of water through such
-tubes; but when the tubes are de-electrised, the
-flow is free and constant: boiling water, or fire de-electrises
-all such tubes. The electric matter on a
-bar of iron is a hinderance to water running down,
-but when removed by means of fire, the water runs
-down the bar freely. The atmosphere is a minus-pressure
-medium to the earth, and on the general
-principle that <i>interposed elementary matter renders
-discontinuous</i> the medium of pressure, which is the
-medium of space.</p>
-
-<p>Minus-pressure means exist in other than the
-elementary form, as in blotting-paper, candle-wick,
-pledgets of lint. Within the cupping-glass, which
-is empty of air only, it is the minus-pressure matter
-obtained from flame which promotes the rise of blister.
-Within the vessels of the vascular system, as
-mucilaginous lining, minus-pressure matter assists
-the circulation of fluids, on the foregoing capillary
-principle. The slime on deep-water fish, seems
-provided to lessen the pressure of the water on the
-inhabitants of those seas. Minus-pressure matter
-on one side only of a body, destroys the equilibrium,
-and promotes the motion of the body; and generally,
-the partial action, implied by motion, of the medium
-of space on bodies or their parts, is promoted by
-interposed minus-pressure matter in every instance
-of physical change. Only in minus-pressure means,
-which serve as a partial vacuum in some cases, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></a>[Pg 34]</span>
-disturb the equilibrium of pressure, is motion, or
-change of place of the elements of bodies, or of
-bodies themselves promoted: without such means
-there is nothing to promote the blowing of a
-wind, or to put the medium of space into action.
-Cause being given, the <i>General Pressure</i> in the production
-of every physical effect, the sole province of
-philosophy consists in tracing out the minus-pressure
-means which promote the occasional and partial
-action of the medium of pressure.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="FIRE" id="FIRE"></a>FIRE.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Fire is not hot, although it burns the flesh and
-promotes pain. Matter, which is unalterable, cannot
-be made hot or cold, neither is there anything
-to make it so. If a limb be made rigid, or the
-nerves of sensation be removed, or the function of
-the nervous fluid be obstructed, the limb may be
-burned off unconsciously. Heat is a sensation
-effected through excitement of the brain; out of
-the brain there is neither excitement nor heat. The
-fire does not excite the brain, but the nervous fluid;
-and although the sensation is not hot, it is imagined
-that the cause must be hot, which is false reasoning.
-The chymist finds heat creviced in all things, even
-those which he admits are destroyed by heat&mdash;gunpowder
-and ice. How can flame be hot, when
-just obtained from the gases of decomposed ice
-water? or, if hot, <i>sui generis</i>, it must have been hot
-frozen flame in the original ice.</p>
-
-<p>Modern philosophy adopts different kinds of
-heat,&mdash;<i>animal, culinary, and latent heat</i>. The first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></a>[Pg 35]</span>
-is our own feeling excited by means of fire in the
-sensitive centre, the brain; also by exercise and
-disease, in the absence of fire. How is the spark
-from the flint or from the steel to saturate a bushel
-of coal with heat? How, again, does "heat come to
-an equilibrium in all surrounding bodies," when some
-portion of the coal may be black cold, and others
-red hot&mdash;using the popular terms&mdash;in the fire-place,
-at the same time, and while the air in the chamber
-is indexing zero? <i>Latent heat</i> is of the philosopher's
-own peculiar making; and on the "<i>great discovery</i>"
-the most unbounded praise is still bestowed. Latent
-heat, "which all bodies possess without being
-heated," which, "heats nothing," and is not hot, is
-cold heat, and should be nomenclatured such, or,
-absurd heat. Are not Instructors less than half-reasoners
-and unnatural philosophers, who abide
-by and teach such consummate nonsense: on a
-par with which is the discovery of "latent dark
-light"&mdash;"of black being formed by the intermixture
-of two luminous rays at the point of intersection
-in the spectrum," which is the same as
-feelable darkness; after which, there only remains for
-"<i>new discovery</i>," latent sound, for inking on, thence
-vibrating from, a sheet of music-paper; and latent
-motion, to keep a stone at rest, the quantity of
-motion in the world having been already ascertained
-arithmetically to a fraction; the last-day discovery,
-the quantity of right reason, is the small remaining
-trifle to be discovered. Radiation of heat and cold
-by fire and ice, being inconsistent with the <i>inertia</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></a>[Pg 36]</span>
-of <i>matter</i>, is an erroneous and greatly-misleading
-assumption, although proved through the nicest
-experiments, according to the experimenter's ideas.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of fire communicating anything to bodies,
-<i>fire promotes loss to everything</i> in its neighbourhood.
-The bars of stoves, iron pokers, steam-boilers; all
-culinary vessels; coal, wood, candles, paper, linen,
-all suffer loss by means of fire; cinders, charcoal,
-tinder, are but remains: to which it is no exception
-that some bodies acquire substance and weight in
-becoming oxydes; because, previous to acquiring
-oxygen from the air, they must have lost elementary
-matter to the fire to make spaces for the oxygen
-to enter, otherwise the open air should oxydize
-equally, in the absence of fire.</p>
-
-<p>The loss, or matter of loss which fire promotes
-to fluids, appears as air-beads on the sides and
-bottom within the vessel on the fire, before the
-water comes to ebullition: these beads cannot be
-made to rise in the water by any manner of agitation,
-which is proof they have not come from the
-fire, and through the rigid bottom, or ascent and
-escape are inevitable. When the bottom has been
-sufficiently de-electrised by the fire, they are pressed
-through it to the fire; or if the vessel be removed
-and placed on the ground, they become dispersed
-through the water insensibly. The like spherules
-collect on an egg while boiling, which cannot be
-anything issued from the fire to the surface of the
-water, then precipitated on the egg. On the bottom
-of a glass-retort suspended over a lamp, the like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></a>[Pg 37]</span>
-spherules collect, from which it is supposed that
-water never touches the bottom of any containing
-vessel; it must touch that which it wets.</p>
-
-<p>That air suffers loss to fire, is made evident by
-the air being deprived of, or losing its oxygen during
-combustion; and from both fire and flame becoming
-extinguished in a limited quantity of respirable air,
-in consequence of having lost its oxygen to the
-combustible, while in the state of fire.</p>
-
-<p>Solids, as polished metals and glass, when they
-experience no change of weight, lose to the fire
-imponderable elementary matter only. So is it when
-the hand is presented to the fire, it loses electric
-matter, and the loss it suffers promotes the sensation
-of heat: when the hand afterwards touches a
-body, supposed to be cold, it acquires elementary
-matter from that which is touched. In every
-instance the body, solid or fluid, supposed to be
-<i>heating</i>, is losing elementary matter; and that which
-is said to be <i>cooling</i>, is acquiring the like matter;
-the hand <i>loses</i> to the former and <i>receives</i> from the
-latter electric matter.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="THE_MEDIUM_OF_FIRE" id="THE_MEDIUM_OF_FIRE"></a>THE MEDIUM OF FIRE.</h2>
-
-
-<p>A peculiar medium is formed within a fire, towards
-the composition of which the fuel contributes
-more or less of its elements; which is made manifest
-in a piece of wood or paper when held within the fire,
-being brought to the state of combustion, and without
-touching the fuel, (heat, be it remembered, is no
-more physical than shadow.) The like medium is
-formed from the elements contributed by flame, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></a>[Pg 38]</span>
-whatever of elementary matter the atmosphere may
-contribute beside. High above the flame of a lamp
-combustion and fusion are effected the same as
-within, or in contact with the flame. Between the
-cupped hands this medium is receivable, and may
-be carried from the flame of a candle to the wick of
-a different candle just blown out, which it re-illumines.
-There being little or none of the medium
-of fire attendant on a detached ignited body, favours
-the conjecture that the fuel during combustion
-contributes somewhat of its elements towards the
-formation of the medium of fire. Hence, although
-not included in the nomenclature of chymistry or
-any other, the medium of fire should have place on
-the list of realities.</p>
-
-<p>As all bodies include more or less of free elementary
-matter, which excludes its equal in volume of
-the medium of space, so to admit medium of space
-in order to cause change in the constitution of a
-body, the body must undergo previous de-electrisation:
-the law is general.</p>
-
-<p>The medium of space being the expanding and
-decomposing cause, by means of its centrifugal
-pressure within bodies, to prevent its being in
-excess and effecting such changes spontaneously,
-productive of the decomposition of all things, all
-bodies are protected or retained in their present
-condition by the electric matter within them, which
-excludes the decomposing cause.</p>
-
-<p>Within the medium of fire all kinds of bodies
-become de-electrised; all suffer loss of electric
-matter, which is succeeded by influent medium of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></a>[Pg 39]</span>
-space, the centrifugal pressure of which affects the
-several changes to which bodies are liable previous
-to ultimate dissolution into the elementary state.
-In promoting the de-electrisation of every kind of
-body, and to the extreme, which no other individual
-medium or menstruum can effect, consists the universal
-utility of the medium of fire.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="EXPANSION" id="EXPANSION"></a>EXPANSION.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The theory of expansion is of easy comprehension;
-it consists in previous de-electrisation, succeeded
-by influent medium of space, which, by
-acting with centrifugal pressure, produces the phenomenon
-of expansion. The general pressure is
-the expanding cause, by reason of the portion of
-medium of space within all bodies being continuous
-with the medium of pressure in general space.</p>
-
-<p>A bar of iron placed within the medium of fire
-suffers de-electrisation; then acquires medium of
-space, by which the bar is expanded. When taken
-from the fire, it acquires electric matter similar to
-that of which it had suffered loss, which displaces
-the expanding medium, and now becomes contracted
-by external pressure. The olden philosophy has no
-contracting cause, the imputed attraction having
-been destroyed by the imputed heat of the fire, as
-the same philosophy states of the imputed attraction
-of magnets being destroyed by the heat of fire,
-which leaves the bar to contract itself.</p>
-
-<p>A piece of lead on the fire becomes de-electrised
-and expanded. The portion of medium of space it
-has acquired separates the atoms of the lead by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></a>[Pg 40]</span>
-which the state of solidity is subverted; it remains
-as one of the constituents of the lead, and is as a
-menstruum to the metal, and the atoms of the metal
-may be said to swim in it as the globules of blood in
-the serum. Further de-electrisation and additional
-increments of medium of space are productive of
-complete dispersion of the atoms of the metal, and
-of a kind of efflorescent result, which is a subsequent
-formation. The air in a corked bottle before the
-fire loses electric matter to the medium of fire;
-and by the medium of space which enters the
-vacated interstices, the cork is exploded. In the
-partially exhausted air-pump receiver, that decrease
-in the quantity of air should increase the expansive
-power of the remainder, and that the atoms should
-fly asunder with exploding force, is most unreasonable
-and impossible. The physical fact is,
-the more the air is reduced, the greater is the
-quantity of influent medium of space, consequently
-of expanding and exploding force. In the condensing
-of air, as is the expression, by the piston of the
-syringe, the quantity is reduced from being forced
-out through the pores of the syringe; and pressure
-on the bottom of the piston springs it up when the
-depressing power is removed. Under the general
-pressure the atoms of air must be in contact; and
-the volume being reduced, implies reduction of
-quantity: hard unalterable atoms are incompressible
-beyond contact; and as to their being elastic, it
-is physically impossible; medium of space being
-forced out and re-entering, is what makes the air
-be considered elastic. Let the syringe be worked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></a>[Pg 41]</span>
-under water, and the matter displaced appears escaping
-as air-bubbles, and as air-beads on the outside
-of the syringe.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="OXYGEN_AIR" id="OXYGEN_AIR"></a>OXYGEN AIR.</h2>
-
-
-<p>All airs are compounds. Medium of space is
-the most voluminous constituent of every <span class="correction" title="In the original book: acriform">aëriform</span>
-body, which accounts for an air or gas and steam
-being of so much greater volume than that from
-which it had been obtained; steam has fifteen hundred
-times the volume of the water it was produced
-from.</p>
-
-<p>Oxygen air is decomposed in converting it with
-hydrogen to water: there is no oxygen or hydrogen
-air in water; their <i>elements</i> are the constituents of
-water. Oxygen is decomposed by respiration;
-when inspired, it is not expired, but nitrogen, which
-must have been one of its constituents, and from
-there being nothing to constitute the expiration but
-the previous inspiration the proposition is proved.</p>
-
-<p>The constituents of oxygen are&mdash;nitrogen, <i>a
-highly rare imponderable element</i> and medium of
-space. The first is the most ponderable element of
-nitrogen air; its atoms are the largest of all others
-of the elements of matter, and, it may be said, they
-constitute the substance of the framework of all
-ponderable or gross formations. Davy says, "the
-properties of nitrogen are altogether negative;"
-the same applies to every other kind of air, all
-being constituted of <i>inert</i> atomic substance, consequently
-of inactive essence; and all being alike in
-every respect but in the size of their atoms. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></a>[Pg 42]</span>
-imponderable element being highly evanescent, is
-never found alone, and is always connected with
-nitrogen; hence simple nitrogen is obtainable only
-from bodies, or by deoxygenating atmospheric air.
-Atmospheric air is nitrogen, plus the imponderable
-element; and when the nitrogen is saturated with
-the same element, the air is oxygen: hence, whichever
-is inspired, nitrogen is expired.</p>
-
-<p>From nitrogen being evolved copiously from
-water in vacuo, and from ice being convertible to
-nitrogen, according to Priestley, so is nitrogen a constituent
-of water, also of the gases into which water
-is decomposable; but as it cannot belong to the
-hydrogen, owing to its superior levity, it must to
-the oxygen; which is confirmation of the above,
-that nitrogen is a constituent of oxygen air or gas.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="THE_USE_OF_OXYGEN_IN_PROMOTING_COMBUSTION" id="THE_USE_OF_OXYGEN_IN_PROMOTING_COMBUSTION"></a>THE USE OF OXYGEN IN PROMOTING COMBUSTION.</h2>
-
-
-<p>How oxygen supports combustion no Elementary
-Treatise explains; but leaves it to be imagined, that
-oxygen is somewhat of a burnable nature, or that it
-generates heat when blown into a fire. The fact is,
-it supports combustion only mechanically. The
-centrifugal pressure, by the medium of space, decomposes
-the fuel; electric matter, entering the
-ignited fuel, displaces medium of space, and the fire
-goes out; oxygen prevents the entrance of electric
-matter, and permits the medium of space to enter
-the fuel freely, the pressure from without gives centrifugal
-force. In this <span class="correction" title="In the original book: two-fold">twofold</span> manner of service
-oxygen promotes the continuance of the kind of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></a>[Pg 43]</span>
-decomposition known as combustion. A live coal
-is greatly <i>deficient</i> of electric matter; when just
-fallen from the fire it is said to be red and hot,
-after a few minutes black and cold; all of which are
-but mental effects. On the hearth the coal acquires
-electric matter from the air, which displaces medium
-of space, and becomes extinguished; so would the
-fire were there no oxygen in the surrounding air.
-Hence it would seem, that the interstices of oxygen
-are too diminutive for electric matter to enter, but
-are sufficiently large for those of the medium of
-space to pass through, thence into the fuel. Should
-the utility of the nitrogen of oxygen in combustion
-be questioned, because nitrogen alone puts an end
-to the combustion of a candle; it may be answered,
-that, as the imponderable element of oxygen air,
-from being highly evanescent, is not obtainable
-without the nitrogen, and as by the service of both
-together combustion is increased, so may both be
-considered supporters of combustion; the grosser
-element serving as a carrier to the minor, and, as it
-were, giving it momentum sufficient to penetrate
-beyond the surface of the half-decomposed, or previously
-ignited fuel.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="COMBUSTION" id="COMBUSTION"></a>COMBUSTION.</h2>
-
-
-<p>A piece of wood, like everything else when placed
-within the medium of fire, suffers de-electrisation
-and <span class="correction" title="In the original book: acquiries">acquires</span> medium of space: this twofold procedure
-continuing, the wood becomes split or burst
-asunder, and its elements gradually forced out by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a>[Pg 44]</span>
-the centrifugal pressure; some of which are precipitated,
-some contribute to the medium of fire,
-others are recombined differently and exist for a
-short space of time as flame, and others, with matter
-from the air, form soot. Such is the most rational
-theory of combustion, consistent with the <i>inertia</i> of
-matter and the absence of heat.</p>
-
-<p>Friction rubs away electric matter, percussion
-forces it out, combustion and ignition follow, and
-without being promoted by either heat or fire. The
-kindling matter of a coal-laid fire requires the
-de-electrising spark at first, and the de-electrised
-kindling de-electrises the coal; the wood fire, effected
-by means of friction, is independent of even the
-spark of fire for its commencement, from having
-been otherwise de-electrised at first. Within the
-fire, one part de-electrises another, and the centrifugal
-pressure decomposes the whole.</p>
-
-<p>Animal combustion is consequent on the internal
-organs and flesh being de-electrised, the stomach
-first, by means of spirituous liquors, which, like fire
-in so doing, promote the sensation of heat. The
-stomach and adjacent organs, from being thus de-electrised,
-are prepared to receive the decomposing
-medium; and from oxygen, to exclude electric matter,
-being absent, the flesh is brought to the state of
-smothered combustion and charred: it may now be
-considered in the light of a <i>mortuum caput</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The spontaneous combustion of greasy clothes,
-damp hay and other things, is promoted by the
-limited quantity of air in which such articles are
-confined. To the hand the air seems warm before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></a>[Pg 45]</span>
-combustion has commenced, which indicates deficiency
-of electric matter, but which, in time, the air
-acquires from greasy clothes, and from damp hay,
-the removal of which is succeeded by the destroying
-medium, by which the elements of the combustible
-become separated, set free, and dispersed.</p>
-
-<p>In summer, when the atmosphere is greatly deficient
-of what may be termed winter electric matter,
-all woodwork is in a desiccated condition; and the
-slight friction of limb against limb is sufficient to
-make space for medium of space to enter in excess,
-and convert to fire, tree after tree, the whole of a
-forest.</p>
-
-<p>The combustion of a candle is well worthy the
-philosopher's attention. The candle while burning,
-comprises a series of the simplest operations, and
-far beyond the powers of art to effect or otherwise
-imitate; yet from indifference to the familiar, and
-the paucity of skill required in the construction,
-there is nothing less noticed with philosophic
-acumen. The mechanism and materials to be
-wrought are the same; which consist in a slender,
-compact, portable cylinder of tallow, within which
-is included an equal length of wick. The various
-operations of de-electrising, fluidifying, and gas-making,
-are performed in silent, regular succession,
-unretarded by friction and unincumbered with containing
-vessels, Nature furnishes the power. The
-wick answers the purpose of service-pipes, through
-which the half-wrought materials are conveyed in a
-gaseous form to the refining fire, within which they
-remain as in a gasometer of supply, to be gradually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></a>[Pg 46]</span>
-diffused through the surrounding flame, and there
-receive the finishing lustrous polish. The new
-formation is now a refinery to the work in progress,
-and is curiously situated over the materials where
-only it could serve the numerous requisite purposes.
-Nor does the gradual consumption of the
-machinery derange the order of operation, work and
-wear being carried on simultaneously to the end.
-The many-coloured tissue wrought, of starlight
-shine and of expanded base, is tastefully tapered as
-if to please in appearance, as well as lighten our
-darkness. Thus by natural means, operating on
-almost uncostly materials, mankind are supplied
-with that by which darkness is turned to day&mdash;the
-candle flame.</p>
-
-<p>All combustion is on the same principle, previous
-de-electrisation the commencement, and, by the
-same cause continued, the centrifugal pressure,
-which is on the increase from being derived from
-the general pressure. Flame, or the electric spark,
-de-electrises the gases, oxygen and hydrogen, before
-their conversion to water takes place; compression
-effects the same. The inflammable air in mines
-becomes exploded from the de-electrising consequence
-of flame, when inadvertently exposed; and
-at times the de-electrisation is effected by the
-atmosphere, as in spontaneous combustion. The
-mine explosion, promoted by the atmosphere, is a
-case of spontaneous detonation, if not combustion,
-which, from sad experience taught, should be anticipated
-by the application of a rocket fired by a
-train. The foul air should be got rid of timely, not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></a>[Pg 47]</span>
-left to accumulate, and the weather dictates when.
-"The Davy" may be said to insulate the flame of
-the lamp from the electric matter of the air within
-the mine. The flame, when exposed, de-electrises
-the foul air, and in fluent medium of space causes
-the explosion.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="WATER" id="WATER"></a>WATER.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Water is the most compound of fluids, although
-when pure it promotes little or no sensation, which
-is owing to the certain proportion of its elements
-to each other. It seems to have, as constituents,
-a portion of each of the general elements; of which,
-when any are in excess or deficiency, the fluid
-differs from common pure water, but still is an
-aqueous fluid. All aqueous fluids which differ
-from pure water, do so from elementary disproportion
-in their constitution. Ancient philosophers
-considered water the parent of all things, because
-it contributes matter of substance and increase, they
-said, to all kinds of bodies, and because there is
-nothing elementary belonging to bodies which is
-not obtainable, by one means or other, from water
-or its productions. It contributes increase to the
-whole of the vegetable kingdom, and through vegetable
-matter to the increase of animal flesh. From
-the vegetable world are obtainable, by means of art,
-earths, metals, salts, acids, alkalies, even flame;
-the primitives of which are of the same kind as the
-initials of water; also of the atmosphere, which is
-convertible to water, but is not water, by reason of
-not only elementary disproportion, but the enor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></a>[Pg 48]</span>mous
-excess of medium of space in which its
-elements are involved.</p>
-
-<p>The constitution of water being unknown, and
-supposed to consist of only the gases, hydropathy
-is condemned, like mesmerism, through the ignorance
-and intolerance of professionals, themselves
-falsely educated at best. As alimentary, water is
-the most wholesome drink under heaven; as medicinal,
-far beyond comparison with extracts from
-metals and minerals, from which deduct the water,
-the remainder kills. The hydropathic perspiration
-cleanses the flesh from head to foot; physic, the
-intestines and stomach only. Water is the elixir of
-both body and mind; witness the persons who are
-teetotallers. A patient declared to the present
-writer, he would rather have run naked into the
-street, were he not bound up by the wet sheets,
-than endure the fog and stench from his body by
-the cold water perspiration. Yet doctors insist
-that hydropathy is not medicinal or curative, or
-why not adopt the practice?</p>
-
-<p>Water is formed by detonating the gases, oxygen
-and hydrogen, by which their <i>elements</i> become
-combined in the form of water; which is the only
-formative mode pursued in the laboratory of art;
-whereas, in that of nature, it is variously formed:
-the number of elements determines the number of
-modes. Suppose six the number of the natural
-elements, then any five and the remaining one, any
-four and the remaining two, or any three and the
-other three, met and compressed within the atmosphere,
-the product is water. On the meeting of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></a>[Pg 49]</span>
-certain clouds, where <i>the gases</i> could not have
-equal elevation, water is formed; and on walls
-and wainscots, under cover, in humid weather, it is
-formed from the electric matter on their surface
-and the complement of elements contributed by the
-atmosphere: the same walls, in the same weather,
-would have no water, if kept de-electrised by
-stoves. It is formed similarly on furs, woollens,
-and the spider's web, all of which are retainers of
-electric matter; and on the leaves of plants as <i>dew</i>,
-but on the side only which is covered with the like
-electric matter. Dew-water is neither a precipitation
-nor exhalation, but a formation on that where
-it is found.</p>
-
-<p>Water is formed on glass and metallic vessels,
-however closely covered, as long and no longer than
-the included water gives out electric matter through
-the pores of the vessel. In the air of the tropics,
-the dew or water running down the outside of
-covered and uncovered vessels, cannot be considered
-humidity of the air condensed by cold. In proof
-of the foregoing, the hitherto unexplained experiment
-is opportune.</p>
-
-<p>A plate of glass, covered on one side with tin
-foil, has much dew on the naked side when uppermost,
-and none, when the covered side is uppermost,
-of equal dewy nights. The foil acquires
-electric matter from the ground, which the glass or
-naked upper side receives and retains; but when
-the naked side is next the ground, the portion of
-electric matter it acquires is conducted off by the
-foil at top; and as where there is no electric matter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></a>[Pg 50]</span>
-there is no dew, the upper coated side is dry, and
-under circumstances which would have left much
-dew on the glass side if uppermost.</p>
-
-<p>Within the animal system various aqueous fluids
-and humidities are formed, and, as in the former
-instances, without oxygen and hydrogen being
-present; namely, hydrocephalus, the stomach juices,
-liquor pericardium, water of blister, milk, tears: to
-these add the juices of fruit, the chymists' aqueous
-fluids, together with the variety of formative modes,
-and the complex constitution of water remains
-unquestionable. Lavoisier's experiments proved
-the same, by the endless variety in the residue and
-product, from decomposing and recomposing the
-same water several times. Davy states, that,
-when experimenting on different substances, water
-frequently appeared, when there was nothing sensibly
-present to which it could be attributed, if not to
-nitrogen, which disappeared simultaneously with
-the water appearing: electric matter is everywhere
-present, although not sensibly discoverable.</p>
-
-<p>From which it is obvious that the alchymists
-of old mistook the road to <i>El Dorado</i>. Instead of
-aiming at turning the grosser metals into gold, they
-should have alchymised on water, taking its elements
-as the money-changer does those of the numeration
-table, and by the rules of transposition made the
-valueless stand in the place of most value.</p>
-
-<p>Water in the boiler loses electric matter to the
-fire beneath, and is expanded by influent medium
-of space; the excess of the latter throws out the
-elements of the superior stratum, which, with an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></a>[Pg 51]</span>
-enormous influx of medium of space, are the
-constituents of steam and the power of steam.
-The so-acquired medium of space, by the pressure
-from without which it is under, is the cause of the
-elasticity and force of steam. Steam is not water, nor
-is it ever condensed by "cold." It consists in the
-elements of water, less that which the water lost to
-the fire: both, with a reduced or proportional
-quantity of medium of space, make the original stratum
-of water. What but electric matter can steam
-receive from the pipes it may be passed through,
-and is discharged from as water? Insulated,
-"centrifugally repellant heat," without fulcrum, is
-a most inconsiderable substitute for <i>the pressure of
-nature</i> by the all-pervading medium of space, and but
-a shadowy substitute in accounting for the powerful
-effects of steam. There is no repellant force in the
-flame of a candle; and what but influent medium
-of space can make a pint of water fill and overflow
-a quart vessel.</p>
-
-<p>Water loses its fluidity and is made solid or
-congealed, upon losing the imponderable oxygenating
-element. Priestley through his experiments made
-the discovery, that, "air, purer than atmospheric, is
-given out by water at the instant of congelation,"&mdash;which
-must be oxygen air. From which we learn,
-that oxygen is the natural hinderance against the
-waters of the globe being solid; with which experimental
-practice and experience agree, it being well
-known that oxygen added to a freezing solution,
-retards congelation; and that, to facilitate the
-freezing of water, a smart tap is given to the side<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></a>[Pg 52]</span>
-of the vessel, hitherto unknown why, but seems as
-if to shake out the oxygen. The following observed
-circumstances exhibit the congelation of water
-throughout all its stages. The air in a chamber being
-favourable for the reception of oxygen from water,
-the water in a cylindrical earthen pitcher became
-frozen; a plate of ice was formed, which equalled
-the area of the vessel, and firmly fixed to the sides
-one full inch higher than the water had been at
-first. The bottom of the vessel was blown out, the
-sides remained whole, and the ice not broken or
-moved.</p>
-
-<p>The circumstances of the case admits of the
-following illustration. Medium of space, by its
-pressure, forced out the oxygen; additional increments
-of the same medium entered, collapsed the
-elements of the deoxydated stratum of water, and so
-forcibly expanded the rest of the water as to make
-it explode the bottom of the vessel, all at the same
-instant. As all excess of medium of space retired
-from the water, the latter sunk to the original
-height; and had not the water escaped, it would
-have been an inch separate from the plate of ice.
-A river thus frozen, flows freely beneath the ice
-from the same circumstances. The bomb-shell at
-Hudson Bay was exploded by the expanded water,
-not by the newly-formed ice; or else the sides, not
-the bottom of the earthen vessel, would have been
-exploded.</p>
-
-<p>Ice is deoxygenated water, and abounds with
-electric matter, hence it floats; and ice-water is
-at the minimum of density from being deficient of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></a>[Pg 53]</span>
-oxygen. Ice, in a Florence flask, hung over a lamp,
-yields abundance of electric matter, towards the
-formation of lamp-black on the outside of the
-bottom of the flask, which, to the miniature painter
-may be preferable, from being the freest of grit. In
-all cases of combustion, the elements of lamp-black
-are present; so that, in combustion of the diamond,
-the same kind of soot being formed, affords no
-information of the constituents of this highly-prized
-crystal. With more reason than that of pure
-carbon, (which is but another name for the electric
-matter which is the principal constituent of ice,
-and lamp-black) being the base of diamond, it may
-be assumed, that, diamond is a crystalized oxyde of
-water. The electrician's opposite characteristics of
-the two, diamond and ice, accord with the suggestion.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="SOLVENCY" id="SOLVENCY"></a>SOLVENCY.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The menstruum is supposed to <i>act</i> by "chymical
-attraction," from having "chymical affinity" on the
-involved "chymical solid," which enables it to
-draw out the elementary atoms of the solid:
-whereas the <i>inert</i> menstruum does nothing; it is but
-an interstitial recipient for the atoms to be forced
-into, as they become centrifugally forced out of the
-solid. And because the atoms of a body are of
-different sizes, some make novel interstices, and
-thus expedite the dissolution. Only by increasing
-the number and kind of interstices, can diluting a
-menstruum with water increase what is imagined
-to be its solvency. Neither chymical properties,
-nor chymical strength of a fluid, if it had any such,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></a>[Pg 54]</span>
-could be increased by dilution, and the stronger
-should dissolve that which the weaker is said to
-dissolve. The contrary supposes that the force
-which breaks a stone is too strong to break a nutshell.
-Mechanical dissolution by the centrifugal
-pressure is independent of <i>chymicalities</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="GASTRIC_SOLVENCY" id="GASTRIC_SOLVENCY"></a>Gastric solution</h3>
-<p class="p-h3"> is effected similarly: the juice
-has none of the chymical properties of Liebig, nor
-does ingestion stand in need of the living principle
-of Coombe; the former are imaginary, the latter is
-denied from gastric solution taking place in a tea-cup.
-The gastric juice is an interstitial receiver of the
-elements of the pulp, when forced out by the centrifugal
-pressure into the gastric menstruum, as those
-of soap into water. The pulp and its <i>striæ</i> are
-disunited, mechanically decomposed, not abraded:
-some of its elements escape into the air within the
-stomach, which, by disturbing the equilibrium
-within, promote irregularity of pressure on the
-outside of the sac, which causes the <i>pliæ</i> to be in
-the peristaltic motion, supposed to be caused by
-the stomach stimulating itself. The same circumstances
-take place within and without the intestines.
-The whole process of digestion is dynamic,
-in which the only stimulant is pressure.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of the various conjectures on the origin of the
-gastric juice, there cannot be any more unreasonable
-than that which considers it a fluid <i>sui generis</i>,
-and as having origin out of the stomach. All fluids
-are compounds; and those belonging to the body
-may be said to be formed out of, or by commixture
-with others. To suppose for an instant, that a fluid,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></a>[Pg 55]</span>
-which is <i>destructive of all flesh</i>, should have existence
-out of the stomach, and remain harmless in
-some <i>fleshy</i> vessel as long as the stomach is empty
-of food, or until food is required to "stimulate" its
-flow from without through the <i>papillæ</i> of the villous
-lining into the stomach, is a most strange physiologic
-oversight. Why not rather conclude at once,
-that the flesh-destroying juice exists only where it is
-required and for immediate service, and where only
-there are preventive means, the peristaltic motion,
-against it proving injurious to the flesh of the stomach;
-and to the vessels of secretion it would be injurious,
-hence, not as the juice but chyme it is passed
-out of the stomach into the system. Under such
-circumstances, the suggestion is nothing unreasonable,
-that, <i>there is no gastric juice out of the stomach,
-nor within, but while there is food present
-to contribute one or more of its elements to the
-other juices, including the saliva, towards effecting
-its completion as a fit interstitial gastric menstruum,
-for receiving the elementary constituents of the
-pulp under mechanical decomposition by the centripetally
-disuniting pressure of the medium of
-space</i>. Like the all de-electrising medium of fire,
-which exists only where and while it is being
-formed, the gastric juice should be looked upon as if
-<i>designed to be of difficult formation</i>; made more so
-by depending on the food for its completion, which is
-not a matter of "observation" within the stomach,
-or in the <span class="correction" title="In the original book: teacup">tea-cup</span>: neither is the perfect juice, which
-may be sponged or syringed from the bottom of the
-stomach, any proof that as such precisely it came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a>[Pg 56]</span>
-from the <i>papillæ</i>, as some suppose. As to the
-papillary flow being <i>stimulated</i> by the food, with as
-bad philosophy it might be said, charmed; or that
-clockwork is <i>stimulated</i> by the weights. The flow
-is promoted by the pulp, as were the latter a piece
-of sponge. And that the papillary flow is but a
-constituent, not the flesh-destroying juice, in promoting
-ingestion, is evident from the hunger pain it
-promotes while harmlessly accumulating out of the
-stomach, indicating the stomach being empty; and
-the relief experienced at its source when discharged
-into the stomach, it is, which has given rise to
-the idea, that certain organs <i>sympathise</i> with the
-stomach.</p>
-
-<p>Such metaphorical expressions may pass for the
-poetry of pathology, but hitherto have stood in the
-way of deep research. Ingestion is expedited by
-sleep, in consequence of the accumulation of <span class="correction" title="In the original book: minus pressure-matter">minus-pressure
-matter</span> in the gastric region and stomach
-at the time; and sleep is promoted by imperfect
-mastication causing a deficiency of saliva in the
-stomach which is compensated by <span class="correction" title="In the original book: minus pressure-matter">minus-pressure matter</span>
-of the thus provoked comatose flow. The
-pollparrot masticates but little, if at all, and sleeps
-regularly after breakfast.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="USE_OF_THE_INSPIRED_OXYGEN_WITHIN_THE_SYSTEM" id="USE_OF_THE_INSPIRED_OXYGEN_WITHIN_THE_SYSTEM"></a>USE OF THE INSPIRED OXYGEN WITHIN THE SYSTEM.</h2>
-
-
-<p>There is none of the inspired oxygen returned to
-the lungs by the circulation. What becomes of it,
-or what its use within the system, has not been
-written for our learning. It is not retained in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></a>[Pg 57]</span>
-blood, nor is it animalised; nothing yields less
-oxygen than animal matter. To convey "carbon"
-out of the system, and somehow purify the blood, is
-the supposed service; but if so, should it not be
-included in every expiration and of the inspiration
-quantity? but which is not the case.</p>
-
-<p>Harvey proved that the blood circulates, but left
-undiscovered what keeps in motion the <i>inert</i> fluid,
-except the systole, which the <i>inert</i> heart cannot
-effect on itself. No organ can do anything of itself,
-the whole being composed of inert substance, and
-nothing else; even the life of the body, whatever it
-may be, leaves the function of every organ, not
-excepting that of the brain, dependent on the
-general pressure.</p>
-
-<p>By the general pressure the air is forced into,
-but not through or beyond the lungs which it
-inflates, and inflates nothing else. Within the
-blood-vessels it would prove fatal; and although
-from it the blood derives that by which it becomes
-arterialised, yet the blood and air do not come in
-contact, extravasation and pulmonary rupture must
-happen, did the lungs permit the blood and air
-coming together, or in immediate contact. Of the
-air of an inspiration, the oxygenating imponderable
-element only can permeate the pulmonary tissue.
-This element it is which imponderably arterialises
-the blood; the nitrogen of the inspiration constitutes
-the immediate succeeding exspiration.</p>
-
-<p>The oxygenating element promotes the circulation
-on the same principle that it promotes combustion;
-its diminutive interstices exclude electric<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a>[Pg 58]</span>
-matter, which coagulates, and admits the propelling
-force, medium of space, which is the only cause of
-motion, to enter the blood. The oxygenated blood
-being propelled, or pressed, by the medium of space
-it includes, from the lungs into the ventricle, the
-collapse, or systole, takes place, and the blood is
-forced out of the ventricle, through the auricle, into
-the aorta, thence through the several branches of
-the arterial system, to and through the capillaries,
-into the veins. Thus, from the medium of space
-within the blood being continuous with the medium
-of space generally, it is manifest that the blood is
-circulated not by the systole, but by the general
-pressure. To produce the systole, there is nothing
-but the normal pressure on the outside surface of
-the heart; nor, to lessen the normal pressure on
-the parietes of the ventricle, is there anything but
-the arterialising, <span class="correction" title="In the original book: minus pressure">minus-pressure</span>, imponderable
-element of the blood just received into the
-ventricle.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the entire of the arterial flow, the
-blood is losing the arterialising <span class="correction" title="In the original book: minus pressure">minus-pressure</span>
-matter to the different organs, as the means by
-which the functional action of each is promoted.
-Without such means, there is nothing to disturb
-the equilibrium of pressure on an organ to produce
-organic motion, action, or function. Hence, it
-appears, that the use of the inspired oxygen consists
-in promoting the circulation of the blood and
-the functional motion or action of the different
-organs within the frame.</p>
-
-<p>Before entering the veins the blood is fully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></a>[Pg 59]</span>
-deoxygenated; within them it acquires gradually
-electric matter, productive of the livid or coagulating
-appearance; at the same time the blood-propelling
-medium is lessening in quantity; but which
-is compensated in the mucilaginous lining of the
-veins, which assists the venous flow on the <span class="correction" title="In the original book: minus pressure">minus-pressure</span>
-capillary principle; capillary attraction
-would collapse the vessels. The electric matter
-collected by the venous blood is got rid of in the
-lungs, and expired with the nitrogen and a remnant
-of the oxygenating element of the last inspiration;
-hence the small portion of carbonic acid gas
-obtained from the expiration.</p>
-
-<p>After all organic service, the arterialising minus-pressure
-matter is insensibly transpired, which is
-inferable from the supply being continued through
-respiration; which, although constant, yet, from
-being intermitting, might, perhaps, cause corresponding
-stoppings in the round of organic
-action; hence it would seem that, against such
-intervals or interruptions taking place, the liver
-has been designed to collect for casual distribution
-a portion of the same minus-pressure matter. The
-great surface of the liver may stand comparison
-with the plate, or cylinder, of the electrifying
-machine, and the organs as jars which receive
-electric matter from it, as each stands in need.</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="SPLEEN" id="SPLEEN"></a><span class="correction" title="Inserted from the Table of Contents.">Use of the Spleen.</span></h3>
-<p class="p-h3">&mdash;
-The <span class="smcap">spleen</span>, from being an organ common to
-the human frame, must have an allotted service to
-supply; although considered useless by some, to all
-of unknown utility, it may be <i>a lateral channel of
-arterial blood direct from the heart, to supply the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></a>[Pg 60]</span>
-vessels lying in a portion of the body not traversed
-by the arteries belonging to the great arterial system</i>;
-those of the diaphragm first; thence through the
-umbilical cord to the fetus, in which the circulation
-is indispensable, from being the only means of
-conveying and dispersing throughout the body, in
-the absence of respiration, the minus-pressure
-matter which the organism of the fetus requires to
-promote the several functions, without which life
-would become extinct if commenced. In this
-supply of motion promoting elementary matter,
-consists all that can be considered <i>aeration</i> of the
-blood, and all that the blood of both the fetus and
-the <i>adult</i> requires, or can possibly receive. In the
-chirping chick, while within the yet unbroken shell,
-aeration is <i>prevented</i> by incubation of the mother
-bird; but the arterialising elementary matter is
-amply provided within the larger, apparently
-empty, end of the shell. To keep out electric
-matter, which would exclude the blood-moving
-medium, is the object of the hen sitting on the
-eggs, and oven-hatching is effected on the same
-principle.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="DIAPHRAGM" id="DIAPHRAGM"></a><span class="correction" title="Inserted from the Table of Contents.">How the Diaphragm Is Raised.</span></h3>
-<p class="p-h3">&mdash;
-The <i>diaphragm</i> cannot rise of itself, and has no
-self-acting, self-lifting nerves or muscles, all flesh
-being composed of <i>inert</i> atoms. The rise is proof
-positive that pressure is greater on the posterior
-than anterior surface of the membrane, and the
-unchanged normal pressure beneath indicates reduced
-pressure above; the latter is promoted by
-minus-pressure matter imparted by the splenic
-blood to the diaphragm, while passing through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></a>[Pg 61]</span>
-vessels of the diaphragm. This arterialising matter
-being highly evanescent, escapes from the diaphragm
-and upwards, and during the escape mitigates
-the pressure, intercepts it in some degree
-from the superior surface; then, by the normal
-pressure beneath, the rise of the diaphragm is
-effected. As the escape, or separation, is becoming
-complete, the equilibrium is being restored, and the
-diaphragm depressed to the normal level. If this
-be not the rationale of diaphragmatic motion, it
-will be little improved by the substitution of
-muscular energy, leverage, or muscular vitality,
-while leaving out <i>muscular inertia</i>, which should
-not be omitted, but included, in accounting for
-every muscular action and motion.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="CORRELATIVE_ELEMENTS" id="CORRELATIVE_ELEMENTS"></a>CORRELATIVE ELEMENTS.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Any pair of the general elements, the interstices
-of one of which are the only interstices for receiving
-and retaining the atoms of the other, or that
-can be occupied by the atoms of any other of the
-general elements, such elements are correlatives.</p>
-
-<p>Elementary co-relation is conspicuous in the
-opposite polarities of the loadstone, magnet, and
-crystals, and all bodies subject to polarization, which
-includes the animal frame. Similar co-relation is
-evinced between the galvanic fluids, those of the
-pile, and those named electricity; likewise between
-oxygen and hydrogen, the oxygenating element and
-nitrogen, acids and alkalies and all mutually neutralizing
-substances. Still it is not meant that all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></a>[Pg 62]</span>
-the general elements are so paired; doubtless, there
-are several ratios of size between the atoms of the
-different elements, for the purpose of multiplying
-variety among formations, the substance of which
-is of the same species throughout. Possibly the
-correlative principle gave rise to the ideal scale of
-<i>chymical affinities</i>, subsequently refined to <i>affections
-of matter</i>. Naturally, correlative elements will be
-found together, as are nitrogen and the imponderable
-element; also the magnetic fluids common to
-iron.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="MAGNETISM" id="MAGNETISM"></a>MAGNETISM.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Were attraction a property of the atomic substance
-of the loadstone, it could be neither transferable,
-receivable, nor liable to be destroyed by fire.
-A magnet is a work of art, the substance is inert,
-it can no more attract than think. Magnetism is an
-accident of matter; it consists in the correlatives of
-an iron bar having become separated, and drawn
-one to each end of the bar: separation and
-transition to the extremities of the bar, are what the
-rubbing on the poles of the loadstone effects.</p>
-
-<p>Two paving-stones hanging a short distance asunder
-and touched by nothing but the tranquil air,
-remain at rest; but should attract each other
-had "every atom in creation" the property. Were a
-vacuum, partial vacuum or air much rarer than
-atmospheric, now placed between the suspended
-stones, each would be in motion towards the other
-the same instant. Here both <i>causes</i>, the general
-pressure, and the minus-pressure, or motion <i>pro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></a>[Pg 63]</span>moting</i>
-means, are given; the latter are sensibly
-present, and the absence of attraction is as evident
-as the inutility of anything of the kind to effect the
-mutual approach of the two bodies. Not so is the
-approach of two magnets understood, because the
-intermediate minus-pressure means <i>present</i> are not
-sensible. That iron magnets do not move together
-by attraction, or that attraction is not the cause of
-the phenomena imputed to it, is proved in the case
-of iron-filings dropping from a bar, when the connection
-of the bar with the galvanic battery is
-broken; and it will not be contended that the galvanic
-current is attraction.</p>
-
-<p>In order to arrive at a knowledge of wherein
-consists the means which subvert the equilibrium
-between two suspended magnets, reference has to
-be made to the artizan's mode of operating in converting
-the unmagnetised bar to a magnet. He
-holds the bar in the middle, and draws one half
-along the pole of a loadstone; then draws the other
-half along the other pole, and after a few such
-alternate <i>rubbings</i> against the poles, the bar is a
-polarized magnet. From which it was formerly
-supposed, that iron contains a magnetic fluid which
-the loadstone rubbings divide, and draw half to
-each end of the bar. But were such the fact, the
-ends or poles should be <i>equals</i>, whereas they are
-magnetic opposites. Now, with more reason, it is
-considered that iron includes two different, removable
-elements, (correlatives,) which, by the manipulation
-on the loadstone, are drawn one to each end
-of the bar, and there remain as polar atmospheres,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></a>[Pg 64]</span>
-and constitute what are termed the polarities, or
-opposite polarities of the bar; the latter opinion is
-somewhat confirmed by the corresponding manner
-in which iron filings, while being scattered on a
-sheet of paper, become arranged round the poles of
-a magnet lying under the paper.</p>
-
-<p>The magnetic relation, which the polar atmospheres
-of any iron magnet bear to those of every
-iron magnet, being the same as exists between the
-polar atmospheres of every individual magnet,
-makes manifest, that a certain pair of correlative
-elements is common to all magnetisable iron; but
-without concluding that, by the same kind of correlatives,
-the polarities are produced in bodies not
-ferruginous, which, if the physical fact, so may the
-animal correlatives be different in some instances.
-From which it follows, that no one mesmeriser can
-affect mesmerically every person, nor any one person
-be so affected by all mesmerisers. Neither are all persons
-"nervous" alike, which should moderate the war
-cry against mesmerism generally because of failure
-in some cases; and should awaken the philosophic
-mesmeriser, willing to make perfect the science, to
-investigate the cause of exceptions and difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>Now, as respects the interposed minus-pressure
-means or matter, which, by destroying the equilibrium,
-promote the approaching motion of two suspended
-magnets; there is nothing whatever to refer
-to, but the magnets themselves, that is, their polar
-atmospheres, which, together or facing one another,
-make a rare or minus-pressure medium between the
-proximate ends, into which both magnets are moved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></a>[Pg 65]</span>
-by the greater pressure on their remotest ends. It
-lies with the previously-instructed patient, while
-clairvoyant, through questioning by the mesmeriser,
-to make close observation, and report all
-circumstances respecting the magnetic lights; also,
-those attached to and proceeding from the mesmeriser,
-towards elucidating this most of all recondite
-subjects&mdash;magnetism, in the philosophy of
-physics. The mesmeriser should hold in mind,
-that, probably the air between the facing ends of
-two magnets is magnetically affected, that is, made
-a magnet in the series by the other two; which
-seems to be the case when the patient is magnetised
-at a distance from the mesmeriser by means of the
-pointed finger, and by the <i>effect</i> of will at a much
-greater distance.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="NATURAL_SLEEP" id="NATURAL_SLEEP"></a>NATURAL SLEEP.</h2>
-
-
-<p>That sleep is not at the command of will is certain,
-or why undergo the tedium of a restless night?
-Before the state of sleep can obtain, the body has
-to experience an <i>electro-physico</i> change, by which
-the extremities are left polarised and the body an
-animal or living magnet. That the extremities are
-polarised during sleep, is admitted by all physiologists;
-for the effecting of which there must be a
-pair of correlative elements concerned. While the
-elementary transfer, productive of the polarities, is
-taking place, so is drowsiness; when sleep has
-obtained, the natural magnetising procedure has
-terminated; hence from the degree of polarity, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></a>[Pg 66]</span>
-mesmeriser can determine the stage to which the
-patient has been brought between the comatose and
-clairvoyant states, and know the capability of his
-patient for being made clairvoyant or not; this
-polar index should be well noticed.</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="COMATOSE_FLOW" id="COMATOSE_FLOW"></a><span class="correction" title="Inserted from the Table of Contents.">Comatose Flow.</span></h3>
-<p class="p-h3">&mdash;
-It must have been observed by many persons
-while dozing and the body in a sitting or leaning
-posture, that an agreeable warm glow arises in the
-chest, which increases while passing sensibly through
-the pectoral towards the gastric region, and which
-terminates, insensibly, in the consummation of
-sleep; from the feet upwards a similar, but less
-perceptible, flow takes place. Of this twofold
-<i>comatose flow</i>, the immediate consequence is polarisation
-of the extremities; sleep is a remote, but not
-the remotest consequence, when effects similar to
-those by the flow are mesmerically effected. Thus
-it appears that the theory of sleep and magnetism
-is the same. The magnetising procedure, however,
-has this difference; the magnetic correlatives are
-drawn from the middle to and out of the extremities
-of the bar; those of the body of the patient
-recede from the extremities to the central region,
-leaving one, the correlative of the other, at each
-extremity, in both cases.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The foregoing theory of sleep is described from
-immediate personal observation. While leaning
-over a table, the doze heavy, the comatose flow
-distinctly felt in its agreeable downward progress
-through the chest, when, just at the instant of forgetfulness,
-the violent slam of a door drove away
-all chance of sleep under the following circum<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></a>[Pg 67]</span>stances:
-a sensible and sudden revulsion upwards,
-a few seconds of giddiness, and a smart painful
-stroke on the stomach took place, all in quick succession;
-which may be accounted for thus: the slam
-prevented the correlative fluids from the opposite
-extremities meeting centrally; each gushed irregularly
-back, and depolarized its extremity, the
-suddenness of which caused the giddiness. The
-stroke is the true electric shock, inflicted by the
-medium of space suddenly rushing or falling on the
-stomach, from which the matter of the comatose
-flow had been as suddenly displaced. Taking all
-circumstances into consideration, it is manifest that
-the state of sleep is the result of a natural magnetizing
-operation.</p>
-
-<p>Before the fire, while reading, the superior extremity
-loses electric matter to the fire, which leaves
-it polarized and promotes the comatose flow.
-The lower extremity becomes polarized simultaneously
-with the upper as a correlative consequence.
-Sleep is supposed to be expedited by heat; hence
-the afternoon's nap is seconded by a silk handkerchief
-thrown over the head, but which is only a
-hindrance to electric matter, similar to that of the
-comatose flow entering from the air and depolarizing
-the extremity. The handkerchief, from being
-a non-conductor, only prevents the coming sleep
-being retarded; it could neither generate nor
-multiply heat.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally it might be questioned, why the body
-should become somnolent daily; and, by what means
-the comatose flow is naturally effected;&mdash;of itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></a>[Pg 68]</span>
-it could not take place. The languor removed, and
-renovation of muscular strength through sleep,
-may satisfy in the first instance. Next, it would
-seem, that, as the functions of the several organs
-depend on the presence of minus-pressure matter
-for unequalising the pressure on each organ, so must
-there be waste, loss, and daily deficit of minus-pressure
-matter; which, from being made good by
-means of sleep, leaves it inferable, that the daily
-quantity derived from respiration may be little
-more than sufficient for the continuance of animation
-under the minimum of bodily exercise; but as
-man is necessitated to follow laborious avocations,
-so is it designed, that the loss by service and waste
-shall be the means whereby the necessary re-supply
-is to be furnished. The loss leaves the extremities
-polarized; and as greater waste towards total
-exhaustion approaches, the matter of the comatose
-flow becomes needed and is employed in prolonging
-the functions of the different organs, and before
-exhaustion is complete the body is in the state of
-sleep; during which, from every inspiration being
-far more lengthy than ordinary, the body is resupplied
-to repletion with the respirable minus-pressure
-matter, by which the extremities are
-depolarized, and the sleeper is awake, refreshed and
-invigorated. From which it may be said, that a
-man toils himself to sleep, and sleeps himself
-awake; and that, not "balmy sleep," but respiration,
-is "tired Nature's sweet restorer."</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="MESMERIC_SLEEP" id="MESMERIC_SLEEP"></a>Mesmeric sleep</h3>
-<p class="p-h3"> may be considered forced sleep.
-It is effected with little or no comatose flow, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></a>[Pg 69]</span>
-renders replenishing by long breathing unnecessary;
-and the patient, on being awakened by demagnetising
-the extremities, is rather debilitated than
-refreshed.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Every finger of the mesmeriser is a magnet to
-the magnetic correlatives within the extremities of
-the patient; and the passes polarize after the
-manner of the comatose flow in the case of natural
-sleep. From there being no mesmerically-effected
-comatose flow, there is reason to infer, that <i>the contents
-of the nerves of sensation only are what the
-passes polarize</i> and what only are polarized in
-natural sleep, although expressed by the word,
-<i>extremities</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Repetition of the passes separates, or de-electrises
-more completely the nerves of the extremities, than
-for the production of natural sleep is requisite.
-Hence it may be said, that the body of the <i>mesmerised</i>
-patient is in magnetic advance, and hence
-the series of surprising consequences which bring
-to light more and more the wonders of the
-economy.</p>
-
-<p>The passes should be conducted on magnetising
-principles; that is, from the extremities to the
-gastric region to bring on somnolency, and from
-the same region to the head and feet or extremes
-to awaken; from head to foot is unscientific, and
-might be prejudicial; the central region of the body
-should be considered <i>the mesmeric insuperable line</i>.
-Cross passes having been found efficient are not
-anomalous, by reason of the nerves and branches
-lying in all directions.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></a>[Pg 70]</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="VISION" id="VISION"></a>VISION.</h2>
-
-
-<p>According to the popular opinion, which governs
-the philosopher, and with which the established
-philosophy agrees, vision is an act performed by the
-eye, which is said to be endowed with the faculty
-of sight, by which it is enabled to look into,
-through space, and see external bodies made visible
-when covered with solar or day light; nothing of
-which is true. The eyeball is not possessed of
-sight; to see is not the function of the sense;
-externals are not visible; there is no material light;
-light is a sensible or mental effect consequent on
-the chromatic organ of the brain being excited by
-the fluid of the optic nerve. All we know by means
-of the optic sense, consists in the sensation of light
-or coloured light, accompanied with the idea of
-form. The object which promotes the sensation
-being, seemingly, the place of the sensation, all
-imagine the sensation is the colour of the object to
-which the eye is directed, and hence, that the object
-or body is seen by the eyes. These general mistakes
-are made evident and stand corrected by reference
-to the sense itself, its physiology and function, as
-previously stated and advised.</p>
-
-<p>The medium of space is the visual medium; not,
-however, for looking through, as is supposed, but
-by reason of it forming the link or intermediate
-means by which the object is connected with the
-sense. Now, as the medium of space is present
-everywhere, and as it promotes visual or optic perception,
-the question naturally arises, why do we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></a>[Pg 71]</span>
-not see in the night as well as day, in all places and
-at all times; in a word, why do we not see in the
-dark? The clairvoyant does "see" in the dark.</p>
-
-<p>The nervous fluid excites the sensation of colour;
-the medium of space connects mediately the object
-with the nervous fluid, which fluid acts on
-the optic cerebral organ by pressure and degrees of
-pressure. The nervous fluid, nor anything else, acts
-essentially, that is, by means of properties and
-qualities; and its acting on the brain is caused by
-external agency, the fluid itself being <i>inert</i>. It may
-well be supposed that the exquisite construction of
-the brain, from being competent to produce psychologic
-effects, although excited by material agency,
-requires but the most simple means, such as a
-simple impulse or impression, to be actuated into
-excitement; and as the portion or line of the
-medium of space which is continuous from the
-external object, through the pupil, to the nervous
-fluid within the retina, is that which puts the
-nervous fluid into functional action on the brain, it
-is fairly assumable that only by pressure, degrees,
-and changes of pressure, the nervous fluid can
-by possibility act on and excite the brain; which
-equally applies to the nervous fluid of all the senses.
-Taking, then, the maximum of optic pressure as
-productive of no sensation; so, from there being no
-object to perceive, it is imagined we are surrounded
-with darkness; and taking the minimum as exciting
-the sensation recognised as luminous, light, or
-white, to intermediate degrees of cerebral pressure
-are to be attributed the sensations of red, yellow,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></a>[Pg 72]</span>
-blue and of colours generally. According to these
-terms of the colorific scale, all optically-excited
-perceptions are consequent on the cerebral pressure
-being in degrees on the scale of descent from the
-maximum.</p>
-
-<p>For the reduction of optic pressure, there are
-different minus-pressure means, namely, the sun,
-flame, electricity, phosphoric substances; and the
-daily electric matter, which is constant in the atmosphere
-at the eastern hemisphere of the globe, and
-which keeps pace with the sun; because the rarest
-elements of the atmosphere will be in greater quantity
-on the side facing the sun. As this daily
-electric matter emerges before the sun is above the
-<span class="correction" title="In the original book: horiozn">horizon</span>, the general optic pressure excites the sensation
-supposed to be the light of day-break; and
-while following, after sunset, the sensation is known
-as twilight. Any such minus-pressure matter lying
-in the visual direction, shortens the visual line, and
-intercepts the continuity of that line of the medium
-of space which makes one with the axis of the eye,
-and thus effects the reduction of optic pressure.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Note.</i>&mdash;The terms here made use of, from being
-unknown in the olden philosophy, need explanation.&mdash;<i>Axis
-line</i>: that line of the medium of space
-which is as the axis of the eye produced to, and
-terminated by the external object. <i>Visual line</i>, the
-same. <i>Visual continuity</i>; the line which is continuous
-<i>angularly</i> with the termination of the axis
-line. From the termination of this <i>continuous</i> line,
-there may be another angular continuity or <i>line</i>, as
-from mirror to mirror. All lines continuous from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></a>[Pg 73]</span>
-the axis line and terminated by <i>the object</i> supposed
-to be seen, and however irregular, are <i>lines</i>
-of <i>vision</i>: the angular point, <i>the point of</i> (first,
-second, or third) <i>continuity</i>. The reader should
-make a diagram for each case as he proceeds.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Within the window-closed room, a lighted candle
-is supposed to fill the entire space with light
-radiated from the flame: the perception is named
-light, and is thus wise excited. When the axis line is
-terminated by the flame, the pressure on the nervous
-fluid is lessened to the degree which promotes the
-sensation of luminousness, which seems to be the
-physical appearance of the flame itself. Again;
-when, in the same room, the eye is directed to a
-mirror the like perception is excited, because the
-visual line is continuous from the point of continuity,
-or termination of the axis line, to the flame as
-before. When the axis line is terminated by a piece
-of furniture, the point of continuity being imperfect
-and the visual continuity thence to the flame
-irregular or indirect, the optic pressure on the
-brain by the axis line excites the sensation of
-colour, which is imputed to the object, chair, or
-table.</p>
-
-<p>In the celebrated <span class="smcap">Optics</span>, the visual lines are
-mistaken for rays of light radiated from the flame,
-and reflected from the other objects; which rays are
-supposed to enter the eye, and (as if possessed of
-intelligence) arrange themselves on the back of the
-eye or on the retina, in the precise form, but of a
-different size, of the object to which the eyes are
-directed, as the means by which externals are seen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></a>[Pg 74]</span>
-before the face. In cases wherein the visual line
-is indirect, as when lying through media of unequal
-density, the supposed rays are said to be refracted:
-and, because the curtained iris excludes the visual
-medium, except through the pinhole pupil, thence
-along the axis through the lenses of the eyeball, the
-<i>optics</i> inculcate, that the eye has been formed to
-see only in straight lines. Finally, by Dr. Reed it
-is taught, that the use of the sensation and of the
-image on the <i>back</i> of the eye, is to make the external
-object <i>opposite the face</i> be seen; all which has to be
-rejected and forgotten in being guided by the natural,
-real function of the sense, against which there is no
-appeal. There are no rays concerned; the medium
-of vision is quiescent; there can be neither
-radiation, reflection, nor refraction effected by passive
-inert bodies; there is no image on any part of
-the eye or retina; and externals could not be made
-visible, or seen by their images. Such absurdities,
-all of which are maintained in modern philosophy,
-have prevented, more than any thing else, the science
-and phenomena of Mesmerism being understood.</p>
-
-<p>According to the interstitial composition of the
-surface of a body, so is the point of visual continuity
-at or beneath the surface; which determines
-the degree of pressure on the axis line; which determines
-what shall be the resulting sensation, or apparent
-colour of the surface of the object to which the
-pupil of the eyeball is directed. Through a pane
-of glass, or through the clear atmosphere, the axis
-line may be said to be uninterruptedly continuous,
-and the perception is as if the glass were away.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></a>[Pg 75]</span>
-Through an ignited sheet of iron the visual continuity
-is imperfect, and may be said to be continuous
-only halfway through the sheet. An ignited bar,
-at first, is said to be brown, then ignited to redness:
-colours are sensations. Within the bar the axis
-line is continuous in zig-zag order, which causes
-the optic pressure to excite the sensation of red: it
-is a prismatic case. The <i>spectra</i>, by means of the
-prism, are only in the sensorium; the skreen itself
-is unseen. When the direct axis line terminates at
-the apparent red on the skreen, the continuity
-thence is maintained through some particular part
-of the prism; when terminated by the yellow,
-through a different part; when by the blue, through
-another different part; and through each part the
-continuity is somewhat curvilinear, hence the pressures
-and perceptions are different. Through the air,
-when the perception is of the many-coloured rainbow,
-the visual continuity is as through the prism:
-there is no coloured bow out of the sensorium.</p>
-
-<p>Where there are no minus-pressure means for
-lessening the optic pressure, as in mines, caves, and
-window-closed rooms, there can be no perceptions
-of light and colour. From the sensation ceasing
-the same instant the last window-shutter is closed,
-it would seem, that, the <i>daily</i> minus-pressure matter
-is in constant flow eastward through the globe.
-The rheumatic sufferer fears sun-down, as if the
-daily matter enters and protects the nerves from
-the nightly. The meteorologist has to resolve the
-problem for the philosopher in tracing the magnetic
-meridian.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></a>[Pg 76]</span></p>
-
-<p>The objection is unfounded against pressure being
-the cerebral exciting cause. It is objected, that, from
-two stars equally distant, one considered red, the
-other blue, the pressure cannot be changed along the
-visual lines in the small space of time the eye takes
-to direct itself from one to the other star. There
-is no changing of pressure on either line. The
-existing pressure on the sense by each is different,
-and what it is, depends on the constitution of the
-external object, as in every other instance, and just
-as on that of the ignited bar already stated. The
-imputed colours of the stars being different, so is
-the continuity of axis line beneath the surface of the
-atmosphere of each star, also the degree of pressure
-and the sensitive result.</p>
-
-<p>Neither is it maintainable that the medium of space
-cannot be the medium of vision, because "from
-being all-pervading, it should excite vision through
-all kinds of bodies, as through a block of rock crystal,
-but does not through so thin a substance as a leaf of
-blotting-paper." By clairvoyance it is proved that
-the visual continuity is maintained through stone
-walls; and by reason of the <i>visual and auditory</i>
-medium being the same, that is, medium of space,
-the "hearing" through stone walls, makes the
-"seeing" possible. The bell must be connected mediately
-with the auditory sense, as is the object with
-the visual sense; and through stone walls there is
-nothing continuous but the medium of space. Sound
-is no more a transmissible object than colour;
-neither belongs to the external object. In all such
-cases of sensations which are different, although the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></a>[Pg 77]</span>
-promoting means are the same for all the senses,
-that the organs of sense may not be equally susceptible,
-or capable of being put into functional
-service by the same degree of cerebral pressure,
-should be held in mind, or else it might be asked
-why all the senses are not excited at the same time.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="TRANSPARENCY" id="TRANSPARENCY"></a>TRANSPARENCY.</h2>
-
-
-<p>A transparent body, is one through which the
-visual line is uninterruptedly continuous from an
-object to the sense. The materials for glass-making
-are opaque, and the natural opacity of their elementary
-atoms is unalterable. Hence in some novel
-arrangement of the atoms towards promoting the
-direct continuity of the medium of space through
-them, consists the object of vitrifying and principle
-of transparency.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="OPACITY" id="OPACITY"></a>OPACITY.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The principal obstacle to transparency is interposed
-electric matter. In the earliest stages of
-glass-making an immense volume of electric matter
-is got rid of by means of the furnace fire, which
-becomes sooty smoke while ascending and passing
-through the furnace funnel; and to prevent all
-return of the like, it is, that solid oxygen is added
-to the materials when fused, the interstices of
-which, in the vitrified mass, secure the direct continuity
-of the visual medium. Priestley made black
-wax and brass filings transparent, by only removing
-all interposed electric matter. The body of a living<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></a>[Pg 78]</span>
-man, by being de-electrised, has been made transparent.
-In these instances the transparency is of
-short continuance, and the opacity is restored by
-returning electric matter. Fire, in de-electrising
-gems and crystals, destroys all partial opacity.
-The clearest water is made cloudy on receiving
-the charge from the electrifying jar; by uncustomary
-electric matter, the atmosphere is made
-foggy, and is transparent again when the electric
-matter becomes a constituent of rain-water. These
-instances show, that, electric matter lying in the
-way of the medium of space and vision, interrupts
-its regular continuity, consequently, its direct
-pressure; yet not wholly,&mdash;clairvoyance and sound
-make manifest that the continuity is maintained
-through the most opaque bodies. The principle
-bears strongly on the physiology of clairvoyance.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="THE_NERVOUS_FLUID" id="THE_NERVOUS_FLUID"></a>THE NERVOUS FLUID.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Were there a distinct fluid belonging to the
-nerves of sensation, and insulated, it could not be
-affected by external circumstances, nor its cerebral
-excitement be productive in the least of any knowledge,
-relative or inferential of external bodies. Were
-the fluid not insulated, it should be subject to waste
-like the lachrymal fluid, and must excite the brain
-differently at different times, even under equal
-circumstances; which must make it impossible to
-identify the same body after its removal out of the
-axis-of-vision direction.</p>
-
-<p>A distinct fluid, not insulated, has to be in con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></a>[Pg 79]</span>tact
-with the line of medium of space which the external
-object terminates, which adds to the difficulty
-of waste, in the possibility of the nerves becoming
-flooded with an abnormal fluid, medium of space.
-Much more likely is it, that, <i>the cerebral exciting
-fluid, of the nerves generally, consists in medium of
-space</i>, received from without through the cuticular
-insertions and orifices of the nerves as streamlets
-from the great ocean of space, subject to neither
-ebb nor flow, and liable to change of pressure
-occasioned by external agency. According to this
-idea, the object and brain are the terms of the
-visual line; and medium of space, continuous from
-the object through the nerves to the brain, is the
-connecting link.</p>
-
-<p>Further; although medium of space is the nervous
-fluid and immediate cerebral exciting cause,
-(which entitles it to be named the <span class="smcap">true</span> <i>nervous
-fluid</i>,) there are strong grounds for concluding
-that, with the true fluid, the nerves include a pair
-of correlative elements. Because of the mesmeric
-effected polarities being without the comatose flow,
-which leaves nothing to look to for the polarizing
-means but the contents of the nerves. Next, as
-clairvoyance is a cerebral effect, something connected
-with the nervous fluid must be concerned in
-its production, or why not clairvoyance take place
-without the magnetic passes. Finally, the true
-fluid, or any single fluid, is incapable of being
-polarized; and the true fluid might be rendered
-immovable at times, were there no electric or minus-pressure
-matter within the nerves, also to prevent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></a>[Pg 80]</span>
-its increase, and to retain the normal quantity of the
-true fluid. All extremes being prevented, and the
-polarities of the extremities productive of increased
-lucidity, are consistent with idea of the nerves including
-magnetising correlatives, which, beside, serve
-as an elastic break against the fluid exciting the
-brain indistinctly, irregularly, or exquisitely; and
-only, as it were, muffled, to prevent the sensibility
-of the cerebral organs being worn out prematurely.</p>
-
-<p>Another object may be attained by the included
-electric correlatives, namely, restricting the exciting
-pressure to certain degrees, so that the sensation
-shall be defined and directing, but otherwise useless
-and misleading. Another may be, that of regulating
-the degrees of pressure on such a scale, as that,
-by the same senses, sensations shall be excited as
-different from each other as those of red, yellow,
-and blue by the optic sense, heat and cold by the
-feeling sense, sweet and bitter by the gustory sense.
-To which the conjecture may be added, for the
-purpose of anatomic and physiologic inquiry, that,
-as not even an elementary interstice is without
-design, so may the orifices of the retina be of regulated
-diameters, to ensure such definite degrees of
-pressure on the brain as shall excite the sensations
-recognised as primitive colours.</p>
-
-<p>On the principle that the nervous fluid is derived
-from without, the question is decided as to the
-cuticular termination of the nerves, which is objected
-to by some, in consequence of a few of the
-nerves being observed to have "inward bending."
-And is it not a matter of common observation, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></a>[Pg 81]</span>
-"feeling is most sensible at the tips of the
-fingers" or apparent place of the sensation.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="CLAIRVOYANCE" id="CLAIRVOYANCE"></a>CLAIRVOYANCE.</h2>
-
-
-<p>All mesmerically-produced phenomena are the
-consequence of the passes. The immediate effect of
-the passes is de-electrisation of the nerves, that is,
-of their contents, which leaves them polarised (as is
-the case in natural sleep), but more intensely than is
-effected by the comatose flow. In the ordinary condition,
-the contents of the nerves may be likened to
-milky water in a barometer tube; in natural sleep,
-to the same, with a less degree of milkiness&mdash;the
-latter subsiding from the ends to the middle portion
-of the water; and in the clairvoyant condition of
-the nerves, to the milkiness having so completely
-subsided as to leave the water above and below the
-middle of the tube transparent. In the ordinary
-condition, the nervous fluid is clogged, as it were,
-with intermixed electric matter, which, by marring
-the regular continuity of the fluid from without to
-the brain, reduces in some degree the exciting
-pressure on the brain, which prevents the function
-of the fluid being employed to its utmost. In this
-encumbered state, the fluid may be said to act on
-the brain, as the clapper when muffled on a bell.
-Still the excited pressure is sufficiently strong, and
-the mental result sufficiently distinct for all human
-purposes. When to the clairvoyant degree the
-nerves have been denuded of impeding electric
-matter, the nervous fluid is enabled to act on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></a>[Pg 82]</span>
-brain as if unmuffled; and as its continuity from
-the orifices of the retina through space is not in any
-manner altered, so, to the altered electric condition,
-mesmerically effected, on the contents of the nerves
-between their orifices and the brain, we must attribute
-all mesmerically produced phenomena; and
-without supposing that the brain is quickened
-into a higher degree of sensibility, or that any one
-of its various organs has acquired some exalted
-degree of psychologic ability.</p>
-
-<p>That <i>long vision</i> and <i>opaque vision</i> should be consequences
-of cleansing, as it were, the nerves of
-intercepting minus-pressure matter, is nothing surprising,
-it is as removing dust from the window to
-better our vision: the physiology is traceable, and
-the psychology not more incomprehensible than its
-hourly occurrence in a minor degree, to which, as
-sensible effects, we are indebted for all we know,
-and by which we abide, without inquiry into their
-nature or origin; so perfect is the design of Nature
-in our make for supplying all that is requisite to
-the comfort and enjoyment of man in his present
-state of existence.</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="LONG_VISION" id="LONG_VISION"></a>Long vision</h3>
-<p class="p-h3">, during the clairvoyant state, or the
-recognition of objects greatly remote by the sensation
-each promotes, has its wonder much more in
-the <i>nature of the medium of space</i> than in the
-familiar mental effect. The optically promoted sensation
-is proof that the external object, were it at
-the antipodes, is in mediate connection with not
-only the nervous fluid of the retina, but the brain.
-Long and ordinary vision have the same theory: in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></a>[Pg 83]</span>
-both states the same chromatic cerebral organ is
-excited by the nervous fluid; in both the nervous fluid
-is continuous from the brain to the external body;
-and in both the object perceived is the sensation of
-colour. That the eye-ball lenses are concerned in
-long and opaque, as in short vision, however in the
-two former, the eyes may be bandaged (to satisfy
-the desire of spectators, otherwise useless, if not
-worse,) is obvious, from the knowledge of form being
-connected with the sensation, as in every instance
-of optically-excited perception.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>By the passes, the nervous fluid is freed from the
-visual intercepting electric matter; which matter,
-like the colouring matter in stained glass, renders
-the continuity of the visual medium or fluid within
-the optic nerve impaired.</p>
-
-<p>To account for the phenomenon of much longer
-than ordinary vision, there is nothing in the mesmeric
-case to effect the difference, or refer to, but
-the de-electrised condition of the nervous fluid.
-From which it would seem that the visual line from
-the most remote object, is always as continuous to
-the brain as from one within arm's length before
-the face; and that the degree of cerebral exciting
-pressure on the longer line is rendered equally efficacious,
-<i>now</i>, that the electric impediment has been
-removed from the nervous fluid; hence, that the
-normal intermixed quantity of electric matter with
-the nervous fluid prevents us being clairvoyant at
-all times, is reasonable to conclude.</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="OPAQUE_VISION" id="OPAQUE_VISION"></a>Opaque vision</h3>
-<p class="p-h3">, or the "seeing through opaque
-bodies," is not the absurdity so generally imagined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></a>[Pg 84]</span>
-when judged and reasoned on according to the true
-principles of visual perception: the facts of clairvoyance
-place the absurdity on the denier.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>As the medium of space furnishes all the nerves
-with the true and only cerebral exciting fluid, which
-is necessarily all-pervading, and proved to be so by
-the auditory sense, or "hearing through stone
-walls," the possibility of seeing through such bodies
-is made manifest, and <i>clairvoyantly</i>, has been
-proved. Misled by the idea that the eye-balls look
-through solid glass, yet cannot look through a stone,
-to doubt and deny is pardonable; yet nothing else
-is requisite, than that the visual medium shall be
-continuous from the object to the brain, no matter
-how many opaque objects lie between, for the perception
-being excited, and promoted by the remote
-object: the object perceived is the sensation of this or
-that colour, as in transparent vision. It is no ordinary
-circumstance, that of "seeing through opaque
-bodies;" neither is it an ordinary circumstance, the
-extreme de-electrised condition of the nervous
-fluid, <i>on which the extra-ordinary of the phenomenon
-depends</i>. In removing the partial opacity of a
-crystal by means of fire, the hindrance to the visual
-continuity, electric matter, is displaced; but as no
-such electric displacement from a stone wall is
-effected or practicable, while to the clairvoyant the
-continuity is as were there no electric impediment
-in the wall, is proof additional that the medium of
-space, the common cerebral exciting cause, pervades
-all things, the human body included, and
-hence the being in <i>Report</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></a>[Pg 85]</span></p>
-
-<p>Now that mesmeric practice and proof have stifled
-all open opposition, by the influential ignorant, to
-the surprising truths of the science, that all persons
-cannot be mesmerised to the clairvoyant stage, is in
-nowise prejudicial to mesmerism, or to the <span class="smcap">science
-of the economy</span> being intimately connected with
-medical practice; neither are occasional failures by
-the clairvoyant, especially in trial tests, some of
-which exhibit samples of complicated confusion, as
-if for the purpose of suppression, instead of laudably
-exalting the all-important science of mesmerism.
-Had the very liberal offer of a hundred
-pounds been under less complicated conditions,
-the bank-note most certainly would have been
-deciphered and changed hands. Had the note been
-spread open, while enclosed between two plates of
-sheet-iron, and then read by the clairvoyant, the
-test would have been sufficient to convince the
-most steady, sturdy, staunch unbeliever, and the
-<i>dénouement</i> affirmative to every dispassionate observer.
-But from being folded line upon line, letter
-on letter, at least three deep, the misarrangement
-destroyed most effectually all reading order. A
-Newtonian would say, that, "the commixed rays
-proceeding from the several overlaid typographic
-characters, and from the lines placed tier over
-tier, could never form the image of even a single
-letter on the retina, with anything resembling
-legible clearness;" therefore the trial must fail
-most inevitably.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></a>[Pg 86]</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="RIGIDITY" id="RIGIDITY"></a>RIGIDITY.</h2>
-
-
-<p>None deny that rigidity of the limbs can be
-effected mesmerically; but all mistake who impute
-the phenomenon to muscular ability, irritability, or
-energy. All flesh is <i>inert</i>; all muscular fibrine is
-flexible, bends from its own weight when held
-horizontally, and over it the will has neither power
-nor influence. Then, how is a muscle or nerve to
-stiffen itself, and where is the mechanical arrangement
-within for such purpose? The power is
-derived from without, and consists in medium of
-space. The de-electrising passes make entrance-room
-for influent medium of space, which is the
-cause of the limbs becoming rigid. As in Bramah's
-pump, water serves the purpose of an iron piston,
-so, within the nerves and muscles, medium of space
-in excess and under the general pressure, is an
-equally rigid piston, and the cause of all muscular
-strength and of rigidity. The depolarizing passes
-bring back electric matter, which displaces all
-excess of medium of space, and with it the physical
-cause of rigidity.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="PAIN" id="PAIN"></a>PAIN.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Pain is not removed but prevented by means of
-the passes. It is not excited in the mesmerised
-patient during severe surgical operations, because
-the movements of the brain, as is said of a watch
-with the finger on a wheel, are stopped.</p>
-
-<p>General insensibility being effected by pressure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></a>[Pg 87]</span>
-of the surgeon's finger on the brain of a fractured
-skull, so is it mesmerically effected by the nervous
-fluid, which has suffered increase as the nerves have
-been de-electrised by the passes.</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="CURATIVE_MESMERISM" id="CURATIVE_MESMERISM"></a><span class="correction" title="Inserted from the Table of Contents.">Curative Mesmerism.</span></h3>
-<p class="p-h3">&mdash;
-The curative principle of mesmerism seems to
-consist in correcting occasional irregularities in the
-<i>electric circulation</i>. By the passes, electric matter
-in excess is removed, which, from being noxious to
-the part, might contribute to the formation of mucus
-to become concrete, or otherwise injurious to the
-flesh: or, the passes may transfer the excess to
-supply deficiency elsewhere,&mdash;as in the case of gout,
-a disease of the sufferer's own making, from excess
-of de-electrising food and drink, which uncoats and
-unlines the nerves, and thus leaves the nervous fluid,
-from casual circumstances, to almost lacerate the
-brain. Stomach coating aliment, not denuding
-physic, is the cure: as electric matter may become
-a constituent of the humidities of the different
-organs, so may it of the serous fluid, which is
-indispensable to wholesome flesh. In all such cases
-mesmerism is curative.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="ETHERS" id="ETHERS"></a><span class="correction" title="Inserted from the Table of Contents.">Ethers.</span></h3>
-<p class="p-h3">&mdash;
-From inhaled <i>ethers</i>, producing insensibility without
-rigidity, it would seem that they contribute a kind
-of electric matter to the interior of the nerves, but
-which, from being uncongenial, is happily soon displaced.
-All excess being the more prejudicial, the
-quicker the displacement the better. Any ether
-imparted to the fluids of the nerves, may effect reduction
-in the quantity of the true fluid through the
-cuticle orifices; or make breaks in what is left,
-so as to leave the nervous fluid incompetent to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></a>[Pg 88]</span>
-produce excitement of the brain; hence the insensibility
-of the patient, if that can be considered
-insensibility, when there is nothing of pain of which
-to be insensible.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Etherising by external application, but which
-may not amount to mesmerizing, is nothing new.
-A Dublin apothecary, sixty years since, cured the
-poor daily of nervous complaints, headaches especially,
-by pressing a folded handkerchief on the
-forehead, taken from a wide-mouth jar, concealed
-with professional delicacy, behind the counter, but
-long since discontinued; the learned in the laws of
-life and living, considering that short-hand work is
-a forbidden practice,&mdash;that something newest in the
-last <i>Pharmacop&oelig;ia</i> is better than the best, for all
-parties. Tobacco-smoking brings on a degree of
-insensibility, and mesmerically conduces to sleep,
-which exertion frustrates. The smoke of the fire
-in London stayed the plague in the year 1666.
-The subject is worthy of consideration by the mesmerizing
-physician, in case of epidemics especially.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="REPORT" id="REPORT"></a>REPORT.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The being in report one with another, the mesmerised
-with the mesmeriser, is proved possible,
-and from being effected by the passes is proved
-also to be natural,&mdash;not satanic or supernatural, the
-weakest of all ideas. Within Nature there can be
-nothing supernatural; nor out of Nature, or of the
-other worlds, anything in the power of living man or
-poor human nature to command or imitate. How<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></a>[Pg 89]</span>ever,
-as believers are not reasoners, except in the
-arithmetic of funds, to the reformer <i>Time</i>, must be
-left the conversion to Reason.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the whole of Nature there is nothing
-insulated, not even an atom. Involved in a universal
-medium of pressure, all things must be in contact,
-mediate or immediate. The atmosphere is a
-universal connecting link. As by the sea the most
-distantly-situated islands are in mediate connection,
-so are all mankind by means of the atmosphere.
-Still this atmospheric connection is limited to margin
-with margin, surface with surface. By the all-pervading
-medium of space, the interior of all living
-beings is in mediate connection, equally as the interior
-of submerged sponges by the water. As
-"light" would pervade and connect our bodies
-were they glass, so does the medium of space. But
-were mankind so left, it is difficult to conceive how
-the organic functions could possibly take place, and
-impossible to say how personal individuality could
-be, as at present, an independent animal privilege.</p>
-
-<p>Although the medium of space is continuous
-through all bodies, the regular continuity is impaired
-by the elements of the atmosphere between
-each. The atmosphere not only protects all living
-bodies against the maximum and all excess of pressure,
-but in some considerable degree insulates the
-bodies of persons from each other, just as fog and
-small snow intercept the visual continuity and would
-render "rays of light" interruptedly continuous; so
-do the intermixed atoms of the atmosphere the regular
-continuity of the medium of space between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></a>[Pg 90]</span>
-person and person, as respects surfaces. Within the
-body, insulation is still more complete: here, electric
-matter and air abound to the exclusion of all
-excess of medium of space; by which the different
-organs remain, in a manner disconnected, or so far,
-as that the functional action of each organ has its
-distinct period, instead of the action of the whole
-being simultaneously performed. Beside these
-means and degrees of insulation, the non-conducting
-coating and lining of the nerves insulate more completely
-their elementary contents, by which the
-nerves are not only tubes of separation but insulation,
-and are direct conducting channels of the
-nervous fluid through the body from its external
-source to the brain.</p>
-
-<p>Although man is thus isolated from man, the
-isolating means do not prevent the medium of
-space being continuous through all, and from one
-to another; which is manifested by the clairvoyant,
-who has the like of the sensation excited in the
-brain of the mesmeriser repeated or excited in his
-own brain; as when the mesmeriser masticates and
-the sensation of the same flavour is known by the
-mesmerised. The sensation is nothing transferable;
-taste is not by the tongue; hence, by the sensation
-being excited in succession in the brain of each
-person, is the only conceivable mode, in reason,
-why the second should know what the first is masticating.
-The nervous fluid of the two may be
-supposed to be derived from the medium of space
-between them; then, by the medium of space lying
-between, the nervous fluids of the two are rendered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></a>[Pg 91]</span>
-continuous one with the other, and is so at all
-times, but only when the nervous fluid is mesmerically
-de-electrised is it productive of clairvoyant
-perceptions. Community of sensation, or the <i>same</i>
-sensation being perceived by different persons, is an
-impossibility. The first sensation is only where it
-has been excited, in the brain of the mesmeriser; and
-supposing the matter of the nervous fluid continuous
-direct from his brain to that of the patient, in it,
-what has the latter to perceive?&mdash;nothing; neither
-is perception separable in idea from the result of
-cerebral excitement. It is to be hoped that the
-desultory ideas here advanced may tend to a better
-knowledge on this singular mesmeric discovery.
-Even the foregoing may be objected to with apparent
-reason, on consideration of what is termed "community
-of thought," wherein there is no previous
-sensation to be repeated. To account for which
-requires more cerebral information than has as yet
-been brought to light; when satisfactorily known it
-may show, whether or not community in dreaming
-may be effected. Report would be impossible were
-there not intimate connection of brain with brain.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="VOLUNTARY_DE-ELECTRISATION" id="VOLUNTARY_DE-ELECTRISATION"></a>VOLUNTARY DE-ELECTRISATION.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Every motion of the limbs being effected by pressure,
-to promote the local change minus-pressure
-matter has to be displaced. That the assent of will
-is indispensable is evident, inasmuch as there is no
-<i>ordinary</i> limb motion, if not previously assented
-to by the will. Yet will is no mechanical power,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></a>[Pg 92]</span>
-nor anything having a distinct existence. Will
-seems to be, the mutual accordance of the cerebral
-organs to act together so as to effect, or rather
-assist, the accomplishing of a present intention. The
-act may be likened to that of suction, voluntarily performed
-by the brain to de-electrise itself, in order to
-make room for and receive that which lies in the
-way of the desired object being effected. The voluntary
-act by the brain cannot be on anything far
-away, or not in contact with the brain, and that
-which is acted on must be continuous to the place of
-the removable impediment. If, then, the brain does
-de-electrise itself, and that by so doing it receives
-electric matter from the nerves which are continuous
-from the limb to the brain, such removal of
-electric matter is effected within the nerves of the
-limb, as makes space for medium of space to enter
-in the requisite quantity to move the limb according
-to the required velocity. It is not to be overlooked,
-that, previous to the self de-electrisation of
-the brain, thought may be concerned in promoting
-the cerebral de-electrising act. So far as the foregoing
-may be true, the like circumstances take place
-when the mesmeriser wills into report with himself
-the far-off patient, the electric matter in the space
-between being affected with as much facility, as the
-transfer of similar matter from the trough to the
-utmost extent of the galvanic wire, which may be
-considered instantaneous, considering the hundreds
-of miles distance between.</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="WILL" id="WILL"></a><span class="correction" title="Inserted from the Table of Contents.">The Nature and Power of Will.</span></h3>
-<p class="p-h3">&mdash;
-The power of effecting, voluntarily, the transfer of
-electric matter from one part of the interior of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></a>[Pg 93]</span>
-body to a different, seems to belong, in some necessary
-degree, to all bodies possessed of life. The
-object is to make space for medium of space to
-enter, and by its pressure to put the animal in a
-state of locomotion. The snake, worm, and snail
-do so to be pressed onward along the ground; the
-oyster, to have the shells firmly collapsed; the limpit,
-to be pressed against the rock; and each, cerebrally
-wills the replacement of electric matter to displace
-the cause of pressure, medium of space, for the
-grovelling reptile to be at rest&mdash;the oyster, that the
-shells may be opened; the limpit, when willing to
-fall into the water. The fly, lizard, and walrus, so
-de-electrise the body, as to reverse the direction of
-what is supposed to be their natural weight, by
-which means each becomes pressed upwards, and
-walks with the back downwards&mdash;which, to be consistent
-with the established philosophy, should be
-considered <i>repellent gravitation</i>. The goat voluntarily
-de-electrises his body to have it pressed with
-double force against the slippery rock; the lynx, to
-have mesmeric long vision; the cat, to have opaque
-vision, or "see through the dark;" the fire-fly, to
-effect reduction of the optic pressure productive of
-sensations of colour. The carrier-pigeon effects
-self de-electrisation to the clairvoyant degree, by
-which the external object, the turret at Constantinople,
-promotes the sensation which indicates at
-once the shortest direction of flight from London
-to the birth-place of the bird. The eagle de-electrises
-itself inwardly, the same as if by the mesmeric
-passes, to promote olfactory lucidity, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></a>[Pg 94]</span>
-which to ascertain the presence of carrion on the
-ground. Fishes effect internal de-electrisation, somehow
-by means of the contents of the swim, for
-influent medium of space to propel the body with
-a velocity superior to the power of the short, flexible
-fins. The flight of birds is not effected by wing
-motion, or wing powers. The crow, eagle, and kite
-sail in all directions on extended motionless wing,
-and the odd wing-flap now and then given, is only
-to assist in keeping the body in the necessary electric
-condition. The swallow is darted most rapidly
-through the air with closed wing, and changes
-acutely, without way, the direction of flight, by
-changing instantaneously the direction of impulse.
-With the greatest wing-agitation the hawk remains
-at times stationary in the air. The fish, bird, and
-bullet are impelled by the same cause, pressure, by
-the medium of space on the de-electrised rear.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The cow and goat voluntarily de-electrise the
-cud, for medium of space to enter and press it
-upwards through the food-passage which the cud
-presses against, instead of being raised by nerves or
-muscles of the esophagus. In parturition also, and the
-discharge of the feces, the same principles are maintained.
-The "throes of Nature" are consequent on
-the natural pressure being made intermitting, by
-electric matter returning to and escaping from the
-birth at intervals. The physiologist may refer to
-muscular action; but where are the delivery muscles?
-The stage-dancer makes de-electrising efforts to
-receive medium of space, by which to be lifted
-above the boards and supported a few seconds in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></a>[Pg 95]</span>
-the air. Muscles at full stretch in opposite directions,
-and the fulcrum, if any, being carried by
-them, is out of all dynamic rule. All persons make
-a de-electrising effort previous to the leap-spring,
-and while continuing to stand or run and tiptoe,
-without being aware of the reason; and the fatigue
-is not muscular, but in keeping the body fittingly
-de-electrised.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>gymnotus electricus</i> kills the distant prey
-instantaneously, which receives nothing whatever of
-missile from the enemy; nor could the latter be
-accessary to the death-stroke, were there nothing
-between to connect one with the other: nothing
-passing and no connecting means, no outstretched
-arm or instrument touching that which is to be
-acted on, is a mechanical absurdity, and is attributing
-an effect to that which, it may be said, is an absent
-cause. The eel voluntarily performs the cerebral
-operation on the electric matter which is continuous
-from itself through the air to the marked prey,
-which effects instantaneous removal of the same
-matter from the prey; which permits medium of
-space at the same instant to give the de-electrised
-part the death-blow.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="APPLICATION_OF_MESMERISM" id="APPLICATION_OF_MESMERISM"></a>APPLICATION OF MESMERISM.</h2>
-
-
-<p>First. A National Asylum, to be named, <span class="smcap">The
-British Mesmeric Institution</span>, should be founded
-and endowed. England should take the lead. A
-Professorship of Magnetism should be founded. All
-Sanatory Asylums to be obliged to furnish their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></a>[Pg 96]</span>
-experience periodically, and be under control of the
-Institution, which should be possessed of power to
-undiploma the medical practitioner who refuses to
-mesmerise. Self-mesmerising to Clairvoyance, to be
-taught, which is as teachable as ventriloquism; the
-principle is the same of both,&mdash;the theory is that of
-sound.</p>
-
-<p>Through self-mesmerising, the blind and eyeless
-would be extricated occasionally from the shadow
-leading to the valley of death and be enabled to
-follow some useful calling. Some blind, illiterate
-clairvoyant, may have superior <i>connoisseurship</i>, entitling
-him to fill the academic chair. Through
-mesmerism the resuscitating process can be brought
-under rules of science. Through clairvoyance the
-geography of the globe may yet be improved; the
-northern passage discovered; the astronomer assisted
-in his stellar speculations beyond the possibility
-of mere telescopic discovery. On ship-board,
-the voluntary clairvoyant may make discovery of
-the haze-hidden lighthouse and wave-hidden shoal.
-In the hands of the clairvoyant the telescope and
-microscope, will, in time, make us acquainted
-with other worlds, other beings, and other of the
-wonderful works of the <span class="smcap">Great God of Nature</span>!</p>
-
-<p>The Seeker after God from the book of God's
-own composing, the holy volume of his own works,
-through voluntary clairvoyance, will feel himself in
-the enjoyment of a second nature, the fit inhabitant
-of an intellectual world, in which the powers of
-thought are without limits. And who can say what
-discovery of abstract truths may not be elicited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></a>[Pg 97]</span>
-from the conversation of two or more clairvoyants
-in mutual report, all of exalted talent and superior
-education? Other worlds, ere this be past, may
-open to our view, and their inhabitants become clairvoyantly
-familiar to human observation. The idea
-is pregnant with hope; it presumes that we are not
-inhabitants of only the earth, but the universe;
-which may be considered a natural, <i>never</i>-dying
-hope. Why, then, should the science be opposed
-which has already been so beneficial to our species,
-and promises to make known the never yet discovered
-wonders of the animal economy? Surely
-they will be yet ashamed of having done those things,
-the fruit of which is the bitterness of remorse.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="CONTINUOUS_MOTION" id="CONTINUOUS_MOTION"></a>CONTINUOUS MOTION.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The motion which continues after the body has
-ceased to be in contact with the <i>sensible</i> impelling
-cause, is named continuous motion. The body
-impelled receives neither force nor motion from the
-impelling cause: neither force nor motion is anything
-transferrable or anything communicable; forcible
-velocity and change of place are but accidents of
-matter, and but local, casual circumstances of
-bodies. Being <i>inert</i>, the body cannot move itself.
-Motion, therefore, is but a physical effect, and must
-have a cause equal to the duration of the effect:
-motion after impulse has ceased, would be effect
-without cause&mdash;which is an absurdity and impossibility;
-therefore impulse is constant as motion, however
-insensible the impelling cause. These dynamic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></a>[Pg 98]</span>
-principles cannot be too frequently brought to mind,
-considering the general erroneous opinion on the
-subject which maintains, that "a body continues in
-motion because it cannot stop itself;" which is effect
-without its equal of cause.</p>
-
-<p>A body in motion is under unequal pressure on
-opposite sides, greater on the rear than front. The
-air in front resists, that in the rear may be said to
-recede from the body; therefore neither impels the
-projectile. Under such circumstances there remains
-but the alternative, that of the electric constitution
-of the body being changed by the previous
-impulse, by which medium of space accumulates
-on one side, or decreases on the opposite. The
-phenomenon admits of being thus illustrated:</p>
-
-<p>The first, previous or sensible impulse, effects
-de-electrisation of the body on the rear or side of
-impulse; influent medium of space immediately
-occupies the vacated rear, and by its pressure impels
-the body through the air. The velocity of the
-previous impulse, gives momentum to the body
-greater than the included freely-removable elementary
-matter can obtain; of consequence the latter
-is left behind in the air, and the pressure of the
-acquired medium of space in the rear, is the continuous
-impelling cause. Thus is the mistake of
-Dugald Stuart made evident, that "motion is the
-immediate and only effect of impulse."</p>
-
-<p>It is not the air's resistance which makes the
-motion of a projectile decline and end. Taking
-impulse as ten, resistance four, there remains six
-degrees of unresisted impulse, which should impel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></a>[Pg 99]</span>
-the body for ever through the atmosphere. The
-decline and cessation of impulse is that which brings
-the projectile to rest.</p>
-
-<p>From the instant the body has ceased to be in
-contact with the sensible impelling cause, electric
-matter is re-entering the rear, which displaces
-gradually the impelling medium; and as are the
-increments of the former, so are the decrements of
-the latter, and so is the decline of motion.</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="ASCENDING_AND_DESCENDING_MOTION" id="ASCENDING_AND_DESCENDING_MOTION"></a>Ascending and Descending Motion.</h3>
-<p class="p-h3">&mdash;The rear of
-the vertically-impelled body becomes vacated of
-minus-pressure matter, and replaced with medium
-of space; by the latter, and general pressure, the
-body is forced upwards as a cork by water. While
-ascending, the rear is acquiring electric matter and
-losing the impelling medium,&mdash;the velocity of course
-declines; and when at the highest, the body is at
-rest in the air for an instant, then is precipitated to
-the ground. During the entire of the descent,
-electric matter is vacating the rear and medium of
-space entering, consequently the fall is accelerated.
-Now as the body cannot fall of itself; as descending
-motion is of increasing velocity, while motion
-in every other direction is retarded; and, because
-all descent has the same <i>centripetal</i> direction, so
-should there be some distinct cause to produce
-these conspicuous effects, which, to trace, suggest
-the following hypothesis:</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="CENTRIPETAL_FLOW" id="CENTRIPETAL_FLOW"></a>Centripetal Flow.</h3>
-<p class="p-h3">&mdash;The different motions of the
-globe affect all bodies on its surface, so as to
-appear to the inhabitants as if the whole were at
-rest; supposing thence, that the centre of the earth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></a>[Pg 100]</span>
-is the centre of motion, the following may be considered
-probable consequences:&mdash;The general pressure
-being less at the centre and axis than on the
-surface of the earth, obliges the medium of space
-to flow through the atmosphere and entire surface,
-<i>centripetally</i>, to the centre, thence along the axis,
-carrying with it electric matter, and has exit at the
-poles, which polarizes the globe and produces the
-boreales. The centripetal flow retains the atmosphere
-to the earth; precipitates bodies from the air
-in a centripetal direction; accelerates the descent;
-and retards all motion not in its own direction: it
-prevents vertical ascent being equal to impulse, the
-difference being employed in bearing against the
-flow. The flow makes bodies ponderate or have
-weight, causes the dip and direction of the compass-needle.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chap">
-<h2><a name="FORMATION_OF_A_PLANET" id="FORMATION_OF_A_PLANET"></a>FORMATION OF A PLANET.</h2>
-
-
-<p>That cannot be considered a chaotic state from
-which the eternal order sprung; nor that a created
-body, the substance of which previously existed,
-which was and is common to all bodies. Hence it
-may be concluded that a planet is a natural production,
-equally as the instantly-formed ponderous
-atmospheric aërolite, supposed to have come from
-the moon.</p>
-
-<p>From the elementary to the aëriform, thence the
-aqueous state, seems the simplest and primeval
-order of atomic combination. Hence it is conceivable,
-that, were an immense volume of the general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></a>[Pg 101]</span>
-elements collected together in the regions of space,
-and subjected to extreme pressure, the result would
-be an aqueous sphere, with an attached residue of
-the same elements to serve as a primeval atmosphere
-to receive increase from future mists and
-exhalations. While aqueous and with one side only
-of the sphere facing the sun, the elements of the
-water cannot avoid being in a state of constant disturbance
-and transfer, productive of combinations,
-formations, and precipitations until the equilibrium
-has obtained, leaving ultimately the solid masses so
-formed, as they would now appear were the ocean
-away: the original water, from having contributed
-the elements of the newly-formed solids, being
-reduced in quantity and changed in quality, is left
-as the ocean is at present, saline. During the
-intermediate plastic state, and as induration increased,
-the endowed fertility may have produced
-<i>kinds</i>, many of which have become extinct.</p>
-
-<p>It may be further assumed, that deep within the
-planet the elements abound in neither kind nor
-quantity as at the surface and in the atmosphere;
-and if the imponderable oxygen element be absent,
-an immense mass of ice would form the nucleus
-of the earth, the occasional melting at the surface
-of which, in the neighbourhood of sulphurous and
-ferruginous masses, may cause those volcanic eruptions
-from which no region of the earth is free.
-Thus it would seem that a planet may be the
-natural formation of an instant, requiring time for
-completion, and may be an everyday circumstance
-in space.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102"></a>[Pg 102]</span></p>
-
-<p>The strict inquirer into terrestrial magnetism has
-to ascertain, whether the non-conducting central
-ice be not the means, some how, of separating the
-correlative fluids which the centripetal flow carries
-with it along the axis through the Poles, and which
-make the Poles magnetic opposites; or, whether, of
-these fluids, one only is transmissible through ice.</p>
-
-<p>A planet may be subject to wear and the fertility
-to decrease, thence to be uninhabitable, as Herschel
-describes the very probable condition of the moon,
-owing to the rapid motion through space, solar
-effects and cultivation. The idea is neither gloomy
-nor a threatened dread. Man was born to leave
-this world, and live where <span class="smcap">God</span> has pleased. Some
-anticipate the night, when we shall see "our
-God in terror, and our world on fire!"&mdash;"undoing
-all, as all had never been," or made in vain. But
-He who blessed and never cursed his works, whose
-mercy and goodness endureth for ever, and who
-will "save both man and beast," is not a God
-of terror!</p>
-
-<p>Why the planets are moved round the sun, all in
-the same direction, excites speculation in the absence
-of demonstration. Let it be supposed that the
-inequalities in a newly-formed planet prevent the
-body being at rest under the general pressure; in
-which case the planet is put into its primeval
-motion, and in the direction of the strongest impulsive
-pressure. But as the like inequalities precisely,
-cannot present in every new planet, neither could
-the motion of all be in the same direction, which
-gives room for conceiving the probability that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></a>[Pg 103]</span>
-portion of the medium, however extensive, in which
-the solar system is involved, revolves round the
-sun, or round the orbit of the sun, and that its
-motion is promoted by the sun in the solar orbit,&mdash;which
-orbit may probably be promoted by the
-rarity of the elements in the solar regions. The
-medium of space so revolving, determines the direction
-of all the planets, which by the hypothesis
-must be the same as that of the revolving medium.</p>
-
-<p>By some such means only is it conceivable how
-solar matter can arrive at Neptune, the Earth, or
-even Mercury,&mdash;the <i>inert</i> sun being incapable of
-radiating anything from itself, and solar atoms
-requiring a physical impelling cause, in motion, and
-acting on the rear of each from the sun to the
-extreme of planetary space. A circulating medium
-of constantly-increasing radius, appears indispensably
-necessary for the purpose of conveying solar
-matter through the regions of space, and for the
-maintaining all planetary motion in the same uniform
-direction. The subject is open to all, and worthy
-of notice: what is now advanced will be passed
-over, from having no mathematical appendage, but
-which, makes even false causes pass for the demonstrated
-truth. The mathematical science has not
-to this day demonstrated the cause of planetary
-motion,&mdash;a subject wholly indifferent to modern
-astronomy, in which the false, self-gravitation, in
-connection with <i>inertia</i>, satisfies all as long as the
-astronomer remains self-satisfied.</p>
-
-<div class="div-h3">
-<h3><a name="COMET" id="COMET"></a><span class="correction" title="Inserted from the Table of Contents.">Formation and Use of a Comet.</span></h3>
-<p class="p-h3">&mdash;
-A <i>Comet</i> may have been a planet by formation,
-and impelled, before completion, immeasurably far<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104"></a>[Pg 104]</span>
-beyond the sun. The tail is probably the primitive
-atmosphere, left behind and pressed after the body
-as towards a sheltering wall; the <i>coma</i> may be
-electric matter collected on the front, and subject
-to increase, which, by lessening pressure on the
-side facing the direction of motion, and without
-increased pressure on the opposite side, may cause
-the velocity of the planet to be subject to acceleration,
-or prevent the motion being equitable: the
-reticulated tail may serve to collect all redundant
-solar matter in space, after planetary use, for deposit
-in the solar regions, or the sun as the heart
-of the system, for future circulation. Were the
-tail to approach the earth sufficiently near, the
-waters of the sea would be pressed upwards as
-towards an immense water-spout; in which case
-the rivers must become drained; and as the Comet
-recedes from the earth, the fall of the immense
-column would produce <i>another general deluge</i> over
-one hemisphere, at least, of the globe! The deposits
-from a comet's tail may occasion those nebulocities
-named solar spots.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center">Tyler and Reed, Printers, Bolt-court, London.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-</div>
-<div class="chap bbox transnote">
-<h2><a name="TN" id="TN"></a>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE.</h2>
-<p>Archaic, dialectical and unusual spellings and usage have been
-maintained. Obvious typos have been fixed as detailed below.
-Changes are noted in the text like <span class="correction" title="Original text shown here.">this</span>.
-<span class="not-mobile"> Hovering over the underlined word or phrase will display the original text.</span></p>
-
-<p class="mobile">The cover image was developed at Project Gutenberg
-Distributed Proofreaders (pgdp.net) and is in the public domain.</p>
-
-<p>Table of Contents entries with no corresponding centered title in the original book have
-been indented and the titles have been inserted inline.</p>
-
-<table id="changes" summary="Transcriber's changes">
-<tr>
- <td class="vtop">Page <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>:</td>
- <td>DEDICATION&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;iii<br />
- ADVERTISEMENT&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;v<br />
- TABLE OF CONTENTS&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;vii<br />
- MESMERISM AND ESTABLISHED PHILOSOPHY&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>PHILOSOPHY, THE ESTABLISHED&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">THE USE OF OXYGEN IN PROMOTING COMBUSTION&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;42</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>&mdash;&mdash;, ITS USE IN COMBUSTION&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;42</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">USE OF THE INSPIRED OXYGEN WITHIN THE SYSTEM&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;56</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>USE OF OXYGEN IN RESPIRATION&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;56</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop vtop" >Page <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">NATURAL SLEEP&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;65<br />
- COMATOSE FLOW&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;66<br />
- MESMERIC SLEEP&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;68</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="vtop">In the original book:</td>
- <td>SLEEP, NATURAL&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;65<br />
- &mdash;&mdash;, MESMERIC&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;68<br />
- COMATOSE FLOW&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;66</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop vtop">Page <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">TRANSPARENCY&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;77<br />
- OPACITY&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;77</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="vtop">In the original book:</td>
- <td>TRANSPARENCY AND OPACITY&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;77</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop vtop">Page <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">MESMERISM, CURATIVE&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;87<br />
- ETHERS&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;87</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="vtop">In the original book:</td>
- <td>ETHERS&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;87<br />
- MESMERISM, CURATIVE&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;87</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop vtop">Page <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>(inserted)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_10">10</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">an excruciating, painless toothache, and,</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>an excruciating, painless toothach, and,</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_24">24</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">velocity and direction makes no exception.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>velocity and direction makes no exeption.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_41">41</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">constituent of every aëriform body</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>constituent of every acriform body</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_42">42</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">In this twofold manner of service</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>In this two-fold manner of service</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_43">43</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">suffers de-electrisation and acquires medium</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>suffers de-electrisation and acquiries medium</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_55">55</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">within the stomach, or in the tea-cup</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>within the stomach, or in the teacup</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_56">56</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">the accumulation of minus-pressure matter in</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>the accumulation of minus pressure-matter in</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_56">56</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">which is compensated by minus-pressure matter</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>which is compensated by minus pressure-matter</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_58">58</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">the arterialising, minus-pressure, imponderable</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>the arterialising, minus pressure, imponderable</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_58">58</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">losing the arterialising minus-pressure matter</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>losing the arterialising minus pressure matter</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_59">59</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">the venous flow on the minus-pressure capillary</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>the venous flow on the minus pressure capillary</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_59">59</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop"><i>Use of the Spleen.</i>&mdash;The <span class="smcap">spleen</span>, from being an</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>The <span class="smcap">spleen</span>, from being an</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_60">60</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop"><i>How the Diaphragm Is Raised.</i>&mdash;The <i>diaphragm</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>The <i>diaphragm</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_66">66</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop"><i>Comatose Flow.</i>&mdash;It must have been observed by</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>It must have been observed by</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_72">72</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop">above the horizon, the general optic</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>above the horiozn, the general optic</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_87">87</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop"><i>Curative Mesmerism.</i>&mdash;The curative principle of</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>The curative principle of</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_87">87</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop"><i>Ethers.</i>&mdash;From inhaled <i>ethers</i>, producing</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>From inhaled <i>ethers</i>, producing</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_92">92</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop"><i>The Nature and Power of Will.</i>&mdash;The power of</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>The power of</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tntop">Page <a href="#Page_103">103</a>:</td>
- <td class="tntop"><i>Formation and Use of a Comet.</i>&mdash;A <i>Comet</i> may</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>In the original book:</td>
- <td>A <i>Comet</i> may</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philosophy Which Shows the
-Physiology of Mesmerism and Explains the Phenomenon of Clairvoyance, by T. H. Pasley
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