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+Project Gutenberg's The Machinery of the Universe, by Amos Emerson Dolbear
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Machinery of the Universe
+ Mechanical Conceptions of Physical Phenomena
+
+Author: Amos Emerson Dolbear
+
+Release Date: July 18, 2009 [EBook #29444]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MACHINERY OF THE UNIVERSE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Andrew D. Hwang, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+_THE ROMANCE OF SCIENCE_
+
+
+THE MACHINERY OF THE UNIVERSE
+
+MECHANICAL CONCEPTIONS OF
+PHYSICAL PHENOMENA
+
+
+BY
+A. E. DOLBEAR, A.B., A.M., M.E., PH.D.
+
+PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY, TUFTS COLLEGE, MASS.
+
+
+PUBLISHED UNDER GENERAL LITERATURE COMMITTEE.
+
+
+LONDON:
+SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE,
+NORTHUMBERLAND AVENUE, W.C.;
+43, QUEEN VICTORIA STREET, E.C.
+
+BRIGHTON: 129, NORTH STREET.
+
+NEW YORK: E. & J. B. YOUNG & CO.
+
+1897.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+For thirty years or more the expressions "Correlation of the Physical
+Forces" and "The Conservation of Energy" have been common, yet few
+persons have taken the necessary pains to think out clearly what
+mechanical changes take place when one form of energy is transformed
+into another.
+
+Since Tyndall gave us his book called _Heat as a Mode of Motion_ neither
+lecturers nor text-books have attempted to explain how all phenomena are
+the necessary outcome of the various forms of motion. In general,
+phenomena have been attributed to _forces_--a metaphysical term, which
+explains nothing and is merely a stop-gap, and is really not at all
+needful in these days, seeing that transformable modes of motion, easily
+perceived and understood, may be substituted in all cases for forces.
+
+In December 1895 the author gave a lecture before the Franklin Institute
+of Philadelphia, on "Mechanical Conceptions of Electrical Phenomena," in
+which he undertook to make clear what happens when electrical phenomena
+appear. The publication of this lecture in _The Journal of the Franklin
+Institute_ and in _Nature_ brought an urgent request that it should be
+enlarged somewhat and published in a form more convenient for the
+public. The enlargement consists in the addition of a chapter on the
+"_Contrasted Properties of Matter and the Ether_," a chapter containing
+something which the author believes to be of philosophical importance in
+these days when electricity is so generally described as a phenomenon of
+the ether.
+
+A. E. DOLBEAR.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+Ideas of phenomena ancient and modern, metaphysical and
+ mechanical--Imponderables--Forces, invented and
+ discarded--Explanations--Energy, its factors, Kinetic
+ and Potential--Motions, kinds and transformations
+ of--Mechanical, molecular, and atomic--Invention of
+ Ethers, Faraday's conceptions p. 7
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+Properties of Matter and Ether compared--Discontinuity
+ _versus_ Continuity--Size of atoms--Astronomical
+ distances--Number of atoms in the universe--Ether
+ unlimited--Kinds of Matter, permanent qualities
+ of--Atomic structure; vortex-rings, their
+ properties--Ether structureless--Matter
+ gravitative, Ether not--Friction in Matter, Ether
+ frictionless--Chemical properties--Energy in
+ Matter and in Ether--Matter as a transformer
+ of Energy--Elasticity--Vibratory rates and
+ waves--Density--Heat--Indestructibility of
+ Matter--Inertia in Matter and in Ether--Matter
+ not inert--Magnetism and Ether waves--States
+ of Matter--Cohesion and chemism affected by
+ temperature--Shearing stress in Solids and in
+ Ether--Ether pressure--Sensation dependent upon
+ Matter--Nervous system not affected by Ether
+ states--Other stresses in Ether--Transformations
+ of Motion--Terminology p. 24
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Antecedents of Electricity--Nature of what is
+ transformed--Series of transformations for the
+ production of light--Positive and negative
+ Electricity--Positive and negative twists--Rotations
+ about a wire--Rotation of an arc--Ether a
+ non-conductor--Electro-magnetic waves--Induction
+ and inductive action--Ether stress and atomic
+ position--Nature of an electric current--Electricity
+ a condition, not an entity p. 94
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+Ideas of phenomena ancient and modern, metaphysical and
+ mechanical--Imponderables--Forces, invented and
+ discarded--Explanations--Energy, its factors, Kinetic
+ and Potential--Motions, kinds and transformations
+ of--Mechanical, molecular, and atomic--Invention of
+ Ethers, Faraday's conceptions.
+
+'And now we might add something concerning a most subtle spirit
+ which pervades and lies hid in all gross bodies, by the force
+ and action of which spirit the particles of bodies attract
+ each other at near distances, and cohere if contiguous, and
+ electric bodies operate at greater distances, as well repelling
+ as attracting neighbouring corpuscles, and light is emitted,
+ reflected, inflected, and heats bodies, and all sensation is
+ excited, and members of animal bodies move at the command of
+ the will.'--NEWTON, _Principia_.
+
+
+In Newton's day the whole field of nature was practically lying fallow.
+No fundamental principles were known until the law of gravitation was
+discovered. This law was behind all the work of Copernicus, Kepler, and
+Galileo, and what they had done needed interpretation. It was quite
+natural that the most obvious and mechanical phenomena should first be
+reduced, and so the _Principia_ was concerned with mechanical principles
+applied to astronomical problems. To us, who have grown up familiar with
+the principles and conceptions underlying them, all varieties of
+mechanical phenomena seem so obvious, that it is difficult for us to
+understand how any one could be obtuse to them; but the records of
+Newton's time, and immediately after this, show that they were not so
+easy of apprehension. It may be remembered that they were not adopted in
+France till long after Newton's day. In spite of what is thought to be
+reasonable, it really requires something more than complete
+demonstration to convince most of us of the truth of an idea, should the
+truth happen to be of a kind not familiar, or should it chance to be
+opposed to our more or less well-defined notions of what it is or ought
+to be. If those who labour for and attain what they think to be the
+truth about any matter, were a little better informed concerning mental
+processes and the conditions under which ideas grow and displace others,
+they would be more patient with mankind; teachers of every rank might
+then discover that what is often called stupidity may be nothing else
+than mental inertia, which can no more be made active by simply willing
+than can the movement of a cannon ball by a like effort. We _grow_ into
+our beliefs and opinions upon all matters, and scientific ideas are no
+exceptions.
+
+Whewell, in his _History of the Inductive Sciences_, says that the
+Greeks made no headway in physical science because they lacked
+appropriate ideas. The evidence is overwhelming that they were as
+observing, as acute, as reasonable as any who live to-day. With this
+view, it would appear that the great discoverers must have been men who
+started out with appropriate ideas: were looking for what they found.
+If, then, one reflects upon the exceeding great difficulty there is in
+discovering one new truth, and the immense amount of work needed to
+disentangle it, it would appear as if even the most successful have but
+indistinct ideas of what is really appropriate, and that their
+mechanical conceptions become clarified by doing their work. This is not
+always the fact. In the statement of Newton quoted at the head of this
+chapter, he speaks of a spirit which lies hid in all gross bodies, etc.,
+by means of which all kinds of phenomena are to be explained; but he
+deliberately abandons that idea when he comes to the study of light, for
+he assumes the existence and activity of light corpuscles, for which he
+has no experimental evidence; and the probability is that he did this
+because the latter conception was one which he could handle
+mathematically, while he saw no way for thus dealing with the other. His
+mechanical instincts were more to be trusted than his carefully
+calculated results; for, as all know, what he called "spirits," is what
+to-day we call the ether, and the corpuscular theory of light has now no
+more than a historic interest. The corpuscular theory was a mechanical
+conception, but each such corpuscle was ideally endowed with qualities
+which were out of all relation with the ordinary matter with which it
+was classed.
+
+Until the middle of the present century the reigning physical philosophy
+held to the existence of what were called imponderables. The phenomena
+of heat were explained as due to an imponderable substance called
+"caloric," which ordinary matter could absorb and emit. A hot body was
+one which had absorbed an imponderable substance. It was, therefore, no
+heavier than before, but it possessed ability to do work proportional to
+the amount absorbed. Carnot's ideal engine was described by him in terms
+that imply the materiality of heat. Light was another imponderable
+substance, the existence of which was maintained by Sir David Brewster
+as long as he lived. Electricity and magnetism were imponderable fluids,
+which, when allied with ordinary matter, endowed the latter with their
+peculiar qualities. The conceptions in each case were properly
+mechanical ones _part_ (but not all) _of the time_; for when the
+immaterial substances were dissociated from matter, where they had
+manifested themselves, no one concerned himself to inquire as to their
+whereabouts. They were simply off duty, but could be summoned, like the
+genii in the story of Aladdin's Lamp. Now, a mechanical conception of
+any phenomenon, or a mechanical explanation of any kind of action, must
+be mechanical all the time, in the antecedents as well as the
+consequents. Nothing else will do except a miracle.
+
+During the fifty years, from about 1820 to 1870, a somewhat different
+kind of explanation of physical events grew up. The interest that was
+aroused by the discoveries in all the fields of physical science--in
+heat, electricity, magnetism and chemistry--by Faraday, Joule,
+Helmholtz, and others, compelled a change of conceptions; for it was
+noticed that each special kind of phenomenon was preceded by some other
+definite and known kind; as, for instance, that chemical action preceded
+electrical currents, that mechanical or electrical activity resulted
+from changing magnetism, and so on. As each kind of action was believed
+to be due to a special force, there were invented such terms as
+mechanical force, electrical force, magnetic, chemical and vital forces,
+and these were discovered to be convertible into one another, and the
+"doctrine of the correlation of the physical forces" became a common
+expression in philosophies of all sorts. By "convertible into one
+another," was meant, that whenever any given force appeared, it was at
+the expense of some other force; thus, in a battery chemical force was
+changed into electrical force; in a magnet, electrical force was changed
+into magnetic force, and so on. The idea here was the _transformation of
+forces_, and _forces_ were not so clearly defined that one could have a
+mechanical idea of just what had happened. That part of the philosophy
+was no clearer than that of the imponderables, which had largely dropped
+out of mind. The terminology represented an advance in knowledge, but
+was lacking in lucidity, for no one knew what a force of any kind was.
+
+The first to discover this and to repudiate the prevailing terminology
+were the physiologists, who early announced their disbelief in a vital
+force, and their belief that all physiological activities were of purely
+physical and chemical origin, and that there was no need to assume any
+such thing as a vital force. Then came the discovery that chemical
+force, or affinity, had only an adventitious existence, and that, at
+absolute zero, there was no such activity. The discovery of, or rather
+the appreciation of, what is implied by the term _absolute zero_, and
+especially of the nature of heat itself, as expressed in the statement
+that heat is a mode of motion, dismissed another of the so-called forces
+as being a metaphysical agency having no real existence, though standing
+for phenomena needing further attention and explanation; and by
+explanation is meant _the presentation of the mechanical antecedents for
+a phenomenon, in so complete a way that no supplementary or unknown
+factors are necessary_. The train moves because the engine pulls it; the
+engine pulls because the steam pushes it. There is no more necessity for
+assuming a steam force between the steam and the engine, than for
+assuming an engine force between the engine and the train. All the
+processes are mechanical, and have to do only with ordinary matter and
+its conditions, from the coal-pile to the moving freight, though there
+are many transformations of the forms of motion and of energy between
+the two extremes.
+
+During the past thirty years there has come into common use another
+term, unknown in any technical sense before that time, namely, _energy_.
+What was once called the conservation of force is now called the
+conservation of energy, and we now often hear of forms of energy. Thus,
+heat is said to be a form of energy, and the forms of energy are
+convertible into one another, as the so-called forces were formerly
+supposed to be transformable into one another. We are asked to consider
+gravitative energy, heat energy, mechanical energy, chemical energy, and
+electrical energy. When we inquire what is meant by energy, we are
+informed that it means ability to do work, and that work is measurable
+as a pressure into a distance, and is specified as foot-pounds. A mass
+of matter moves because energy has been spent upon it, and has acquired
+energy equal to the work done on it, and this is believed to hold true,
+no matter what the kind of energy was that moved it. If a body moves, it
+moves because another body has exerted pressure upon it, and its energy
+is called _kinetic energy_; but a body may be subject to pressure and
+not move appreciably, and then the body is said to possess potential
+energy. Thus, a bent spring and a raised weight are said to possess
+potential energy. In either case, _an energized body receives its energy
+by pressure, and has ability to produce pressure on another body_.
+Whether or not it does work on another body depends on the rigidity of
+the body it acts upon. In any case, it is simply a mechanical
+action--body A pushes upon body B (Fig. 1). There is no need to assume
+anything more mysterious than mechanical action. Whether body B moves
+this way or that depends upon the direction of the push, the point of
+its application. Whether the body be a mass as large as the earth or as
+small as a molecule, makes no difference in that particular. Suppose,
+then, that _a_ (Fig. 2) spends its energy on _b_, _b_ on _c_, _c_ on
+_d_, and so on. The energy of _a_ gives translatory motion to _b_, _b_
+sets _c_ vibrating, and _c_ makes _d_ spin on some axis. Each of these
+has had energy spent on it, and each has some form of energy different
+from the other, but no new factor has been introduced between _a_ and
+_d_, and the only factor that has gone from _a_ to _d_ has been
+motion--motion that has had its direction and quality changed, but not
+its nature. If we agree that energy is neither created nor annihilated,
+by any physical process, and if we assume that _a_ gave to _b_ all its
+energy, that is, all its motion; that _b_ likewise gave its all to _c_,
+and so on; then the succession of phenomena from _a_ to _d_ has been
+simply the transference of a definite amount of motion, and therefore of
+energy, from the one to the other; for _motion has been the only
+variable factor_. If, furthermore, we should agree to call the
+translatory motion [alpha], the vibratory motion [beta], the
+rotary [gamma], then we should have had a conversion of [alpha]
+into [beta], of [beta] into [gamma]. If we should consider
+the amount of transfer motion instead of the kind of motion, we should
+have to say that the [alpha] energy had been transformed into
+[beta] and the [beta] into [gamma].
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 1.]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 2.]
+
+What a given amount of energy will do depends only upon its _form_, that
+is, the kind of motion that embodies it.
+
+The energy spent upon a stone thrown into the air, giving it translatory
+motion, would, if spent upon a tuning fork, make it sound, but not move
+it from its place; while if spent upon a top, would enable the latter to
+stand upon its point as easily as a person stands on his two feet, and
+to do other surprising things, which otherwise it could not do. One can,
+without difficulty, form a mechanical conception of the whole series
+without assuming imponderables, or fluids or forces. Mechanical motion
+only, by pressure, has been transferred in certain directions at certain
+rates. Suppose now that some one should suddenly come upon a spinning
+top (Fig. 3) while it was standing upon its point, and, as its motion
+might not be visible, should cautiously touch it. It would bound away
+with surprising promptness, and, if he were not instructed in the
+mechanical principles involved, he might fairly well draw the conclusion
+that it was actuated by other than simple mechanical principles, and,
+for that reason, it would be difficult to persuade him that there was
+nothing essentially different in the body that appeared and acted thus,
+than in a stone thrown into the air; nevertheless, that statement would
+be the simple truth.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 3.]
+
+All our experience, without a single exception, enforces the proposition
+that no body moves in any direction, or in any way, except when some
+other body _in contact_ with it presses upon it. The action is direct.
+In Newton's letter to his friend Bentley, he says--"That one body
+should act upon another through empty space, without the mediation of
+anything else by and through which their action and pressure may be
+conveyed from one to another, is to me so great an absurdity that I
+believe no man who has in philosophical matters a competent faculty of
+thinking can ever fall into it."
+
+For mathematical purposes, it has sometimes been convenient to treat a
+problem as if one body could act upon another without any physical
+medium between them; but such a conception has no degree of rationality,
+and I know of no one who believes in it as a fact. If this be granted,
+then our philosophy agrees with our experience, and every body moves
+because it is pushed, and the mechanical antecedent of every kind of
+phenomenon is to be looked for in some adjacent body possessing
+energy--that is, the ability to push or produce pressure.
+
+It must not be forgotten that energy is not a simple factor, but is
+always a product of two factors--a mass with a velocity, a mass with a
+temperature, a quantity of electricity into a pressure, and so on. One
+may sometimes meet the statement that matter and energy are the two
+realities; both are spoken of as entities. It is much more philosophical
+to speak of matter and motion, for in the absence of motion there is no
+energy, and the energy varies with the amount of motion; and
+furthermore, to understand any manifestation of energy one must inquire
+what kind of motion is involved. This we do when we speak of mechanical
+energy as the energy involved in a body having a translatory motion;
+also, when we speak of heat as a vibratory, and of light as a wave
+motion. To speak of energy without stating or implying these
+distinctions, is to speak loosely and to keep far within the bounds of
+actual knowledge. To speak thus of a body possessing energy, or
+expending energy, is to imply that the body possesses some kind of
+motion, and produces pressure upon another body because it has motion.
+Tait and others have pointed out the fact, that what is called potential
+energy must, in its nature, be kinetic. Tait says--"Now it is impossible
+to conceive of a truly dormant form of energy, whose magnitude should
+depend, in any way, upon the unit of time; and we are forced to conclude
+that potential energy, like kinetic energy, depends (even if unexplained
+or unimagined) upon motion." All this means that it is now too late to
+stop with energy as a final factor in any phenomenon, that the _form of
+motion_ which embodies the energy is the factor that determines _what_
+happens, as distinguished from how _much_ happens. Here, then, are to be
+found the distinctions which have heretofore been called forces; here
+is embodied the proof that direct pressure of one body upon another is
+what causes the latter to move, and that the direction of movement
+depends on the point of application, with reference to the centre
+of mass.
+
+It is needful now to look at the other term in the product we call
+energy, namely, the substance moving, sometimes called matter or mass.
+It has been mentioned that the idea of a medium filling space was
+present to Newton, but his gravitation problem did not require that he
+should consider other factors than masses and distances. The law of
+gravitation as considered by him was--Every particle of matter attracts
+every other particle of matter with a stress which is proportional to
+the product of their masses, and inversely to the squares of the
+distance between them. Here we are concerned only with the statement
+that every particle of matter attracts every other particle of matter.
+Everything then that possesses gravitative attraction is matter in the
+sense in which that term is used in this law. If there be any other
+substance in the universe that is not thus subject to gravitation, then
+it is improper to call it matter, otherwise the law should read, "Some
+particles of matter attract," etc., which will never do.
+
+We are now assured that there is something else in the universe which
+has no gravitative property at all, namely, the ether. It was first
+imagined in order to account for the phenomena of light, which was
+observed to take about eight minutes to come from the sun to the earth.
+Then Young applied the wave theory to the explanation of polarization
+and other phenomena; and in 1851 Foucault proved experimentally that the
+velocity of light was less in water than in air, as it should be if the
+wave theory be true, and this has been considered a crucial experiment
+which took away the last hope for the corpuscular theory, and
+demonstrated the existence of the ether as a space-filling medium
+capable of transmitting light-waves known to have a velocity of 186,000
+miles per second. It was called the luminiferous ether, to distinguish
+it from other ethers which had also been imagined, such as electric
+ether for electrical phenomena, magnetic ether for magnetic phenomena,
+and so on--as many ethers, in fact, as there were different kinds of
+phenomena to be explained.
+
+It was Faraday who put a stop to the invention of ethers, by suggesting
+that the so-called luminiferous ether might be the one concerned in all
+the different phenomena, and who pointed out that the arrangement of
+iron filings about a magnet was indicative of the direction of the
+stresses in the ether. This suggestion did not meet the approval of the
+mathematical physicists of his day, for it necessitated the abandonment
+of the conceptions they had worked with, as well as the terminology
+which had been employed, and made it needful to reconstruct all their
+work to make it intelligible--a labour which was the more distasteful as
+it was forced upon them by one who, although expert enough in
+experimentation, was not a mathematician, and who boasted that the most
+complicated mathematical work he ever did was to turn the crank of a
+calculating machine; who did all his work, formed his conclusions, and
+then said--"The work is done; hand it over to the computers."
+
+It has turned out that Faraday's mechanical conceptions were right.
+Every one now knows of Maxwell's work, which was to start with Faraday's
+conceptions as to magnetic phenomena, and follow them out to their
+logical conclusions, applying them to molecules and the reactions of the
+latter upon the ether. Thus he was led to conclude that light was an
+electro-magnetic phenomenon; that is, that the waves which constitute
+light, and the waves produced by changing magnetism were identical in
+their nature, were in the same medium, travelled with the same velocity,
+were capable of refraction, and so on. Now that all this is a matter of
+common knowledge to-day, it is curious to look back no further than ten
+years. Maxwell's conclusions were adopted by scarcely a physicist in
+the world. Although it was known that inductive action travelled with
+finite velocity in space, and that an electro-magnet would affect the
+space about it practically inversely as the square of the distance, and
+that such phenomena as are involved in telephonic induction between
+circuits could have no other meaning than the one assigned by Maxwell,
+yet nearly all the physicists failed to form the only conception of it
+that was possible, and waited for Hertz to devise apparatus for
+producing interference before they grasped it. It was even then so new,
+to some, that it was proclaimed to be a demonstration of the existence
+of the ether itself, as well as a method of producing waves short enough
+to enable one to notice interference phenomena. It is obvious that Hertz
+himself must have had the mechanics of wave-motion plainly in mind, or
+he would not have planned such experiments. The outcome of it all is,
+that we now have experimental demonstration, as well as theoretical
+reason for believing, that the ether, once considered as only
+luminiferous, is concerned in all electric and magnetic phenomena, and
+that waves set up in it by electro-magnetic actions are capable of being
+reflected, refracted, polarized, and twisted, in the same way as
+ordinary light-waves can be, and that the laws of optics are applicable
+to both.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+PROPERTIES OF MATTER AND ETHER
+
+Properties of Matter and Ether compared--Discontinuity
+ _versus_ Continuity--Size of atoms--Astronomical
+ distances--Number of atoms in the universe--Ether
+ unlimited--Kinds of Matter, permanent qualities
+ of--Atomic structure; vortex-rings, their
+ properties--Ether structureless--Matter
+ gravitative, Ether not--Friction in Matter, Ether
+ frictionless--Chemical properties--Energy in
+ Matter and in Ether--Matter as a transformer
+ of Energy--Elasticity--Vibratory rates and
+ waves--Density--Heat--Indestructibility of
+ Matter--Inertia in Matter and in Ether--Matter
+ not inert--Magnetism and Ether waves--States
+ of Matter--Cohesion and chemism affected by
+ temperature--Shearing stress in Solids and in
+ Ether--Ether pressure--Sensation dependent upon
+ Matter--Nervous system not affected by Ether
+ states--Other stresses in Ether--Transformations
+ of Motion--Terminology.
+
+
+A common conception of the ether has been that it is a finer-grained
+substance than ordinary matter, but otherwise so like the latter that
+the laws found to hold good with matter were equally applicable to the
+ether, and hence the mechanical conceptions formed from experience in
+regard to the one have been transferred to the other, and the properties
+belonging to one, such as density, elasticity, etc., have been asserted
+as properties of the other.
+
+There is so considerable a body of knowledge bearing upon the
+similarities and dissimilarities of these two entities that it will be
+well to compare them. After such comparison one will be better able to
+judge of the propriety of assuming them to be subject to identical laws.
+
+
+1. MATTER IS DISCONTINUOUS.
+
+Matter is made up of atoms having dimensions approximately determined to
+be in the neighbourhood of the one fifty-millionth of an inch in
+diameter. These atoms may have various degrees of aggregation;--they may
+be in practical contact, as in most solid bodies such as metals and
+rocks; in molecular groupings as in water, and in gases such as
+hydrogen, oxygen, and so forth, where two, three, or more atoms cohere
+so strongly as to enable the molecules to act under ordinary
+circumstances like simple particles. Any or all of these molecules and
+atoms may be separated by any assignable distance from each other. Thus,
+in common air the molecules, though rapidly changing their positions,
+are on the average about two hundred and fifty times their own diameter
+apart. This is a distance relatively greater than the distance apart of
+the earth and the moon, for two hundred and fifty times the diameter of
+the earth will be 8000 × 250 = 2,000,000 miles, while the distance to
+the moon is but 240,000 miles. The sun is 93,000,000 miles from the
+earth, and the most of the bodies of the solar system are still more
+widely separated, Neptune being nearly 3000 millions of miles from the
+sun. As for the fixed stars, they are so far separated from us that, at
+the present rate of motion of the solar system in its drift through
+space--500 millions of miles in a year--it would take not less than
+40,000 years to reach the nearest star among its neighbours, while for
+the more remote ones millions of years must be reckoned. The huge space
+separating these masses is practically devoid of matter; it is a vacuum.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS CONTINUOUS.
+
+The idea of continuity as distinguished from discontinuity may be gained
+by considering what would be made visible by magnification. Water
+appears to the eye as if it were without pores, but if sugar or salt be
+put into it, either will be dissolved and quite disappear among the
+molecules of the water as steam does in the air, which shows that there
+are some unoccupied spaces between the molecules. If a microscope be
+employed to magnify a minute drop of water it still shows the same lack
+of structure as that looked at with the unaided eye. If the magnifying
+power be the highest it may reveal a speck as small as the
+hundred-thousandth part of an inch, yet the speck looks no different in
+character. We know that water is composed of two different kinds of
+atoms, hydrogen and oxygen, for they can be separated by chemical means
+and kept in separate bottles, and again made to combine to form water
+having all the qualities that belonged to it before it was decomposed.
+If a very much higher magnifying power were available, we should
+ultimately be able to see the individual water molecules, and recognize
+their hydrogen and oxygen constituents by their difference in size, rate
+of movements, and we might possibly separate them by mechanical methods.
+What one would see would be something very different in structure from
+the water as it appears to our eyes. If the ether were similarly to be
+examined through higher and still higher magnifying powers, even up to
+infinity, there is no reason for thinking that the last examination
+would show anything different in structure or quality from that which
+was examined with low power or with no microscope at all. This is all
+expressed by saying that the ether is a continuous substance, without
+interstices, that it fills space completely, and, unlike gases,
+liquids, and solids, is incapable of absorbing or dissolving anything.
+
+
+2. MATTER IS LIMITED.
+
+There appears to be a definite amount of matter in the visible universe,
+a definite number of molecules and atoms. How many molecules there are
+in a cubic inch of air under ordinary pressure has been determined, and
+is represented approximately by a huge number, something like a thousand
+million million millions.
+
+When the diameter of a molecule has been measured, as it has been
+approximately, and found to be about one fifty-millionth of an inch,
+then fifty million in a row would reach an inch, and the cube of fifty
+million is 125,000,000000,000000,000000, one hundred and twenty-five
+thousand million million millions. In a cubic foot there will of course
+be 1728 times that number. One may if one likes find how many there may
+be in the earth, and moon, sun and planets, for the dimensions of them
+are all very well known. Only the multiplication table need be used, and
+the sum of all these will give how many molecules there are in the solar
+system. If one should feel that the number thus obtained was not very
+accurate, he might reflect that if there were ten times as many it would
+add but another cipher to a long line of similar ones and would not
+materially modify it. The point is that there is a definite, computable
+number. If one will then add to these the number of molecules in the
+more distant stars and nebulę, of which there are visible about
+100,000,000, making such estimate of their individual size as he thinks
+prudent, the sum of all will give the number of molecules in the visible
+universe. The number is not so large but it can be written down in a
+minute or two. Those who have been to the pains to do the sum say it may
+be represented by seven followed by ninety-one ciphers. One could easily
+compute how many molecules so large a space would contain if it were
+full and as closely packed as they are in a drop of water, but there
+would be a finite and not an infinite number, and therefore there is a
+limited number of atoms in the visible universe.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS UNLIMITED.
+
+The evidence for this comes to us from the phenomena of light.
+Experimentally, ether waves of all lengths are found to have a velocity
+of 186,000 miles in a second. It takes about eight minutes to reach us
+from the sun, four hours from Neptune the most distant planet, and from
+the nearest fixed star about three and a half years. Astronomers tell us
+that some visible stars are so distant that their light requires not
+less than ten thousand years and probably more to reach us, though
+travelling at the enormous rate of 186,000 miles a second. This means
+that the whole of space is filled with this medium. If there were any
+vacant spaces, the light would fail to get through them, and stars
+beyond them would become invisible. There are no such vacant spaces, for
+any part of the heavens shows stars beaming continuously, and every
+increase in telescopic power shows stars still further removed than any
+seen before. The whole of this intervening space must therefore be
+filled with the ether. Some of the waves that reach us are not more than
+the hundred-thousandth of an inch long, so there can be no crack or
+break or absence of ether from so small a section as the
+hundred-thousandth of an inch in all this great expanse. More than this.
+No one can think that the remotest visible stars are upon the boundary
+of space, that if one could get to the most distant star he would have
+on one side the whole of space while the opposite side would be devoid
+of it. Space we know is of three dimensions, and a straight line may be
+prolonged in any direction to an infinite distance, and a ray of light
+may travel on for an infinite time and come to no end provided space be
+filled with ether.
+
+How long the sun and stars have been shining no one knows, but it is
+highly probable that the sun has existed for not less than 1000 million
+years, and has during that time been pouring its rays as radiant energy
+into space. If then in half that time, or 500 millions of years, the
+light had somewhere reached a boundary to the ether, it could not have
+gone beyond but would have been reflected back into the ether-filled
+space, and such part of the sky would be lit up by this reflected light.
+There is no indication that anything like reflection comes to us from
+the sky. This is equivalent to saying that the ether fills space in
+every direction away from us to an unlimited distance, and so far is
+itself unlimited.
+
+
+3. MATTER IS HETEROGENEOUS.
+
+The various kinds of matter we are acquainted with are commonly called
+the elements. These when combined in various ways exhibit characteristic
+phenomena which depend upon the kinds of matter, the structure and
+motions which are involved. There are some seventy different kinds of
+this elemental matter which may be identified as constituents of the
+earth. Many of the same elements have been identified in the sun and
+stars, such for instance as hydrogen, carbon, and iron. Such phenomena
+lead us to conclude that the kinds of matter elsewhere in the universe
+are identical with such as we are familiar with, and that elsewhere the
+variety is as great. The qualities of the elements, within a certain
+range of temperature, are permanent; they are not subject to
+fluctuations, though the qualities of combinations of them may vary
+indefinitely. The elements therefore may be regarded as retaining their
+identity in all ordinary experience.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS HOMOGENEOUS.
+
+One part of the ether is precisely like any other part everywhere and
+always, and there are no such distinctions in it as correspond with the
+elemental forms of matter.
+
+
+4. MATTER IS ATOMIC.
+
+There is an ultimate particle of each one of the elements which is
+practically absolute and known as an atom. The atom retains its identity
+through all combinations and processes. It may be here or there, move
+fast or slow, but its atomic form persists.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS NON-ATOMIC.
+
+One might infer, from what has already been said about continuity, that
+the ether could not be constituted of separable particles like masses of
+matter; for no matter how minute they might be, there would be
+interspaces and unoccupied spaces which would present us with phenomena
+which have never been seen. It is the general consensus of opinion
+among those who have studied the subject that the ether is not atomic in
+structure.
+
+
+5. MATTER HAS DEFINITE STRUCTURE.
+
+Every atom of every element is so like every other atom of the same
+element as to exhibit the same characteristics, size, weight, chemical
+activity, vibratory rate, etc., and it is thus shown conclusively that
+the structural form of the elemental particles is the same for each
+element, for such characteristic reactions as they exhibit could hardly
+be if they were mechanically unlike.
+
+Of what form the atoms of an element may be is not very definitely
+known. The earlier philosophers assumed them to be hard round particles,
+but later thinkers have concluded that atoms of such a character are
+highly improbable, for they could not exhibit in this case the
+properties which the elements do exhibit. They have therefore dismissed
+such a conception from consideration. In place of this hypothesis has
+been substituted a very different idea, namely, that an atom is a
+vortex-ring[1] of ether floating in the ether, as a smoke-ring puffed
+out by a locomotive in still air may float in the air and show various
+phenomena.
+
+[Footnote 1: Vortex-rings for illustration may be made by having a
+wooden box about a foot on a side, with a round orifice in the middle of
+one side, and the side opposite covered with stout cloth stretched tight
+over a framework. A saucer containing strong ammonia water, and another
+containing strong hydrochloric acid, will cause dense fumes in the box,
+and a tap with the hand upon the cloth back will force out a ring from
+the orifice. These may be made to follow and strike each other,
+rebounding and vibrating, apparently attracting each other and being
+attracted by neighbouring bodies.
+
+By filling the mouth with smoke, and pursing the lips as if to make the
+sound _o_, one may make fifteen or twenty small rings by snapping the
+cheek with the finger.]
+
+A vortex-ring produced in the air behaves in the most surprising manner.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 4.--Method of making vortex-rings and their
+behaviour.]
+
+1. It retains its ring form and the same material rotating as it
+starts with.
+
+2. It can travel through the air easily twenty or thirty feet in a
+second without disruption.
+
+3. Its line of motion when free is always at right angles to the
+plane of the ring.
+
+4. It will not stand still unless compelled by some object. If
+stopped in the air it will start up itself to travel on without
+external help.
+
+5. It possesses momentum and energy like a solid body.
+
+6. It is capable of vibrating like an elastic body, making a
+definite number of such vibrations per second, the degree of
+elasticity depending upon the rate of vibration. The swifter the
+rotation, the more rigid and elastic it is.
+
+7. It is capable of spinning on its own axis, and thus having rotary
+energy as well as translatory and vibratory.
+
+8. It repels light bodies in front of it, and attracts into itself
+light bodies in its rear.
+
+9. If projected along parallel with the top of a long table, it will
+fall upon it every time, just as a stone thrown horizontally will
+fall to the ground.
+
+10. If two rings of the same size be travelling in the same line,
+and the rear one overtakes the other, the front one will enlarge its
+diameter, while the rear one will contract its own till it can go
+through the forward one, when each will recover its original
+diameter, and continue on in the same direction, but vibrating,
+expanding and contracting their diameters with regularity.
+
+11. If two rings be moving in the same line, but in opposite
+directions, they will repel each other when near, and thus retard
+their speed. If one goes through the other, as in the former case,
+it may quite lose its velocity, and come to a standstill in the air
+till the other has moved on to a distance, when it will start up in
+its former direction.
+
+12. If two rings be formed side by side, they will instantly collide
+at their edges, showing strong attraction.
+
+13. If the collision does not destroy them, they may either break
+apart at the point of the collision, and then weld together into a
+single ring with twice the diameter, and then move on as if a single
+ring had been formed, or they may simply bounce away from each
+other, in which case they always rebound _in a plane_ at right
+angles to the plane of collision. That is, if they collided on their
+sides, they would rebound so that one went up and the other down.
+
+14. Three may in like manner collide and fuse into a single ring.
+
+Such rings formed in air by a locomotive may rise wriggling in the air
+to the height of several hundred feet, but they are soon dissolved and
+disappear. This is because the friction and viscosity of the air robs
+the rings of their substance and energy. If the air were without
+friction this could not happen, and the rings would then be persistent,
+and would retain all their qualities.
+
+Suppose then that such rings were produced in a medium without friction
+as the ether is believed to be, they would be permanent structures with
+a variety of properties. They would occupy space, have definite form and
+dimensions, momentum, energy, attraction and repulsion, elasticity; obey
+the laws of motion, and so far behave quite like such matter as we know.
+For such reasons it is thought by some persons to be not improbable
+that the atoms of matter are minute vortex-rings of ether in the ether.
+That which distinguishes the atom from the ether is the form of motion
+which is embodied in it, and if the motion were simply arrested, there
+would be nothing to distinguish the atom from the ether into which it
+dissolved. In other words, such a conception makes the atoms of matter a
+form of motion of the ether, and not a created something put into the
+ether.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS STRUCTURELESS.
+
+If the ether be the boundless substance described, it is clear it can
+have no form as a whole, and if it be continuous it can have no minute
+structure. If not constituted of atoms or molecules there is nothing
+descriptive that can be said about it. A molecule or a particular mass
+of matter could be identified by its form, and is thus in marked
+contrast with any portion of ether, for the latter could not be
+identified in a similar way. One may therefore say that the ether is
+formless.
+
+
+6. MATTER IS GRAVITATIVE.
+
+The law of gravitation is held as being universal. According to it every
+particle of matter in the universe attracts every other particle. The
+evidence for this law in the solar system is complete. Sun, planets,
+satellites, comets and meteors are all controlled by gravitation, and
+the movements of double stars testify to its activity among the more
+distant bodies of the universe. The attraction does not depend upon the
+kind of matter nor the arrangement of molecules or atoms, but upon the
+amount or mass of matter present, and if it be of a definite kind of
+matter, as of hydrogen or iron, the gravitative action is proportional
+to the number of atoms.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS GRAVITATIONLESS.
+
+One might infer already that if the ether were structureless, physical
+laws operative upon such material substances as atoms could not be
+applicable to it, and so indeed all the evidence we have shows that
+gravitation is not one of its properties. If it were, and it behaved in
+any degree like atomic structures, it would be found to be denser in the
+neighbourhood of large bodies like the earth, planets, and the sun.
+Light would be turned from its straight path while travelling in such
+denser medium, or made to move with less velocity. There is not the
+slightest indication of any such effect anywhere within the range of
+astronomical vision.
+
+Gravitation then is a property belonging to matter and not to ether.
+The impropriety of thinking or speaking of the ether as matter of any
+kind will be apparent if one reflects upon the significance of the law
+of gravitation as stated. Every particle of matter in the universe
+attracts every other particle. If there be anything else in the universe
+which has no such quality, then it should not be called matter, else the
+law should read: Some particles of matter attract some other particles,
+which would be no law at all, for a real physical law has no exceptions
+any more than the multiplication table has. Physical laws are physical
+relations, and all such relations are quantitative.
+
+
+7. MATTER IS FRICTIONABLE.
+
+A bullet shot into the air has its velocity continuously reduced by the
+air, to which its energy is imparted by making it move out of its way. A
+railway train is brought to rest by the friction brake upon the wheels.
+The translatory energy of the train is transformed into the molecular
+energy called heat. The steamship requires to propel it fast, a large
+amount of coal for its engines, because the water in which it moves
+offers great friction--resistance which must be overcome. Whenever one
+surface of matter is moved in contact with another surface there is a
+resistance called friction, the moving body loses its rate of motion,
+and will presently be brought to rest unless energy be continuously
+supplied. This is true for masses of matter of all sizes and with all
+kinds of motion. Friction is the condition for the transformation of all
+kinds of mechanical motions into heat. The test of the amount of
+friction is the rate of loss of motion. A top will spin some time in the
+air because its point is small. It will spin longer on a plate than on
+the carpet, and longer in a vacuum than in the air, for it does not have
+the air friction to resist it, and there is no kind or form of matter
+not subject to frictional resistance.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS FRICTIONLESS.
+
+The earth is a mass of matter moving in the ether. In the equatorial
+region the velocity of a point is more than a thousand miles in an hour,
+for the circumference of the earth is 25,000 miles, and it turns once on
+its axis in 24 hours, which is the length of the day. If the earth were
+thus spinning in the atmosphere, the latter not being in motion, the
+wind would blow with ten times hurricane velocity. The friction would be
+so great that nothing but the foundation rocks of the earth's crust
+could withstand it, and the velocity of rotation would be reduced
+appreciably in a relatively short time. The air moves along with the
+earth as a part of it, and consequently no such frictional destruction
+takes place, but the earth rotates in the ether with that same rate, and
+if the ether offered resistance it would react so as to retard the
+rotation and increase the length of the day. Astronomical observations
+show that the length of the day has certainly not changed so much as the
+tenth of a second during the past 2000 years. The earth also revolves
+about the sun, having a speed of about 19 miles in a second, or 68,000
+miles an hour. This motion of the earth and the other planets about the
+sun is one of the most stable phenomena we know. The mean distance and
+period of revolution of every planet is unalterable in the long run. If
+the earth had been retarded by its friction in the ether the length of
+the year would have been changed, and astronomers would have discovered
+it. They assert that a change in the length of a year by so much as the
+hundredth part of a second has not happened during the past thousand
+years. This then is testimony, that a velocity of nineteen miles a
+second for a thousand years has produced no effect upon the earth's
+motion that is noticeable. Nineteen miles a second is not a very swift
+astronomical motion, for comets have been known to have a velocity of
+400 miles a second when in the neighbourhood of the sun, and yet they
+have not seemed to suffer any retardation, for their orbits have not
+been shortened. Some years ago a comet was noticed to have its periodic
+time shortened an hour or two, and the explanation offered at first was
+that the shortening was due to friction in the ether although no other
+comet was thus affected. The idea was soon abandoned, and to-day there
+is no astronomical evidence that bodies having translatory motion in the
+ether meet with any frictional resistance whatever. If a stone could be
+thrown in interstellar space with a velocity of fifty feet a second it
+would continue to move in a straight line with the same speed for any
+assignable time.
+
+As has been said, light moves with the velocity of 186,000 miles per
+second, and it may pursue its course for tens of thousands of years.
+There is no evidence that it ever loses either its wave-length or
+energy. It is not transformed as friction would transform it, else there
+would be some distance at which light of given wave-length and amplitude
+would be quite extinguished. The light from distant stars would be
+different in character from that coming from nearer stars. Furthermore,
+as the whole solar system is drifting in space some 500,000,000 of miles
+in a year, new stars would be coming into view in that direction, and
+faint stars would be dropping out of sight in the opposite direction--a
+phenomenon which has not been observed. Altogether the testimony seems
+conclusive that the ether is a frictionless medium, and does not
+transform mechanical motion into heat.
+
+
+8. MATTER IS ĘOLOTROPIC.
+
+That is, its properties are not alike in all directions. Chemical
+phenomena, crystallization, magnetic and electrical phenomena show each
+in their way that the properties of atoms are not alike on opposite
+faces. Atoms combine to form molecules, and molecules arrange themselves
+in certain definite geometric forms such as cubes, tetrahedra, hexagonal
+prisms and stellate forms, with properties emphasized on certain faces
+or ends. Thus quartz will twist a ray of light in one direction or the
+other, depending upon the arrangement which may be known by the external
+form of the crystal. Calc spar will break up a ray of light into two
+parts if the light be sent through it in certain directions, but not if
+in another. Tourmaline polarizes light sent through its sides and
+becomes positively electrified at one end while being heated. Some
+substances will conduct sound or light or heat or electricity better in
+one direction than in another. All matter is magnetic in some degree,
+and that implies polarity. If one will recall the structure of a
+vortex-ring, he will see how all the motion is inward on one side and
+outward on the other, which gives different properties to the two sides:
+a push away from it on one side and a pull toward it on the other.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS ISOTROPIC.
+
+That is, its properties are alike in every direction. There is no
+distinction due to position. A mass of matter will move as freely in one
+direction as in another; a ray of light of any wave-length will travel
+in it in one direction as freely as in any other; neither velocity nor
+direction are changed by the action of the ether alone.
+
+
+9. MATTER IS CHEMICALLY SELECTIVE.
+
+When the elements combine to form molecules they always combine in
+definite ways and in definite proportions. Carbon will combine with
+hydrogen, but will drop it if it can get oxygen. Oxygen will combine
+with iron or lead or sodium, but cannot be made to combine with
+fluorine. No more than two atoms of oxygen can be made to unite with one
+carbon atom, nor more than one hydrogen with one chlorine atom. There is
+thus an apparent choice for the kind and number of associates in
+molecular structure, and the instability of a molecule depends
+altogether upon the presence in its neighbourhood of other atoms for
+which some of the elements in the molecule have a stronger attraction
+or affinity than they have for the atoms they are now combined with.
+Thus iron is not stable in the presence of water molecules, and it
+becomes iron oxide; iron oxide is not stable in the presence of hot
+sulphur, it becomes an iron sulphide. All the elements are thus
+selective, and it is by such means that they may be chemically
+identified.
+
+There is no phenomenon in the ether that is comparable with this.
+Evidently there could not be unless there were atomic structures having
+in some degree different characteristics which we know the ether to be
+without.
+
+
+10. THE ELEMENTS OF MATTER ARE HARMONICALLY RELATED.
+
+It is possible to arrange the elements in the order of their atomic
+weights in columns which will show communities of property. Newlands,
+Mendeléeff, Meyer, and others have done this. The explanation for such
+an arrangement has not yet been forthcoming, but that it expresses a
+real fact is certain, for in the original scheme there were several gaps
+representing undiscovered elements, the properties of which were
+predicted from that of their associates in the table. Some of these have
+since been discovered, and their atomic weight and physical properties
+accord with those predicted.
+
+With the ether such a scheme is quite impossible, for the very evident
+reason that there are no different things to have relation with each
+other. Every part is just like every other part. Where there are no
+differences and no distinctions there can be no relations. The ether is
+quite harmonic without relations.
+
+
+11. MATTER EMBODIES ENERGY.
+
+So long as the atoms of matter were regarded as hard round particles,
+they were assumed to be inert and only active when acted upon by what
+were called forces, which were held to be entities of some sort,
+independent of matter. These could pull or push it here or there, but
+the matter was itself incapable of independent activity. All this is now
+changed, and we are called upon to consider every atom as being itself a
+form of energy in the same sense as heat or light are forms of energy,
+the energy being embodied in particular forms of motion. Light, for
+instance, is a wave motion of the ether. An atom is a rotary ring of
+ether. Stop the wave motion, and the light would be annihilated. Stop
+the rotation, and the atom would be annihilated for the same reason. As
+the ray of light is a particular embodiment of energy, and has no
+existence apart from it, so an atom is to be regarded as an embodiment
+of energy. On a previous page it is said that energy is the ability of
+one body to act upon and move another in some degree. An atom of any
+kind is not the inert thing it has been supposed to be, for it can do
+something. Even at absolute zero, when all its vibratory or heat energy
+would be absent, it would be still an elastic whirling body pulling upon
+every other atom in the universe with gravitational energy, twisting
+other atoms into conformity with its own position with its magnetic
+energy; and, if such ether rings are like the rings which are made in
+air, will not stand still in one place even if no others act upon it,
+but will start at once by its own inherent energy to move in a right
+line at right angles to its own plane and in the direction of the whirl
+inside the ring. Two rings of wood or iron might remain in contact with
+each other for an indefinite time, but vortex-rings will not, but will
+beat each other away as two spinning tops will do if they touch ever so
+gently. If they do not thus separate it is because there are other forms
+of energy acting to press them together, but such external pressure will
+be lessened by the rings' own reactions.
+
+It is true that in a frictionless medium like the ether one cannot at
+present see how such vortex-rings could be produced in it. Certainly not
+by any such mechanical methods as are employed to make smoke-rings in
+air, for the friction of the air is the condition for producing them.
+However they came to be, there is implied the previous existence of the
+ether and of energy in some form capable of acting upon it in a manner
+radically different from any known in physical science.
+
+There is good spectroscopic evidence that in some way elements of
+different kinds are now being formed in nebulę, for the simplest show
+the presence of hydrogen alone. As they increase in complexity other
+elements are added, until the spectrum exhibits all the elements we know
+of. It has thus seemed likely either that most of what are called
+elements are composed of molecular groupings of some fundamental
+element, which by proper physical methods might be decomposed, as one
+can now decompose a molecule of ammonia or sulphuric acid, or that the
+elements are now being created by some extra-physical process in those
+far-off regions. In either case an atom is the embodiment of energy in
+such a form as to be permanent under ordinary physical circumstances,
+but of which, if in any manner it should be destroyed, only the form
+would be lost. The ether would remain, and the energy which was embodied
+would be distributed in other ways.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS ENDOWED WITH ENERGY.
+
+The distinction between energy in matter and energy in the ether will be
+apparent, on considering that both the ether and energy in some form
+must be conceived as existing independent of matter; though every atom
+were annihilated, the ether would remain and all the energy embodied in
+the atoms would be still in existence in the ether. The atomic energy
+would simply be dissolved. One can easily conceive the ether as the same
+space-filling, continuous, unlimited medium, without an atom in it. On
+this assumption it is clear that no form of energy with which we have to
+deal in physical science would have any existence in the ether; for
+every one of those forms, gravitational, thermal, electric, magnetic, or
+any other--all are the results of the forms of energy in matter. If
+there were no atoms, there would be no gravitation, for that is the
+attraction of atoms upon each other. If there were no atoms, there could
+be no atomic vibration, therefore no heat, and so on for each and all.
+Nevertheless, if an atom be the embodiment of energy, there must have
+been energy in the ether before any atom existed. One of the properties
+of the ether is its ability to distribute energy in certain ways, but
+there is no evidence that of itself it ever transforms energy. Once a
+given kind of energy is in it, it does not change; hence for the
+apparition of a form of energy, like the first vortex-ring, there must
+have been not only energy, but some other agency capable of transforming
+that energy into a permanent structure. To the best of our knowledge
+to-day, the ether would be absolutely helpless. Such energy as was
+active in forming atoms must be called by another name than what is
+appropriate for such transformations as occur when, for instance, the
+mechanical energy of a bullet is transformed into heat when the target
+is struck. Behind the ether must be assumed some agency, directing and
+controlling energy in a manner totally different from any agency, which
+is operative in what we call physical science. Nothing short of what is
+called a miracle will do--an event without a physical antecedent in any
+way necessarily related to its factors, as is the fact of a stone
+related to gravity or heat to an electric current.
+
+Ether energy is an endowment instead of being an embodiment, and implies
+antecedents of a super-physical kind.
+
+
+12. MATTER IS AN ENERGY TRANSFORMER.
+
+As each different kind of energy represents some specific form of
+motion, and _vice versā_, some sort of mechanism is needful for
+transforming one kind into another, therefore molecular structure of
+one kind or another is essential. The transformation is a mechanical
+process, and matter in some particular and appropriate form is the
+condition of its taking place. If heat appears, then its antecedent has
+been some other form of motion acting upon the substance heated. It may
+have been the mechanical motion of another mass of matter, as when a
+bullet strikes a target and becomes heated; or it may be friction, as
+when a car-axle heats when run without proper oiling to reduce friction;
+or it may be condensation, as when tinder is ignited by condensing the
+air about it; or chemical reactions, when molecular structure is changed
+as in combustion, or an electrical current, which implies a dynamo and
+steam-engine or water-power. If light appears, its antecedent has been
+impact or friction, condensation or chemical action, and if electricity
+appears the same sort of antecedents are present. Whether the one or the
+other of these forms of energy is developed, depends upon what kind of a
+structure the antecedent energy has acted upon. If radiant energy,
+so-called, falls upon a mass of matter, what is absorbed is at once
+transformed into heat or into electric or magnetic effects; _which_ one
+of these depends upon the character of the mechanism upon which the
+radiant energy acts, but the radiant energy itself, which consists of
+ether-waves, is traceable back in every case to a mass of matter having
+definite characteristic motions.
+
+One may therefore say with certainty that every physical phenomenon is a
+change in the direction, or velocity, or character, of the energy
+present, and such change has been produced by matter acting as a
+transformer.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS A NON-TRANSFORMER.
+
+It has already been said that the absence of friction in the ether
+enables light-waves to maintain their identity for an indefinite time,
+and to an indefinitely great distance. In a uniform, homogeneous
+substance of any kind, any kind of energy which might be in it would
+continue in it without any change. Uniformity and homogeneity imply
+similarity throughout, and the necessary condition for transformation is
+unlikeness. One might not look for any kind of physical phenomenon which
+was not due to the presence and activity of some heterogeneity.
+
+As a ray of light continues a ray of light so long as it exists in free
+ether, so all kinds of radiations, of whatever wave-length, continue
+identical until they fall upon some mechanical structure called matter.
+Translatory motion continues translatory, rotary continues rotary, and
+vibratory continues to be vibratory, and no transforming change can
+take place in the absence of matter. The ether is helpless.
+
+
+13. MATTER IS ELASTIC.
+
+It is commonly stated that certain substances, like putty and dough, are
+inelastic, while some other substances, like glass, steel, and wood, are
+elastic. This quality of elasticity, as manifested in such different
+degrees, depends upon molecular combinations; some of which, as in glass
+and steel, are favourable for exhibiting it, while others mask it, for
+the ultimate atoms of all kinds are certainly highly elastic.
+
+The measure of elasticity in a mass of matter is the velocity with which
+a wave-motion will be transmitted through it. Thus the elasticity of the
+air determines the velocity of sound in it. If the air be heated, the
+elasticity is increased and the sound moves faster. The rates of such
+sound-conduction range from a few feet in a second to about 16,000, five
+times swifter than a cannon ball. In such elastic bodies as vibrate to
+and fro like the prongs of a tuning-fork, or give sounds of a definite
+pitch, the rate of vibration is determined by the size and shape of the
+body as well as by their elementary composition. The smaller a body is,
+the higher its vibratory rate, if it be made of the same material and
+the form remains the same. Thus a tuning-fork, that may be carried in
+the waistcoat-pocket, may vibrate 500 times a second. If it were only
+the fifty-millionth of an inch in size, but of the same material and
+form, it would vibrate 30,000,000000 times a second; and if it were made
+of ether, instead of steel, it would vibrate as many times faster as the
+velocity of waves in the ether is greater than it is in steel, and would
+be as many as 400,000000,000000 times per second. The amount of
+displacement, or the amplitude of vibration, with the pocket-fork might
+be no more than the hundredth of an inch, and this rate measured as
+translation velocity would be but five inches per second. If the fork
+were of atomic magnitude, and should swing its sides one half the
+diameter of the atom, or say the hundred-millionth of an inch, the
+translational velocity would be equivalent to about eighty miles a
+second, or a hundred and fifty times the velocity of a cannon ball,
+which may be reckoned at about 3000 feet.
+
+That atoms really vibrate at the above rate per second is very certain,
+for their vibrations produce ether-waves the length of which may be
+accurately measured. When a tuning-fork vibrates 500 times a second, and
+the sound travels 1100 feet in the same interval, the length of each
+wave will be found by dividing the velocity in the air by the number of
+vibrations, or 1100 ÷ 500 = 2.2 feet. In like manner, when one knows
+the velocity and wave-length, he may compute the number of vibrations by
+dividing the velocity by the wave-length. Now the velocity of the waves
+called light is 186,000 miles a second, and a light-wave may be one
+forty thousandth of an inch long. The atom that produces the wave must
+be vibrating as many times per second as the fifth thousandth of an inch
+is contained in 186,000 miles. Reducing this number to inches we have
+
+186,000 × 5280 × 12
+------------------- = 400,000,000,000,000, nearly.
+ 1/40,000
+
+This shows that the atoms are minute elastic bodies that change their
+form rapidly when struck. As rapid as the change is, yet the rate of
+movement is only one-fifth that of a comet when near the sun, and is
+therefore easily comparable with other velocities observed in masses of
+matter.
+
+These vibratory motions, due to the elasticity of the atoms, is what
+constitutes heat.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS ELASTIC.
+
+The elasticity of a mass of matter is its ability to recover its
+original form after that form has been distorted. There is implied that
+a stress changes its shape and dimensions, which in turn implies a
+limited mass and relative change of position of parts and some degree
+of discontinuity. From what has been said of the ether as being
+unlimited, continuous, and not made of atoms or molecules, it will be
+seen how difficult, if not impossible, it is to conceive how such a
+property as elasticity, as manifested in matter, can be attributed to
+the ether, which is incapable of deformation, either in structure or
+form, the latter being infinitely extended in every direction and
+therefore formless. Nevertheless, certain forms of motion, such as
+light-waves, move in it with definite velocity, quite independent of how
+they originate. This velocity of 186,000 miles a second so much exceeds
+any movement of a mass of matter that the motions can hardly be
+compared. Thus if 400 miles per second be the swiftest speed of any mass
+of matter known--that of a comet near the sun--the ether-wave moves
+186,000 ÷ 400 = 465 times faster than such comet, and 900,000 times
+faster than sound travels in air. It is clear that if this rate of
+motion depends upon elasticity, the elasticity must be of an entirely
+different type from that belonging to matter, and cannot be defined in
+any such terms as are employed for matter.
+
+If one considers gravitative phenomena, the difficulty is enormously
+increased. The orbit of a planet is never an exact ellipse,
+on account of the perturbations produced by the planetary
+attractions--perturbations which depend upon the direction and distance
+of the attracting bodies. These, however, are so well known that slight
+deviations are easily noticed. If gravitative attraction took any such
+appreciable time to go from one astronomical body to another as does
+light, it would make very considerable differences in the paths of the
+planets and the earth. Indeed, if the velocity of gravitation were less
+than a million times greater than that of light, its effects would have
+been discovered long ago. It is therefore considered that the velocity
+of gravitation cannot be less than 186000,000000 miles per second. How
+much greater it may be no one can guess. Seeing that gravitation is
+ether-pressure, it does not seem probable that its velocity can be
+infinite. However that may be, the ability of the ether to transmit
+pressure and various disturbances, evidently depends upon properties so
+different from those that enable matter to transmit disturbances that
+they deserve to be called by different names. To speak of the elasticity
+of the ether may serve to express the fact that energy may be
+transmitted at a finite rate in it, but it can only mislead one's
+thinking if he imagines the process to be similar to energy transmission
+in a mass of matter. The two processes are incomparable. No other word
+has been suggested, and perhaps it is not needful for most scientific
+purposes that another should be adopted, but the inappropriateness of
+the one word for the different phenomena has long been felt.
+
+
+14. MATTER HAS DENSITY.
+
+This quality is exhibited in two ways in matter. In the first, the
+different elements in their atomic form have different masses or atomic
+weights. An atom of oxygen weighs sixteen times as much as an atom of
+hydrogen; that is, it has sixteen times as much matter, as determined by
+weight, as the hydrogen atom has, or it takes sixteen times as many
+hydrogen atoms to make a pound as it takes of oxygen atoms. This is
+generally expressed by saying that oxygen has sixteen times the density
+of hydrogen. In like manner, iron has fifty-six times the density, and
+gold one hundred and ninety-six. The difference is one in the structure
+of the atomic elements. If one imagines them to be vortex-rings, they
+may differ in size, thickness, and rate of rotation; either of these
+might make all the observed difference between the elements, including
+their density. In the second way, density implies compactness of
+molecules. Thus if a cubic foot of air be compressed until it occupies
+but half a cubic foot, each cubic inch will have twice as many molecules
+in it as at first. The amount of air per unit volume will have been
+doubled, the weight will have been doubled, the amount of matter as
+determined by its weight will have been doubled, and consequently we say
+its density has been doubled.
+
+If a bullet or a piece of iron be hammered, the molecules are compacted
+closer together, and a greater number can be got into a cubic inch when
+so condensed. In this sense, then, density means the number of molecules
+in a unit of space, a cubic inch or cubic centimeter. There is implied
+in this latter case that the molecules do not occupy all the available
+space, that they may have varying degrees of closeness; in other words,
+matter is discontinuous, and therefore there may be degrees in density.
+
+
+THE ETHER HAS DENSITY.
+
+It is common to have the degree of density of the ether spoken of in the
+same way, and for the same reason, that its elasticity is spoken of. The
+rate of transmission of a physical disturbance, as of a pressure or a
+wave-motion in matter, is conditioned by its degree of density; that is,
+the amount of matter per cubic inch as determined by its weight; the
+greater the density the slower the rate. So if rate of speed and
+elasticity be known, the density may be computed. In this way the
+density of the ether has been deduced by noting the velocity of light.
+The enormous velocity is supposed to prove that its density is very
+small, even when compared with hydrogen. This is stated to be about
+equal to that of the air at the height of two hundred and ten miles
+above the surface of the earth, where the air molecules are so few that
+a molecule might travel for 60,000,000 miles without coming in collision
+with another molecule. In air of ordinary density, a molecule can on the
+average move no further than about the two-hundred-and-fifty-thousandth
+of an inch without such collision. It is plain the density of the ether
+is so far removed from the density of anything we can measure, that it
+is hardly comparable with such things. If, in addition, one recalls the
+fact that the ether is homogeneous, that is all of one kind, and also
+that it is not composed of atoms and molecules, then degree of
+compactness and number of particles per cubic inch have no meaning, and
+the term density, if used, can have no such meaning as it has when
+applied to matter. There is no physical conception gained from the study
+of matter that can be useful in thinking of it. As with elasticity, so
+density is inappropriately applied to the ether, but there is no
+substitute yet offered.
+
+
+15. MATTER IS HEATABLE.
+
+So long as heat was thought to be some kind of an imponderable thing,
+which might retain its identity whether it were in or out of matter,
+its real nature was obscured by the name given to it. An imponderable
+was a mysterious something like a spirit, which was the cause of certain
+phenomena in matter. Heat, light, electricity, magnetism, gravitation,
+were due to such various agencies, and no one concerned himself with the
+nature of one or the other. Bacon thought that heat was a brisk
+agitation of the particles of substances, and Count Rumford and Sir
+Humphrey Davy thought they proved that it could be nothing else, but
+they convinced nobody. Mayer in Germany and Joule in England showed that
+quantitative relations existed between work done and heat developed, but
+not until the publication of the book called _Heat as a Mode of Motion_,
+was there a change of opinion and terminology as to the nature of heat.
+For twenty years after that it was common to hear the expressions heat,
+and radiant heat, to distinguish between phenomena in matter and what is
+now called radiant energy radiations, or simply ether-waves. Not until
+the necessity arose for distinguishing between different forms of
+energy, and the conditions for developing them, did it become clear to
+all that a change in the form of energy implied a change in the form of
+motion that embodied it. The energy called heat energy was proved to be
+a vibratory motion of molecules, and what happened in the ether as a
+result of such vibrations is no longer spoken of as heat, but as ether
+waves. When it is remembered that the ultimate atoms are elastic bodies,
+and that they will, if free, vibrate in a periodic manner when struck or
+shaken in any way, just as a ball will vibrate after it is struck, it is
+easy to keep in mind the distinction between the mechanical form of
+motion spent in striking and the vibratory form of the motion produced
+by it. The latter is called heat; no other form of motion than that is
+properly called heat. It is this alone that represents temperature, the
+rate and amplitude of such atomic and molecular vibrations as constitute
+change, of form. Where molecules like those in a gas have some freedom
+of movement between impacts, they bound away from each other with
+varying velocities. The path of such motion may be long or short,
+depending upon the density or compactness of the molecules, but such
+changes in position are not heat for a molecule any more than the flight
+of a musket ball is heat, though it may be transformed into heat on
+striking the target.
+
+This conception of heat as the rapid change in the form of atoms and
+molecules, due to their elasticity, is a phenomenon peculiar to matter.
+It implies a body possessing form that may be changed; elasticity, that
+its changes may be periodic, and degrees of freedom that secure space
+for the changes. Such a body may be heated. Its temperature will depend
+upon the amplitude of such vibrations, and will be limited by the
+maximum amplitude.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS UNHEATABLE.
+
+The translatory motion of a mass of matter, big or little, through the
+ether, is not arrested in any degree so far as observed, but the
+internal vibratory motion sets up waves in the ether, the ether absorbs
+the energy, and the amplitude is continually lessened. The motion has
+been transferred and transformed; transferred from matter to the ether,
+and transformed from vibratory to waves travelling at the rate of
+186,000 miles per second. The latter is not heat, but the result of
+heat. With the ether constituted as described, such vibratory motion as
+constitutes heat is impossible to it, and hence the characteristic of
+heat-motion in it is impossible; it cannot therefore be heated. The
+space between the earth and the sun may have any assignable amount of
+energy in the form of ether waves or light, but not any temperature. One
+might loosely say that the temperature of empty spaces was absolute
+zero, but that would not be quite correct, for the idea of temperature
+cannot properly be entertained as applicable to the ether. To say that
+its temperature was absolute zero, would serve to imply that it might be
+higher, which is inadmissible.
+
+When energy has been transformed, the old name by which the energy was
+called must be dropped. Ether cannot be heated.
+
+
+16. MATTER IS INDESTRUCTIBLE.
+
+This is commonly said to be one of the essential properties of matter.
+All that is meant by it, however, is simply this: In no physical or
+chemical process to which it has been experimentally subjected has there
+been any apparent loss. The matter experimented upon may change from a
+solid or liquid to a gas, or the molecular change called chemical may
+result in new compounds, but the weight of the material and its atomic
+constituents have not appreciably changed. That matter cannot be
+annihilated is only the converse of the proposition that matter cannot
+be created, which ought always to be modified by adding, by physical or
+chemical processes at present known. A chemist may work with a few
+grains of a substance in a beaker, or test-tube, or crucible, and after
+several solutions, precipitations, fusions and dryings, may find by
+final weighing that he has not lost any appreciable amount, but how much
+is an appreciable amount? A fragment of matter the ten-thousandth of an
+inch in diameter has too small a weight to be noted in any balance, yet
+it would be made up of thousands of millions of atoms. Hence if, in the
+processes to which the substance had been subjected, there had been the
+total annihilation of thousands of millions of atoms, such phenomenon
+would not have been discovered by weighing. Neither would it have been
+discovered if there had been a similar creation or development of new
+matter. All that can be asserted concerning such events is, that they
+have not been discovered with our means of observation.
+
+The alchemists sought to transform one element into another, as lead
+into gold. They did not succeed. It was at length thought to be
+impossible, and the attempt to do it an absurdity. Lately, however,
+telescopic observation of what is going on in nebulę, which has already
+been referred to, has somewhat modified ideas of what is possible and
+impossible in that direction. It is certainly possible roughly to
+conceive how such a structure as a vortex-ring in the ether might be
+formed. With certain polarizing apparatus it is possible to produce rays
+of circularly polarized light. These are rays in which the motion is an
+advancing rotation like the wire in a spiral spring. If such a line of
+rotations in the ether were flexible, and the two ends should come
+together, there is reason for thinking they would weld together, in
+which case the structure would become a vortex-ring and be as durable as
+any other. There is reason for believing, also, that somewhat similar
+movements are always present in a magnetic field, and though we do not
+know how to make them close up in the proper way, it does not follow
+that it is impossible for them to do so.
+
+The bearing of all this upon the problem of the transmutation of
+elements is evident. No one now will venture to deny its possibility as
+strongly as it was denied a generation ago. It will also lead one to be
+less confident in the theory that matter is indestructible. Assuming the
+vortex-ring theory of atoms to be true, if in any way such a ring could
+be cut or broken, there would not remain two or more fragments of a ring
+or atom. The whole would at once be dissolved into the ether. The ring
+and rotary energy that made it an atom would be destroyed, but not the
+substance it was made of, nor the energy which was embodied therein. For
+a long time philosophers have argued, and commonsense has agreed with
+them, that an atom which could not be ideally broken into two parts was
+impossible, that one could at any rate think of half an atom as a real
+objective possibility. This vortex-ring theory shows easily how possible
+it is to-day to think what once was philosophically incredible. It shows
+that metaphysical reasoning may be ever so clear and apparently
+irrefragable, yet for all that it may be very unsound. The trouble does
+not come so much from the logic as from the assumption upon which the
+logic is founded. In this particular case the assumption was that the
+ultimate particles of matter were hard, irrefragable somethings, without
+necessary relations to anything else, or to energy, and irrefragable
+only because no means had been found of breaking them.
+
+The destructibility or indestructibility of the ether cannot be
+considered from the same standpoint as that for matter, either ideally
+or really. Not ideally, because we are utterly without any mechanical
+conceptions of the substance upon which one can base either reason or
+analogy; and not really, because we have no experimental evidence as to
+its nature or mode of operation. If it be continuous, there are no
+interspaces, and if it be illimitable there is no unfilled space
+anywhere. Furthermore, one might infer that if in any way a portion of
+the ether could be annihilated, what was left would at once fill up the
+vacated space, so there would be no record left of what had happened.
+Apparently, its destruction would be the destruction of a substance,
+which is a very different thing from the destruction of a mode of
+motion. In the latter, only the form of the motion need be destroyed to
+completely obliterate every trace of the atom. In the former, there
+would need to be the destruction of both substance and energy, for it is
+certain, for reasons yet to be attended to, that the ether is saturated
+with energy.
+
+One may, without mechanical difficulties, imagine a vortex-ring
+destroyed. It is quite different with the ether itself, for if it were
+destroyed in the same sense as the atom of matter, it would be changed
+into something else which is not ether, a proposition which assumes the
+existence of another entity, the existence for which is needed only as a
+mechanical antecedent for the other. The same assumption would be needed
+for this entity as for the ether, namely, something out of which it was
+made, and this process of assuming antecedents would be interminable.
+The last one considered would have the same difficulties to meet as the
+ether has now. The assumption that it was in some way and at some time
+created is more rational, and therefore more probable, than that it
+either created itself or that it always existed. Considered as the
+underlying stratum of matter, it is clear that changes of any kind in
+matter can in no way affect the quantity of ether.
+
+
+17. MATTER HAS INERTIA.
+
+The resistance that a mass of matter opposes to a change in its position
+or rate and direction of movement, is called inertia. That it should
+actively oppose anything has been already pointed out as reason for
+denying that matter is inert, but inertia is the measure of the reaction
+of a body when it is acted upon by pressure from any source tending to
+disturb its condition of either rest or motion. It is the equivalent of
+mass, or the amount of matter as measured by gravity, and is a fixed
+quantity; for inertia is as inherent as any other quality, and belongs
+to the ultimate atoms and every combination of them. It implies the
+ability to absorb energy, for it requires as much energy to bring a
+moving body to a standstill as was required to give it its forward
+motion.
+
+Both rotary and vibratory movements are opposed by the same property. A
+grindstone, a tuning-fork, and an atom of hydrogen require, to move them
+in their appropriate ways, an amount of energy proportionate to their
+mass or inertia, which energy is again transformed through friction into
+heat and radiated away.
+
+One may say that inertia is the measure of the ability of a body to
+transfer or transform mechanical energy. The meteorite that falls upon
+the earth to-day gives, on its impact, the same amount of energy it
+would have given if it had struck the earth ten thousand years ago. The
+inertia of the meteor has persisted, not as energy, but as a factor of
+energy. We commonly express the energy of a mass of matter by
+_mv_^{2}/2, where _m_ stands for the mass and _v_ for its velocity. We
+might as well, if it were as convenient, substitute inertia for mass,
+and write the expression _iv_^{2}/2, for the mass, being measured by its
+inertia, is only the more common and less definitive word for the same
+thing. The energy of a mass of matter is, then, proportional to its
+inertia, because inertia is one of its factors. Energy has often been
+treated as if it were an objective thing, an entity and a unity; but
+such a conception is evidently wrong, for, as has been said before, it
+is a product of two factors, either of which may be changed in any
+degree if the other be changed inversely in the same degree. A cannon
+ball weighing 1000 pounds, and moving 100 feet per second, will have
+156,000 foot-pounds of energy, but a musket ball weighing an ounce will
+have the same amount when its velocity is 12,600 feet per second.
+Nevertheless, another body acting upon either bullet or cannon ball,
+tending to move either in some new direction, will be as efficient
+while those bodies are moving at any assignable rate as when they are
+quiescent, for the change in direction will depend upon the inertia of
+the bodies, and that is constant.
+
+The common theory of an inert body is one that is wholly passive, having
+no power of itself to move or do anything, except as some agency outside
+itself compels it to move in one way or another, and thus endows it with
+energy. Thus a stone or an iron nail are thought to be inert bodies in
+that sense, and it is true that either of them will remain still in one
+place for an indefinite time and move from it only when some external
+agency gives them impulse and direction. Still it is known that such
+bodies will roll down hill if they will not roll up, and each of them
+has itself as much to do with the down-hill movement as the earth has;
+that is, it attracts the earth as much as the earth attracts it. If one
+could magnify the structure of a body until the molecules became
+individually visible, every one of them would be seen to be in intense
+activity, changing its form and relative position an enormous number of
+times per second in undirected ways. No two such molecules move in the
+same way at the same time, and as all the molecules cohere together,
+their motions in different directions balance each other, so that the
+body as a whole does not change its position, not because there is no
+moving agency in itself, but because the individual movements are
+scattering, and not in a common direction. An army may remain in one
+place for a long time. To one at a distance it is quiescent, inert. To
+one in the camp there is abundant sign of activity, but the movements
+are individual movements, some in one direction and some in another, and
+often changing. The same army on the march has the same energy, the same
+rate of individual movement; but all have a common direction, it moves
+as a whole body into new territory. So with the molecules of matter. In
+large masses they appear to be inert, and to do nothing, and to be
+capable of doing nothing. That is only due to the fact that their energy
+is undirected, not that they can do nothing. The inference that if
+quiescent bodies do not act in particular ways they are inert, and
+cannot act in any kind of a way, is a wrong inference. An illustration
+may perhaps make this point plainer. A lump of coal will be still as
+long as anything if it be undisturbed. Indeed, it has thus lain in a
+coal-bed for millions of years probably, but if coal be placed where it
+can combine with oxygen, it forthwith does so, and during the process
+yields a large amount of energy in the shape of heat. One pound of coal
+in this way gives out 14,000 heat units, which is the equivalent of
+11,000,000 foot-pounds of work, and if it could be all utilized would
+furnish a horse-power for five and a half hours. Can any inert body
+weighing a pound furnish a horse-power for half a day? And can a body
+give out what it has not got? Are gunpowder and nitro-glycerine inert?
+Are bread and butter and foods in general inert because they will not
+push and pull as a man or a horse may? All have energy, which is
+available in certain ways and not in others, and whatever possesses
+energy available in any way is not an ideally inert body. Lastly, how
+many inert bodies together will it take to make an active body? If the
+question be absurd, then all the phenomena witnessed in bodies, large or
+small, are due to the fact that the atoms are not inert, but are
+immensely energetic, and their inertia is the measure of their rates of
+exchanging energy.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS CONDITIONALLY POSSESSED OF INERTIA.
+
+A moving mass of matter is brought to rest by friction, because it
+imparts its motion at some rate to the body it is in contact with.
+Generally the energy is transformed into heat, but sometimes it appears
+as electrification. Friction is only possible because one or both of the
+bodies possess inertia. That a body may move in the ether for an
+indefinite time without losing its velocity has been stated as a reason
+for believing the ether to be frictionless. If it be frictionless, then
+it is without inertia, else the energy of the earth and of a ray of
+light would be frittered away. A ray of light can only be transformed
+when it falls upon molecules which may be heated by it. As the ether
+cannot be heated and cannot transform translational energy, it is
+without inertia for _such_ a form of motion and its embodied energy.
+
+It is not thus with other forms of energy than the translational. Atomic
+and molecular vibrations are so related to the ether that they are
+transformed into waves, which are conducted away at a definite rate.
+This shows that such property of inertia as is possessed by the ether is
+selective and not like that of matter, which is equally "inertiative"
+under all conditions. Similarly with electric and magnetic phenomena, it
+is capable of transforming the energy which may reside as stress in the
+ether, and other bodies moving in the space so affected meet with
+frictional resistance, for they become heated if the motion be
+maintained. On the other hand, there is no evidence that the body which
+produced the electric or magnetic stress suffers any degree of friction
+on moving in precisely the same space. A bar magnet rotating on its
+longitudinal axis does not disturb its own field, but a piece of iron
+revolving near the magnet will not only become heated, but will heat the
+stationary magnet. Much experimental work has been done to discover, if
+possible, the relation of a magnet to its ether field. As the latter is
+not disturbed by the rotation of the magnet, it has been concluded that
+the field does not rotate; but as every molecule in the magnet has its
+own field independent of all the rest, it is mechanically probable that
+each such field does vary in the rotation, but among the thousands of
+millions of such fields the average strength of the field does not vary
+within measurable limits. Another consideration is that the magnetic
+field itself, when moved in space, suffers no frictional resistance.
+There is no magnetic energy wasted through ether inertia. These
+phenomena show that whether the ether exhibits the quality called
+inertia depends upon the kind of motion it has.
+
+
+18. MATTER IS MAGNETIC.
+
+The ordinary phenomenon of magnetism is shown by bringing a piece of
+iron into the neighbourhood of a so-called magnet, where it is attracted
+by the latter, and if free to move will go to and cling to the magnet. A
+delicately suspended magnetic needle will be affected appreciably by a
+strong magnet at the distance of several hundred feet. As the strength
+of such action varies inversely as the square of the distance from the
+magnet, it is evident there can be no absolute boundary to it. At a
+distance from an ordinary magnet it becomes too weak to be detected by
+our methods, not that there is a limit to it. It is customary to think
+of iron as being peculiarly endowed with magnetic quality, but all kinds
+of matter possess it in some degree. Wood, stone, paper, oats, sulphur,
+and all the rest, are attracted by a magnet, and will stick to it if the
+magnet be a strong one. Whether a piece of iron itself exhibits the
+property depends upon its temperature, for near 700 degrees it becomes
+as magnetically indifferent as a piece of copper at ordinary
+temperature. Oxygen, too, at 200 degrees below the zero of Centigrade
+adheres to a magnet like iron.
+
+In this as in so many other particulars, how a piece of matter behaves
+depends upon its temperature, not that the essential qualities are
+modified in any degree, but temperature interferes with atomic
+arrangement and aggregation, and so disguises their phenomena.
+
+As every kind of matter is thus affected by a magnet, the manifestations
+differing but in degree, it follows that all kinds of atoms--all the
+elements--are magnetic. An inherent property in them, as much so as
+gravitation or inertia; apparently a quality depending upon the
+structure of the atoms themselves, in the same sense as gravitation is
+thus dependent, as it is not a quality of the ether.
+
+An atom must, then, be thought of as having polarity, different
+qualities on the two sides, and possessing a magnetic field as extensive
+as space itself. The magnetic field is the stress or pressure in the
+ether produced by the magnetic body. This ether pressure produced by a
+magnet may be as great as a ton per square inch. It is this pressure
+that holds an armature to the magnet. As heat is a molecular condition
+of vibration, and radiant energy the result of it, so is magnetism a
+property of molecules, and the magnetic field the temporary condition in
+the ether, which depends upon the presence of a magnetic body. We no
+longer speak of the wave-motion in the ether which results from heat, as
+heat, but call it radiation, or ether waves, and for a like reason the
+magnetic field ought not to be called magnetism.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS NON-MAGNETIC.
+
+A magnetic field manifests itself in a way that implies that the ether
+structure, if it may be said to have any, is deformed--deformed in such
+a sense that another magnet in it tends to set itself in the plane of
+the stress; that is, the magnet is twisted into a new position to
+accommodate itself to the condition of the medium about it. The new
+position is the result of the reaction of the ether upon the magnet and
+ether pressure acting at right angles to the body that produced the
+stress. Such an action is so anomalous as to suggest the propriety of
+modifying the so-called third law of motion, viz., action and reaction
+are equal and opposite, adding that sometimes action and reaction are at
+right angles.
+
+There is no condition or property exhibited by the ether itself which
+shows it to have any such characteristic as attraction, repulsion, or
+differences in stress, except where its condition is modified by the
+activities of matter in some way. The ether itself is not attracted or
+repelled by a magnet; that is, it is not a magnetic body in any such
+sense as matter in any of its forms is, and therefore cannot properly be
+called magnetic.
+
+It has been a mechanical puzzle to understand how the vibratory motions
+called heat could set up light waves in the ether seeing that there is
+an absence of friction in the latter. In the endeavour to conceive it,
+the origin of sound-waves has been in mind, where longitudinal air-waves
+are produced by the vibrations of a sounding body, and molecular impact
+is the antecedent of the waves. The analogy does not apply. The
+following exposition may be helpful in grasping the idea of such
+transformation and change of energy from matter to the ether.
+
+Consider a straight bar permanent magnet to be held in the hand. It has
+its north and south poles and its field, the latter extending in every
+direction to an indefinite distance. The field is to be considered as
+ether stress of such a sort as to tend to set other magnets in it in new
+positions. If at a distance of ten feet there were a delicately-poised
+magnet needle, every change in the position of the magnet held in the
+hand would bring about a change in the position of the needle. If the
+position of the hand magnet were completely reversed, so the south pole
+faced where the north pole faced before, the field would have been
+completely reversed, and the poised needle would have been pushed by the
+field into an opposite position. If the needle were a hundred feet away,
+the change would have been the same except in amount. The same might be
+said if the two were a mile apart, or the distance of the moon or any
+other distance, for there is no limit to an ether magnetic field.
+Suppose the hand magnet to have its direction completely reversed once
+in a second. The whole field, and the direction of the stress, would
+necessarily be reversed as often. But this kind of change in stress is
+known by experiment to travel with the speed of light, 186,000 miles a
+second; the disturbance due to the change of position of the magnet will
+therefore be felt in some degree throughout space. In a second and a
+third of a second it will have reached the moon, and a magnet there will
+be in some measure affected by it. If there were an observer there with
+a delicate-enough magnet, he could be witness to its changes once a
+second for the same reason one in the room could. The only difference
+would be one of amount of swing. It is therefore theoretically possible
+to signal to the moon with a swinging magnet. Suppose again that the
+magnet should be swung twice a second, there would be formed two waves,
+each one half as long as the first. If it should swing ten times a
+second, then the waves would be one-tenth of 186,000 miles long. If in
+some mechanical way it could be rotated 186,000 times a second, the wave
+would be but one mile long. Artificial ways have been invented for
+changing this magnet field as many as 100 million times a second, and
+the corresponding wave is less than a foot long. The shape of a magnet
+does not necessarily make it weaker or stronger as a magnet, but if the
+poles are near together the magnetic field is denser between them than
+when they are separated. The ether stress is differently distributed for
+every change in the relative positions of the poles.
+
+A common U-magnet, if struck, will vibrate like a tuning-fork, and gives
+out a definite pitch. Its poles swing towards and away from each other
+at uniform rates, and the pitch of the magnet will depend upon its size,
+thickness, and the material it is made of.
+
+Let ten or fifteen ohms of any convenient-sized wire be wound upon the
+bend of a commercial U-magnet. Let this wire be connected to a telephone
+in its circuit. When the magnet is made to sound like a tuning-fork, the
+pitch will be reproduced in the telephone very loudly. If another magnet
+with a different pitch be allowed to vibrate near the former, the pitch
+of the vibrating body will be heard in the telephone, and these show
+that the changing magnetic field reacts upon the quiescent magnet, and
+compels the latter to vibrate at the same rate. The action is an ether
+action, the waves are ether waves, but they are relatively very long. If
+the magnet makes 500 vibrations a second, the waves will be 372 miles
+long, the number of times 500 is contained in 186,000 miles. Imagine the
+magnet to become smaller and smaller until it was the size of an atom,
+the one-fifty-millionth of an inch. Its vibratory rate would be
+proportionally increased, and changes in its form will still bring about
+changes in its magnetic field. But its magnetic field is practically
+limitless, and the number of vibrations per second is to be reckoned
+as millions of millions; the waves are correspondingly short,
+small fractions of an inch. When they are as short as the
+one-thirty-seven-thousandth of an inch, they are capable of affecting
+the retina of the eye, and then are said to be visible as red light. If
+the vibratory rate be still higher, and the corresponding waves be no
+more than one-sixty-thousandth of an inch long, they affect the retina
+as violet light, and between these limits there are all the waves that
+produce a complete spectrum. The atoms, then, shake the ether in this
+way because they all have a magnetic hold upon the ether, so that any
+disturbance of their own magnetism, such as necessarily comes when they
+collide, reacts upon the ether for the same reason that a large magnet
+acts thus upon it when its poles approach and recede from each other. It
+is not a phenomenon of mechanical impact or frictional resistance, since
+neither are possible in the ether.
+
+
+19. MATTER EXISTS IN SEVERAL STATES.
+
+Molecular cohesion exists between very wide ranges. When strong, so if
+one part of a body is moved the whole is moved in the same way, without
+breaking continuity or the relative positions of the molecules, we call
+the body a solid. In a liquid, cohesion is greatly reduced, and any part
+of it may be deformed without materially changing the form of the rest.
+The molecules are free to move about each other, and there is no
+definite position which any need assume or keep. With gases, the
+molecules are without any cohesion, each one is independent of every
+other one, collides with and bounds away from others as free elastic
+particles do. Between impacts it moves in what is called its free path,
+which may be long or short as the density of the gas be less or greater.
+
+These differing degrees of cohesion depend upon temperature, for if the
+densest and hardest substances are sufficiently heated they will become
+gaseous. This is only another way of saying that the states of matter
+depend upon the amount of molecular energy present. Solid ice becomes
+water by the application of heat. More heat reduces it to steam; still
+more decomposes the steam molecules into oxygen and hydrogen molecules;
+and lastly, still more heat will decompose these molecules into their
+atomic state, complete dissociation. On cooling, the process of
+reduction will be reversed until ice has been formed again.
+
+Cohesive strength in solids is increased by reduction of temperature,
+and metallic rods become stronger the colder they are.
+
+No distinction is now made between cohesion and chemical affinity, and
+yet at low temperatures chemical action will not take place, which
+phenomenon shows there is a distinction between molecular cohesion and
+molecular structure. In molecular structure, as determined by chemical
+activity, the molecules and atoms are arranged in definite ways which
+depend upon the rate of vibrations of the components. The atoms are set
+in definite positions to constitute a given molecule. But atoms or
+molecules may cohere for other reasons, gravitative or magnetic, and
+relative positions would be immaterial. In the absence of temperature, a
+solid body would be solider and stronger than ever, while a gaseous mass
+would probably fall by gravity to the floor of the containing vessel
+like so much dust. The molecular structure might not be changed, for
+there would be no agency to act upon it in a disturbing way.
+
+
+THE ETHER HAS NO CORRESPONDING STATES.
+
+Degrees of density have already been excluded, and the homogeneity and
+continuity of the ether would also exclude the possibility of different
+states at all comparable with such as belong to matter. As for cohesion,
+it is doubtful if the term ought to be applied to such a substance. The
+word itself seems to imply possible separateness, and if the ether be a
+single indivisible substance, its cohesion must be infinite and is
+therefore not a matter of degree. The ether has sometimes been
+considered as an elastic solid, but such solidity is comparable with
+nothing we call solid in matter, and the word has to be defined in a
+special sense in order that its use may be tolerated at all. In addition
+to this, some of the phenomena exhibited by it, such as diffraction and
+double refraction, are quite incompatible with the theory that the ether
+is an elastic solid. The reasons why it cannot be considered as a liquid
+or gas have been considered previously.
+
+The expression _states of matter_ cannot be applied to the ether in any
+such sense as it is applied to matter, but there is one sense when
+possibly it may be considered applicable. Let it be granted that an atom
+is a vortex-ring of ether in the ether, then the state of being in ring
+rotation would suffice to differentiate that part of the ether from the
+rest, and give to it a degree of individuality not possessed by the
+rest; and such an atom might be called a state of ether. In like manner,
+if other forms of motion, such as transverse waves, circular and
+elliptical spirals, or others, exist in the ether, then such movements
+give special character to the part thus active, and it would be proper
+to speak of such states of the ether, but even thus the word would not
+be used in the same sense as it is used when one speaks of the states of
+matter as being solid, liquid, and gaseous.
+
+
+20. SOLID MATTER CAN EXPERIENCE A SHEARING STRESS, LIQUIDS AND GASES
+CANNOT.
+
+A sliding stress applied to a solid deforms it to a degree which depends
+upon the stress and the degree of rigidity preserved by the body. Thus
+if the hand be placed upon a closed book lying on the table, and
+pressure be so applied as to move the upper side of the book but not the
+lower, the book is said to be subject to a shearing stress. If the
+pressing hand has a twisting motion, the book will be warped. Any solid
+may be thus sheared or warped, but neither liquids nor gases can be so
+affected. Molecular cohesion makes it possible in the one, and the lack
+of it, impossible in the others. The solid can maintain such a
+deformation indefinitely long, if the pressure does not rupture its
+molecular structure.
+
+
+THE ETHER CAN MAINTAIN A SHEARING STRESS.
+
+The phenomena in a magnetic field show that the stress is of such a sort
+as to twist into a new directional position the body upon which it acts
+as exhibited by a magnetic needle, also as indicated by the transverse
+vibrations of the ether waves, and again by the twist given to plane
+polarized light when moving through a magnetic field. These are all
+interpreted as indicative of the direction of ether stress, as being
+similar to a shearing stress in solid matter. The fact has been adduced
+to show the ether to be a solid, but such a phenomenon is certainly
+incompatible with a liquid or gaseous ether. This kind of stress is
+maintained indefinitely about a permanent magnet, and the mechanical
+pressure which may result from it is a measure of the strength of the
+magnetic field, and may exceed a thousand pounds per square inch.
+
+
+21. OTHER PROPERTIES OF MATTER.
+
+There are many secondary qualities exhibited by matter in some of its
+forms, such as hardness, brittleness, malleability, colour, etc., and
+the same ultimate element may exhibit itself in the most diverse ways,
+as is the case with carbon, which exists as lamp-black, charcoal,
+graphite, jet, anthracite and diamond, ranging from the softest to the
+hardest of known bodies. Then it may be black or colourless. Gold is
+yellow, copper red, silver white, chlorine green, iodine purple. The
+only significance any or all of such qualities have for us here is that
+the ether exhibits none of them. There is neither hardness nor
+brittleness, nor colour, nor any approach to any of the characteristics
+for the identification of elementary matter.
+
+
+22. SENSATION DEPENDS UPON MATTER.
+
+However great the mystery of the relation of body to mind, it is quite
+true that the nervous system is the mechanism by and through which all
+sensation comes, and that in our experience in the absence of nerves
+there is neither sensation nor consciousness. The nerves themselves are
+but complex chemical structures; their molecular constitution is said to
+embrace as many as 20,000 atoms, chiefly carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and
+nitrogen. There must be continuity of this structure too, for to sever a
+nerve is to paralyze all beyond. If all knowledge comes through
+experience, and all experience comes through the nervous system, the
+possibilities depend upon the mechanism each one is provided with for
+absorbing from his environment, what energies there are that can act
+upon the nerves. Touch, taste, and smell imply contact, sound has
+greater range, and sight has the immensity of the universe for its
+field. The most distant but visible star acts through the optic nerve to
+present itself to consciousness. It is not the ego that looks out
+through the eyes, but it is the universe that pours in upon the ego.
+
+Again, all the known agencies that act upon the nerves, whether for
+touch or sound or sight, imply matter in some of its forms and
+activities, to adapt the energy to the nervous system. The mechanism
+for the perception of light is complicated. The light acts upon a
+sensitive surface where molecular structure is broken up, and this
+disturbance is in the presence of nerve terminals, and the sensation is
+not in the eye but in the sensorium. In like manner for all the rest; so
+one may fairly say that matter is the condition for sensation, and in
+its absence there would be nothing we call sensation.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS INSENSIBLE TO NERVES.
+
+The ether is in great contrast with matter in this particular. There is
+no evidence that in any direct way it acts upon any part of the nervous
+system, or upon the mind. It is probable that this lack of relation
+between the ether and the nervous system was the chief reason why its
+discovery was so long delayed, as the mechanical necessities for it even
+now are felt only by such as recognize continuity as a condition for the
+transmission of energy of whatever kind it may be. Action at a distance
+contradicts all experience, is philosophically incredible, and is
+repudiated by every one who once perceives that energy has two
+factors--substance and motion.
+
+The table given below presents a list of twenty-two of the known
+properties of matter contrasted with those exhibited by the ether. In
+none of them are the properties of the two identical, and in most of
+them what is true for one is not true for the other. They are not simply
+different, they are incomparable.
+
+From the necessities of the case, as knowledge has been acquired and
+terminology became essential for making distinctions, the ether has been
+described in terms applicable to matter, hence such terms as mass,
+solidity, elasticity, density, rigidity, etc., which have a definite
+meaning and convey definite mechanical conceptions when applied to
+matter, but have no corresponding meaning and convey no such mechanical
+conceptions when applied to the ether. It is certain that they are
+inappropriate, and that the ether and its properties cannot be described
+in terms applicable to matter. Mathematical considerations derived from
+the study of matter have no advantage, and are not likely to lead us to
+a knowledge of the ether.
+
+Only a few have perceived the inconsistency of thinking of the two in
+the same terms. In his _Grammar of Science_, Prof. Karl Pearson says,
+"We find that our sense-impressions of hardness, weight, colour,
+temperature, cohesion, and chemical constitution, may all be described
+by the aid of the motions of a single medium, which itself is conceived
+to have no hardness, weight, colour, temperature, nor indeed elasticity
+of the ordinary conceptual type."
+
+None of the properties of the ether are such as one would or could have
+predicted if he had had all the knowledge possessed by mankind. Every
+phenomenon in it is a surprise to us, because it does not follow the
+laws which experience has enabled us to formulate for matter. A
+substance which has none of the phenomenal properties of matter, and is
+not subject to the known laws of matter, ought not to be called matter.
+Ether phenomena and matter phenomena belong to different categories, and
+the ends of science will not be conserved by confusing them, as is done
+when the same terminology is employed for both.
+
+There are other properties belonging to the ether more wonderful, if
+possible, than those already mentioned. Its ability to maintain enormous
+stresses of various kinds without the slightest evidence of
+interference. There is the gravitational stress, a direct pull between
+two masses of matter. Between two molecules it is immeasurably small
+even when close together, but the prodigious number of them in a bullet
+brings the action into the field of observation, while between such
+bodies as the earth and moon or sun, the quantity reaches an astonishing
+figure. Thus if the gravitative tension due to the gravitative
+attraction of the earth and moon were to be replaced by steel wires
+connecting the two bodies to prevent the moon from leaving its orbit,
+there would be needed four number ten steel wires to every square inch
+upon the earth, and these would be strained nearly to the breaking
+point. Yet this stress is not only endured continually by this pliant,
+impalpable, transparent medium, but other bodies can move through the
+same space apparently as freely as if it were entirely free. In addition
+to this, the stress from the sun and the more variable stresses from the
+planets are all endured by the same medium in the same space and
+apparently a thousand or a million times more would not make the
+slightest difference. Rupture is impossible.
+
+Electric and magnetic stresses, acting parallel or at right angles to
+the other, exist in the same space and to indefinite degrees, neither
+modifying the direction nor amount of either of the others.
+
+These various stresses have been computed to represent energy, which if
+it could be utilized, each cubic inch of space would yield five hundred
+horse-power. It shows what a store-house of energy the ether is. If
+every particle of matter were to be instantly annihilated, the universe
+of ether would still have an inexpressible amount of energy left. To
+draw at will directly from this inexhaustible supply, and utilize it for
+the needs of mankind, is not a forlorn hope.
+
+The accompanying table presents these contrasting properties for
+convenient inspection.
+
+
+CONTRASTED PROPERTIES OF MATTER AND THE ETHER.
+
+ MATTER. ETHER.
+
+ 1. Discontinuous Continuous
+ 2. Limited Unlimited
+ 3. Heterogeneous Homogeneous
+ 4. Atomic Non-atomic
+ 5. Definite structure Structureless
+ 6. Gravitative Gravitationless
+ 7. Frictionable Frictionless
+ 8. Ęolotropic Isotropic
+ 9. Chemically selective ----
+10. Harmonically related ----
+11. Energy embodied Energy endowed
+12. Energy transformer Non-transformer
+13. Elastic Elastic?
+14. Density Density?
+15. Heatable Unheatable
+16. Indestructible? Indestructible
+17. Inertiative Inertiative conditionally
+18. Magnetic ----
+19. Variable states ----
+20. Subject to shearing stress
+ in solid Shearing stress maintained
+21. Has Secondary qualities ----
+22. Sensation depends upon Insensible to nerves
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Antecedents of Electricity--Nature of what is
+ transformed--Series of transformations for the
+ production of light--Positive and negative
+ Electricity--Positive and negative twists--Rotations
+ about a wire--Rotation of an arc--Ether a
+ non-conductor--Electro-magnetic waves--Induction
+ and inductive action--Ether stress and atomic
+ position--Nature of an electric current--Electricity
+ a condition, not an entity.
+
+
+So far as we have knowledge to-day, the only factors we have to consider
+in explaining physical phenomena are: (1) Ordinary matter, such as
+constitutes the substance of the earth, and the heavenly bodies; (2) the
+ether, which is omnipresent; and (3) the various forms of motion, which
+are mutually transformable in matter, and some of which, but not all,
+are transformable into ether forms. For instance, the translatory motion
+of a mass of matter can be imparted to another mass by simple impact,
+but translatory motion cannot be imparted to the ether, and, for that
+reason, a body moving in it is not subject to friction, and continues
+to move on with velocity undiminished for an indefinite time; but the
+vibratory motion which constitutes heat is transformable into
+wave-motion in the ether, and is transmitted away with the speed of
+light. The kind of motion which is thus transformed is not even a
+to-and-fro swing of an atom, or molecule, like the swing of a pendulum
+bob, but that due to a change of form of the atoms within the molecule,
+otherwise there could be no such thing as spectrum analysis. Vibratory
+motion of the matter becomes undulatory motion in the ether. The
+vibratory motion we call heat; the wave-motion we call sometimes radiant
+energy, sometimes light. Neither of these terms is a good one, but we
+now have no others.
+
+It is conceded that it is not proper to speak of the wave-motion in the
+ether as _heat_; it is also admitted that the ether is not heated by the
+presence of the wave--or, in other words, the temperature of the ether
+is absolute zero. Matter only can be heated. But the ether waves can
+heat other matter they may fall on; so there are three steps in the
+process and two transformations--(1) vibrating matter; (2) waves in the
+ether; (3) vibration in other matter. Energy has been transferred
+indirectly. What is important to bear in mind is, that when a form of
+energy in matter is transformed in any manner so as to lose its
+characteristics, it is not proper to call it by the same name after as
+before, and this we do in all cases when the transformation is from one
+kind in matter to another kind in matter. Thus, when a bullet is shot
+against a target, before it strikes it has what we call mechanical
+energy, and we measure that in foot-pounds; after it has struck the
+target, the transformation is into heat, and this has its mechanical
+equivalent, but is not called mechanical energy, nor are the motions
+which embody it similar. The mechanical ideas in these phenomena are
+easy to grasp. They apply to the phenomena of the mechanics of large and
+small bodies, to sound, to heat, and to light, as ordinarily considered,
+but they have not been applied to electric phenomena, as they evidently
+should be, unless it be held that such phenomena are not related to
+ordinary phenomena, as the latter are to one another.
+
+When we would give a complete explanation of the phenomena exhibited by,
+say, a heated body, we need to inquire as to the antecedents of the
+manifestation, and also its consequents. Where and how did it get its
+heat? Where and how did it lose it? When we know every step of those
+processes, we know all there is to learn about them. Let us undertake
+the same thing for some electrical phenomena.
+
+First, under what circumstances do electrical phenomena arise?
+
+(1) _Mechanical_, as when two different kinds of matter are subject to
+friction.
+
+(2) _Thermal_, as when two substances in molecular contact are heated at
+the junction.
+
+(3) _Magnetic_, as when any conductor is in a changing magnetic field.
+
+(4) _Chemical_, as when a metal is being dissolved in any solution.
+
+(5) _Physiological_, as when a muscle contracts.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 5.--Frictional electrical machine.]
+
+Each of these has several varieties, and changes may be rung on
+combinations of them, as when mechanical and magnetic conditions
+interact.
+
+(1) In the first case, ordinary mechanical or translational energy is
+spent as friction, an amount measurable in foot-pounds, and the factors
+we know, a pressure into a distance. If the surface be of the same kind
+of molecules, the whole energy is spent as heat, and is presently
+radiated away. If the surfaces are of unlike molecules, the product is a
+compound one, part heat, part electrical. What we have turned into the
+machine we know to be a particular mode of motion. We have not changed
+the amount of matter involved; indeed, we assume, without specifying and
+without controversy, that matter is itself indestructible, and the
+product, whether it be of one kind or another, can only be some form of
+motion. Whether we can describe it or not is immaterial; but if we agree
+that heat is vibratory molecular motion, and there be any other kind of
+a product than heat, it too must also be some other form of motion. So
+if one is to form a conception of the mechanical origin of electricity,
+this is the only one he can have--transformed motion.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 6.--Thermo-pile.]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 7.--Dynamo.]
+
+(2) When heat is the antecedent of electricity, as in the thermo-pile,
+that which is turned into the pile we know to be molecular motion of a
+definite kind. That which comes out of it must be some equivalent
+motion, and if all that went in were transformed, then all that came out
+would be transformed, call it by what name we will and let its amount be
+what it may.
+
+(3) When a conductor is moved in a magnetic field, the energy spent is
+measurable in foot-pounds, as before, a pressure into a distance. The
+energy appears in a new form, but the quantity of matter being
+unchanged, the only changeable factor is the kind of motion, and that
+the motion is molecular is evident, for the molecules are heated.
+Mechanical or mass motion is the antecedent, molecular heat motion is
+the consequent, and the way we know there has been some intermediate
+form is, that heat is not conducted at the rate which is observed in
+such a case. Call it by what name one will, some form of motion has been
+intermediate between the antecedent and the consequent, else we have
+some other factor of energy to reckon with than ether, matter and
+motion.
+
+(4) In a galvanic battery, the source of electricity is chemical action;
+but what is chemical action? Simply an exchange of the constituents of
+molecules--a change which involves exchange of energy. Molecules capable
+of doing chemical work are loaded with energy. The chemical products of
+battery action are molecules of different constitution, with smaller
+amounts of energy as measured in calorics or heat units. If the results
+of the chemical reaction be prevented from escaping, by confining them
+to the cell itself, the whole energy appears as heat and raises the
+temperature of the cell. If a so-called circuit be provided, the energy
+is distributed through it, and less heat is spent in the cell, but
+whether it be in one place or another, the mass of matter involved is
+not changed, and the variable factor is the motion, the same as in the
+other cases. The mechanical conceptions appropriate are the
+transformation of one kind of motion into another kind by the mechanical
+conditions provided.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 8.--Galvanic Battery.]
+
+(5) Physiological antecedents of electricity are exemplified by the
+structure and mode of operation of certain muscles (Fig. 9, _a_) in the
+torpedo and other electrical animals. The mechanical contraction of them
+results in an electrical excitation, and, if a proper circuit be
+provided, in an electric current. The energy of a muscle is derived from
+food, which is itself but a molecular compound loaded with energy of a
+kind available for muscular transformation. Bread-and-butter has more
+available energy, pound for pound, than has coal, and can be substituted
+for coal for running an engine. It is not used, because it costs so much
+more. There is nothing different, so far as the factors of energy go,
+between the food of an animal and the food of an engine. What becomes of
+the energy depends upon the kind of structure it acts on. It may be
+changed into translatory, and the whole body moves in one direction; or
+into molecular, and then appears as heat or electrical energy.
+
+If one confines his attention to the only variable factor in the energy
+in all these cases, and traces out in each just what happens, he will
+have only motions of one sort or another, at one rate or another, and
+there is nothing mysterious which enters into the processes.
+
+We will turn now to the mode in which electricity manifests itself, and
+what it can do. It may be well to point out at the outset what has
+occasionally been stated, but which has not received the philosophical
+attention it deserves--namely, that electrical phenomena are reversible;
+that is, any kind of a physical process which is capable of producing
+electricity, electricity is itself able to produce. Thus to name a few:
+If mechanical motion develops electricity, electricity will produce
+mechanical motion; the movement of a pith ball and an electric motor are
+examples. If chemical action can produce it, it will produce chemical
+action, as in the decomposition of water and electro-plating. As heat
+may be its antecedent, so will it produce heat. If magnetism be an
+antecedent factor, magnetism may be its product. What is called
+induction may give rise to it in an adjacent conductor, and, likewise,
+induction may be its effect.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 9.--Torpedo.]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 10.--Dynamo and Motor.]
+
+Let us suppose ourselves to be in a building in which a steam-engine is
+at work. There is fuel, the furnace, the boiler, the pipes, the engine
+with its fly-wheel turning. The fuel burns in the furnace, the water is
+superheated in the boiler, the steam is directed by the pipes, the
+piston is moved by the steam pressure, and the fly-wheel rotates
+because of proper mechanism between it and the piston. No one who has
+given attention to the successive steps in the process is so puzzled as
+to feel the need of inventing a particular force, or a new kind of
+matter, or any agency, at any stage of the process, different from the
+simple mechanical ones represented by a push or a pull. Even if he
+cannot see clearly how heat can produce a push, he does not venture to
+assume a genii to do the work, but for the time is content with saying
+that if he starts with motion in the furnace and stops with the motion
+of the fly-wheel, any assumption of any other factor than some form of
+motion between the two would be gratuitous. He can truthfully say that
+he understands the _nature_ of that which goes on between the furnace
+and the wheel; that it is some sort of motion, the particular kind of
+which he might make out at his leisure.
+
+Suppose once more that, across the road from an engine-house, there was
+another building, where all sorts of machines--lathes, planers, drills,
+etc.--were running, but that the source of the power for all this was
+out of sight, and that one could see no connection between this and the
+engine on the other side of the street. Would one need to suppose there
+was anything mysterious between the two--a force, a fluid, an immaterial
+something? This question is put on the supposition that one should not
+be aware of the shaft that might be between the two buildings, and that
+it was not obvious on simple inspection how the machines got their
+motions from the engine. No one would be puzzled because he did not know
+just what the intervening mechanism might be. If the boiler were in the
+one building, and the engine in the other with the machines, he could
+see nothing moving between them, even if the steam-pipes were of glass.
+If matter of any kind were moving, he could not see it there. He would
+say there _must_ be something moving, or pressure could not be
+transferred from one place to the other.
+
+Substitute for the furnace and boiler a galvanic battery or a dynamo;
+for the machines of the shop, one or more motors with suitable wire
+connections. When the dynamo goes the motors go; when the dynamo stops
+the motors stop; nothing can be seen to be turning or moving in any way
+between them. Is there any necessity for assuming a mysterious agency,
+or a force of a _nature_ different from the visible ones at the two ends
+of the line? Is it not certain that the question is, How does the motion
+get from one to the other, whether there be a wire or not? If there be a
+wire, it is plain that there is motion in it, for it is heated its whole
+length, and heat is known to be a mode of motion, and every molecule
+which is thus heated must have had some antecedent motions. Whether it
+be defined or not, and whether it be called by one name or another, are
+quite immaterial, if one is concerned only with the _nature_ of the
+action, whether it be matter or ether, or motion or abracadabra.
+
+Once more: suppose we have a series of active machines. (Fig. 11.) An
+arc lamp, radiating light-waves, gets its energy from the wire which is
+heated, which in turn gets its energy from the electric current; that
+from a dynamo, the dynamo from a steam-engine; that from a furnace and
+the chemical actions going on in it. Let us call the chemical actions A,
+the furnace B, the engine C, the dynamo D, the electric lamp E, the
+ether waves F. (Fig. 12.)
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 11.]
+
+The product of the chemical action of the coal is molecular motion,
+called heat in the furnace. The product of the heat is mechanical motion
+in the engine. The product of the mechanical motion is electricity in
+the dynamo. The product of the electric current in the lamp is
+light-waves in the ether. No one hesitates for an instant to speak of
+the heat as being molecular motion, nor of the motions of the engine as
+being mechanical; but when we come to the product of the dynamo, which
+we call electricity, behold, nearly every one says, not that he does not
+know what it is, but that no one knows! Does any one venture to say he
+does not know what heat is, because he cannot describe in detail just
+what goes on in a heated body, as it might be described by one who saw
+with a microscope the movements of the molecules? Let us go back for a
+moment to the proposition stated early in this book, namely, that if any
+body of any magnitude moves, it is because some other body in motion and
+in contact with it has imparted its motion by mechanical pressure.
+Therefore, the ether waves at F (Fig. 11) imply continuous motions of
+some sort from A to F. That they are all motions of ordinary matter from
+A to E is obvious, because continuous matter is essential for the
+maintenance of the actions. At E the motions are handed over to the
+ether, and they are radiated away as light-waves.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 12.]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 13.]
+
+A puzzling electrical phenomenon has been what has been called its
+duality-states, which are spoken of as positive and negative. Thus, we
+speak of the positive plate of a battery and the negative pole of a
+dynamo; and another troublesome condition to idealize has been, how it
+could be that, in an electric circuit, there could be as much energy at
+the most remote part as at the source. But, if one will take a limp
+rope, 8 or 10 feet long, tie its ends together, and then begin to twist
+it at any point, he will see the twist move in a right-handed spiral on
+the one hand, and in a left-handed spiral on the other, and each may be
+traced quite round the circuit; so there will be as much twist, as much
+motion, and as much energy in one part of the rope as in any other; and
+if one chooses to call the right-handed twist positive, and the
+left-handed twist negative, he will have the mechanical phenomenon of
+energy-distribution and the terminology, analogous to what they are in
+an electric conductor. (Fig. 13.) Are the cases more dissimilar than the
+mechanical analogy would make them seem to be?
+
+Are there any phenomena which imply that rotation is going on in an
+electric conductor? There are. An electric arc, which is a current in
+the air, and is, therefore, less constrained than it is in a conductor,
+rotates. Especially marked is this when in front of the pole of a
+magnet; but the rotation may be noticed in an ordinary arc by looking at
+it with a stroboscope disk, rotated so as to make the light to the eye
+intermittent at the rate of four or five hundred per second. A ray of
+plane polarized light, parallel with a wire conveying a current, has its
+plane of vibration twisted to the right or left, as the current goes
+one way or the other through the wire, and to a degree that depends upon
+the distance it travels; not only so, but if the ray be sent, by
+reflection, back through the same field, it is twisted as much more--a
+phenomenon which convinces one that rotation is going on in the space
+through which the ray travels. If the ether through which the ray be
+sent were simply warped or in some static stress, the ray, after
+reflection, would be brought back to its original plane, which is not
+the case. This rotation in the ether is produced by what is going on in
+the wire. The ether waves called light are interpreted to imply that
+molecules originate them by their vibrations, and that there are as many
+ether waves per second as of molecular vibrations per second. In like
+manner, the implication is the same, that if there be rotations in the
+ether they must be produced by molecular rotation, and there must be as
+many rotations per second in the ether as there are molecular rotations
+that produce them. The space about a wire carrying a current is often
+pictured as filled with whorls indicating this motion (Fig. 14), and one
+must picture to himself, not the wire as a whole rotating, but each
+individual molecule independently. But one is aware that the molecules
+of a conductor are practically in contact with each other, and that if
+one for any reason rotates, the next one to it would, from frictional
+action, cause the one it touched to rotate in the opposite direction,
+whereas, the evidence goes to show that all rotation is in the same
+direction.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 14.]
+
+How can this be explained mechanically? Recall the kind of action that
+constitutes heat, that it is not translatory action in any degree, but
+vibratory, in the sense of a change of form of an elastic body, and
+this, too, of the atoms that make up the molecule of whatever sort. Each
+atom is so far independent of every other atom in the molecule that it
+can vibrate in this way, else it could not be heated. The greater the
+amplitude of vibration, the more free space to move in, and continuous
+contact of atoms is incompatible with the mechanics of heat. There must,
+therefore, be impact and freedom alternating with each other in all
+degrees in a heated body. If, in any way, the atoms themselves _were_
+made to rotate, their heat impacts not only would restrain the
+rotations, but the energy also of the rotation motion would increase the
+vibrations; that is, the heat would be correspondingly increased, which
+is what happens always when an electric current is in a conductor. It
+appears that the cooler a body is the less electric resistance it has,
+and the indications are that at absolute zero there is no resistance;
+that is, impacts do not retard rotation, but it is also apparent that
+any current sent through a conductor at that temperature would at once
+heat it. This is the same as saying that an electric current could not
+be sent through a conductor at absolute zero.
+
+So far, mechanical conceptions are in accordance with electrical
+phenomena, but there are several others yet to be noted. Electrical
+phenomena has been explained as molecular or atomic phenomena, and there
+is one more in that category which is well enough known, and which is so
+important and suggestive, that the wonder is its significance has not
+been seen by those who have sought to interpret electrical phenomena.
+The reference is to the fact that electricity cannot be transmitted
+through a vacuum. An electric arc begins to spread out as the density of
+the air decreases, and presently it is extinguished. An induction spark
+that will jump two or three feet in air cannot be made to bridge the
+tenth of an inch in an ordinary vacuum. A vacuum is a perfect
+non-conductor of electricity. Is there more than one possible
+interpretation to this, namely, that electricity is fundamentally a
+molecular and atomic phenomenon, and in the absence of molecules cannot
+exist? One may say, "Electrical _action_ is not hindered by a vacuum,"
+which is true, but has quite another interpretation than the implication
+that electricity is an ether phenomenon. The heat of the sun in some way
+gets to the earth, but what takes place in the ether is not
+heat-transmission. There is no heat in space, and no one is at liberty
+to say, or think, that there can be heat in the absence of matter.
+
+When heat has been transformed into ether waves, it is no longer heat,
+call it by what name one will. Formerly, such waves were called
+heat-waves; no one, properly informed, does so now. In like manner, if
+electrical motions or conditions in matter be transformed, no matter
+how, it is no longer proper to speak of such transformed motions or
+conditions as electricity. Thus, if electrical energy be transformed
+into heat, no one thinks of speaking of the latter as electrical. If the
+electrical energy be transformed into mechanical of any sort, no one
+thinks of calling the latter electrical because of its antecedent. If
+electrical motions be transformed into ether actions of any kind, why
+should we continue to speak of the transformed motions or energy as
+being electrical? Electricity may be the antecedent, in the same sense
+as the mechanical motion of a bullet may be the antecedent of the heat
+developed when the latter strikes the target; and if it be granted that
+a vacuum is a perfect non-conductor of electricity, then it is
+manifestly improper to speak of any phenomenon in the ether as an
+electrical phenomenon. It is from the failure to make this distinction
+that most of the trouble has come in thinking on this subject. Some have
+given all their attention to what goes on in matter, and have called
+that electricity; others have given their attention to what goes on in
+the ether, and have called that electricity, and some have considered
+both as being the same thing, and have been confounded.
+
+Let us consider what is the relation between an electrified body and the
+ether about it.
+
+When a body is electrified, the latter at the same time creates an ether
+stress about it, which is called an electric field. The ether stress may
+be considered as a warp in the distribution of the energy about the body
+(Fig. 15), by the new positions given to the molecules by the process of
+electrification. It has been already said that the evidence from other
+sources is that atoms, rather than molecules, in larger masses, are what
+affect the ether. One is inclined to inquire for the evidence we have as
+to the constitution of matter or of atoms. There is only one hypothesis
+to-day that has any degree of probability; that is, the vortex-ring
+theory, which describes an atom as being a vortex-ring of ether in the
+ether. It possesses a definite amount of energy in virtue of the motion
+which constitutes it, and this motion differentiates it from the
+surrounding ether, giving it dimensions, elasticity, momentum, and the
+possibility of translatory, rotary, vibratory motions, and combinations
+of them. Without going further into this, it is sufficient, for a
+mechanical conception, that one should have so much in mind, as it will
+vastly help in forming a mechanical conception of reactions between
+atoms and the ether. An exchange of energy between such an atom and the
+ether is not an exchange between different kinds of things, but between
+different conditions of the same thing. Next, it should be remembered
+that all the elements are magnetic in some degree. This means that they
+are themselves magnets, and every magnet has a magnetic field unlimited
+in extent, which can almost be regarded as a part of itself. If a magnet
+of any size be moved, its field is moved with it, and if in any way the
+magnetism be increased or diminished, the field changes correspondingly.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 15.]
+
+Assume a straight bar electro-magnet in circuit, so that a current can
+be made intermittent, say, once a second. When the circuit is closed and
+the magnet is made, the field at once is formed and travels outwards at
+the rate of 186,000 miles per second. When the current stops, the field
+adjacent is destroyed. Another closure develops the field again, which,
+like the other, travels outwards; and so there may be formed a series of
+waves in the ether, each 186,000 miles long, with an electro-magnetic
+antecedent. If the circuit were closed ten times a second, the waves
+would be 18,600 miles long; if 186,000 times a second, they would be but
+one mile long. If 400 million of millions times a second, they would be
+but the forty-thousandth of an inch long, and would then affect the eye,
+and we should call them light-waves, but the latter would not differ
+from the first wave in any particular except in length. As it is proved
+that such electro-magnetic waves have all the characteristics of light,
+it follows that they must originate with electro-magnetic action, that
+is, in the changing magnetism of a magnetic body. This makes it needful
+to assume that the atoms which originate waves are magnets, as they are
+experimentally found to be. But how can a magnet, not subject to a
+varying current, change its magnetic field? The strength or density of a
+magnetic field depends upon the form of the magnet. When the poles are
+near together, the field is densest; when the magnet is bent back to a
+straight bar, the field is rarest or weakest, and a change in the form
+of the magnet from a U-form to a straight bar would result in a change
+of the magnetic field within its greatest limits. A few turns of
+wire--as has been already said--wound about the poles of an ordinary
+U-magnet, and connected to an ordinary magnetic telephone, will enable
+one, listening to the latter, to hear the pitch of the former loudly
+reproduced when the magnet is struck like a tuning-fork, so as to
+vibrate. This shows that the field of the magnet changes at the same
+rate as the vibrations.
+
+Assume that the magnet becomes smaller and smaller until it is of the
+dimensions of an atom, say for an approximation, the fifty-millionth of
+an inch. It would still have its field; it would still be elastic and
+capable of vibration, but at an enormously rapid rate; but its vibration
+would change its field in the same way, and so there would be formed
+those waves in the ether, which, because they are so short that they can
+affect the eye, we call light. The mechanical conceptions are
+legitimate, because based upon experiments having ranges through nearly
+the whole gamut as waves in ether.
+
+The idea implies that every atom has what may be loosely called an
+electro-magnetic grip upon the whole of the ether, and any change in the
+former brings some change in the latter.
+
+Lastly, the phenomenon called induction may be mechanically conceived.
+
+It is well known that a current in a conductor makes a magnet of the
+wire, and gives it an electro-magnetic field, so that other magnets in
+its neighbourhood are twisted in a way tending to set them at right
+angles to the wire. Also, if another wire be adjacent to the first, an
+electric current having an opposite direction is induced in it. Thus:
+
+Consider a permanent magnet A (Fig. 15), free to turn on an axis in the
+direction of the arrow. If there be other free magnets, B and C, in
+line, they will assume such positions that their similar poles all point
+one way. Let A be twisted to a position at right angles, then B will
+turn, but in the opposite direction, and C in similar. That is, if A
+turn in the direction of the hands of a clock, B and C will turn in
+opposite directions. These are simply the observed movements of large
+magnets. Imagine that these magnets be reduced to atomic dimensions, yet
+retaining their magnetic qualities, poles and fields. Would they not
+evidently move in the same way and for the same reason? If it be true,
+that a magnet field always so acts upon another as to tend by rotation
+to set the latter into a certain position, with reference to the stress
+in that field, then, _wherever there is a changing magnetic field, there
+the atoms are being adjusted by it_.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 16.]
+
+Suppose we have a line of magnetic needles free to turn, hundreds or
+thousands of them, but disarranged. Let a strong magnetic field be
+produced at one end of the line. The field would be strongest and best
+conducted along the magnet line, but every magnet in the line would be
+compelled to rotate, and if the first were kept rotating, the rotation
+would be kept up along the whole line. This would be a mechanical
+illustration of how an electric current travels in a conductor. The
+rotations are of the atomic sort, and are at right angles to the
+direction of the conductor.
+
+That which makes the magnets move is inductive magnetic ether stress,
+but the advancing motion represents mechanical energy of rotation, and
+it is this motion, with the resulting friction, which causes the heat in
+a conductor.
+
+What is important to note is, that the action in the ether is not
+electric action, but more properly the result of electro-magnetic
+action. Whatever name be given to it, and however it comes about, there
+is no good reason for calling any kind of ether action electrical.
+
+Electric action, like magnetic action, begins and ends in matter. It is
+subject to transformations into thermal and mechanical actions, also
+into ether stress--right-handed or left-handed--which, in turn, can
+similarly affect other matter, but with opposite polarities.
+
+In his _Modern Views of Electricity_, Prof. O. J. Lodge warns us, quite
+rightly, that perhaps, after all, there is no such _thing_ as
+electricity--that electrification and electric energy may be terms to be
+kept for convenience; but if electricity as a term be held to imply a
+force, a fluid, an imponderable, or a thing which could be described by
+some one who knew enough, then it has no degree of probability, for
+spinning atomic magnets seem capable of developing all the electrical
+phenomena we meet. It must be thought of as a _condition_ and not as an
+entity.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+_Richard Clay & Sons, Limited, London & Bungay._
+
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+By J. E. TAYLOR, F.L.S., F.G.S., Editor of "Science-Gossip."
+
+=PONDS AND DITCHES.=
+By M. C. COOKE, M.A., LL.D.
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+=THE SEA-SHORE.=
+By Professor P. MARTIN DUNCAN, M.B. (London), F.R.S.
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+=THE WOODLANDS.=
+By M. C. COOKE, M.A., LL.D., Author of "Freaks and Marvels
+of Plant Life," &c.
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+By J. E. TAYLOR, F.L.S., F.G.S.
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+
+=MECHANICIANS.= By T. C. LEWIS, M.A.
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+=PHYSICISTS.= By W. GARNETT, Esq., M.A.
+
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+MANUALS OF HEALTH.
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+OTHER BUILDINGS.= By the late ERNEST H. JACOB, M.A., M.D. (OXON.).
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+=PHYSIOLOGY.= By Professor A. MACALISTER, LL.D., M.D., F.R.S., F.S.A.
+
+=GEOLOGY.= By the Rev. T. G. BONNEY, M.A., F.G.S.
+
+=ASTRONOMY.= By W. H. CHRISTIE, M.A., F.R.S.
+
+=BOTANY.= By the late Professor ROBERT BENTLEY.
+
+=ZOOLOGY.= By ALFRED NEWTON, M.A., F.R.S., Professor of Zoology in the
+University of Cambridge. New Revised Edition.
+
+=MATTER AND MOTION.= By the late J. CLERK MAXWELL, M.A., Trinity College,
+Cambridge.
+
+=SPECTROSCOPE (THE), AND ITS WORK.= By the late RICHARD A. PROCTOR.
+
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+
+=ELECTRICITY.= By the late Prof. FLEEMING JENKIN.
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+revised by Professor F. JEFFREY BELL. With numerous
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+_Wild Flowers._ By ANNE PRATT, Author of "Our
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+ * * * * *
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+Transcriber's Note
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+Minor typographical corrections have been made without comment.
+Inconsistencies in hyphenation, and the author's use of commas
+when writing large numbers, have been retained.
+
+
+
+
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+
+Project Gutenberg's The Machinery of the Universe, by Amos Emerson Dolbear
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Machinery of the Universe
+ Mechanical Conceptions of Physical Phenomena
+
+Author: Amos Emerson Dolbear
+
+Release Date: July 18, 2009 [EBook #29444]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MACHINERY OF THE UNIVERSE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Andrew D. Hwang, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="center" style="margin: auto; max-width: 40em;">
+
+<div class="bigskip"></div>
+<div>
+<!-- Page i -->
+<span class="noshow"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>i<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<!--TITLE PAGE-->
+<div style="font-size: 150%"><i>THE ROMANCE OF SCIENCE</i></div>
+<hr />
+
+<h1>THE MACHINERY OF<br /> THE UNIVERSE</h1>
+
+<span style="font-size: 120%">
+MECHANICAL CONCEPTIONS OF<br /><br /> PHYSICAL PHENOMENA
+</span>
+
+<div class="hugeskip"></div>
+
+<div>
+<span style="font-size: 90%">BY<br /><br /></span>
+<span style="font-size: 120%">
+A. E. DOLBEAR, A.B., A.M., M.E., Ph.D.<br /><br />
+</span>
+<span style="font-size: 90%">
+PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY, TUFTS COLLEGE, MASS.
+</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="hugeskip"></div>
+
+<div style="font-size: 90%">
+PUBLISHED UNDER GENERAL LITERATURE COMMITTEE.
+</div>
+
+<div class="hugeskip"></div>
+
+<div>
+<span>LONDON:<br /></span>
+<span>SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE,<br /></span>
+<span style="font-size: 90%">NORTHUMBERLAND AVENUE, W.C.;<br /></span>
+<span style="font-size: 80%">43, QUEEN VICTORIA STREET, E.C.<br /><br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<div style="font-size: 80%">
+<span class="smcap">Brighton: 129, NORTH STREET.<br /><br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<div style="font-size: 90%">
+<span class="smcap">New York</span>: E. &amp; J. B. YOUNG &amp; CO.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div style="font-size: 90%">1897.</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page ii -->
+<span class='noshow'><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>ii<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page iii -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>iii<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE</h2>
+
+<p>For thirty years or more the expressions &ldquo;Correlation of the Physical
+Forces&rdquo; and &ldquo;The Conservation of Energy&rdquo; have been common, yet few
+persons have taken the necessary pains to think out clearly what
+mechanical changes take place when one form of energy is transformed
+into another.</p>
+
+<p>Since Tyndall gave us his book called <i>Heat as a Mode of Motion</i> neither
+lecturers nor text-books have attempted to explain how all phenomena are
+the necessary outcome of the various forms of motion. In general,
+phenomena have been attributed to <i>forces</i>&mdash;a metaphysical term, which
+explains nothing and is merely a stop-gap, and is really not at all
+needful in these days, seeing that transformable modes of motion, easily
+perceived and understood, may be substituted in all cases for forces.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page iv -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>iv<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>In December 1895 the author gave a lecture before the Franklin Institute
+of Philadelphia, on &ldquo;Mechanical Conceptions of Electrical Phenomena,&rdquo; in
+which he undertook to make clear what happens when electrical phenomena
+appear. The publication of this lecture in <i>The Journal of the Franklin
+Institute</i> and in <i>Nature</i> brought an urgent request that it should be
+enlarged somewhat and published in a form more convenient for the
+public. The enlargement consists in the addition of a chapter on the
+&ldquo;<i>Contrasted Properties of Matter and the Ether</i>,&rdquo; a chapter containing
+something which the author believes to be of philosophical importance in
+these days when electricity is so generally described as a phenomenon of
+the ether.</p>
+
+<div>
+<span class="smcap" style="float: right; margin-right: 1em;">A. E. Dolbear.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page v -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>v<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<h2>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a></h3>
+
+<p class="hangindent">
+Ideas of phenomena ancient and modern, metaphysical and
+mechanical&mdash;Imponderables&mdash;Forces, invented and
+discarded&mdash;Explanations&mdash;Energy, its factors, Kinetic and
+Potential&mdash;Motions, kinds and transformations of&mdash;Mechanical, molecular,
+and atomic&mdash;Invention of Ethers, Faraday's conceptions p.&nbsp;7</p>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a></h3>
+
+<p class="hangindent">
+Properties of Matter and Ether compared&mdash;Discontinuity <i>versus</i>
+Continuity&mdash;Size of atoms&mdash;Astronomical distances&mdash;Number of atoms in
+the universe&mdash;Ether unlimited&mdash;Kinds of Matter, permanent qualities
+of&mdash;Atomic structure; vortex-rings, their properties&mdash;Ether
+structureless&mdash;Matter gravitative, Ether not&mdash;Friction in Matter, Ether
+frictionless&mdash;Chemical properties&mdash;Energy in Matter and in Ether&mdash;Matter
+as a transformer of Energy&mdash;Elasticity&mdash;Vibratory rates and
+waves&mdash;Density&mdash;Heat&mdash;Indestructibility of Matter&mdash;Inertia in Matter and
+in Ether&mdash;Matter not inert&mdash;Magnetism and Ether waves&mdash;States of
+Matter&mdash;Cohesion and chemism affected by temperature&mdash;Shearing stress in
+Solids and in Ether&mdash;Ether pressure&mdash;Sensation dependent upon
+Matter&mdash;Nervous system not affected by Ether states&mdash;Other stresses in
+Ether&mdash;Transformations of Motion&mdash;Terminology p.&nbsp;24</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page vi -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>vi<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a></h3>
+
+<p class="hangindent">
+Antecedents of Electricity&mdash;Nature of what is transformed&mdash;Series of
+transformations for the production of light&mdash;Positive and negative
+Electricity&mdash;Positive and negative twists&mdash;Rotations about a
+wire&mdash;Rotation of an arc&mdash;Ether a non-conductor&mdash;Electro-magnetic
+waves&mdash;Induction and inductive action&mdash;Ether stress and atomic
+position&mdash;Nature of an electric current&mdash;Electricity a condition, not an
+entity p.&nbsp;94</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 7 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>7<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>
+</div>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<p class="hangindent">
+Ideas of phenomena ancient and modern, metaphysical and
+mechanical&mdash;Imponderables&mdash;Forces, invented and
+discarded&mdash;Explanations&mdash;Energy, its factors, Kinetic and
+Potential&mdash;Motions, kinds and transformations of&mdash;Mechanical, molecular,
+and atomic&mdash;Invention of Ethers, Faraday's conceptions.</p>
+
+<div class="bigskip"></div>
+<p class="hangindent">
+&lsquo;And now we might add something concerning a most subtle spirit
+which pervades and lies hid in all gross bodies, by the force and
+action of which spirit the particles of bodies attract each other at
+near distances, and cohere if contiguous, and electric bodies
+operate at greater distances, as well repelling as attracting
+neighbouring corpuscles, and light is emitted, reflected, inflected,
+and heats bodies, and all sensation is excited, and members of
+animal bodies move at the command of the
+will.&rsquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Newton</span>,
+<i>Principia</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In Newton's day the whole field of nature was practically lying fallow.
+No fundamental principles were known until the law of gravitation was
+discovered. This law was behind all the work of Copernicus, Kepler, and
+Galileo, and what they had done needed interpretation. It was quite
+natural
+<!-- Page 8 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>8<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+that the most obvious and mechanical phenomena should first be
+reduced, and so the <i>Principia</i> was concerned with mechanical principles
+applied to astronomical problems. To us, who have grown up familiar with
+the principles and conceptions underlying them, all varieties of
+mechanical phenomena seem so obvious, that it is difficult for us to
+understand how any one could be obtuse to them; but the records of
+Newton's time, and immediately after this, show that they were not so
+easy of apprehension. It may be remembered that they were not adopted in
+France till long after Newton's day. In spite of what is thought to be
+reasonable, it really requires something more than complete
+demonstration to convince most of us of the truth of an idea, should the
+truth happen to be of a kind not familiar, or should it chance to be
+opposed to our more or less well-defined notions of what it is or ought
+to be. If those who labour for and attain what they think to be the
+truth about any matter, were a little better informed concerning mental
+processes and the conditions under which ideas grow and displace others,
+they would be more patient with mankind; teachers of every rank might
+then discover that what is often called stupidity may be nothing else
+than mental inertia, which can no more be made active by simply willing
+than can the movement of a cannon ball
+<!-- Page 9 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>9<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+by a like effort. We <i>grow</i> into
+our beliefs and opinions upon all matters, and scientific ideas are no
+exceptions.</p>
+
+<p>Whewell, in his <i>History of the Inductive Sciences</i>, says that the
+Greeks made no headway in physical science because they lacked
+appropriate ideas. The evidence is overwhelming that they were as
+observing, as acute, as reasonable as any who live to-day. With this
+view, it would appear that the great discoverers must have been men who
+started out with appropriate ideas: were looking for what they found.
+If, then, one reflects upon the exceeding great difficulty there is in
+discovering one new truth, and the immense amount of work needed to
+disentangle it, it would appear as if even the most successful have but
+indistinct ideas of what is really appropriate, and that their
+mechanical conceptions become clarified by doing their work. This is not
+always the fact. In the statement of Newton quoted at the head of this
+chapter, he speaks of a spirit which lies hid in all gross bodies, etc.,
+by means of which all kinds of phenomena are to be explained; but he
+deliberately abandons that idea when he comes to the study of light, for
+he assumes the existence and activity of light corpuscles, for which he
+has no experimental evidence; and the probability is that he did this
+because the latter conception was one which he
+<!-- Page 10 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>10<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+could handle
+mathematically, while he saw no way for thus dealing with the other. His
+mechanical instincts were more to be trusted than his carefully
+calculated results; for, as all know, what he called &ldquo;spirits,&rdquo; is what
+to-day we call the ether, and the corpuscular theory of light has now no
+more than a historic interest. The corpuscular theory was a mechanical
+conception, but each such corpuscle was ideally endowed with qualities
+which were out of all relation with the ordinary matter with which it
+was classed.</p>
+
+<p>Until the middle of the present century the reigning physical philosophy
+held to the existence of what were called imponderables. The phenomena
+of heat were explained as due to an imponderable substance called
+&ldquo;caloric,&rdquo; which ordinary matter could absorb and emit. A hot body was
+one which had absorbed an imponderable substance. It was, therefore, no
+heavier than before, but it possessed ability to do work proportional to
+the amount absorbed. Carnot's ideal engine was described by him in terms
+that imply the materiality of heat. Light was another imponderable
+substance, the existence of which was maintained by Sir David Brewster
+as long as he lived. Electricity and magnetism were imponderable fluids,
+which, when allied with ordinary matter, endowed the latter with their
+peculiar qualities. The conceptions
+<!-- Page 11 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>11<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+in each case were properly
+mechanical ones <i>part</i> (but not all) <i>of the time</i>; for when the
+immaterial substances were dissociated from matter, where they had
+manifested themselves, no one concerned himself to inquire as to their
+whereabouts. They were simply off duty, but could be summoned, like the
+genii in the story of Aladdin's Lamp. Now, a mechanical conception of
+any phenomenon, or a mechanical explanation of any kind of action, must
+be mechanical all the time, in the antecedents as well as the
+consequents. Nothing else will do except a miracle.</p>
+
+<p>During the fifty years, from about 1820 to 1870, a somewhat different
+kind of explanation of physical events grew up. The interest that was
+aroused by the discoveries in all the fields of physical science&mdash;in
+heat, electricity, magnetism and chemistry&mdash;by Faraday, Joule,
+Helmholtz, and others, compelled a change of conceptions; for it was
+noticed that each special kind of phenomenon was preceded by some other
+definite and known kind; as, for instance, that chemical action preceded
+electrical currents, that mechanical or electrical activity resulted
+from changing magnetism, and so on. As each kind of action was believed
+to be due to a special force, there were invented such terms as
+mechanical force, electrical force, magnetic, chemical and vital forces,
+and these were discovered to be
+<!-- Page 12 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>12<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+convertible into one another, and the
+&ldquo;doctrine of the correlation of the physical forces&rdquo; became a common
+expression in philosophies of all sorts. By &ldquo;convertible into one
+another,&rdquo; was meant, that whenever any given force appeared, it was at
+the expense of some other force; thus, in a battery chemical force was
+changed into electrical force; in a magnet, electrical force was changed
+into magnetic force, and so on. The idea here was the <i>transformation of
+forces</i>, and <i>forces</i> were not so clearly defined that one could have a
+mechanical idea of just what had happened. That part of the philosophy
+was no clearer than that of the imponderables, which had largely dropped
+out of mind. The terminology represented an advance in knowledge, but
+was lacking in lucidity, for no one knew what a force of any kind was.</p>
+
+<p>The first to discover this and to repudiate the prevailing terminology
+were the physiologists, who early announced their disbelief in a vital
+force, and their belief that all physiological activities were of purely
+physical and chemical origin, and that there was no need to assume any
+such thing as a vital force. Then came the discovery that chemical
+force, or affinity, had only an adventitious existence, and that, at
+absolute zero, there was no such activity. The discovery of, or rather
+the appreciation of, what is implied by the term <i>absolute zero</i>, and
+<!-- Page 13 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>13<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+especially of the nature of heat itself, as expressed in the statement
+that heat is a mode of motion, dismissed another of the so-called forces
+as being a metaphysical agency having no real existence, though standing
+for phenomena needing further attention and explanation; and by
+explanation is meant <i>the presentation of the mechanical antecedents for
+a phenomenon, in so complete a way that no supplementary or unknown
+factors are necessary</i>. The train moves because the engine pulls it; the
+engine pulls because the steam pushes it. There is no more necessity for
+assuming a steam force between the steam and the engine, than for
+assuming an engine force between the engine and the train. All the
+processes are mechanical, and have to do only with ordinary matter and
+its conditions, from the coal-pile to the moving freight, though there
+are many transformations of the forms of motion and of energy between
+the two extremes.</p>
+
+<p>During the past thirty years there has come into common use another
+term, unknown in any technical sense before that time, namely, <i>energy</i>.
+What was once called the conservation of force is now called the
+conservation of energy, and we now often hear of forms of energy. Thus,
+heat is said to be a form of energy, and the forms of energy are
+convertible into one another, as the so-called forces were formerly
+supposed to be transformable into one another.
+<!-- Page 14 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>14<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+We are asked to consider
+gravitative energy, heat energy, mechanical energy, chemical energy, and
+electrical energy. When we inquire what is meant by energy, we are
+informed that it means ability to do work, and that work is measurable
+as a pressure into a distance, and is specified as foot-pounds. A mass
+of matter moves because energy has been spent upon it, and has acquired
+energy equal to the work done on it, and this is believed to hold true,
+no matter what the kind of energy was that moved it. If a body moves, it
+moves because another body has exerted pressure upon it, and its energy
+is called <i>kinetic energy</i>; but a body may be subject to pressure and
+not move appreciably, and then the body is said to possess potential
+energy. Thus, a bent spring and a raised weight are said to possess
+potential energy. In either case, <i>an energized body receives its energy
+by pressure, and has ability to produce pressure on another body</i>.
+Whether or not it does work on another body depends on the rigidity of
+the body it acts upon. In any case, it is simply a mechanical
+action&mdash;body A pushes upon body B (Fig. 1). There is no need to assume
+anything more mysterious than mechanical action. Whether body B moves
+this way or that depends upon the direction of the push, the point of
+its application. Whether the body be a mass as large as the earth or as
+small as a molecule, makes no difference in
+<!-- Page 15 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>15<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+that particular. Suppose,
+then, that <i>a</i> (Fig. 2) spends its energy on <i>b</i>, <i>b</i> on <i>c</i>, <i>c</i> on
+<i>d</i>, and so on. The energy of <i>a</i> gives translatory motion to <i>b</i>, <i>b</i>
+sets <i>c</i> vibrating, and <i>c</i> makes <i>d</i> spin on some axis. Each of these
+has had energy spent on it, and each has some form of energy different
+from the other, but no new factor has been introduced between <i>a</i> and
+<i>d</i>, and the only factor that has gone from <i>a</i> to <i>d</i> has been
+motion&mdash;motion that has had its direction and quality changed, but not
+its nature. If we agree that energy is neither created nor annihilated,
+by any physical process, and if we assume that <i>a</i> gave to <i>b</i> all its
+energy, that is, all its motion; that <i>b</i> likewise gave its all to <i>c</i>,
+and so on; then the succession of phenomena
+<!-- Page 16 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>16<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+from <i>a</i> to <i>d</i> has been
+simply the transference of a definite amount of motion, and therefore of
+energy, from the one to the other; for <i>motion has been the only
+variable factor</i>. If, furthermore, we should agree to call the
+translatory motion &alpha;, the vibratory motion &beta;, the
+rotary &gamma;, then we should have had a conversion of &alpha;
+into &beta;, of &beta; into &gamma;. If we should consider
+the amount of transfer motion instead of the kind of motion, we should
+have to say that the &alpha; energy had been transformed into &beta;
+and the &beta; into &gamma;.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_1" id="FIG_1"></a>
+<img src="images/016a.png" width="250" height="108" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 1.</span>
+</span></div>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_2" id="FIG_2"></a>
+<img src="images/016b.png" width="450" height="141" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 2.</span>
+</span></div>
+
+<p>What a given amount of energy will do depends only upon its <i>form</i>, that
+is, the kind of motion that embodies it.</p>
+
+<p>The energy spent upon a stone thrown into the air, giving it translatory
+motion, would, if spent upon a tuning fork, make it sound, but not move
+it from its place; while if spent upon a top, would enable the latter to
+stand upon its point as easily as a person stands on his two feet, and
+to do other surprising things, which otherwise it could not do. One can,
+without difficulty, form a mechanical conception of the whole series
+without assuming imponderables, or fluids or forces. Mechanical motion
+only, by pressure, has been transferred in certain directions at certain
+rates. Suppose now that some one should suddenly come upon a spinning
+top (Fig. 3) while it was standing upon its point,
+<!-- Page 17 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>17<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+and, as its motion
+might not be visible, should cautiously touch it. It would bound away
+with surprising promptness, and, if he were not instructed in the
+mechanical principles involved, he might fairly well draw the conclusion
+that it was actuated by other than simple mechanical principles, and,
+for that reason, it would be difficult to persuade him that there was
+nothing essentially different in the body that appeared and acted thus,
+than in a stone thrown into the air; nevertheless, that statement would
+be the simple truth.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_3" id="FIG_3"></a>
+<img src="images/018.png" width="200" height="269" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 3.</span>
+</span></div>
+
+<p>All our experience, without a single exception, enforces the proposition
+that no body moves in any direction, or in any way, except when some
+other body <i>in contact</i> with it presses upon it. The action is direct.
+In Newton's letter to his friend
+<!-- Page 18 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>18<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+Bentley, he says&mdash;&ldquo;That one body
+should act upon another through empty space, without the mediation of
+anything else by and through which their action and pressure may be
+conveyed from one to another, is to me so great an absurdity that I
+believe no man who has in philosophical matters a competent faculty of
+thinking can ever fall into it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>For mathematical purposes, it has sometimes been convenient to treat a
+problem as if one body could act upon another without any physical
+medium between them; but such a conception has no degree of rationality,
+and I know of no one who believes in it as a fact. If this be granted,
+then our philosophy agrees with our experience, and every body moves
+because it is pushed, and the mechanical antecedent of every kind of
+phenomenon is to be looked for in some adjacent body possessing
+energy&mdash;that is, the ability to push or produce pressure.</p>
+
+<p>It must not be forgotten that energy is not a simple factor, but is
+always a product of two factors&mdash;a mass with a velocity, a mass with a
+temperature, a quantity of electricity into a pressure, and so on. One
+may sometimes meet the statement that matter and energy are the two
+realities; both are spoken of as entities. It is much more philosophical
+to speak of matter and motion, for in the absence of motion there is no
+energy, and the
+<!-- Page 19 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>19<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+energy varies with the amount of motion; and
+furthermore, to understand any manifestation of energy one must inquire
+what kind of motion is involved. This we do when we speak of mechanical
+energy as the energy involved in a body having a translatory motion;
+also, when we speak of heat as a vibratory, and of light as a wave
+motion. To speak of energy without stating or implying these
+distinctions, is to speak loosely and to keep far within the bounds of
+actual knowledge. To speak thus of a body possessing energy, or
+expending energy, is to imply that the body possesses some kind of
+motion, and produces pressure upon another body because it has motion.
+Tait and others have pointed out the fact, that what is called potential
+energy must, in its nature, be kinetic. Tait says&mdash;&ldquo;Now it is impossible
+to conceive of a truly dormant form of energy, whose magnitude should
+depend, in any way, upon the unit of time; and we are forced to conclude
+that potential energy, like kinetic energy, depends (even if unexplained
+or unimagined) upon motion.&rdquo; All this means that it is now too late to
+stop with energy as a final factor in any phenomenon, that the <i>form of
+motion</i> which embodies the energy is the factor that determines <i>what</i>
+happens, as distinguished from how <i>much</i> happens. Here, then, are to be
+found the distinctions which have heretofore been
+<!-- Page 20 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>20<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+called forces; here
+is embodied the proof that direct pressure of one body upon another is
+what causes the latter to move, and that the direction of movement
+depends on the point of application, with reference to the centre of
+mass.</p>
+
+<p>It is needful now to look at the other term in the product we call
+energy, namely, the substance moving, sometimes called matter or mass.
+It has been mentioned that the idea of a medium filling space was
+present to Newton, but his gravitation problem did not require that he
+should consider other factors than masses and distances. The law of
+gravitation as considered by him was&mdash;Every particle of matter attracts
+every other particle of matter with a stress which is proportional to
+the product of their masses, and inversely to the squares of the
+distance between them. Here we are concerned only with the statement
+that every particle of matter attracts every other particle of matter.
+Everything then that possesses gravitative attraction is matter in the
+sense in which that term is used in this law. If there be any other
+substance in the universe that is not thus subject to gravitation, then
+it is improper to call it matter, otherwise the law should read, &ldquo;Some
+particles of matter attract,&rdquo; etc., which will never do.</p>
+
+<p>We are now assured that there is something else in the universe which
+has no gravitative property
+<!-- Page 21 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>21<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+at all, namely, the ether. It was first
+imagined in order to account for the phenomena of light, which was
+observed to take about eight minutes to come from the sun to the earth.
+Then Young applied the wave theory to the explanation of polarization
+and other phenomena; and in 1851 Foucault proved experimentally that the
+velocity of light was less in water than in air, as it should be if the
+wave theory be true, and this has been considered a crucial experiment
+which took away the last hope for the corpuscular theory, and
+demonstrated the existence of the ether as a space-filling medium
+capable of transmitting light-waves known to have a velocity of 186,000
+miles per second. It was called the luminiferous ether, to distinguish
+it from other ethers which had also been imagined, such as electric
+ether for electrical phenomena, magnetic ether for magnetic phenomena,
+and so on&mdash;as many ethers, in fact, as there were different kinds of
+phenomena to be explained.</p>
+
+<p>It was Faraday who put a stop to the invention of ethers, by suggesting
+that the so-called luminiferous ether might be the one concerned in all
+the different phenomena, and who pointed out that the arrangement of
+iron filings about a magnet was indicative of the direction of the
+stresses in the ether. This suggestion did not meet the approval of the
+mathematical physicists of his day, for it necessitated
+<!-- Page 22 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>22<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+the abandonment
+of the conceptions they had worked with, as well as the terminology
+which had been employed, and made it needful to reconstruct all their
+work to make it intelligible&mdash;a labour which was the more distasteful as
+it was forced upon them by one who, although expert enough in
+experimentation, was not a mathematician, and who boasted that the most
+complicated mathematical work he ever did was to turn the crank of a
+calculating machine; who did all his work, formed his conclusions, and
+then said&mdash;&ldquo;The work is done; hand it over to the computers.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It has turned out that Faraday's mechanical conceptions were right.
+Every one now knows of Maxwell's work, which was to start with Faraday's
+conceptions as to magnetic phenomena, and follow them out to their
+logical conclusions, applying them to molecules and the reactions of the
+latter upon the ether. Thus he was led to conclude that light was an
+electro-magnetic phenomenon; that is, that the waves which constitute
+light, and the waves produced by changing magnetism were identical in
+their nature, were in the same medium, travelled with the same velocity,
+were capable of refraction, and so on. Now that all this is a matter of
+common knowledge to-day, it is curious to look back no further than ten
+years. Maxwell's conclusions
+<!-- Page 23 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>23<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+were adopted by scarcely a physicist in
+the world. Although it was known that inductive action travelled with
+finite velocity in space, and that an electro-magnet would affect the
+space about it practically inversely as the square of the distance, and
+that such phenomena as are involved in telephonic induction between
+circuits could have no other meaning than the one assigned by Maxwell,
+yet nearly all the physicists failed to form the only conception of it
+that was possible, and waited for Hertz to devise apparatus for
+producing interference before they grasped it. It was even then so new,
+to some, that it was proclaimed to be a demonstration of the existence
+of the ether itself, as well as a method of producing waves short enough
+to enable one to notice interference phenomena. It is obvious that Hertz
+himself must have had the mechanics of wave-motion plainly in mind, or
+he would not have planned such experiments. The outcome of it all is,
+that we now have experimental demonstration, as well as theoretical
+reason for believing, that the ether, once considered as only
+luminiferous, is concerned in all electric and magnetic phenomena, and
+that waves set up in it by electro-magnetic actions are capable of being
+reflected, refracted, polarized, and twisted, in the same way as
+ordinary light-waves can be, and that the laws of optics are applicable
+to both.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 24 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>24<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>
+</div>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>PROPERTIES OF MATTER AND ETHER</h3>
+
+<p class="hangindent">
+Properties of Matter and Ether compared&mdash;Discontinuity <i>versus</i>
+Continuity&mdash;Size of atoms&mdash;Astronomical distances&mdash;Number of atoms in
+the universe&mdash;Ether unlimited&mdash;Kinds of Matter, permanent qualities
+of&mdash;Atomic structure; vortex-rings, their properties&mdash;Ether
+structureless&mdash;Matter gravitative, Ether not&mdash;Friction in Matter, Ether
+frictionless&mdash;Chemical properties&mdash;Energy in Matter and in Ether&mdash;Matter
+as a transformer of Energy&mdash;Elasticity&mdash;Vibratory rates and
+waves&mdash;Density&mdash;Heat&mdash;Indestructibility of Matter&mdash;Inertia in Matter and
+in Ether&mdash;Matter not inert&mdash;Magnetism and Ether waves&mdash;States of
+Matter&mdash;Cohesion and chemism affected by temperature&mdash;Shearing stress in
+Solids and in Ether&mdash;Ether pressure&mdash;Sensation dependent upon
+Matter&mdash;Nervous system not affected by Ether states&mdash;Other stresses in
+Ether&mdash;Transformations of Motion&mdash;Terminology.</p>
+
+<div class="bigskip"></div>
+<p>A common conception of the ether has been that it is a finer-grained
+substance than ordinary matter, but otherwise so like the latter that
+the laws found to hold good with matter were equally applicable to the
+ether, and hence the mechanical conceptions
+<!-- Page 25 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>25<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+formed from experience in
+regard to the one have been transferred to the other, and the properties
+belonging to one, such as density, elasticity, etc., have been asserted
+as properties of the other.</p>
+
+<p>There is so considerable a body of knowledge bearing upon the
+similarities and dissimilarities of these two entities that it will be
+well to compare them. After such comparison one will be better able to
+judge of the propriety of assuming them to be subject to identical laws.</p>
+
+
+<h3>1. MATTER IS DISCONTINUOUS.</h3>
+
+<p>Matter is made up of atoms having dimensions approximately determined to
+be in the neighbourhood of the one fifty-millionth of an inch in
+diameter. These atoms may have various degrees of aggregation;&mdash;they may
+be in practical contact, as in most solid bodies such as metals and
+rocks; in molecular groupings as in water, and in gases such as
+hydrogen, oxygen, and so forth, where two, three, or more atoms cohere
+so strongly as to enable the molecules to act under ordinary
+circumstances like simple particles. Any or all of these molecules and
+atoms may be separated by any assignable distance from each other. Thus,
+in common air the molecules, though rapidly changing their positions,
+are on the average about two hundred and fifty times their own diameter
+apart.
+<!-- Page 26 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>26<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+This is a distance relatively greater than the distance apart of
+the earth and the moon, for two hundred and fifty times the diameter of
+the earth will be 8000 × 250 = 2,000,000 miles, while the distance to
+the moon is but 240,000 miles. The sun is 93,000,000 miles from the
+earth, and the most of the bodies of the solar system are still more
+widely separated, Neptune being nearly 3000 millions of miles from the
+sun. As for the fixed stars, they are so far separated from us that, at
+the present rate of motion of the solar system in its drift through
+space&mdash;500 millions of miles in a year&mdash;it would take not less than
+40,000 years to reach the nearest star among its neighbours, while for
+the more remote ones millions of years must be reckoned. The huge space
+separating these masses is practically devoid of matter; it is a vacuum.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS CONTINUOUS.</h3>
+
+<p>The idea of continuity as distinguished from discontinuity may be gained
+by considering what would be made visible by magnification. Water
+appears to the eye as if it were without pores, but if sugar or salt be
+put into it, either will be dissolved and quite disappear among the
+molecules of the water as steam does in the air, which shows that there
+are some unoccupied spaces between the molecules.
+<!-- Page 27 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>27<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+If a microscope be
+employed to magnify a minute drop of water it still shows the same lack
+of structure as that looked at with the unaided eye. If the magnifying
+power be the highest it may reveal a speck as small as the
+hundred-thousandth part of an inch, yet the speck looks no different in
+character. We know that water is composed of two different kinds of
+atoms, hydrogen and oxygen, for they can be separated by chemical means
+and kept in separate bottles, and again made to combine to form water
+having all the qualities that belonged to it before it was decomposed.
+If a very much higher magnifying power were available, we should
+ultimately be able to see the individual water molecules, and recognize
+their hydrogen and oxygen constituents by their difference in size, rate
+of movements, and we might possibly separate them by mechanical methods.
+What one would see would be something very different in structure from
+the water as it appears to our eyes. If the ether were similarly to be
+examined through higher and still higher magnifying powers, even up to
+infinity, there is no reason for thinking that the last examination
+would show anything different in structure or quality from that which
+was examined with low power or with no microscope at all. This is all
+expressed by saying that the ether is a continuous substance, without
+interstices, that it fills space completely,
+<!-- Page 28 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>28<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+and, unlike gases,
+liquids, and solids, is incapable of absorbing or dissolving anything.</p>
+
+
+<h3>2. MATTER IS LIMITED.</h3>
+
+<p>There appears to be a definite amount of matter in the visible universe,
+a definite number of molecules and atoms. How many molecules there are
+in a cubic inch of air under ordinary pressure has been determined, and
+is represented approximately by a huge number, something like a thousand
+million million millions.</p>
+
+<p>When the diameter of a molecule has been measured, as it has been
+approximately, and found to be about one fifty-millionth of an inch,
+then fifty million in a row would reach an inch, and the cube of fifty
+million is 125,000,000000,000000,000000, one hundred and twenty-five
+thousand million million millions. In a cubic foot there will of course
+be 1728 times that number. One may if one likes find how many there may
+be in the earth, and moon, sun and planets, for the dimensions of them
+are all very well known. Only the multiplication table need be used, and
+the sum of all these will give how many molecules there are in the solar
+system. If one should feel that the number thus obtained was not very
+accurate, he might reflect that if there were ten times as many it would
+add but another cipher to a long line of similar ones and would not
+<!-- Page 29 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>29<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+materially modify it. The point is that there is a definite, computable
+number. If one will then add to these the number of molecules in the
+more distant stars and nebulę, of which there are visible about
+100,000,000, making such estimate of their individual size as he thinks
+prudent, the sum of all will give the number of molecules in the visible
+universe. The number is not so large but it can be written down in a
+minute or two. Those who have been to the pains to do the sum say it may
+be represented by seven followed by ninety-one ciphers. One could easily
+compute how many molecules so large a space would contain if it were
+full and as closely packed as they are in a drop of water, but there
+would be a finite and not an infinite number, and therefore there is a
+limited number of atoms in the visible universe.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS UNLIMITED.</h3>
+
+<p>The evidence for this comes to us from the phenomena of light.
+Experimentally, ether waves of all lengths are found to have a velocity
+of 186,000 miles in a second. It takes about eight minutes to reach us
+from the sun, four hours from Neptune the most distant planet, and from
+the nearest fixed star about three and a half years. Astronomers tell us
+that some visible stars are so distant that their light requires not
+less than ten
+<!-- Page 30 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>30<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+thousand years and probably more to reach us, though
+travelling at the enormous rate of 186,000 miles a second. This means
+that the whole of space is filled with this medium. If there were any
+vacant spaces, the light would fail to get through them, and stars
+beyond them would become invisible. There are no such vacant spaces, for
+any part of the heavens shows stars beaming continuously, and every
+increase in telescopic power shows stars still further removed than any
+seen before. The whole of this intervening space must therefore be
+filled with the ether. Some of the waves that reach us are not more than
+the hundred-thousandth of an inch long, so there can be no crack or
+break or absence of ether from so small a section as the
+hundred-thousandth of an inch in all this great expanse. More than this.
+No one can think that the remotest visible stars are upon the boundary
+of space, that if one could get to the most distant star he would have
+on one side the whole of space while the opposite side would be devoid
+of it. Space we know is of three dimensions, and a straight line may be
+prolonged in any direction to an infinite distance, and a ray of light
+may travel on for an infinite time and come to no end provided space be
+filled with ether.</p>
+
+<p>How long the sun and stars have been shining no one knows, but it is
+highly probable that the sun has
+<!-- Page 31 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>31<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+existed for not less than 1000 million
+years, and has during that time been pouring its rays as radiant energy
+into space. If then in half that time, or 500 millions of years, the
+light had somewhere reached a boundary to the ether, it could not have
+gone beyond but would have been reflected back into the ether-filled
+space, and such part of the sky would be lit up by this reflected light.
+There is no indication that anything like reflection comes to us from
+the sky. This is equivalent to saying that the ether fills space in
+every direction away from us to an unlimited distance, and so far is
+itself unlimited.</p>
+
+
+<h3>3. MATTER IS HETEROGENEOUS.</h3>
+
+<p>The various kinds of matter we are acquainted with are commonly called
+the elements. These when combined in various ways exhibit characteristic
+phenomena which depend upon the kinds of matter, the structure and
+motions which are involved. There are some seventy different kinds of
+this elemental matter which may be identified as constituents of the
+earth. Many of the same elements have been identified in the sun and
+stars, such for instance as hydrogen, carbon, and iron. Such phenomena
+lead us to conclude that the kinds of matter elsewhere in the universe
+are identical with such as we are familiar with, and that elsewhere the
+variety is as great. The qualities of the elements,
+<!-- Page 32 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>32<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+within a certain
+range of temperature, are permanent; they are not subject to
+fluctuations, though the qualities of combinations of them may vary
+indefinitely. The elements therefore may be regarded as retaining their
+identity in all ordinary experience.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS HOMOGENEOUS.</h3>
+
+<p>One part of the ether is precisely like any other part everywhere and
+always, and there are no such distinctions in it as correspond with the
+elemental forms of matter.</p>
+
+
+<h3>4. MATTER IS ATOMIC.</h3>
+
+<p>There is an ultimate particle of each one of the elements which is
+practically absolute and known as an atom. The atom retains its identity
+through all combinations and processes. It may be here or there, move
+fast or slow, but its atomic form persists.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS NON-ATOMIC.</h3>
+
+<p>One might infer, from what has already been said about continuity, that
+the ether could not be constituted of separable particles like masses of
+matter; for no matter how minute they might be, there would be
+interspaces and unoccupied spaces which would present us with phenomena
+which have never
+<!-- Page 33 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>33<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+been seen. It is the general consensus of opinion
+among those who have studied the subject that the ether is not atomic in
+structure.</p>
+
+
+<h3>5. MATTER HAS DEFINITE STRUCTURE.</h3>
+
+<p>Every atom of every element is so like every other atom of the same
+element as to exhibit the same characteristics, size, weight, chemical
+activity, vibratory rate, etc., and it is thus shown conclusively that
+the structural form of the elemental particles is the same for each
+element, for such characteristic reactions as they exhibit could hardly
+be if they were mechanically unlike.</p>
+
+<p>Of what form the atoms of an element may be is not very definitely
+known. The earlier philosophers assumed them to be hard round particles,
+but later thinkers have concluded that atoms of such a character are
+highly improbable, for they could not exhibit in this case the
+properties which the elements do exhibit. They have therefore dismissed
+such a conception from consideration. In place of this hypothesis has
+been substituted a very different idea, namely, that an atom is a
+vortex-ring<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> of ether floating in the ether, as a smoke-ring
+<!-- Page 34 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>34<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+puffed
+out by a locomotive in still air may float in the air and show various
+phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>A vortex-ring produced in the air behaves in the most surprising manner.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_4" id="FIG_4"></a>
+<img src="images/035.jpg" width="500" height="369" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 4.</span>&mdash;Method of making vortex-rings
+and their behaviour.
+</span></div>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 35 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>35<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<div style="font-size: 90%">
+<p>1. It retains its ring form and the same material rotating as it
+starts with.</p>
+
+<p>2. It can travel through the air easily twenty or thirty feet in a
+second without disruption.</p>
+
+<p>3. Its line of motion when free is always at right angles to the
+plane of the ring.</p>
+
+<p>4. It will not stand still unless compelled by some object. If
+stopped in the air it will start up itself to travel on without
+external help.</p>
+
+<p>5. It possesses momentum and energy like a solid body.</p>
+
+<p>6. It is capable of vibrating like an elastic body, making a
+definite number of such vibrations per second, the degree of
+elasticity depending upon the rate of vibration. The swifter the
+rotation, the more rigid and elastic it is.</p>
+
+<p>7. It is capable of spinning on its own axis, and thus having rotary
+energy as well as translatory and vibratory.</p>
+
+<p>8. It repels light bodies in front of it, and attracts into itself
+light bodies in its rear.</p>
+
+<p>9. If projected along parallel with the top of a long table, it will
+fall upon it every time, just as a stone thrown horizontally will
+fall to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>10. If two rings of the same size be travelling in the same line,
+and the rear one overtakes the other, the front one will enlarge its
+diameter, while the rear one will contract its own till it can go
+through the forward one, when each will recover its original
+diameter, and continue on in the same direction, but vibrating,
+expanding and contracting their diameters with regularity.</p>
+
+<p>11. If two rings be moving in the same line, but in opposite
+directions, they will repel each other when near, and thus retard
+their speed. If one goes through the other, as in the former case,
+it may quite lose its velocity, and come to a standstill in the air
+till the other has moved
+<!-- Page 36 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>36<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+on to a distance, when it will start up in
+its former direction.</p>
+
+<p>12. If two rings be formed side by side, they will instantly collide
+at their edges, showing strong attraction.</p>
+
+<p>13. If the collision does not destroy them, they may either break
+apart at the point of the collision, and then weld together into a
+single ring with twice the diameter, and then move on as if a single
+ring had been formed, or they may simply bounce away from each
+other, in which case they always rebound <i>in a plane</i> at right
+angles to the plane of collision. That is, if they collided on their
+sides, they would rebound so that one went up and the other down.</p>
+
+<p>14. Three may in like manner collide and fuse into a single ring.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Such rings formed in air by a locomotive may rise wriggling in the air
+to the height of several hundred feet, but they are soon dissolved and
+disappear. This is because the friction and viscosity of the air robs
+the rings of their substance and energy. If the air were without
+friction this could not happen, and the rings would then be persistent,
+and would retain all their qualities.</p>
+
+<p>Suppose then that such rings were produced in a medium without friction
+as the ether is believed to be, they would be permanent structures with
+a variety of properties. They would occupy space, have definite form and
+dimensions, momentum, energy, attraction and repulsion, elasticity; obey
+the laws of motion, and so far behave quite like such matter as we know.
+For such reasons
+<!-- Page 37 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>37<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+it is thought by some persons to be not improbable
+that the atoms of matter are minute vortex-rings of ether in the ether.
+That which distinguishes the atom from the ether is the form of motion
+which is embodied in it, and if the motion were simply arrested, there
+would be nothing to distinguish the atom from the ether into which it
+dissolved. In other words, such a conception makes the atoms of matter a
+form of motion of the ether, and not a created something put into the
+ether.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS STRUCTURELESS.</h3>
+
+<p>If the ether be the boundless substance described, it is clear it can
+have no form as a whole, and if it be continuous it can have no minute
+structure. If not constituted of atoms or molecules there is nothing
+descriptive that can be said about it. A molecule or a particular mass
+of matter could be identified by its form, and is thus in marked
+contrast with any portion of ether, for the latter could not be
+identified in a similar way. One may therefore say that the ether is
+formless.</p>
+
+
+<h3>6. MATTER IS GRAVITATIVE.</h3>
+
+<p>The law of gravitation is held as being universal. According to it every
+particle of matter in the universe attracts every other particle. The
+evidence
+<!-- Page 38 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>38<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+for this law in the solar system is complete. Sun, planets,
+satellites, comets and meteors are all controlled by gravitation, and
+the movements of double stars testify to its activity among the more
+distant bodies of the universe. The attraction does not depend upon the
+kind of matter nor the arrangement of molecules or atoms, but upon the
+amount or mass of matter present, and if it be of a definite kind of
+matter, as of hydrogen or iron, the gravitative action is proportional
+to the number of atoms.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS GRAVITATIONLESS.</h3>
+
+<p>One might infer already that if the ether were structureless, physical
+laws operative upon such material substances as atoms could not be
+applicable to it, and so indeed all the evidence we have shows that
+gravitation is not one of its properties. If it were, and it behaved in
+any degree like atomic structures, it would be found to be denser in the
+neighbourhood of large bodies like the earth, planets, and the sun.
+Light would be turned from its straight path while travelling in such
+denser medium, or made to move with less velocity. There is not the
+slightest indication of any such effect anywhere within the range of
+astronomical vision.</p>
+
+<p>Gravitation then is a property belonging to
+<!-- Page 39 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>39<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+matter and not to ether.
+The impropriety of thinking or speaking of the ether as matter of any
+kind will be apparent if one reflects upon the significance of the law
+of gravitation as stated. Every particle of matter in the universe
+attracts every other particle. If there be anything else in the universe
+which has no such quality, then it should not be called matter, else the
+law should read: Some particles of matter attract some other particles,
+which would be no law at all, for a real physical law has no exceptions
+any more than the multiplication table has. Physical laws are physical
+relations, and all such relations are quantitative.</p>
+
+
+<h3>7. MATTER IS FRICTIONABLE.</h3>
+
+<p>A bullet shot into the air has its velocity continuously reduced by the
+air, to which its energy is imparted by making it move out of its way. A
+railway train is brought to rest by the friction brake upon the wheels.
+The translatory energy of the train is transformed into the molecular
+energy called heat. The steamship requires to propel it fast, a large
+amount of coal for its engines, because the water in which it moves
+offers great friction&mdash;resistance which must be overcome. Whenever one
+surface of matter is moved in contact with another surface there is a
+resistance called friction,
+<!-- Page 40 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>40<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+the moving body loses its rate of motion,
+and will presently be brought to rest unless energy be continuously
+supplied. This is true for masses of matter of all sizes and with all
+kinds of motion. Friction is the condition for the transformation of all
+kinds of mechanical motions into heat. The test of the amount of
+friction is the rate of loss of motion. A top will spin some time in the
+air because its point is small. It will spin longer on a plate than on
+the carpet, and longer in a vacuum than in the air, for it does not have
+the air friction to resist it, and there is no kind or form of matter
+not subject to frictional resistance.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS FRICTIONLESS.</h3>
+
+<p>The earth is a mass of matter moving in the ether. In the equatorial
+region the velocity of a point is more than a thousand miles in an hour,
+for the circumference of the earth is 25,000 miles, and it turns once on
+its axis in 24 hours, which is the length of the day. If the earth were
+thus spinning in the atmosphere, the latter not being in motion, the
+wind would blow with ten times hurricane velocity. The friction would be
+so great that nothing but the foundation rocks of the earth's crust
+could withstand it, and the velocity of rotation would be reduced
+appreciably in a relatively short time. The air
+<!-- Page 41 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>41<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+moves along with the
+earth as a part of it, and consequently no such frictional destruction
+takes place, but the earth rotates in the ether with that same rate, and
+if the ether offered resistance it would react so as to retard the
+rotation and increase the length of the day. Astronomical observations
+show that the length of the day has certainly not changed so much as the
+tenth of a second during the past 2000 years. The earth also revolves
+about the sun, having a speed of about 19 miles in a second, or 68,000
+miles an hour. This motion of the earth and the other planets about the
+sun is one of the most stable phenomena we know. The mean distance and
+period of revolution of every planet is unalterable in the long run. If
+the earth had been retarded by its friction in the ether the length of
+the year would have been changed, and astronomers would have discovered
+it. They assert that a change in the length of a year by so much as the
+hundredth part of a second has not happened during the past thousand
+years. This then is testimony, that a velocity of nineteen miles a
+second for a thousand years has produced no effect upon the earth's
+motion that is noticeable. Nineteen miles a second is not a very swift
+astronomical motion, for comets have been known to have a velocity of
+400 miles a second when in the neighbourhood of the sun, and yet they
+have not
+<!-- Page 42 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>42<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+seemed to suffer any retardation, for their orbits have not
+been shortened. Some years ago a comet was noticed to have its periodic
+time shortened an hour or two, and the explanation offered at first was
+that the shortening was due to friction in the ether although no other
+comet was thus affected. The idea was soon abandoned, and to-day there
+is no astronomical evidence that bodies having translatory motion in the
+ether meet with any frictional resistance whatever. If a stone could be
+thrown in interstellar space with a velocity of fifty feet a second it
+would continue to move in a straight line with the same speed for any
+assignable time.</p>
+
+<p>As has been said, light moves with the velocity of 186,000 miles per
+second, and it may pursue its course for tens of thousands of years.
+There is no evidence that it ever loses either its wave-length or
+energy. It is not transformed as friction would transform it, else there
+would be some distance at which light of given wave-length and amplitude
+would be quite extinguished. The light from distant stars would be
+different in character from that coming from nearer stars. Furthermore,
+as the whole solar system is drifting in space some 500,000,000 of miles
+in a year, new stars would be coming into view in that direction, and
+faint stars would be dropping out of sight in the opposite
+<!-- Page 43 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>43<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+direction&mdash;a
+phenomenon which has not been observed. Altogether the testimony seems
+conclusive that the ether is a frictionless medium, and does not
+transform mechanical motion into heat.</p>
+
+
+<h3>8. MATTER IS ĘOLOTROPIC.</h3>
+
+<p>That is, its properties are not alike in all directions. Chemical
+phenomena, crystallization, magnetic and electrical phenomena show each
+in their way that the properties of atoms are not alike on opposite
+faces. Atoms combine to form molecules, and molecules arrange themselves
+in certain definite geometric forms such as cubes, tetrahedra, hexagonal
+prisms and stellate forms, with properties emphasized on certain faces
+or ends. Thus quartz will twist a ray of light in one direction or the
+other, depending upon the arrangement which may be known by the external
+form of the crystal. Calc spar will break up a ray of light into two
+parts if the light be sent through it in certain directions, but not if
+in another. Tourmaline polarizes light sent through its sides and
+becomes positively electrified at one end while being heated. Some
+substances will conduct sound or light or heat or electricity better in
+one direction than in another. All matter is magnetic in some degree,
+and that implies polarity. If one will recall the structure of a
+vortex-ring, he will see how all the
+<!-- Page 44 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>44<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+motion is inward on one side and
+outward on the other, which gives different properties to the two sides:
+a push away from it on one side and a pull toward it on the other.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS ISOTROPIC.</h3>
+
+<p>That is, its properties are alike in every direction. There is no
+distinction due to position. A mass of matter will move as freely in one
+direction as in another; a ray of light of any wave-length will travel
+in it in one direction as freely as in any other; neither velocity nor
+direction are changed by the action of the ether alone.</p>
+
+
+<h3>9. MATTER IS CHEMICALLY SELECTIVE.</h3>
+
+<p>When the elements combine to form molecules they always combine in
+definite ways and in definite proportions. Carbon will combine with
+hydrogen, but will drop it if it can get oxygen. Oxygen will combine
+with iron or lead or sodium, but cannot be made to combine with
+fluorine. No more than two atoms of oxygen can be made to unite with one
+carbon atom, nor more than one hydrogen with one chlorine atom. There is
+thus an apparent choice for the kind and number of associates in
+molecular structure, and the instability of a molecule depends
+altogether upon the presence in its neighbourhood of other atoms for
+which some of the
+<!-- Page 45 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>45<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+elements in the molecule have a stronger attraction
+or affinity than they have for the atoms they are now combined with.
+Thus iron is not stable in the presence of water molecules, and it
+becomes iron oxide; iron oxide is not stable in the presence of hot
+sulphur, it becomes an iron sulphide. All the elements are thus
+selective, and it is by such means that they may be chemically
+identified.</p>
+
+<p>There is no phenomenon in the ether that is comparable with this.
+Evidently there could not be unless there were atomic structures having
+in some degree different characteristics which we know the ether to be
+without.</p>
+
+
+<h3>10. THE ELEMENTS OF MATTER ARE HARMONICALLY RELATED.</h3>
+
+<p>It is possible to arrange the elements in the order of their atomic
+weights in columns which will show communities of property. Newlands,
+Mendeléeff, Meyer, and others have done this. The explanation for such
+an arrangement has not yet been forthcoming, but that it expresses a
+real fact is certain, for in the original scheme there were several gaps
+representing undiscovered elements, the properties of which were
+predicted from that of their associates in the table. Some of these have
+since been discovered, and their atomic weight and physical properties
+accord with those predicted.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 46 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>46<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>With the ether such a scheme is quite impossible, for the very evident
+reason that there are no different things to have relation with each
+other. Every part is just like every other part. Where there are no
+differences and no distinctions there can be no relations. The ether is
+quite harmonic without relations.</p>
+
+
+<h3>11. MATTER EMBODIES ENERGY.</h3>
+
+<p>So long as the atoms of matter were regarded as hard round particles,
+they were assumed to be inert and only active when acted upon by what
+were called forces, which were held to be entities of some sort,
+independent of matter. These could pull or push it here or there, but
+the matter was itself incapable of independent activity. All this is now
+changed, and we are called upon to consider every atom as being itself a
+form of energy in the same sense as heat or light are forms of energy,
+the energy being embodied in particular forms of motion. Light, for
+instance, is a wave motion of the ether. An atom is a rotary ring of
+ether. Stop the wave motion, and the light would be annihilated. Stop
+the rotation, and the atom would be annihilated for the same reason. As
+the ray of light is a particular embodiment of energy, and has no
+existence apart from it, so an atom is to be regarded as an embodiment
+of energy. On a
+<!-- Page 47 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>47<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+previous page it is said that energy is the ability of
+one body to act upon and move another in some degree. An atom of any
+kind is not the inert thing it has been supposed to be, for it can do
+something. Even at absolute zero, when all its vibratory or heat energy
+would be absent, it would be still an elastic whirling body pulling upon
+every other atom in the universe with gravitational energy, twisting
+other atoms into conformity with its own position with its magnetic
+energy; and, if such ether rings are like the rings which are made in
+air, will not stand still in one place even if no others act upon it,
+but will start at once by its own inherent energy to move in a right
+line at right angles to its own plane and in the direction of the whirl
+inside the ring. Two rings of wood or iron might remain in contact with
+each other for an indefinite time, but vortex-rings will not, but will
+beat each other away as two spinning tops will do if they touch ever so
+gently. If they do not thus separate it is because there are other forms
+of energy acting to press them together, but such external pressure will
+be lessened by the rings' own reactions.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that in a frictionless medium like the ether one cannot at
+present see how such vortex-rings could be produced in it. Certainly not
+by any such mechanical methods as are employed to
+<!-- Page 48 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>48<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+make smoke-rings in
+air, for the friction of the air is the condition for producing them.
+However they came to be, there is implied the previous existence of the
+ether and of energy in some form capable of acting upon it in a manner
+radically different from any known in physical science.</p>
+
+<p>There is good spectroscopic evidence that in some way elements of
+different kinds are now being formed in nebulę, for the simplest show
+the presence of hydrogen alone. As they increase in complexity other
+elements are added, until the spectrum exhibits all the elements we know
+of. It has thus seemed likely either that most of what are called
+elements are composed of molecular groupings of some fundamental
+element, which by proper physical methods might be decomposed, as one
+can now decompose a molecule of ammonia or sulphuric acid, or that the
+elements are now being created by some extra-physical process in those
+far-off regions. In either case an atom is the embodiment of energy in
+such a form as to be permanent under ordinary physical circumstances,
+but of which, if in any manner it should be destroyed, only the form
+would be lost. The ether would remain, and the energy which was embodied
+would be distributed in other ways.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 49 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>49<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS ENDOWED WITH ENERGY.</h3>
+
+<p>The distinction between energy in matter and energy in the ether will be
+apparent, on considering that both the ether and energy in some form
+must be conceived as existing independent of matter; though every atom
+were annihilated, the ether would remain and all the energy embodied in
+the atoms would be still in existence in the ether. The atomic energy
+would simply be dissolved. One can easily conceive the ether as the same
+space-filling, continuous, unlimited medium, without an atom in it. On
+this assumption it is clear that no form of energy with which we have to
+deal in physical science would have any existence in the ether; for
+every one of those forms, gravitational, thermal, electric, magnetic, or
+any other&mdash;all are the results of the forms of energy in matter. If
+there were no atoms, there would be no gravitation, for that is the
+attraction of atoms upon each other. If there were no atoms, there could
+be no atomic vibration, therefore no heat, and so on for each and all.
+Nevertheless, if an atom be the embodiment of energy, there must have
+been energy in the ether before any atom existed. One of the properties
+of the ether is its ability to distribute energy in certain ways, but
+there is no evidence that of itself it ever transforms energy. Once a
+<!-- Page 50 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>50<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+given kind of energy is in it, it does not change; hence for the
+apparition of a form of energy, like the first vortex-ring, there must
+have been not only energy, but some other agency capable of transforming
+that energy into a permanent structure. To the best of our knowledge
+to-day, the ether would be absolutely helpless. Such energy as was
+active in forming atoms must be called by another name than what is
+appropriate for such transformations as occur when, for instance, the
+mechanical energy of a bullet is transformed into heat when the target
+is struck. Behind the ether must be assumed some agency, directing and
+controlling energy in a manner totally different from any agency, which
+is operative in what we call physical science. Nothing short of what is
+called a miracle will do&mdash;an event without a physical antecedent in any
+way necessarily related to its factors, as is the fact of a stone
+related to gravity or heat to an electric current.</p>
+
+<p>Ether energy is an endowment instead of being an embodiment, and implies
+antecedents of a super-physical kind.</p>
+
+
+<h3>12. MATTER IS AN ENERGY TRANSFORMER.</h3>
+
+<p>As each different kind of energy represents some specific form of
+motion, and <i>vice versā</i>, some sort of mechanism is needful for
+transforming one kind
+<!-- Page 51 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>51<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+into another, therefore molecular structure of
+one kind or another is essential. The transformation is a mechanical
+process, and matter in some particular and appropriate form is the
+condition of its taking place. If heat appears, then its antecedent has
+been some other form of motion acting upon the substance heated. It may
+have been the mechanical motion of another mass of matter, as when a
+bullet strikes a target and becomes heated; or it may be friction, as
+when a car-axle heats when run without proper oiling to reduce friction;
+or it may be condensation, as when tinder is ignited by condensing the
+air about it; or chemical reactions, when molecular structure is changed
+as in combustion, or an electrical current, which implies a dynamo and
+steam-engine or water-power. If light appears, its antecedent has been
+impact or friction, condensation or chemical action, and if electricity
+appears the same sort of antecedents arc present. Whether the one or the
+other of these forms of energy is developed, depends upon what kind of a
+structure the antecedent energy has acted upon. If radiant energy,
+so-called, falls upon a mass of matter, what is absorbed is at once
+transformed into heat or into electric or magnetic effects; <i>which</i> one
+of these depends upon the character of the mechanism upon which the
+radiant energy acts, but the radiant energy itself, which consists of
+<!-- Page 52 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>52<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+ether-waves, is traceable back in every case to a mass of matter having
+definite characteristic motions.</p>
+
+<p>One may therefore say with certainty that every physical phenomenon is a
+change in the direction, or velocity, or character, of the energy
+present, and such change has been produced by matter acting as a
+transformer.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS A NON-TRANSFORMER.</h3>
+
+<p>It has already been said that the absence of friction in the ether
+enables light-waves to maintain their identity for an indefinite time,
+and to an indefinitely great distance. In a uniform, homogeneous
+substance of any kind, any kind of energy which might be in it would
+continue in it without any change. Uniformity and homogeneity imply
+similarity throughout, and the necessary condition for transformation is
+unlikeness. One might not look for any kind of physical phenomenon which
+was not due to the presence and activity of some heterogeneity.</p>
+
+<p>As a ray of light continues a ray of light so long as it exists in free
+ether, so all kinds of radiations, of whatever wave-length, continue
+identical until they fall upon some mechanical structure called matter.
+Translatory motion continues translatory, rotary continues rotary, and
+vibratory continues
+<!-- Page 53 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>53<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+to be vibratory, and no transforming change can
+take place in the absence of matter. The ether is helpless.</p>
+
+
+<h3>13. MATTER IS ELASTIC.</h3>
+
+<p>It is commonly stated that certain substances, like putty and dough, are
+inelastic, while some other substances, like glass, steel, and wood, are
+elastic. This quality of elasticity, as manifested in such different
+degrees, depends upon molecular combinations; some of which, as in glass
+and steel, are favourable for exhibiting it, while others mask it, for
+the ultimate atoms of all kinds are certainly highly elastic.</p>
+
+<p>The measure of elasticity in a mass of matter is the velocity with which
+a wave-motion will be transmitted through it. Thus the elasticity of the
+air determines the velocity of sound in it. If the air be heated, the
+elasticity is increased and the sound moves faster. The rates of such
+sound-conduction range from a few feet in a second to about 16,000, five
+times swifter than a cannon ball. In such elastic bodies as vibrate to
+and fro like the prongs of a tuning-fork, or give sounds of a definite
+pitch, the rate of vibration is determined by the size and shape of the
+body as well as by their elementary composition. The smaller a body is,
+the higher its vibratory rate, if it be made of the same material
+<!-- Page 54 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>54<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+and
+the form remains the same. Thus a tuning-fork, that may be carried in
+the waistcoat-pocket, may vibrate 500 times a second. If it were only
+the fifty-millionth of an inch in size, but of the same material and
+form, it would vibrate 30,000,000000 times a second; and if it were made
+of ether, instead of steel, it would vibrate as many times faster as the
+velocity of waves in the ether is greater than it is in steel, and would
+be as many as 400,000000,000000 times per second. The amount of
+displacement, or the amplitude of vibration, with the pocket-fork might
+be no more than the hundredth of an inch, and this rate measured as
+translation velocity would be but five inches per second. If the fork
+were of atomic magnitude, and should swing its sides one half the
+diameter of the atom, or say the hundred-millionth of an inch, the
+translational velocity would be equivalent to about eighty miles a
+second, or a hundred and fifty times the velocity of a cannon ball,
+which may be reckoned at about 3000 feet.</p>
+
+<p>That atoms really vibrate at the above rate per second is very certain,
+for their vibrations produce ether-waves the length of which may be
+accurately measured. When a tuning-fork vibrates 500 times a second, and
+the sound travels 1100 feet in the same interval, the length of each
+wave will be found by dividing the velocity in the air by the number of
+vibrations, or 1100 ÷ 500 = 2.2 feet. In like manner,
+<!-- Page 55 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>55<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+when one knows
+the velocity and wave-length, he may compute the number of vibrations by
+dividing the velocity by the wave-length. Now the velocity of the waves
+called light is 186,000 miles a second, and a light-wave may be one
+forty thousandth of an inch long. The atom that produces the wave must
+be vibrating as many times per second as the fifth thousandth of an inch
+is contained in 186,000 miles. Reducing this number to inches we have</p>
+
+<!--TO DO-->
+<div class="center">
+<table summary="calculation of atomic frequency">
+<tr>
+<td class="center" style="line-height: 0.5em">186,000 × 5280 × 12</td> <td></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="center">
+<hr style="width: 10em; margin: 0em; padding: 0em;" />
+</td>
+<td class="left">
+= 400,000,000,000,000, nearly.
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="center" style="line-height: 0.5em">1/40,000</td> <td></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 0em">
+This shows that the atoms are minute elastic bodies that change their
+form rapidly when struck. As rapid as the change is, yet the rate of
+movement is only one-fifth that of a comet when near the sun, and is
+therefore easily comparable with other velocities observed in masses of
+matter.</p>
+
+<p>These vibratory motions, due to the elasticity of the atoms, is what
+constitutes heat.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS ELASTIC.</h3>
+
+<p>The elasticity of a mass of matter is its ability to recover its
+original form after that form has been distorted. There is implied that
+a stress changes its shape and dimensions, which in turn implies a
+limited mass and relative change of position of
+<!-- Page 56 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>56<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+parts and some degree
+of discontinuity. From what has been said of the ether as being
+unlimited, continuous, and not made of atoms or molecules, it will be
+seen how difficult, if not impossible, it is to conceive how such a
+property as elasticity, as manifested in matter, can be attributed to
+the ether, which is incapable of deformation, either in structure or
+form, the latter being infinitely extended in every direction and
+therefore formless. Nevertheless, certain forms of motion, such as
+light-waves, move in it with definite velocity, quite independent of how
+they originate. This velocity of 186,000 miles a second so much exceeds
+any movement of a mass of matter that the motions can hardly be
+compared. Thus if 400 miles per second be the swiftest speed of any mass
+of matter known&mdash;that of a comet near the sun&mdash;the ether-wave moves
+186,000 ÷ 400 = 465 times faster than such comet, and 900,000 times
+faster than sound travels in air. It is clear that if this rate of
+motion depends upon elasticity, the elasticity must be of an entirely
+different type from that belonging to matter, and cannot be defined in
+any such terms as are employed for matter.</p>
+
+<p>If one considers gravitative phenomena, the difficulty is enormously
+increased. The orbit of a planet is never an exact ellipse, on account
+of the perturbations produced by the planetary
+attractions&mdash;perturbations which depend upon the direction
+<!-- Page 57 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>57<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+and distance
+of the attracting bodies. These, however, are so well known that slight
+deviations are easily noticed. If gravitative attraction took any such
+appreciable time to go from one astronomical body to another as does
+light, it would make very considerable differences in the paths of the
+planets and the earth. Indeed, if the velocity of gravitation were less
+than a million times greater than that of light, its effects would have
+been discovered long ago. It is therefore considered that the velocity
+of gravitation cannot be less than 186000,000000 miles per second. How
+much greater it may be no one can guess. Seeing that gravitation is
+ether-pressure, it does not seem probable that its velocity can be
+infinite. However that may be, the ability of the ether to transmit
+pressure and various disturbances, evidently depends upon properties so
+different from those that enable matter to transmit disturbances that
+they deserve to be called by different names. To speak of the elasticity
+of the ether may serve to express the fact that energy may be
+transmitted at a finite rate in it, but it can only mislead one's
+thinking if he imagines the process to be similar to energy transmission
+in a mass of matter. The two processes are incomparable. No other word
+has been suggested, and perhaps it is not needful for most scientific
+purposes that another should be
+<!-- Page 58 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>58<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+adopted, but the inappropriateness of
+the one word for the different phenomena has long been felt.</p>
+
+
+<h3>14. MATTER HAS DENSITY.</h3>
+
+<p>This quality is exhibited in two ways in matter. In the first, the
+different elements in their atomic form have different masses or atomic
+weights. An atom of oxygen weighs sixteen times as much as an atom of
+hydrogen; that is, it has sixteen times as much matter, as determined by
+weight, as the hydrogen atom has, or it takes sixteen times as many
+hydrogen atoms to make a pound as it takes of oxygen atoms. This is
+generally expressed by saying that oxygen has sixteen times the density
+of hydrogen. In like manner, iron has fifty-six times the density, and
+gold one hundred and ninety-six. The difference is one in the structure
+of the atomic elements. If one imagines them to be vortex-rings, they
+may differ in size, thickness, and rate of rotation; either of these
+might make all the observed difference between the elements, including
+their density. In the second way, density implies compactness of
+molecules. Thus if a cubic foot of air be compressed until it occupies
+but half a cubic foot, each cubic inch will have twice as many molecules
+in it as at first. The amount of air per unit volume will have been
+doubled, the weight will have been doubled, the amount of
+<!-- Page 59 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>59<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+matter as
+determined by its weight will have been doubled, and consequently we say
+its density has been doubled.</p>
+
+<p>If a bullet or a piece of iron be hammered, the molecules are compacted
+closer together, and a greater number can be got into a cubic inch when
+so condensed. In this sense, then, density means the number of molecules
+in a unit of space, a cubic inch or cubic centimeter. There is implied
+in this latter case that the molecules do not occupy all the available
+space, that they may have varying degrees of closeness; in other words,
+matter is discontinuous, and therefore there may be degrees in density.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER HAS DENSITY.</h3>
+
+<p>It is common to have the degree of density of the ether spoken of in the
+same way, and for the same reason, that its elasticity is spoken of. The
+rate of transmission of a physical disturbance, as of a pressure or a
+wave-motion in matter, is conditioned by its degree of density; that is,
+the amount of matter per cubic inch as determined by its weight; the
+greater the density the slower the rate. So if rate of speed and
+elasticity be known, the density may be computed. In this way the
+density of the ether has been deduced by noting the velocity of light.
+The enormous velocity is supposed to prove that its density is very
+<!-- Page 60 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>60<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+small, even when compared with hydrogen. This is stated to be about
+equal to that of the air at the height of two hundred and ten miles
+above the surface of the earth, where the air molecules are so few that
+a molecule might travel for 60,000,000 miles without coming in collision
+with another molecule. In air of ordinary density, a molecule can on the
+average move no further than about the two-hundred-and-fifty-thousandth
+of an inch without such collision. It is plain the density of the ether
+is so far removed from the density of anything we can measure, that it
+is hardly comparable with such things. If, in addition, one recalls the
+fact that the ether is homogeneous, that is all of one kind, and also
+that it is not composed of atoms and molecules, then degree of
+compactness and number of particles per cubic inch have no meaning, and
+the term density, if used, can have no such meaning as it has when
+applied to matter. There is no physical conception gained from the study
+of matter that can be useful in thinking of it. As with elasticity, so
+density is inappropriately applied to the ether, but there is no
+substitute yet offered.</p>
+
+
+<h3>15. MATTER IS HEATABLE.</h3>
+
+<p>So long as heat was thought to be some kind of an imponderable thing,
+which might retain its
+<!-- Page 61 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>61<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+identity whether it were in or out of matter,
+its real nature was obscured by the name given to it. An imponderable
+was a mysterious something like a spirit, which was the cause of certain
+phenomena in matter. Heat, light, electricity, magnetism, gravitation,
+were due to such various agencies, and no one concerned himself with the
+nature of one or the other. Bacon thought that heat was a brisk
+agitation of the particles of substances, and Count Rumford and Sir
+Humphrey Davy thought they proved that it could be nothing else, but
+they convinced nobody. Mayer in Germany and Joule in England showed that
+quantitative relations existed between work done and heat developed, but
+not until the publication of the book called <i>Heat as a Mode of Motion</i>,
+was there a change of opinion and terminology as to the nature of heat.
+For twenty years after that it was common to hear the expressions heat,
+and radiant heat, to distinguish between phenomena in matter and what is
+now called radiant energy radiations, or simply ether-waves. Not until
+the necessity arose for distinguishing between different forms of
+energy, and the conditions for developing them, did it become clear to
+all that a change in the form of energy implied a change in the form of
+motion that embodied it. The energy called heat energy was proved to be
+a vibratory motion of molecules, and what happened
+<!-- Page 62 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>62<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+in the ether as a
+result of such vibrations is no longer spoken of as heat, but as ether
+waves. When it is remembered that the ultimate atoms are elastic bodies,
+and that they will, if free, vibrate in a periodic manner when struck or
+shaken in any way, just as a ball will vibrate after it is struck, it is
+easy to keep in mind the distinction between the mechanical form of
+motion spent in striking and the vibratory form of the motion produced
+by it. The latter is called heat; no other form of motion than that is
+properly called heat. It is this alone that represents temperature, the
+rate and amplitude of such atomic and molecular vibrations as constitute
+change, of form. Where molecules like those in a gas have some freedom
+of movement between impacts, they bound away from each other with
+varying velocities. The path of such motion may be long or short,
+depending upon the density or compactness of the molecules, but such
+changes in position are not heat for a molecule any more than the flight
+of a musket ball is heat, though it may be transformed into heat on
+striking the target.</p>
+
+<p>This conception of heat as the rapid change in the form of atoms and
+molecules, due to their elasticity, is a phenomenon peculiar to matter.
+It implies a body possessing form that may be changed; elasticity, that
+its changes may be periodic, and
+<!-- Page 63 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>63<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+degrees of freedom that secure space
+for the changes. Such a body may be heated. Its temperature will depend
+upon the amplitude of such vibrations, and will be limited by the
+maximum amplitude.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS UNHEATABLE.</h3>
+
+<p>The translatory motion of a mass of matter, big or little, through the
+ether, is not arrested in any degree so far as observed, but the
+internal vibratory motion sets up waves in the ether, the ether absorbs
+the energy, and the amplitude is continually lessened. The motion has
+been transferred and transformed; transferred from matter to the ether,
+and transformed from vibratory to waves travelling at the rate of
+186,000 miles per second. The latter is not heat, but the result of
+heat. With the ether constituted as described, such vibratory motion as
+constitutes heat is impossible to it, and hence the characteristic of
+heat-motion in it is impossible; it cannot therefore be heated. The
+space between the earth and the sun may have any assignable amount of
+energy in the form of ether waves or light, but not any temperature. One
+might loosely say that the temperature of empty spaces was absolute
+zero, but that would not be quite correct, for the idea of temperature
+cannot properly be entertained as applicable to the ether.
+<!-- Page 64 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>64<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+To say that
+its temperature was absolute zero, would serve to imply that it might be
+higher, which is inadmissible.</p>
+
+<p>When energy has been transformed, the old name by which the energy was
+called must be dropped. Ether cannot be heated.</p>
+
+
+<h3>16. MATTER IS INDESTRUCTIBLE.</h3>
+
+<p>This is commonly said to be one of the essential properties of matter.
+All that is meant by it, however, is simply this: In no physical or
+chemical process to which it has been experimentally subjected has there
+been any apparent loss. The matter experimented upon may change from a
+solid or liquid to a gas, or the molecular change called chemical may
+result in new compounds, but the weight of the material and its atomic
+constituents have not appreciably changed. That matter cannot be
+annihilated is only the converse of the proposition that matter cannot
+be created, which ought always to be modified by adding, by physical or
+chemical processes at present known. A chemist may work with a few
+grains of a substance in a beaker, or test-tube, or crucible, and after
+several solutions, precipitations, fusions and dryings, may find by
+final weighing that he has not lost any appreciable amount, but how much
+is an appreciable amount? A fragment of matter the ten-thousandth
+<!-- Page 65 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>65<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+of an
+inch in diameter has too small a weight to be noted in any balance, yet
+it would be made up of thousands of millions of atoms. Hence if, in the
+processes to which the substance had been subjected, there had been the
+total annihilation of thousands of millions of atoms, such phenomenon
+would not have been discovered by weighing. Neither would it have been
+discovered if there had been a similar creation or development of new
+matter. All that can be asserted concerning such events is, that they
+have not been discovered with our means of observation.</p>
+
+<p>The alchemists sought to transform one element into another, as lead
+into gold. They did not succeed. It was at length thought to be
+impossible, and the attempt to do it an absurdity. Lately, however,
+telescopic observation of what is going on in nebulę, which has already
+been referred to, has somewhat modified ideas of what is possible and
+impossible in that direction. It is certainly possible roughly to
+conceive how such a structure as a vortex-ring in the ether might be
+formed. With certain polarizing apparatus it is possible to produce rays
+of circularly polarized light. These are rays in which the motion is an
+advancing rotation like the wire in a spiral spring. If such a line of
+rotations in the ether were flexible, and the two ends should come
+together, there is reason for
+<!-- Page 66 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>66<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+thinking they would weld together, in
+which case the structure would become a vortex-ring and be as durable as
+any other. There is reason for believing, also, that somewhat similar
+movements are always present in a magnetic field, and though we do not
+know how to make them close up in the proper way, it does not follow
+that it is impossible for them to do so.</p>
+
+<p>The bearing of all this upon the problem of the transmutation of
+elements is evident. No one now will venture to deny its possibility as
+strongly as it was denied a generation ago. It will also lead one to be
+less confident in the theory that matter is indestructible. Assuming the
+vortex-ring theory of atoms to be true, if in any way such a ring could
+be cut or broken, there would not remain two or more fragments of a ring
+or atom. The whole would at once be dissolved into the ether. The ring
+and rotary energy that made it an atom would be destroyed, but not the
+substance it was made of, nor the energy which was embodied therein. For
+a long time philosophers have argued, and commonsense has agreed with
+them, that an atom which could not be ideally broken into two parts was
+impossible, that one could at any rate think of half an atom as a real
+objective possibility. This vortex-ring theory shows easily how possible
+it is to-day to think what once was philosophically incredible. It shows
+that
+<!-- Page 67 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>67<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+metaphysical reasoning may be ever so clear and apparently
+irrefragable, yet for all that it may be very unsound. The trouble does
+not come so much from the logic as from the assumption upon which the
+logic is founded. In this particular case the assumption was that the
+ultimate particles of matter were hard, irrefragable somethings, without
+necessary relations to anything else, or to energy, and irrefragable
+only because no means had been found of breaking them.</p>
+
+<p>The destructibility or indestructibility of the ether cannot be
+considered from the same standpoint as that for matter, either ideally
+or really. Not ideally, because we are utterly without any mechanical
+conceptions of the substance upon which one can base either reason or
+analogy; and not really, because we have no experimental evidence as to
+its nature or mode of operation. If it be continuous, there are no
+interspaces, and if it be illimitable there is no unfilled space
+anywhere. Furthermore, one might infer that if in any way a portion of
+the ether could be annihilated, what was left would at once fill up the
+vacated space, so there would be no record left of what had happened.
+Apparently, its destruction would be the destruction of a substance,
+which is a very different thing from the destruction of a mode of
+motion. In the latter, only the form of the motion need be destroyed to
+<!-- Page 68 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>68<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+completely obliterate every trace of the atom. In the former, there
+would need to be the destruction of both substance and energy, for it is
+certain, for reasons yet to be attended to, that the ether is saturated
+with energy.</p>
+
+<p>One may, without mechanical difficulties, imagine a vortex-ring
+destroyed. It is quite different with the ether itself, for if it were
+destroyed in the same sense as the atom of matter, it would be changed
+into something else which is not ether, a proposition which assumes the
+existence of another entity, the existence for which is needed only as a
+mechanical antecedent for the other. The same assumption would be needed
+for this entity as for the ether, namely, something out of which it was
+made, and this process of assuming antecedents would be interminable.
+The last one considered would have the same difficulties to meet as the
+ether has now. The assumption that it was in some way and at some time
+created is more rational, and therefore more probable, than that it
+either created itself or that it always existed. Considered as the
+underlying stratum of matter, it is clear that changes of any kind in
+matter can in no way affect the quantity of ether.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 69 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>69<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>17. MATTER HAS INERTIA.</h3>
+
+<p>The resistance that a mass of matter opposes to a change in its position
+or rate and direction of movement, is called inertia. That it should
+actively oppose anything has been already pointed out as reason for
+denying that matter is inert, but inertia is the measure of the reaction
+of a body when it is acted upon by pressure from any source tending to
+disturb its condition of either rest or motion. It is the equivalent of
+mass, or the amount of matter as measured by gravity, and is a fixed
+quantity; for inertia is as inherent as any other quality, and belongs
+to the ultimate atoms and every combination of them. It implies the
+ability to absorb energy, for it requires as much energy to bring a
+moving body to a standstill as was required to give it its forward
+motion.</p>
+
+<p>Both rotary and vibratory movements are opposed by the same property. A
+grindstone, a tuning-fork, and an atom of hydrogen require, to move them
+in their appropriate ways, an amount of energy proportionate to their
+mass or inertia, which energy is again transformed through friction into
+heat and radiated away.</p>
+
+<p>One may say that inertia is the measure of the ability of a body to
+transfer or transform mechanical energy. The meteorite that falls upon
+<!-- Page 70 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>70<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+the earth to-day gives, on its impact, the same amount of energy it
+would have given if it had struck the earth ten thousand years ago. The
+inertia of the meteor has persisted, not as energy, but as a factor of
+energy. We commonly express the energy of a mass of matter by
+<i>mv</i><sup>2</sup>/2, where <i>m</i> stands for the mass and <i>v</i> for its velocity. We
+might as well, if it were as convenient, substitute inertia for mass,
+and write the expression <i>iv</i><sup>2</sup>/2, for the mass, being measured by its
+inertia, is only the more common and less definitive word for the same
+thing. The energy of a mass of matter is, then, proportional to its
+inertia, because inertia is one of its factors. Energy has often been
+treated as if it were an objective thing, an entity and a unity; but
+such a conception is evidently wrong, for, as has been said before, it
+is a product of two factors, either of which may be changed in any
+degree if the other be changed inversely in the same degree. A cannon
+ball weighing 1000 pounds, and moving 100 feet per second, will have
+156,000 foot-pounds of energy, but a musket ball weighing an ounce will
+have the same amount when its velocity is 12,600 feet per second.
+Nevertheless, another body acting upon either bullet or cannon ball,
+tending to move either in some new
+<!-- Page 71 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>71<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+direction, will be as efficient
+while those bodies are moving at any assignable rate as when they are
+quiescent, for the change in direction will depend upon the inertia of
+the bodies, and that is constant.</p>
+
+<p>The common theory of an inert body is one that is wholly passive, having
+no power of itself to move or do anything, except as some agency outside
+itself compels it to move in one way or another, and thus endows it with
+energy. Thus a stone or an iron nail are thought to be inert bodies in
+that sense, and it is true that either of them will remain still in one
+place for an indefinite time and move from it only when some external
+agency gives them impulse and direction. Still it is known that such
+bodies will roll down hill if they will not roll up, and each of them
+has itself as much to do with the down-hill movement as the earth has;
+that is, it attracts the earth as much as the earth attracts it. If one
+could magnify the structure of a body until the molecules became
+individually visible, every one of them would be seen to be in intense
+activity, changing its form and relative position an enormous number of
+times per second in undirected ways. No two such molecules move in the
+same way at the same time, and as all the molecules cohere together,
+their motions in different directions balance each other, so that the
+body as a whole does not change its position,
+<!-- Page 72 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>72<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+not because there is no
+moving agency in itself, but because the individual movements are
+scattering, and not in a common direction. An army may remain in one
+place for a long time. To one at a distance it is quiescent, inert. To
+one in the camp there is abundant sign of activity, but the movements
+are individual movements, some in one direction and some in another, and
+often changing. The same army on the march has the same energy, the same
+rate of individual movement; but all have a common direction, it moves
+as a whole body into new territory. So with the molecules of matter. In
+large masses they appear to be inert, and to do nothing, and to be
+capable of doing nothing. That is only due to the fact that their energy
+is undirected, not that they can do nothing. The inference that if
+quiescent bodies do not act in particular ways they are inert, and
+cannot act in any kind of a way, is a wrong inference. An illustration
+may perhaps make this point plainer. A lump of coal will be still as
+long as anything if it be undisturbed. Indeed, it has thus lain in a
+coal-bed for millions of years probably, but if coal be placed where it
+can combine with oxygen, it forthwith does so, and during the process
+yields a large amount of energy in the shape of heat. One pound of coal
+in this way gives out 14,000 heat units, which is the equivalent of
+11,000,000 foot-pounds
+<!-- Page 73 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>73<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+of work, and if it could be all utilized would
+furnish a horse-power for five and a half hours. Can any inert body
+weighing a pound furnish a horse-power for half a day? And can a body
+give out what it has not got? Are gunpowder and nitro-glycerine inert?
+Are bread and butter and foods in general inert because they will not
+push and pull as a man or a horse may? All have energy, which is
+available in certain ways and not in others, and whatever possesses
+energy available in any way is not an ideally inert body. Lastly, how
+many inert bodies together will it take to make an active body? If the
+question be absurd, then all the phenomena witnessed in bodies, large or
+small, are due to the fact that the atoms are not inert, but are
+immensely energetic, and their inertia is the measure of their rates of
+exchanging energy.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS CONDITIONALLY POSSESSED OF INERTIA.</h3>
+
+<p>A moving mass of matter is brought to rest by friction, because it
+imparts its motion at some rate to the body it is in contact with.
+Generally the energy is transformed into heat, but sometimes it appears
+as electrification. Friction is only possible because one or both of the
+bodies possess inertia. That a body may move in the ether for an
+indefinite time without losing its velocity has been
+<!-- Page 74 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>74<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+stated as a reason
+for believing the ether to be frictionless. If it be frictionless, then
+it is without inertia, else the energy of the earth and of a ray of
+light would be frittered away. A ray of light can only be transformed
+when it falls upon molecules which may be heated by it. As the ether
+cannot be heated and cannot transform translational energy, it is
+without inertia for <i>such</i> a form of motion and its embodied energy.</p>
+
+<p>It is not thus with other forms of energy than the translational. Atomic
+and molecular vibrations are so related to the ether that they are
+transformed into waves, which are conducted away at a definite rate.
+This shows that such property of inertia as is possessed by the ether is
+selective and not like that of matter, which is equally &ldquo;inertiative&rdquo;
+under all conditions. Similarly with electric and magnetic phenomena, it
+is capable of transforming the energy which may reside as stress in the
+ether, and other bodies moving in the space so affected meet with
+frictional resistance, for they become heated if the motion be
+maintained. On the other hand, there is no evidence that the body which
+produced the electric or magnetic stress suffers any degree of friction
+on moving in precisely the same space. A bar magnet rotating on its
+longitudinal axis does not disturb its own field, but a piece
+<!-- Page 75 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>75<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+of iron
+revolving near the magnet will not only become heated, but will heat the
+stationary magnet. Much experimental work has been done to discover, if
+possible, the relation of a magnet to its ether field. As the latter is
+not disturbed by the rotation of the magnet, it has been concluded that
+the field does not rotate; but as every molecule in the magnet has its
+own field independent of all the rest, it is mechanically probable that
+each such field does vary in the rotation, but among the thousands of
+millions of such fields the average strength of the field does not vary
+within measurable limits. Another consideration is that the magnetic
+field itself, when moved in space, suffers no frictional resistance.
+There is no magnetic energy wasted through ether inertia. These
+phenomena show that whether the ether exhibits the quality called
+inertia depends upon the kind of motion it has.</p>
+
+
+<h3>18. MATTER IS MAGNETIC.</h3>
+
+<p>The ordinary phenomenon of magnetism is shown by bringing a piece of
+iron into the neighbourhood of a so-called magnet, where it is attracted
+by the latter, and if free to move will go to and cling to the magnet. A
+delicately suspended magnetic needle will be affected appreciably by a
+strong magnet at the distance of several hundred
+<!-- Page 76 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>76<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+feet. As the strength
+of such action varies inversely as the square of the distance from the
+magnet, it is evident there can be no absolute boundary to it. At a
+distance from an ordinary magnet it becomes too weak to be detected by
+our methods, not that there is a limit to it. It is customary to think
+of iron as being peculiarly endowed with magnetic quality, but all kinds
+of matter possess it in some degree. Wood, stone, paper, oats, sulphur,
+and all the rest, are attracted by a magnet, and will stick to it if the
+magnet be a strong one. Whether a piece of iron itself exhibits the
+property depends upon its temperature, for near 700 degrees it becomes
+as magnetically indifferent as a piece of copper at ordinary
+temperature. Oxygen, too, at 200 degrees below the zero of Centigrade
+adheres to a magnet like iron.</p>
+
+<p>In this as in so many other particulars, how a piece of matter behaves
+depends upon its temperature, not that the essential qualities are
+modified in any degree, but temperature interferes with atomic
+arrangement and aggregation, and so disguises their phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>As every kind of matter is thus affected by a magnet, the manifestations
+differing but in degree, it follows that all kinds of atoms&mdash;all the
+elements&mdash;are magnetic. An inherent property in them, as much so as
+gravitation or inertia; apparently a
+<!-- Page 77 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>77<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+quality depending upon the
+structure of the atoms themselves, in the same sense as gravitation is
+thus dependent, as it is not a quality of the ether.</p>
+
+<p>An atom must, then, be thought of as having polarity, different
+qualities on the two sides, and possessing a magnetic field as extensive
+as space itself. The magnetic field is the stress or pressure in the
+ether produced by the magnetic body. This ether pressure produced by a
+magnet may be as great as a ton per square inch. It is this pressure
+that holds an armature to the magnet. As heat is a molecular condition
+of vibration, and radiant energy the result of it, so is magnetism a
+property of molecules, and the magnetic field the temporary condition in
+the ether, which depends upon the presence of a magnetic body. We no
+longer speak of the wave-motion in the ether which results from heat, as
+heat, but call it radiation, or ether waves, and for a like reason the
+magnetic field ought not to be called magnetism.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS NON-MAGNETIC.</h3>
+
+<p>A magnetic field manifests itself in a way that implies that the ether
+structure, if it may be said to have any, is deformed&mdash;deformed in such
+a sense that another magnet in it tends to set itself in the plane of
+the stress; that is, the magnet is twisted into a new position to
+accommodate itself to the condition
+<!-- Page 78 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>78<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+of the medium about it. The new
+position is the result of the reaction of the ether upon the magnet and
+ether pressure acting at right angles to the body that produced the
+stress. Such an action is so anomalous as to suggest the propriety of
+modifying the so-called third law of motion, viz., action and reaction
+are equal and opposite, adding that sometimes action and reaction are at
+right angles.</p>
+
+<p>There is no condition or property exhibited by the ether itself which
+shows it to have any such characteristic as attraction, repulsion, or
+differences in stress, except where its condition is modified by the
+activities of matter in some way. The ether itself is not attracted or
+repelled by a magnet; that is, it is not a magnetic body in any such
+sense as matter in any of its forms is, and therefore cannot properly be
+called magnetic.</p>
+
+<p>It has been a mechanical puzzle to understand how the vibratory motions
+called heat could set up light waves in the ether seeing that there is
+an absence of friction in the latter. In the endeavour to conceive it,
+the origin of sound-waves has been in mind, where longitudinal air-waves
+are produced by the vibrations of a sounding body, and molecular impact
+is the antecedent of the waves. The analogy does not apply. The
+following exposition may be helpful in grasping the idea of such
+transformation and change of energy from matter to the ether.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 79 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>79<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Consider a straight bar permanent magnet to be held in the hand. It has
+its north and south poles and its field, the latter extending in every
+direction to an indefinite distance. The field is to be considered as
+ether stress of such a sort as to tend to set other magnets in it in new
+positions. If at a distance of ten feet there were a delicately-poised
+magnet needle, every change in the position of the magnet held in the
+hand would bring about a change in the position of the needle. If the
+position of the hand magnet were completely reversed, so the south pole
+faced where the north pole faced before, the field would have been
+completely reversed, and the poised needle would have been pushed by the
+field into an opposite position. If the needle were a hundred feet away,
+the change would have been the same except in amount. The same might be
+said if the two were a mile apart, or the distance of the moon or any
+other distance, for there is no limit to an ether magnetic field.
+Suppose the hand magnet to have its direction completely reversed once
+in a second. The whole field, and the direction of the stress, would
+necessarily be reversed as often. But this kind of change in stress is
+known by experiment to travel with the speed of light, 186,000 miles a
+second; the disturbance due to the change of position of the magnet will
+therefore be felt in some degree
+<!-- Page 80 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>80<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+throughout space. In a second and a
+third of a second it will have reached the moon, and a magnet there will
+be in some measure affected by it. If there were an observer there with
+a delicate-enough magnet, he could be witness to its changes once a
+second for the same reason one in the room could. The only difference
+would be one of amount of swing. It is therefore theoretically possible
+to signal to the moon with a swinging magnet. Suppose again that the
+magnet should be swung twice a second, there would be formed two waves,
+each one half as long as the first. If it should swing ten times a
+second, then the waves would be one-tenth of 186,000 miles long. If in
+some mechanical way it could be rotated 186,000 times a second, the wave
+would be but one mile long. Artificial ways have been invented for
+changing this magnet field as many as 100 million times a second, and
+the corresponding wave is less than a foot long. The shape of a magnet
+does not necessarily make it weaker or stronger as a magnet, but if the
+poles are near together the magnetic field is denser between them than
+when they are separated. The ether stress is differently distributed for
+every change in the relative positions of the poles.</p>
+
+<p>A common <span class="sf">U</span>-magnet, if struck, will vibrate like a tuning-fork, and gives
+out a definite pitch. Its
+<!-- Page 81 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>81<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+poles swing towards and away from each other
+at uniform rates, and the pitch of the magnet will depend upon its size,
+thickness, and the material it is made of.</p>
+
+<p>Let ten or fifteen ohms of any convenient-sized wire be wound upon the
+bend of a commercial <span class="sf">U</span>-magnet. Let this wire be connected to a telephone
+in its circuit. When the magnet is made to sound like a tuning-fork, the
+pitch will be reproduced in the telephone very loudly. If another magnet
+with a different pitch be allowed to vibrate near the former, the pitch
+of the vibrating body will be heard in the telephone, and these show
+that the changing magnetic field reacts upon the quiescent magnet, and
+compels the latter to vibrate at the same rate. The action is an ether
+action, the waves are ether waves, but they are relatively very long. If
+the magnet makes 500 vibrations a second, the waves will be 372 miles
+long, the number of times 500 is contained in 186,000 miles. Imagine the
+magnet to become smaller and smaller until it was the size of an atom,
+the one-fifty-millionth of an inch. Its vibratory rate would be
+proportionally increased, and changes in its form will still bring about
+changes in its magnetic field. But its magnetic field is practically
+limitless, and the number of vibrations per second is to be reckoned as
+millions of millions; the waves are
+<!-- Page 82 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>82<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+correspondingly short, small
+fractions of an inch. When they are as short as the
+one-thirty-seven-thousandth of an inch, they are capable of affecting
+the retina of the eye, and then are said to be visible as red light. If
+the vibratory rate be still higher, and the corresponding waves be no
+more than one-sixty-thousandth of an inch long, they affect the retina
+as violet light, and between these limits there are all the waves that
+produce a complete spectrum. The atoms, then, shake the ether in this
+way because they all have a magnetic hold upon the ether, so that any
+disturbance of their own magnetism, such as necessarily comes when they
+collide, reacts upon the ether for the same reason that a large magnet
+acts thus upon it when its poles approach and recede from each other. It
+is not a phenomenon of mechanical impact or frictional resistance, since
+neither are possible in the ether.</p>
+
+
+<h3>19. MATTER EXISTS IN SEVERAL STATES.</h3>
+
+<p>Molecular cohesion exists between very wide ranges. When strong, so if
+one part of a body is moved the whole is moved in the same way, without
+breaking continuity or the relative positions of the molecules, we call
+the body a solid. In a liquid, cohesion is greatly reduced, and any part
+of it may be deformed without materially changing
+<!-- Page 83 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>83<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+the form of the rest.
+The molecules are free to move about each other, and there is no
+definite position which any need assume or keep. With gases, the
+molecules are without any cohesion, each one is independent of every
+other one, collides with and bounds away from others as free elastic
+particles do. Between impacts it moves in what is called its free path,
+which may be long or short as the density of the gas be less or greater.</p>
+
+<p>These differing degrees of cohesion depend upon temperature, for if the
+densest and hardest substances are sufficiently heated they will become
+gaseous. This is only another way of saying that the states of matter
+depend upon the amount of molecular energy present. Solid ice becomes
+water by the application of heat. More heat reduces it to steam; still
+more decomposes the steam molecules into oxygen and hydrogen molecules;
+and lastly, still more heat will decompose these molecules into their
+atomic state, complete dissociation. On cooling, the process of
+reduction will be reversed until ice has been formed again.</p>
+
+<p>Cohesive strength in solids is increased by reduction of temperature,
+and metallic rods become stronger the colder they are.</p>
+
+<p>No distinction is now made between cohesion and chemical affinity, and
+yet at low temperatures chemical action will not take place, which
+<!-- Page 84 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>84<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+phenomenon shows there is a distinction between molecular cohesion and
+molecular structure. In molecular structure, as determined by chemical
+activity, the molecules and atoms are arranged in definite ways which
+depend upon the rate of vibrations of the components. The atoms are set
+in definite positions to constitute a given molecule. But atoms or
+molecules may cohere for other reasons, gravitative or magnetic, and
+relative positions would be immaterial. In the absence of temperature, a
+solid body would be solider and stronger than ever, while a gaseous mass
+would probably fall by gravity to the floor of the containing vessel
+like so much dust. The molecular structure might not be changed, for
+there would be no agency to act upon it in a disturbing way.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER HAS NO CORRESPONDING STATES.</h3>
+
+<p>Degrees of density have already been excluded, and the homogeneity and
+continuity of the ether would also exclude the possibility of different
+states at all comparable with such as belong to matter. As for cohesion,
+it is doubtful if the term ought to be applied to such a substance. The
+word itself seems to imply possible separateness, and if the ether be a
+single indivisible substance, its cohesion must be infinite and is
+therefore not a matter of degree. The ether has sometimes been
+<!-- Page 85 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>85<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+considered as an elastic solid, but such solidity is comparable with
+nothing we call solid in matter, and the word has to be defined in a
+special sense in order that its use may be tolerated at all. In addition
+to this, some of the phenomena exhibited by it, such as diffraction and
+double refraction, are quite incompatible with the theory that the ether
+is an elastic solid. The reasons why it cannot be considered as a liquid
+or gas have been considered previously.</p>
+
+<p>The expression <i>states of matter</i> cannot be applied to the ether in any
+such sense as it is applied to matter, but there is one sense when
+possibly it may be considered applicable. Let it be granted that an atom
+is a vortex-ring of ether in the ether, then the state of being in ring
+rotation would suffice to differentiate that part of the ether from the
+rest, and give to it a degree of individuality not possessed by the
+rest; and such an atom might be called a state of ether. In like manner,
+if other forms of motion, such as transverse waves, circular and
+elliptical spirals, or others, exist in the ether, then such movements
+give special character to the part thus active, and it would be proper
+to speak of such states of the ether, but even thus the word would not
+be used in the same sense as it is used when one speaks of the states of
+matter as being solid, liquid, and gaseous.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 86 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>86<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>20. SOLID MATTER CAN EXPERIENCE A<br /> SHEARING STRESS, LIQUIDS AND GASES
+CANNOT.</h3>
+
+<p>A sliding stress applied to a solid deforms it to a degree which depends
+upon the stress and the degree of rigidity preserved by the body. Thus
+if the hand be placed upon a closed book lying on the table, and
+pressure be so applied as to move the upper side of the book but not the
+lower, the book is said to be subject to a shearing stress. If the
+pressing hand has a twisting motion, the book will be warped. Any solid
+may be thus sheared or warped, but neither liquids nor gases can be so
+affected. Molecular cohesion makes it possible in the one, and the lack
+of it, impossible in the others. The solid can maintain such a
+deformation indefinitely long, if the pressure does not rupture its
+molecular structure.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER CAN MAINTAIN A SHEARING STRESS.</h3>
+
+<p>The phenomena in a magnetic field show that the stress is of such a sort
+as to twist into a new directional position the body upon which it acts
+as exhibited by a magnetic needle, also as indicated by the transverse
+vibrations of the ether waves, and again by the twist given to plane
+polarized light when moving through a magnetic field. These are
+<!-- Page 87 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>87<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+all
+interpreted as indicative of the direction of ether stress, as being
+similar to a shearing stress in solid matter. The fact has been adduced
+to show the ether to be a solid, but such a phenomenon is certainly
+incompatible with a liquid or gaseous ether. This kind of stress is
+maintained indefinitely about a permanent magnet, and the mechanical
+pressure which may result from it is a measure of the strength of the
+magnetic field, and may exceed a thousand pounds per square inch.</p>
+
+
+<h3>21. OTHER PROPERTIES OF MATTER.</h3>
+
+<p>There are many secondary qualities exhibited by matter in some of its
+forms, such as hardness, brittleness, malleability, colour, etc., and
+the same ultimate element may exhibit itself in the most diverse ways,
+as is the case with carbon, which exists as lamp-black, charcoal,
+graphite, jet, anthracite and diamond, ranging from the softest to the
+hardest of known bodies. Then it may be black or colourless. Gold is
+yellow, copper red, silver white, chlorine green, iodine purple. The
+only significance any or all of such qualities have for us here is that
+the ether exhibits none of them. There is neither hardness nor
+brittleness, nor colour, nor any approach to any of the characteristics
+for the identification of elementary matter.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 88 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>88<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>22. SENSATION DEPENDS UPON MATTER.</h3>
+
+<p>However great the mystery of the relation of body to mind, it is quite
+true that the nervous system is the mechanism by and through which all
+sensation comes, and that in our experience in the absence of nerves
+there is neither sensation nor consciousness. The nerves themselves are
+but complex chemical structures; their molecular constitution is said to
+embrace as many as 20,000 atoms, chiefly carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and
+nitrogen. There must be continuity of this structure too, for to sever a
+nerve is to paralyze all beyond. If all knowledge comes through
+experience, and all experience comes through the nervous system, the
+possibilities depend upon the mechanism each one is provided with for
+absorbing from his environment, what energies there are that can act
+upon the nerves. Touch, taste, and smell imply contact, sound has
+greater range, and sight has the immensity of the universe for its
+field. The most distant but visible star acts through the optic nerve to
+present itself to consciousness. It is not the ego that looks out
+through the eyes, but it is the universe that pours in upon the ego.</p>
+
+<p>Again, all the known agencies that act upon the nerves, whether for
+touch or sound or sight, imply matter in some of its forms and
+activities, to adapt
+<!-- Page 89 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>89<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+the energy to the nervous system. The mechanism
+for the perception of light is complicated. The light acts upon a
+sensitive surface where molecular structure is broken up, and this
+disturbance is in the presence of nerve terminals, and the sensation is
+not in the eye but in the sensorium. In like manner for all the rest; so
+one may fairly say that matter is the condition for sensation, and in
+its absence there would be nothing we call sensation.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE ETHER IS INSENSIBLE TO NERVES.</h3>
+
+<p>The ether is in great contrast with matter in this particular. There is
+no evidence that in any direct way it acts upon any part of the nervous
+system, or upon the mind. It is probable that this lack of relation
+between the ether and the nervous system was the chief reason why its
+discovery was so long delayed, as the mechanical necessities for it even
+now are felt only by such as recognize continuity as a condition for the
+transmission of energy of whatever kind it may be. Action at a distance
+contradicts all experience, is philosophically incredible, and is
+repudiated by every one who once perceives that energy has two
+factors&mdash;substance and motion.</p>
+
+<p>The table given below presents a list of twenty-two of the known
+properties of matter contrasted with those exhibited by the ether. In
+none of them
+<!-- Page 90 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>90<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+are the properties of the two identical, and in most of
+them what is true for one is not true for the other. They are not simply
+different, they are incomparable.</p>
+
+<p>From the necessities of the case, as knowledge has been acquired and
+terminology became essential for making distinctions, the ether has been
+described in terms applicable to matter, hence such terms as mass,
+solidity, elasticity, density, rigidity, etc., which have a definite
+meaning and convey definite mechanical conceptions when applied to
+matter, but have no corresponding meaning and convey no such mechanical
+conceptions when applied to the ether. It is certain that they are
+inappropriate, and that the ether and its properties cannot be described
+in terms applicable to matter. Mathematical considerations derived from
+the study of matter have no advantage, and are not likely to lead us to
+a knowledge of the ether.</p>
+
+<p>Only a few have perceived the inconsistency of thinking of the two in
+the same terms. In his <i>Grammar of Science</i>, Prof. Karl Pearson says,
+&ldquo;We find that our sense-impressions of hardness, weight, colour,
+temperature, cohesion, and chemical constitution, may all be described
+by the aid of the motions of a single medium, which itself is conceived
+to have no hardness, weight, colour, temperature, nor indeed elasticity
+of the ordinary conceptual type.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>None of the properties of the ether are such as
+<!-- Page 91 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>91<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+one would or could have
+predicted if he had had all the knowledge possessed by mankind. Every
+phenomenon in it is a surprise to us, because it does not follow the
+laws which experience has enabled us to formulate for matter. A
+substance which has none of the phenomenal properties of matter, and is
+not subject to the known laws of matter, ought not to be called matter.
+Ether phenomena and matter phenomena belong to different categories, and
+the ends of science will not be conserved by confusing them, as is done
+when the same terminology is employed for both.</p>
+
+<p>There are other properties belonging to the ether more wonderful, if
+possible, than those already mentioned. Its ability to maintain enormous
+stresses of various kinds without the slightest evidence of
+interference. There is the gravitational stress, a direct pull between
+two masses of matter. Between two molecules it is immeasurably small
+even when close together, but the prodigious number of them in a bullet
+brings the action into the field of observation, while between such
+bodies as the earth and moon or sun, the quantity reaches an astonishing
+figure. Thus if the gravitative tension due to the gravitative
+attraction of the earth and moon were to be replaced by steel wires
+connecting the two bodies to prevent the moon from leaving its orbit,
+there would be needed four
+<!-- Page 92 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>92<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+number ten steel wires to every square inch
+upon the earth, and these would be strained nearly to the breaking
+point. Yet this stress is not only endured continually by this pliant,
+impalpable, transparent medium, but other bodies can move through the
+same space apparently as freely as if it were entirely free. In addition
+to this, the stress from the sun and the more variable stresses from the
+planets are all endured by the same medium in the same space and
+apparently a thousand or a million times more would not make the
+slightest difference. Rupture is impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Electric and magnetic stresses, acting parallel or at right angles to
+the other, exist in the same space and to indefinite degrees, neither
+modifying the direction nor amount of either of the others.</p>
+
+<p>These various stresses have been computed to represent energy, which if
+it could be utilized, each cubic inch of space would yield five hundred
+horse-power. It shows what a store-house of energy the ether is. If
+every particle of matter were to be instantly annihilated, the universe
+of ether would still have an inexpressible amount of energy left. To
+draw at will directly from this inexhaustible supply, and utilize it for
+the needs of mankind, is not a forlorn hope.</p>
+
+<p>The accompanying table presents these contrasting properties for
+convenient inspection.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 93 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>93<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>CONTRASTED PROPERTIES OF MATTER AND THE ETHER.</h3>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table summary="comparison of properties of matter and ether">
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td class="center">MATTER.</td>
+<td class="center">ETHER.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">1.</td>
+<td class="left">Discontinuous</td>
+<td class="left">Continuous</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">2.</td>
+<td class="left">Limited</td>
+<td class="left">Unlimited</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">3.</td>
+<td class="left">Heterogeneous</td>
+<td class="left">Homogeneous</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">4.</td>
+<td class="left">Atomic</td>
+<td class="left">Non-atomic</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">5.</td>
+<td class="left">Definite structure</td>
+<td class="left">Structureless</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">6.</td>
+<td class="left">Gravitative</td>
+<td class="left">Gravitationless</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">7.</td>
+<td class="left">Frictionable</td>
+<td class="left">Frictionless</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">8.</td>
+<td class="left">Ęolotropic</td>
+<td class="left">Isotropic</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">9.</td>
+<td class="left">Chemically selective</td>
+<td class="left"><hr class="tdata" /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">10.</td>
+<td class="left">Harmonically related</td>
+<td class="left"><hr class="tdata" /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">11.</td>
+<td class="left">Energy embodied</td>
+<td class="left">Energy endowed</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">12.</td>
+<td class="left">Energy transformer</td>
+<td class="left">Non-transformer</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">13.</td>
+<td class="left">Elastic</td>
+<td class="left">Elastic?</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">14.</td>
+<td class="left">Density</td>
+<td class="left">Density?</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">15.</td>
+<td class="left">Heatable</td>
+<td class="left">Unheatable</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">16.</td>
+<td class="left">Indestructible?</td>
+<td class="left">Indestructible</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">17.</td>
+<td class="left">Inertiative</td>
+<td class="left">Inertiative conditionally</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">18.</td>
+<td class="left">Magnetic</td>
+<td class="left"><hr class="tdata" /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">19.</td>
+<td class="left">Variable states</td>
+<td class="left"><hr class="tdata" /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">20.</td>
+<td class="left" style="padding-right: 1em">Subject to shearing stress in solid</td>
+<td class="left">Shearing stress maintained</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">21.</td>
+<td class="left">Has Secondary qualities</td>
+<td class="left"><hr class="tdata" /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="right">22.</td>
+<td class="left">Sensation depends upon</td>
+<td class="left">Insensible to nerves</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<div class="hugeskip"></div>
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Vortex-rings for illustration may be made by having a
+wooden box about a foot on a side, with a round orifice in the middle of
+one side, and the side opposite covered with stout cloth stretched tight
+over a framework. A saucer containing strong ammonia water, and another
+containing strong hydrochloric acid, will cause dense fumes in the box,
+and a tap with the hand upon the cloth back will force out a ring from
+the orifice. These may be made to follow and strike each other,
+rebounding and vibrating, apparently attracting each other and being
+attracted by neighbouring bodies.</p>
+
+<p>By filling the mouth with smoke, and pursing the lips as if to make the
+sound <i>o</i>, one may make fifteen or twenty small rings by snapping the
+cheek with the finger.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 94 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>94<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>
+</div>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<p>Antecedents of Electricity&mdash;Nature of what is transformed&mdash;Series of
+transformations for the production of light&mdash;Positive and negative
+Electricity&mdash;Positive and negative twists&mdash;Rotations about a
+wire&mdash;Rotation of an arc&mdash;Ether a non-conductor&mdash;Electro-magnetic
+waves&mdash;Induction and inductive action&mdash;Ether stress and atomic
+position&mdash;Nature of an electric current&mdash;Electricity a condition, not an
+entity.</p>
+
+<div class="bigskip"></div>
+<p>So far as we have knowledge to-day, the only factors we have to consider
+in explaining physical phenomena are: (1) Ordinary matter, such as
+constitutes the substance of the earth, and the heavenly bodies; (2) the
+ether, which is omnipresent; and (3) the various forms of motion, which
+are mutually transformable in matter, and some of which, but not all,
+are transformable into ether forms. For instance, the translatory motion
+of a mass of matter can be imparted to another mass by simple impact,
+but translatory motion cannot be imparted to the ether, and, for that
+reason, a body moving in it is
+<!-- Page 95 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>95<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+not subject to friction, and continues
+to move on with velocity undiminished for an indefinite time; but the
+vibratory motion which constitutes heat is transformable into
+wave-motion in the ether, and is transmitted away with the speed of
+light. The kind of motion which is thus transformed is not even a
+to-and-fro swing of an atom, or molecule, like the swing of a pendulum
+bob, but that due to a change of form of the atoms within the molecule,
+otherwise there could be no such thing as spectrum analysis. Vibratory
+motion of the matter becomes undulatory motion in the ether. The
+vibratory motion we call heat; the wave-motion we call sometimes radiant
+energy, sometimes light. Neither of these terms is a good one, but we
+now have no others.</p>
+
+<p>It is conceded that it is not proper to speak of the wave-motion in the
+ether as <i>heat</i>; it is also admitted that the ether is not heated by the
+presence of the wave&mdash;or, in other words, the temperature of the ether
+is absolute zero. Matter only can be heated. But the ether waves can
+heat other matter they may fall on; so there are three steps in the
+process and two transformations&mdash;(1) vibrating matter; (2) waves in the
+ether; (3) vibration in other matter. Energy has been transferred
+indirectly. What is important to bear in mind is, that when a form of
+energy in matter is transformed in any manner so as to lose its
+characteristics, it is not proper to call
+<!-- Page 96 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>96<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+it by the same name after as
+before, and this we do in all cases when the transformation is from one
+kind in matter to another kind in matter. Thus, when a bullet is shot
+against a target, before it strikes it has what we call mechanical
+energy, and we measure that in foot-pounds; after it has struck the
+target, the transformation is into heat, and this has its mechanical
+equivalent, but is not called mechanical energy, nor are the motions
+which embody it similar. The mechanical ideas in these phenomena are
+easy to grasp. They apply to the phenomena of the mechanics of large and
+small bodies, to sound, to heat, and to light, as ordinarily considered,
+but they have not been applied to electric phenomena, as they evidently
+should be, unless it be held that such phenomena are not related to
+ordinary phenomena, as the latter are to one another.</p>
+
+<p>When we would give a complete explanation of the phenomena exhibited by,
+say, a heated body, we need to inquire as to the antecedents of the
+manifestation, and also its consequents. Where and how did it get its
+heat? Where and how did it lose it? When we know every step of those
+processes, we know all there is to learn about them. Let us undertake
+the same thing for some electrical phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>First, under what circumstances do electrical phenomena arise?</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 97 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>97<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>(1) <i>Mechanical</i>, as when two different kinds of matter are subject to
+friction.</p>
+
+<p>(2) <i>Thermal</i>, as when two substances in molecular contact are heated at
+the junction.</p>
+
+<p>(3) <i>Magnetic</i>, as when any conductor is in a changing magnetic field.</p>
+
+<p>(4) <i>Chemical</i>, as when a metal is being dissolved in any solution.</p>
+
+<p>(5) <i>Physiological</i>, as when a muscle contracts.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_5" id="FIG_5"></a>
+<img src="images/098.png" width="450" height="254" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 5.</span>&mdash;Frictional electrical machine.
+</span></div>
+
+<p>Each of these has several varieties, and changes may be rung on
+combinations of them, as when mechanical and magnetic conditions
+interact.</p>
+
+<p>(1) In the first case, ordinary mechanical or translational energy is
+spent as friction, an amount measurable in foot-pounds, and the factors
+we
+<!-- Page 98 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>98<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+know, a pressure into a distance. If the surface be of the same kind
+of molecules, the whole energy is spent as heat, and is presently
+radiated away. If the surfaces are of unlike molecules, the product is a
+compound one, part heat, part electrical. What we have turned into the
+machine we know to be a particular mode of motion. We have not changed
+the amount of matter involved; indeed, we assume, without specifying and
+without controversy, that matter is itself indestructible, and the
+product, whether it be of one kind or another, can only be some form of
+motion. Whether we can describe it or not is immaterial; but if we agree
+that heat
+<!-- Page 99 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>99<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+is vibratory molecular motion, and there be any other kind of
+a product than heat, it too must also be some other form of motion. So
+if one is to form a conception of the mechanical origin of electricity,
+this is the only one he can have&mdash;transformed motion.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_6" id="FIG_6"></a>
+<img src="images/099.png" width="346" height="450" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 6.</span>&mdash;Thermo-pile.
+</span></div>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_7" id="FIG_7"></a>
+<img src="images/100.png" width="500" height="493" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 5.</span>&mdash;Dynamo.
+</span></div>
+
+<p>(2) When heat is the antecedent of electricity, as in the thermo-pile,
+that which is turned into the pile we know to be molecular motion of a
+definite kind. That which comes out of it must be some equivalent
+<!-- Page 100 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>100<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+motion, and if all that went in were transformed, then all that came out
+would be transformed, call it by what name we will and let its amount be
+what it may.</p>
+
+<p>(3) When a conductor is moved in a magnetic field, the energy spent is
+measurable in foot-pounds, as before, a pressure into a distance. The
+energy appears in a new form, but the quantity of matter being
+unchanged, the only changeable factor is the kind of motion, and that
+the motion is molecular is evident, for the molecules are heated.
+Mechanical or mass motion is the antecedent, molecular heat motion is
+the consequent, and the way we know there has been some intermediate
+form is, that heat is not conducted at the rate which is observed in
+such a case. Call it by what name one will, some form of motion has been
+intermediate between the antecedent and the consequent, else we have
+some other factor of energy to reckon with than ether, matter and
+motion.</p>
+
+<p>(4) In a galvanic battery, the source of electricity is chemical action;
+but what is chemical action? Simply an exchange of the constituents of
+molecules&mdash;a change which involves exchange of energy. Molecules capable
+of doing chemical work are loaded with energy. The chemical products of
+battery action are molecules of different constitution, with smaller
+amounts of energy as
+<!-- Page 101 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>101<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+measured in calorics or heat units. If the results
+of the chemical reaction be prevented from escaping, by confining them
+to the cell itself, the whole energy appears as heat and raises the
+temperature of the cell. If a so-called circuit be provided, the energy
+is distributed through it, and less heat is spent in the cell, but
+whether it be in one place or another, the mass of matter involved is
+not changed, and the variable factor is the motion, the same as in the
+other cases. The mechanical conceptions appropriate are the
+transformation of one kind of motion into another kind by the mechanical
+conditions provided.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_8" id="FIG_8"></a>
+<img src="images/102.png" width="313" height="450" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 8.</span>&mdash;Galvanic Battery.
+</span></div>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 102 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>102<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>(5) Physiological antecedents of electricity are exemplified by the
+structure and mode of operation of certain muscles (Fig. 9, <i>a</i>) in the
+torpedo and other electrical animals. The mechanical contraction of them
+results in an electrical excitation, and, if a proper circuit be
+provided, in an electric current. The energy of a muscle is derived from
+food, which is itself but a molecular compound loaded with energy of a
+kind available for muscular transformation. Bread-and-butter has more
+available energy, pound for pound, than has coal, and can be substituted
+for coal for running an engine. It is not used, because it costs so much
+more. There is nothing different, so far as the factors of energy go,
+between the food of an animal and the food of an engine. What becomes of
+the energy depends upon the kind of structure it acts on. It may be
+changed into translatory, and the whole body moves in one direction; or
+into molecular, and then appears as heat or electrical energy.</p>
+
+<p>If one confines his attention to the only variable factor in the energy
+in all these cases, and traces out in each just what happens, he will
+have only motions of one sort or another, at one rate or another, and
+there is nothing mysterious which enters into the processes.</p>
+
+<p>We will turn now to the mode in which electricity manifests itself, and
+what it can do. It may
+<!-- Page 103 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>103<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+be well to point out at the outset what has
+occasionally been stated, but which has not received the philosophical
+attention it deserves&mdash;namely, that electrical phenomena are reversible;
+that is, any kind of a physical process which is capable of producing
+electricity, electricity is itself able to produce. Thus to name a few:
+If mechanical
+<!-- Page 104 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>104<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+motion develops electricity, electricity will produce
+mechanical motion; the movement of a pith ball and an electric motor are
+examples. If chemical action can produce it, it will produce chemical
+action, as in the decomposition of water and electro-plating. As heat
+may be its antecedent, so will it produce heat. If magnetism be an
+antecedent factor, magnetism may be its product. What is called
+induction may give rise to it in an adjacent conductor, and, likewise,
+induction may be its effect.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_9" id="FIG_9"></a>
+<img src="images/104.png" width="226" height="450" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 9.</span>&mdash;Torpedo.
+</span></div>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_10" id="FIG_10"></a>
+<img src="images/105.png" width="400" height="181" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 10.</span>&mdash;Dynamo and Motor.
+</span></div>
+
+<p>Let us suppose ourselves to be in a building in which a steam-engine is
+at work. There is fuel, the furnace, the boiler, the pipes, the engine
+with its fly-wheel turning. The fuel burns in the furnace, the water is
+superheated in the boiler, the steam is directed by the pipes, the
+piston is moved by the steam pressure, and the fly-wheel rotates
+<!-- Page 105 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>105<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+because of proper mechanism between it and the piston. No one who has
+given attention to the successive steps in the process is so puzzled as
+to feel the need of inventing a particular force, or a new kind of
+matter, or any agency, at any stage of the process, different from the
+simple mechanical ones represented by a push or a pull. Even if he
+cannot see clearly how heat can produce a push, he does not venture to
+assume a genii to do the work, but for the time is content with saying
+that if he starts with motion in the furnace and stops with the motion
+of the fly-wheel, any assumption of any other factor than some form of
+motion between the two would be gratuitous. He can truthfully say that
+he understands the <i>nature</i> of that which goes on between the furnace
+and the wheel; that it is some sort of motion, the particular kind of
+which he might make out at his leisure.</p>
+
+<p>Suppose once more that, across the road from an engine-house, there was
+another building, where all sorts of machines&mdash;lathes, planers, drills,
+etc.&mdash;were running, but that the source of the power for all this was
+out of sight, and that one could see no connection between this and the
+engine on the other side of the street. Would one need to suppose there
+was anything mysterious between the two&mdash;a force, a fluid, an immaterial
+something? This question is put on the supposition that one should
+<!-- Page 106 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>106<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+not
+be aware of the shaft that might be between the two buildings, and that
+it was not obvious on simple inspection how the machines got their
+motions from the engine. No one would be puzzled because he did not know
+just what the intervening mechanism might be. If the boiler were in the
+one building, and the engine in the other with the machines, he could
+see nothing moving between them, even if the steam-pipes were of glass.
+If matter of any kind were moving, he could not see it there. He would
+say there <i>must</i> be something moving, or pressure could not be
+transferred from one place to the other.</p>
+
+<p>Substitute for the furnace and boiler a galvanic battery or a dynamo;
+for the machines of the shop, one or more motors with suitable wire
+connections. When the dynamo goes the motors go; when the dynamo stops
+the motors stop; nothing can be seen to be turning or moving in any way
+between them. Is there any necessity for assuming a mysterious agency,
+or a force of a <i>nature</i> different from the visible ones at the two ends
+of the line? Is it not certain that the question is, How does the motion
+get from one to the other, whether there be a wire or not? If there be a
+wire, it is plain that there is motion in it, for it is heated its whole
+length, and heat is known to be a mode of motion, and every molecule
+which is thus heated must have had some
+<!-- Page 107 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>107<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+antecedent motions. Whether it
+be defined or not, and whether it be called by one name or another, are
+quite immaterial, if one is concerned only with the <i>nature</i> of the
+action, whether it be matter or ether, or motion or abracadabra.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_11" id="FIG_11"></a>
+<img src="images/108.png" width="640" height="122" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 11.</span>
+</span></div>
+
+<p>Once more: suppose we have a series of active machines. (Fig. 11.) An
+arc lamp, radiating light-waves, gets its energy from the wire which is
+heated, which in turn gets its energy from the electric current; that
+from a dynamo, the dynamo from a steam-engine; that from a furnace and
+the chemical actions going on in it. Let us call the chemical actions <span class="smcap">a</span>,
+the furnace <span class="smcap">b</span>, the engine <span class="smcap">c</span>, the dynamo <span class="smcap">d</span>, the electric lamp <span class="smcap">e</span>, the
+ether waves <span class="smcap">f</span>. (Fig. 12.)</p>
+
+<p>The product of the chemical action of the coal is molecular motion,
+called heat in the furnace. The product of the heat is mechanical motion
+in the engine. The product of the mechanical motion is electricity in
+the dynamo. The product of the electric current in the lamp is
+light-waves in the ether. No one hesitates for an instant to speak of
+the heat as being molecular motion, nor of the
+<!-- Page 108 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>108<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+motions of the engine as
+being mechanical; but when we come to the product of the dynamo, which
+we call electricity, behold, nearly every one says, not that he does not
+know what it is, but that no one knows! Does any one venture to say he
+does not know what heat is, because he cannot describe in detail just
+what goes on in a heated body, as it might be described by one who saw
+with a microscope the movements of the molecules? Let us go back for a
+moment to the proposition stated early in this book, namely, that if any
+body of any magnitude moves, it is because some other body in motion and
+in contact with it has imparted its motion by mechanical pressure.
+Therefore, the ether waves at <span class="smcap">f</span> (Fig. 11) imply continuous motions of
+some sort from <span class="smcap">a</span> to <span class="smcap">f</span>. That they are all motions of ordinary matter from
+<span class="smcap">a</span> to <span class="smcap">e</span> is obvious, because continuous matter is essential for the
+maintenance
+<!-- Page 109 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>109<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+of the actions. At <span class="smcap">e</span> the motions are handed over to the
+ether, and they are radiated away as light-waves.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_12" id="FIG_12"></a>
+<img src="images/109.png" width="640" height="232" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 12.</span>
+</span></div>
+
+<p>A puzzling electrical phenomenon has been what has been called its
+duality-states, which are spoken of as positive and negative. Thus, we
+speak of the positive plate of a battery and the negative pole of a
+dynamo; and another troublesome condition to idealize has been, how it
+could be that, in an electric circuit, there could be as much energy at
+<!-- Page 110 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>110<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+the most remote part as at the source. But, if one will take a limp
+rope, 8 or 10 feet long, tie its ends together, and then begin to twist
+it at any point, he will see the twist move in a right-handed spiral on
+the one hand, and in a left-handed spiral on the other, and each may be
+traced quite round the circuit; so there will be as much twist, as much
+motion, and as much energy in one part of the rope as in any other; and
+if one chooses to call the right-handed twist positive, and the
+left-handed twist negative, he will have the mechanical phenomenon of
+energy-distribution and the terminology, analogous to what they are in
+an electric conductor. (Fig. 13.) Are the cases more dissimilar than the
+mechanical analogy would make them seem to be?</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_13" id="FIG_13"></a>
+<img src="images/110.png" width="360" height="368" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 13.</span>
+</span></div>
+
+<p>Are there any phenomena which imply that rotation is going on in an
+electric conductor? There are. An electric arc, which is a current in
+the air, and is, therefore, less constrained than it is in a conductor,
+rotates. Especially marked is this when in front of the pole of a
+magnet; but the rotation may be noticed in an ordinary arc by looking at
+it with a stroboscope disk, rotated so as to make the light to the eye
+intermittent at the rate of four or five hundred per second. A ray of
+plane polarized light, parallel with a wire conveying a current, has its
+plane of vibration twisted to the right or left, as the current goes
+<!-- Page 111 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>111<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+one way or the other through the wire, and to a degree that depends upon
+the distance it travels; not only so, but if the ray be sent, by
+reflection, back through the same field, it is twisted as much more&mdash;a
+phenomenon which convinces one that rotation is going on in the space
+through which the ray travels. If the ether through which the ray be
+sent were simply warped or in some static stress, the ray, after
+reflection, would be brought back to its original plane, which is not
+the case. This rotation in the ether is produced by what is going on in
+the wire. The ether waves called light are interpreted to imply that
+molecules originate them by their vibrations, and that there are as many
+ether waves per second as of molecular vibrations per second. In like
+manner, the implication is the same, that if there be rotations in the
+ether they must be produced by molecular rotation, and there must be as
+many rotations per second in the ether as there are molecular rotations
+that produce them. The space about a wire carrying a current is often
+pictured as filled with whorls indicating this motion (Fig. 14), and one
+must picture to himself, not the wire as a whole rotating, but each
+individual molecule independently. But one is aware that the molecules
+of a conductor are practically in contact with each other, and that if
+one for any reason rotates,
+<!-- Page 112 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>112<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+the next one to it would, from frictional
+action, cause the one it touched to rotate in the opposite direction,
+whereas, the evidence goes to show that all rotation is in the same
+direction.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_14" id="FIG_14"></a>
+<img src="images/113.png" width="450" height="91" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 14.</span>
+</span></div>
+
+<p>How can this be explained mechanically? Recall the kind of action that
+constitutes heat, that it is not translatory action in any degree, but
+vibratory, in the sense of a change of form of an elastic body, and
+this, too, of the atoms that make up the molecule of whatever sort. Each
+atom is so far independent of every other atom in the molecule that it
+can vibrate in this way, else it could not be heated. The greater the
+amplitude of vibration, the more free space to move in, and continuous
+contact of atoms is incompatible with the mechanics of heat. There must,
+therefore, be impact and freedom alternating with each other in all
+degrees in a heated body. If, in any way, the atoms themselves <i>were</i>
+made to rotate, their heat impacts not only would restrain the
+rotations, but the energy also of the rotation motion would increase the
+vibrations;
+<!-- Page 113 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>113<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+that is, the heat would be correspondingly increased, which
+is what happens always when an electric current is in a conductor. It
+appears that the cooler a body is the less electric resistance it has,
+and the indications are that at absolute zero there is no resistance;
+that is, impacts do not retard rotation, but it is also apparent that
+any current sent through a conductor at that temperature would at once
+heat it. This is the same as saying that an electric current could not
+be sent through a conductor at absolute zero.</p>
+
+<p>So far, mechanical conceptions are in accordance with electrical
+phenomena, but there are several others yet to be noted. Electrical
+phenomena has been explained as molecular or atomic phenomena, and there
+is one more in that category which is well enough known, and which is so
+important and suggestive, that the wonder is its significance has not
+been seen by those who have sought to interpret electrical phenomena.
+The reference is to the fact that electricity cannot be transmitted
+through a vacuum. An electric arc begins to spread out as the density of
+the air decreases, and presently it is extinguished. An induction spark
+that will jump two or three feet in air cannot be made to bridge the
+tenth of an inch in an ordinary vacuum. A vacuum is a perfect
+non-conductor of electricity. Is there more than one possible
+interpretation to this,
+<!-- Page 114 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>114<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+namely, that electricity is fundamentally a
+molecular and atomic phenomenon, and in the absence of molecules cannot
+exist? One may say, %ldquo;Electrical <i>action</i> is not hindered by a vacuum,&rdquo;
+which is true, but has quite another interpretation than the implication
+that electricity is an ether phenomenon. The heat of the sun in some way
+gets to the earth, but what takes place in the ether is not
+heat-transmission. There is no heat in space, and no one is at liberty
+to say, or think, that there can be heat in the absence of matter.</p>
+
+<p>When heat has been transformed into ether waves, it is no longer heat,
+call it by what name one will. Formerly, such waves were called
+heat-waves; no one, properly informed, does so now. In like manner, if
+electrical motions or conditions in matter be transformed, no matter
+how, it is no longer proper to speak of such transformed motions or
+conditions as electricity. Thus, if electrical energy be transformed
+into heat, no one thinks of speaking of the latter as electrical. If the
+electrical energy be transformed into mechanical of any sort, no one
+thinks of calling the latter electrical because of its antecedent. If
+electrical motions be transformed into ether actions of any kind, why
+should we continue to speak of the transformed motions or energy as
+being electrical? Electricity may be the antecedent,
+<!-- Page 115 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>115<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+in the same sense
+as the mechanical motion of a bullet may be the antecedent of the heat
+developed when the latter strikes the target; and if it be granted that
+a vacuum is a perfect non-conductor of electricity, then it is
+manifestly improper to speak of any phenomenon in the ether as an
+electrical phenomenon. It is from the failure to make this distinction
+that most of the trouble has come in thinking on this subject. Some have
+given all their attention to what goes on in matter, and have called
+that electricity; others have given their attention to what goes on in
+the ether, and have called that electricity, and some have considered
+both as being the same thing, and have been confounded.</p>
+
+<p>Let us consider what is the relation between an electrified body and the
+ether about it.</p>
+
+<p>When a body is electrified, the latter at the same time creates an ether
+stress about it, which is called an electric field. The ether stress may
+be considered as a warp in the distribution of the energy about the body
+(Fig. 15), by the new positions given to the molecules by the process of
+electrification. It has been already said that the evidence from other
+sources is that atoms, rather than molecules, in larger masses, are what
+affect the ether. One is inclined to inquire for the evidence we have as
+to the constitution of matter or of atoms. There is
+<!-- Page 116 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>116<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+only one hypothesis
+to-day that has any degree of probability; that is, the vortex-ring
+theory, which describes an atom as being a vortex-ring of ether in the
+ether. It possesses a definite amount of energy in virtue of the motion
+which constitutes it, and this motion differentiates it from the
+surrounding ether, giving it dimensions, elasticity, momentum, and the
+possibility of translatory, rotary, vibratory motions, and combinations
+of them. Without going further into this, it is sufficient, for a
+mechanical conception, that one should have so much in mind, as it will
+vastly help in forming a mechanical conception of reactions between
+atoms and the ether. An exchange of energy between such an atom and the
+ether is not an exchange between different kinds of things, but between
+different conditions of the same thing. Next, it should be remembered
+that all the elements are magnetic in some degree.
+<!-- Page 117 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>117<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+This means that they
+are themselves magnets, and every magnet has a magnetic field unlimited
+in extent, which can almost be regarded as a part of itself. If a magnet
+of any size be moved, its field is moved with it, and if in any way the
+magnetism be increased or diminished, the field changes correspondingly.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_15" id="FIG_15"></a>
+<img src="images/117.png" width="450" height="166" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 15.</span>
+</span></div>
+
+<p>Assume a straight bar electro-magnet in circuit, so that a current can
+be made intermittent, say, once a second. When the circuit is closed and
+the magnet is made, the field at once is formed and travels outwards at
+the rate of 186,000 miles per second. When the current stops, the field
+adjacent is destroyed. Another closure develops the field again, which,
+like the other, travels outwards; and so there may be formed a series of
+waves in the ether, each 186,000 miles long, with an electro-magnetic
+antecedent. If the circuit were closed ten times a second, the waves
+would be 18,600 miles long; if 186,000 times a second, they would be but
+one mile long. If 400 million of millions times a second, they would be
+but the forty-thousandth of an inch long, and would then affect the eye,
+and we should call them light-waves, but the latter would not differ
+from the first wave in any particular except in length. As it is proved
+that such electro-magnetic waves have all the characteristics of light,
+it follows that they must originate with electro-magnetic
+<!-- Page 118 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>118<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+action, that
+is, in the changing magnetism of a magnetic body. This makes it needful
+to assume that the atoms which originate waves are magnets, as they are
+experimentally found to be. But how can a magnet, not subject to a
+varying current, change its magnetic field? The strength or density of a
+magnetic field depends upon the form of the magnet. When the poles are
+near together, the field is densest; when the magnet is bent back to a
+straight bar, the field is rarest or weakest, and a change in the form
+of the magnet from a <span class="sf">U</span>-form to a straight bar would result in a change
+of the magnetic field within its greatest limits. A few turns of
+wire&mdash;as has been already said&mdash;wound about the poles of an ordinary
+<span class="sf">U</span>-magnet, and connected to an ordinary magnetic telephone, will enable
+one, listening to the latter, to hear the pitch of the former loudly
+reproduced when the magnet is struck like a tuning-fork, so as to
+vibrate. This shows that the field of the magnet changes at the same
+rate as the vibrations.</p>
+
+<p>Assume that the magnet becomes smaller and smaller until it is of the
+dimensions of an atom, say for an approximation, the fifty-millionth of
+an inch. It would still have its field; it would still be elastic and
+capable of vibration, but at an enormously rapid rate; but its vibration
+would change its field in the same way, and so there would be formed
+<!-- Page 119 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>119<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+those waves in the ether, which, because they are so short that they can
+affect the eye, we call light. The mechanical conceptions are
+legitimate, because based upon experiments having ranges through nearly
+the whole gamut as waves in ether.</p>
+
+<p>The idea implies that every atom has what may be loosely called an
+electro-magnetic grip upon the whole of the ether, and any change in the
+former brings some change in the latter.</p>
+
+<p>Lastly, the phenomenon called induction may be mechanically conceived.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known that a current in a conductor makes a magnet of the
+wire, and gives it an electro-magnetic field, so that other magnets in
+its neighbourhood are twisted in a way tending to set them at right
+angles to the wire. Also, if another wire be adjacent to the first, an
+electric current having an opposite direction is induced in it. Thus:</p>
+
+<p>Consider a permanent magnet <span class="smcap">a</span> (Fig. 15), free to turn on an axis in the
+direction of the arrow. If there be other free magnets, <span class="smcap">b</span> and <span class="smcap">c</span>, in
+line, they will assume such positions that their similar poles all point
+one way. Let <span class="smcap">a</span> be twisted to a position at right angles, then <span class="smcap">b</span> will
+turn, but in the opposite direction, and <span class="smcap">c</span> in similar. That is, if <span class="smcap">a</span>
+turn in the direction of the hands of a clock, <span class="smcap">b</span> and <span class="smcap">c</span> will turn in
+opposite directions. These are simply the
+<!-- Page 120 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>120<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+observed movements of large
+magnets. Imagine that these magnets be reduced to atomic dimensions, yet
+retaining their magnetic qualities, poles and fields. Would they not
+evidently move in the same way and for the same reason? If it be true,
+that a magnet field always so acts upon another as to tend by rotation
+to set the latter into a certain position, with reference to the stress
+in that field, then, <i>wherever there is a changing magnetic field, there
+the atoms are being adjusted by it</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="FIG_16" id="FIG_16"></a>
+<img src="images/121.png" width="450" height="188" alt="" />
+<span class="caption"><br />
+<span class="smcap">Fig. 16.</span>
+</span></div>
+
+<p>Suppose we have a line of magnetic needles free to turn, hundreds or
+thousands of them, but disarranged. Let a strong magnetic field be
+produced at one end of the line. The field would be strongest and best
+conducted along the magnet line, but every magnet in the line would be
+compelled to rotate, and if the first were kept rotating, the rotation
+<!-- Page 121 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>121<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+would be kept up along the whole line. This would be a mechanical
+illustration of how an electric current travels in a conductor. The
+rotations are of the atomic sort, and are at right angles to the
+direction of the conductor.</p>
+
+<p>That which makes the magnets move is inductive magnetic ether stress,
+but the advancing motion represents mechanical energy of rotation, and
+it is this motion, with the resulting friction, which causes the heat in
+a conductor.</p>
+
+<p>What is important to note is, that the action in the ether is not
+electric action, but more properly the result of electro-magnetic
+action. Whatever name be given to it, and however it comes about, there
+is no good reason for calling any kind of ether action electrical.</p>
+
+<p>Electric action, like magnetic action, begins and ends in matter. It is
+subject to transformations into thermal and mechanical actions, also
+into ether stress&mdash;right-handed or left-handed&mdash;which, in turn, can
+similarly affect other matter, but with opposite polarities.</p>
+
+<p>In his <i>Modern Views of Electricity</i>, Prof. O. J. Lodge warns us, quite
+rightly, that perhaps, after all, there is no such <i>thing</i> as
+electricity&mdash;that electrification and electric energy may be terms to be
+kept for convenience; but if electricity as a term be held to imply a
+force, a fluid, an imponderable,
+<!-- Page 122 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>122<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+or a thing which could be described by
+some one who knew enough, then it has no degree of probability, for
+spinning atomic magnets seem capable of developing all the electrical
+phenomena we meet. It must be thought of as a <i>condition</i> and not as an
+entity.</p>
+
+<div class="hugeskip"></div>
+
+<h3>THE END</h3>
+
+<div class="hugeskip"></div>
+
+<div><i>Richard Clay &amp; Sons, Limited, London &amp; Bungay.</i></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<!--TO DO-->
+<div>
+<!-- Page 1 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>1<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<span style="font-size: 180%">PUBLICATIONS</span><br /><br />
+<span style="font-size: 90%">OF THE</span><br /><br />
+<span style="font-size: 180%">Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="medskip"></div>
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<h2>THE ROMANCE OF SCIENCE.</h2>
+
+<div style="font-size: 90%">
+<p class=" hangindent">
+A series of books which shows that science has for the masses as
+great interest as, and more edification than, the romances of the
+day.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="center"><i>Small Post 8vo, Cloth boards.</i></div>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>Coal, and what we get from it.</b> By Professor <span class="smcap">Raphael Meldola</span>, F.R.S.,
+F.I.C. With several Illustrations. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>Colour Measurement and Mixture.</b> By <span class="smcap">Captain W. de W. Abney</span>, C.B., R.E.
+With numerous Illustrations. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>The Making of Flowers.</b> By the Rev. Professor <span class="smcap">George Henslow</span>, M.A.,
+F.L.S. With several Illustrations. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>The Birth and Growth of Worlds.</b> A Lecture by Professor <span class="smcap">A. H. Green</span>,
+M.A., F.R.S. 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>Soap-Bubbles, and the Forces which Mould Them.</b> A course of Lectures by
+<span class="smcap">C. V. Boys</span>, A.R.S.M., F.R.S. With numerous Diagrams. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>Spinning Tops.</b> By Professor <span class="smcap">J. Perry</span>, M.E., D.Sc., F.R.S. With numerous
+Diagrams. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>Our Secret Friends and Foes.</b> By <span class="smcap">P. F. Frankland</span>, F.R.S. With numerous
+Illustrations. New Edition, 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>Diseases of Plants.</b> By Professor <span class="smcap">Marshall Ward</span>, M.A., F.R.S., F.L.S.
+With numerous Illustrations. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>The Story of a Tinder-Box.</b> By the late <span class="smcap">Charles Meymott Tidy</span>, M.B., M.S.
+With numerous Illustrations. 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>Time and Tide.</b> A Romance of the Moon. By Sir <span class="smcap">Robert S. Ball</span>, LL.D.,
+Royal Astronomer of Ireland. With Illustrations. Third Edition, revised.
+2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>The Splash of a Drop.</b> By Professor <span class="smcap">A. M. Worthington</span>, F.R.S. With
+numerous Illustrations. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 2 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>2<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>NATURAL HISTORY RAMBLES.</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<i>Fcap. 8vo., with numerous Woodcuts, Cloth boards, 2s. 6d. each.</i><br />
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<b>IN SEARCH OF MINERALS.</b><br />
+By the late <span class="smcap">D. T. Anstead</span>, M.A., F.R.S.<br />
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<b>LAKES AND RIVERS.</b><br />
+By <span class="smcap">C. O. Groom Napier</span>, F.G.S.<br />
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<b>LANE AND FIELD.</b><br />
+By the late Rev. <span class="smcap">J. G. Wood</span>, M.A., Author of &ldquo;Man and his<br />
+Handiwork,&rdquo; &amp;c.<br />
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<b>MOUNTAIN AND MOOR.</b><br />
+By <span class="smcap">J. E. Taylor</span>, F.L.S., F.G.S., Editor of &ldquo;Science-Gossip.&rdquo;<br />
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<b>PONDS AND DITCHES.</b><br />
+By <span class="smcap">M. C. Cooke</span>, M.A., LL.D.<br />
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<b>THE SEA-SHORE.</b><br />
+By Professor <span class="smcap">P. Martin Duncan</span>, M.B. (London), F.R.S.<br />
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<b>THE WOODLANDS.</b><br />
+By <span class="smcap">M. C. Cooke</span>, M.A., LL.D., Author of &ldquo;Freaks and Marvels<br />
+of Plant Life,&rdquo; &amp;c.<br />
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<b>UNDERGROUND.</b><br />
+By <span class="smcap">J. E. Taylor</span>, F.L.S., F.G.S.<br />
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+</div>
+
+<h2>HEROES OF SCIENCE.</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<i>Crown 8vo. Cloth boards, 4s. each.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>ASTRONOMERS.</b> By <span class="smcap">E. J. C. Morton</span>, B.A. With numerous diagrams.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>BOTANISTS, ZOOLOGISTS, AND GEOLOGISTS.</b> By Professor <span class="smcap">P. Martin Duncan</span>,
+F.R.S., &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>CHEMISTS.</b> By <span class="smcap">M. M. Pattison Muir</span>, Esq., F.R.S.E. With several diagrams.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>MECHANICIANS.</b> By <span class="smcap">T. C. Lewis</span>, M.A.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>PHYSICISTS.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Garnett</span>, Esq., M.A.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 3 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>3<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<h2>MANUALS OF HEALTH.</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<i>Fcap. 8vo, 128 pp., Limp Cloth, price 1s. each.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>HEALTH AND OCCUPATION.</b> By the late Sir <span class="smcap">B. W. Richardson</span>, F.R.S., M.D.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>HABITATION IN RELATION TO HEALTH (The).</b> By <span class="smcap">F. S. B. Chaumont</span>, M.D.,
+F.R.S.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>NOTES ON THE VENTILATION AND WARMING OF HOUSES, CHURCHES, SCHOOLS, AND
+OTHER BUILDINGS.</b> By the late <span class="smcap">Ernest H. Jacob</span>, M.A., M.D. (<span class="smcap">Oxon.</span>).</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>ON PERSONAL CARE OF HEALTH.</b> By the late <span class="smcap">E. A. Parkes</span>, M.D., F.R.S.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>AIR, WATER, AND DISINFECTANTS.</b> By <span class="smcap">C. H. Aikman</span>, M.A., D.Sc., F.R.S.E.</p>
+
+<div class="medskip"></div>
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<h2>MANUALS OF ELEMENTARY SCIENCE.</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<i>Foolscap 8vo, 128 pp. with Illustrations, Limp Cloth, 1s. each.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>PHYSIOLOGY.</b> By Professor <span class="smcap">A. Macalister</span>, LL.D., M.D., F.R.S., F.S.A.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>GEOLOGY.</b> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">T. G. Bonney</span>, M.A., F.G.S.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>ASTRONOMY.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. H. Christie</span>, M.A., F.R.S.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>BOTANY.</b> By the late Professor <span class="smcap">Robert Bentley</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>ZOOLOGY.</b> By <span class="smcap">Alfred Newton</span>, M.A., F.R.S., Professor of Zoology in the
+University of Cambridge. New Revised Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>MATTER AND MOTION.</b> By the late <span class="smcap">J. Clerk Maxwell</span>, M.A., Trinity College,
+Cambridge.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>SPECTROSCOPE (THE), AND ITS WORK.</b> By the late <span class="smcap">Richard A. Proctor.</span></p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>CRYSTALLOGRAPHY.</b> By <span class="smcap">Henry Palin Gurney</span>, M.A., Clare College, Cambridge.</p>
+
+<p class="hangindent"><b>ELECTRICITY.</b> By the late Prof. <span class="smcap">Fleeming Jenkin</span>.</p>
+
+<div>
+<!-- Page 4 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>4<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+
+<h2>MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS.</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table summary="miscellaneous publications, titles and prices">
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><i>s</i>.</td> <td><i>d</i>.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Animal Creation (The).</i> A popular Introduction to Zoology.
+By the late <span class="smcap">Thomas Rymer Jones</span>, F.R.S.
+With 488 Woodcuts. Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">7</td> <td class="price">6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Birds' Nests and Eggs.</i> With 11 coloured plates of Eggs.
+Square 16mo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">3</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>British Birds in Their Haunts.</i> By the late Rev.
+<span class="smcap">C. A. Johns</span>, B.A., F.L.S. With 190 engravings by
+Wolf and Whymper. Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">6</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Evenings at the Microscope</i>; or, Researches among
+the Minuter Organs and Forms of Animal Life. By
+the late <span class="smcap">Philip H. Gosse</span>, F.R.S. A New Edition,
+revised by Professor <span class="smcap">F. Jeffrey Bell</span>. With numerous
+Woodcuts. Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">5</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Fern Portfolio (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">Francis G. Heath</span>
+Author of &ldquo;Where to find Ferns,&rdquo; &amp;c. With 15 plates,
+elaborately drawn life-size, exquisitely coloured from
+Nature, and accompanied with descriptive text.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">8</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Fishes, Natural History of British</i>: their Structure,
+Economic Uses, and Capture by Net and Rod. By the
+late <span class="smcap">Frank Buckland</span>. With numerous illustrations.
+Crown 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">5</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Flowers of the Field.</i> By the late Rev. <span class="smcap">C. A.
+Johns</span>, B.A., F.L.S. New edition, with an Appendix
+on Grasses, by <span class="smcap">C. H. Johns</span>, M.A. With numerous
+woodcuts. Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">6</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td>
+<div>
+<!-- Page 5 --><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5"><span class="noshow">[Pg </span>5<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="medskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><i>s</i>.</td> <td><i>d</i>.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Forest Trees (The) of Great Britain.</i> By the late
+Rev. <span class="smcap">C. A. Johns</span>, B.A., F.L.S. With 150 woodcuts.
+Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">5</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Freaks and Marvels of Plant Life</i>; or, Curiosities
+of Vegetation. By <span class="smcap">M. C. Cooke</span>, M.A., LL.D. With
+numerous illustrations. Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">6</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Man and his Handiwork.</i> By the late Rev. <span class="smcap">J. G.
+Wood</span>, Author of &ldquo;Lane and Field,&rdquo; &amp;c. With about
+500 illustrations. Large Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">7</td> <td class="price">6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Natural History of the Bible (The).</i> By the Rev.
+<span class="smcap">Canon Tristram</span>, Author of &ldquo;The Land of Israel,&rdquo; &amp;c.
+With numerous illustrations. Crown 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">5</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Nature and her Servants</i>; or, Sketches of the
+Animal Kingdom. By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Theodore Wood</span>.
+With numerous woodcuts. Large Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">4</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Ocean (The).</i> By the late <span class="smcap">Philip H. Gosse</span>, F.R.S.,
+Author of &ldquo;Evenings at the Microscope.&rdquo; With 51
+illustrations and woodcuts. Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">3</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Our Bird Allies.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Theodore Wood</span>.
+With numerous illustrations. Fcap. 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">2</td> <td class="price">6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Our Insect Allies.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Theodore Wood</span>.
+With numerous illustrations. Fcap. 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">2</td> <td class="price">6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Our Insect Enemies.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Theodore Wood</span>.
+With numerous illustrations. Fcap. 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">2</td> <td class="price">6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Our Island Continent.</i> A Naturalist's Holiday in
+Australia. By <span class="smcap">J. E. Taylor</span>, F.L.S., F.G.S. With
+Map. Fcap. 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">2</td> <td class="price">6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td>
+<div>
+<!-- Page 6 -->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">
+<span class="noshow">[Pg </span>6<span class="noshow">]</span></a></span>
+</div>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="medskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td><i>s</i>.</td> <td><i>d</i>.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Our Native Songsters.</i> By <span class="smcap">Anne Pratt</span>, Author of
+&ldquo;Wild Flowers.&rdquo; With 72 coloured plates. 16mo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">4</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Romance of Low Life amongst Plants.</i> Facts and
+Phenomena of Cryptogamic Vegetation. By <span class="smcap">M. C.
+Cooke,</span> M.A., LL.D., A.L.S. With numerous woodcuts.
+Large post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">4</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Selborne (The Natural History of).</i> By the <span class="smcap">Rev.
+Gilbert White</span>. With Frontispiece, Map, and 50
+woodcuts. Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">2</td> <td class="price">6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Toilers in the Sea.</i> By <span class="smcap">M. C. Cooke,</span> M.A., LL.D.
+Post 8vo. With numerous illustrations.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">5</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Vegetable Wasps and Plant Worms.</i> By <span class="smcap">M. C.
+Cooke,</span> M.A. Illustrated. Post 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">5</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Wayside Sketches.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. Edward Hulme</span>, F.L.S
+With numerous illustrations. Crown 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">5</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Where to find Ferns.</i> By <span class="smcap">Francis G. Heath</span>,
+Author of &ldquo;The Fern Portfolio,&rdquo; &amp;c. With numerous
+illustrations. Fcap. 8vo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">1</td> <td class="price">6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td><div class="smallskip"></div></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="advert">
+<i>Wild Flowers.</i> By <span class="smcap">Anne Pratt</span>, Author of &ldquo;Our
+Native Songsters,&rdquo; &amp;c. With 192 coloured plates. In
+two volumes. 16mo.
+<span class="flush"><i>Cloth boards</i></span></td>
+<td class="price">8</td> <td class="price">0</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="mini" />
+
+<div class="bigskip"></div>
+
+<div class="center">
+LONDON:<br /><br />
+<span style="font-size: 90%">
+<span class="smcap">
+Northumberland Avenue</span>,
+<span class="smcap">Charing Cross</span>, W.C.;</span><br /><br />
+
+<span style="font-size: 80%">
+43, <span class="smcap">Queen Victoria Street</span>, E.C.
+</span>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+</div> <!--global-->
+
+<div class="tnote">
+<h3>Transcriber's Note</h3>
+
+<p>Minor typographical corrections have been made without comment.
+Inconsistencies in hyphenation, and the author's use of commas
+when writing large numbers, have been retained.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Machinery of the Universe, by
+Amos Emerson Dolbear
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MACHINERY OF THE UNIVERSE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 29444-h.htm or 29444-h.zip *****
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+Project Gutenberg's The Machinery of the Universe, by Amos Emerson Dolbear
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Machinery of the Universe
+ Mechanical Conceptions of Physical Phenomena
+
+Author: Amos Emerson Dolbear
+
+Release Date: July 18, 2009 [EBook #29444]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MACHINERY OF THE UNIVERSE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Andrew D. Hwang, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+_THE ROMANCE OF SCIENCE_
+
+
+THE MACHINERY OF THE UNIVERSE
+
+MECHANICAL CONCEPTIONS OF
+PHYSICAL PHENOMENA
+
+
+BY
+A. E. DOLBEAR, A.B., A.M., M.E., PH.D.
+
+PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY, TUFTS COLLEGE, MASS.
+
+
+PUBLISHED UNDER GENERAL LITERATURE COMMITTEE.
+
+
+LONDON:
+SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE,
+NORTHUMBERLAND AVENUE, W.C.;
+43, QUEEN VICTORIA STREET, E.C.
+
+BRIGHTON: 129, NORTH STREET.
+
+NEW YORK: E. & J. B. YOUNG & CO.
+
+1897.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+For thirty years or more the expressions "Correlation of the Physical
+Forces" and "The Conservation of Energy" have been common, yet few
+persons have taken the necessary pains to think out clearly what
+mechanical changes take place when one form of energy is transformed
+into another.
+
+Since Tyndall gave us his book called _Heat as a Mode of Motion_ neither
+lecturers nor text-books have attempted to explain how all phenomena are
+the necessary outcome of the various forms of motion. In general,
+phenomena have been attributed to _forces_--a metaphysical term, which
+explains nothing and is merely a stop-gap, and is really not at all
+needful in these days, seeing that transformable modes of motion, easily
+perceived and understood, may be substituted in all cases for forces.
+
+In December 1895 the author gave a lecture before the Franklin Institute
+of Philadelphia, on "Mechanical Conceptions of Electrical Phenomena," in
+which he undertook to make clear what happens when electrical phenomena
+appear. The publication of this lecture in _The Journal of the Franklin
+Institute_ and in _Nature_ brought an urgent request that it should be
+enlarged somewhat and published in a form more convenient for the
+public. The enlargement consists in the addition of a chapter on the
+"_Contrasted Properties of Matter and the Ether_," a chapter containing
+something which the author believes to be of philosophical importance in
+these days when electricity is so generally described as a phenomenon of
+the ether.
+
+A. E. DOLBEAR.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+Ideas of phenomena ancient and modern, metaphysical and
+ mechanical--Imponderables--Forces, invented and
+ discarded--Explanations--Energy, its factors, Kinetic
+ and Potential--Motions, kinds and transformations
+ of--Mechanical, molecular, and atomic--Invention of
+ Ethers, Faraday's conceptions p. 7
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+Properties of Matter and Ether compared--Discontinuity
+ _versus_ Continuity--Size of atoms--Astronomical
+ distances--Number of atoms in the universe--Ether
+ unlimited--Kinds of Matter, permanent qualities
+ of--Atomic structure; vortex-rings, their
+ properties--Ether structureless--Matter
+ gravitative, Ether not--Friction in Matter, Ether
+ frictionless--Chemical properties--Energy in
+ Matter and in Ether--Matter as a transformer
+ of Energy--Elasticity--Vibratory rates and
+ waves--Density--Heat--Indestructibility of
+ Matter--Inertia in Matter and in Ether--Matter
+ not inert--Magnetism and Ether waves--States
+ of Matter--Cohesion and chemism affected by
+ temperature--Shearing stress in Solids and in
+ Ether--Ether pressure--Sensation dependent upon
+ Matter--Nervous system not affected by Ether
+ states--Other stresses in Ether--Transformations
+ of Motion--Terminology p. 24
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Antecedents of Electricity--Nature of what is
+ transformed--Series of transformations for the
+ production of light--Positive and negative
+ Electricity--Positive and negative twists--Rotations
+ about a wire--Rotation of an arc--Ether a
+ non-conductor--Electro-magnetic waves--Induction
+ and inductive action--Ether stress and atomic
+ position--Nature of an electric current--Electricity
+ a condition, not an entity p. 94
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+Ideas of phenomena ancient and modern, metaphysical and
+ mechanical--Imponderables--Forces, invented and
+ discarded--Explanations--Energy, its factors, Kinetic
+ and Potential--Motions, kinds and transformations
+ of--Mechanical, molecular, and atomic--Invention of
+ Ethers, Faraday's conceptions.
+
+'And now we might add something concerning a most subtle spirit
+ which pervades and lies hid in all gross bodies, by the force
+ and action of which spirit the particles of bodies attract
+ each other at near distances, and cohere if contiguous, and
+ electric bodies operate at greater distances, as well repelling
+ as attracting neighbouring corpuscles, and light is emitted,
+ reflected, inflected, and heats bodies, and all sensation is
+ excited, and members of animal bodies move at the command of
+ the will.'--NEWTON, _Principia_.
+
+
+In Newton's day the whole field of nature was practically lying fallow.
+No fundamental principles were known until the law of gravitation was
+discovered. This law was behind all the work of Copernicus, Kepler, and
+Galileo, and what they had done needed interpretation. It was quite
+natural that the most obvious and mechanical phenomena should first be
+reduced, and so the _Principia_ was concerned with mechanical principles
+applied to astronomical problems. To us, who have grown up familiar with
+the principles and conceptions underlying them, all varieties of
+mechanical phenomena seem so obvious, that it is difficult for us to
+understand how any one could be obtuse to them; but the records of
+Newton's time, and immediately after this, show that they were not so
+easy of apprehension. It may be remembered that they were not adopted in
+France till long after Newton's day. In spite of what is thought to be
+reasonable, it really requires something more than complete
+demonstration to convince most of us of the truth of an idea, should the
+truth happen to be of a kind not familiar, or should it chance to be
+opposed to our more or less well-defined notions of what it is or ought
+to be. If those who labour for and attain what they think to be the
+truth about any matter, were a little better informed concerning mental
+processes and the conditions under which ideas grow and displace others,
+they would be more patient with mankind; teachers of every rank might
+then discover that what is often called stupidity may be nothing else
+than mental inertia, which can no more be made active by simply willing
+than can the movement of a cannon ball by a like effort. We _grow_ into
+our beliefs and opinions upon all matters, and scientific ideas are no
+exceptions.
+
+Whewell, in his _History of the Inductive Sciences_, says that the
+Greeks made no headway in physical science because they lacked
+appropriate ideas. The evidence is overwhelming that they were as
+observing, as acute, as reasonable as any who live to-day. With this
+view, it would appear that the great discoverers must have been men who
+started out with appropriate ideas: were looking for what they found.
+If, then, one reflects upon the exceeding great difficulty there is in
+discovering one new truth, and the immense amount of work needed to
+disentangle it, it would appear as if even the most successful have but
+indistinct ideas of what is really appropriate, and that their
+mechanical conceptions become clarified by doing their work. This is not
+always the fact. In the statement of Newton quoted at the head of this
+chapter, he speaks of a spirit which lies hid in all gross bodies, etc.,
+by means of which all kinds of phenomena are to be explained; but he
+deliberately abandons that idea when he comes to the study of light, for
+he assumes the existence and activity of light corpuscles, for which he
+has no experimental evidence; and the probability is that he did this
+because the latter conception was one which he could handle
+mathematically, while he saw no way for thus dealing with the other. His
+mechanical instincts were more to be trusted than his carefully
+calculated results; for, as all know, what he called "spirits," is what
+to-day we call the ether, and the corpuscular theory of light has now no
+more than a historic interest. The corpuscular theory was a mechanical
+conception, but each such corpuscle was ideally endowed with qualities
+which were out of all relation with the ordinary matter with which it
+was classed.
+
+Until the middle of the present century the reigning physical philosophy
+held to the existence of what were called imponderables. The phenomena
+of heat were explained as due to an imponderable substance called
+"caloric," which ordinary matter could absorb and emit. A hot body was
+one which had absorbed an imponderable substance. It was, therefore, no
+heavier than before, but it possessed ability to do work proportional to
+the amount absorbed. Carnot's ideal engine was described by him in terms
+that imply the materiality of heat. Light was another imponderable
+substance, the existence of which was maintained by Sir David Brewster
+as long as he lived. Electricity and magnetism were imponderable fluids,
+which, when allied with ordinary matter, endowed the latter with their
+peculiar qualities. The conceptions in each case were properly
+mechanical ones _part_ (but not all) _of the time_; for when the
+immaterial substances were dissociated from matter, where they had
+manifested themselves, no one concerned himself to inquire as to their
+whereabouts. They were simply off duty, but could be summoned, like the
+genii in the story of Aladdin's Lamp. Now, a mechanical conception of
+any phenomenon, or a mechanical explanation of any kind of action, must
+be mechanical all the time, in the antecedents as well as the
+consequents. Nothing else will do except a miracle.
+
+During the fifty years, from about 1820 to 1870, a somewhat different
+kind of explanation of physical events grew up. The interest that was
+aroused by the discoveries in all the fields of physical science--in
+heat, electricity, magnetism and chemistry--by Faraday, Joule,
+Helmholtz, and others, compelled a change of conceptions; for it was
+noticed that each special kind of phenomenon was preceded by some other
+definite and known kind; as, for instance, that chemical action preceded
+electrical currents, that mechanical or electrical activity resulted
+from changing magnetism, and so on. As each kind of action was believed
+to be due to a special force, there were invented such terms as
+mechanical force, electrical force, magnetic, chemical and vital forces,
+and these were discovered to be convertible into one another, and the
+"doctrine of the correlation of the physical forces" became a common
+expression in philosophies of all sorts. By "convertible into one
+another," was meant, that whenever any given force appeared, it was at
+the expense of some other force; thus, in a battery chemical force was
+changed into electrical force; in a magnet, electrical force was changed
+into magnetic force, and so on. The idea here was the _transformation of
+forces_, and _forces_ were not so clearly defined that one could have a
+mechanical idea of just what had happened. That part of the philosophy
+was no clearer than that of the imponderables, which had largely dropped
+out of mind. The terminology represented an advance in knowledge, but
+was lacking in lucidity, for no one knew what a force of any kind was.
+
+The first to discover this and to repudiate the prevailing terminology
+were the physiologists, who early announced their disbelief in a vital
+force, and their belief that all physiological activities were of purely
+physical and chemical origin, and that there was no need to assume any
+such thing as a vital force. Then came the discovery that chemical
+force, or affinity, had only an adventitious existence, and that, at
+absolute zero, there was no such activity. The discovery of, or rather
+the appreciation of, what is implied by the term _absolute zero_, and
+especially of the nature of heat itself, as expressed in the statement
+that heat is a mode of motion, dismissed another of the so-called forces
+as being a metaphysical agency having no real existence, though standing
+for phenomena needing further attention and explanation; and by
+explanation is meant _the presentation of the mechanical antecedents for
+a phenomenon, in so complete a way that no supplementary or unknown
+factors are necessary_. The train moves because the engine pulls it; the
+engine pulls because the steam pushes it. There is no more necessity for
+assuming a steam force between the steam and the engine, than for
+assuming an engine force between the engine and the train. All the
+processes are mechanical, and have to do only with ordinary matter and
+its conditions, from the coal-pile to the moving freight, though there
+are many transformations of the forms of motion and of energy between
+the two extremes.
+
+During the past thirty years there has come into common use another
+term, unknown in any technical sense before that time, namely, _energy_.
+What was once called the conservation of force is now called the
+conservation of energy, and we now often hear of forms of energy. Thus,
+heat is said to be a form of energy, and the forms of energy are
+convertible into one another, as the so-called forces were formerly
+supposed to be transformable into one another. We are asked to consider
+gravitative energy, heat energy, mechanical energy, chemical energy, and
+electrical energy. When we inquire what is meant by energy, we are
+informed that it means ability to do work, and that work is measurable
+as a pressure into a distance, and is specified as foot-pounds. A mass
+of matter moves because energy has been spent upon it, and has acquired
+energy equal to the work done on it, and this is believed to hold true,
+no matter what the kind of energy was that moved it. If a body moves, it
+moves because another body has exerted pressure upon it, and its energy
+is called _kinetic energy_; but a body may be subject to pressure and
+not move appreciably, and then the body is said to possess potential
+energy. Thus, a bent spring and a raised weight are said to possess
+potential energy. In either case, _an energized body receives its energy
+by pressure, and has ability to produce pressure on another body_.
+Whether or not it does work on another body depends on the rigidity of
+the body it acts upon. In any case, it is simply a mechanical
+action--body A pushes upon body B (Fig. 1). There is no need to assume
+anything more mysterious than mechanical action. Whether body B moves
+this way or that depends upon the direction of the push, the point of
+its application. Whether the body be a mass as large as the earth or as
+small as a molecule, makes no difference in that particular. Suppose,
+then, that _a_ (Fig. 2) spends its energy on _b_, _b_ on _c_, _c_ on
+_d_, and so on. The energy of _a_ gives translatory motion to _b_, _b_
+sets _c_ vibrating, and _c_ makes _d_ spin on some axis. Each of these
+has had energy spent on it, and each has some form of energy different
+from the other, but no new factor has been introduced between _a_ and
+_d_, and the only factor that has gone from _a_ to _d_ has been
+motion--motion that has had its direction and quality changed, but not
+its nature. If we agree that energy is neither created nor annihilated,
+by any physical process, and if we assume that _a_ gave to _b_ all its
+energy, that is, all its motion; that _b_ likewise gave its all to _c_,
+and so on; then the succession of phenomena from _a_ to _d_ has been
+simply the transference of a definite amount of motion, and therefore of
+energy, from the one to the other; for _motion has been the only
+variable factor_. If, furthermore, we should agree to call the
+translatory motion [alpha], the vibratory motion [beta], the
+rotary [gamma], then we should have had a conversion of [alpha]
+into [beta], of [beta] into [gamma]. If we should consider
+the amount of transfer motion instead of the kind of motion, we should
+have to say that the [alpha] energy had been transformed into
+[beta] and the [beta] into [gamma].
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 1.]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 2.]
+
+What a given amount of energy will do depends only upon its _form_, that
+is, the kind of motion that embodies it.
+
+The energy spent upon a stone thrown into the air, giving it translatory
+motion, would, if spent upon a tuning fork, make it sound, but not move
+it from its place; while if spent upon a top, would enable the latter to
+stand upon its point as easily as a person stands on his two feet, and
+to do other surprising things, which otherwise it could not do. One can,
+without difficulty, form a mechanical conception of the whole series
+without assuming imponderables, or fluids or forces. Mechanical motion
+only, by pressure, has been transferred in certain directions at certain
+rates. Suppose now that some one should suddenly come upon a spinning
+top (Fig. 3) while it was standing upon its point, and, as its motion
+might not be visible, should cautiously touch it. It would bound away
+with surprising promptness, and, if he were not instructed in the
+mechanical principles involved, he might fairly well draw the conclusion
+that it was actuated by other than simple mechanical principles, and,
+for that reason, it would be difficult to persuade him that there was
+nothing essentially different in the body that appeared and acted thus,
+than in a stone thrown into the air; nevertheless, that statement would
+be the simple truth.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 3.]
+
+All our experience, without a single exception, enforces the proposition
+that no body moves in any direction, or in any way, except when some
+other body _in contact_ with it presses upon it. The action is direct.
+In Newton's letter to his friend Bentley, he says--"That one body
+should act upon another through empty space, without the mediation of
+anything else by and through which their action and pressure may be
+conveyed from one to another, is to me so great an absurdity that I
+believe no man who has in philosophical matters a competent faculty of
+thinking can ever fall into it."
+
+For mathematical purposes, it has sometimes been convenient to treat a
+problem as if one body could act upon another without any physical
+medium between them; but such a conception has no degree of rationality,
+and I know of no one who believes in it as a fact. If this be granted,
+then our philosophy agrees with our experience, and every body moves
+because it is pushed, and the mechanical antecedent of every kind of
+phenomenon is to be looked for in some adjacent body possessing
+energy--that is, the ability to push or produce pressure.
+
+It must not be forgotten that energy is not a simple factor, but is
+always a product of two factors--a mass with a velocity, a mass with a
+temperature, a quantity of electricity into a pressure, and so on. One
+may sometimes meet the statement that matter and energy are the two
+realities; both are spoken of as entities. It is much more philosophical
+to speak of matter and motion, for in the absence of motion there is no
+energy, and the energy varies with the amount of motion; and
+furthermore, to understand any manifestation of energy one must inquire
+what kind of motion is involved. This we do when we speak of mechanical
+energy as the energy involved in a body having a translatory motion;
+also, when we speak of heat as a vibratory, and of light as a wave
+motion. To speak of energy without stating or implying these
+distinctions, is to speak loosely and to keep far within the bounds of
+actual knowledge. To speak thus of a body possessing energy, or
+expending energy, is to imply that the body possesses some kind of
+motion, and produces pressure upon another body because it has motion.
+Tait and others have pointed out the fact, that what is called potential
+energy must, in its nature, be kinetic. Tait says--"Now it is impossible
+to conceive of a truly dormant form of energy, whose magnitude should
+depend, in any way, upon the unit of time; and we are forced to conclude
+that potential energy, like kinetic energy, depends (even if unexplained
+or unimagined) upon motion." All this means that it is now too late to
+stop with energy as a final factor in any phenomenon, that the _form of
+motion_ which embodies the energy is the factor that determines _what_
+happens, as distinguished from how _much_ happens. Here, then, are to be
+found the distinctions which have heretofore been called forces; here
+is embodied the proof that direct pressure of one body upon another is
+what causes the latter to move, and that the direction of movement
+depends on the point of application, with reference to the centre
+of mass.
+
+It is needful now to look at the other term in the product we call
+energy, namely, the substance moving, sometimes called matter or mass.
+It has been mentioned that the idea of a medium filling space was
+present to Newton, but his gravitation problem did not require that he
+should consider other factors than masses and distances. The law of
+gravitation as considered by him was--Every particle of matter attracts
+every other particle of matter with a stress which is proportional to
+the product of their masses, and inversely to the squares of the
+distance between them. Here we are concerned only with the statement
+that every particle of matter attracts every other particle of matter.
+Everything then that possesses gravitative attraction is matter in the
+sense in which that term is used in this law. If there be any other
+substance in the universe that is not thus subject to gravitation, then
+it is improper to call it matter, otherwise the law should read, "Some
+particles of matter attract," etc., which will never do.
+
+We are now assured that there is something else in the universe which
+has no gravitative property at all, namely, the ether. It was first
+imagined in order to account for the phenomena of light, which was
+observed to take about eight minutes to come from the sun to the earth.
+Then Young applied the wave theory to the explanation of polarization
+and other phenomena; and in 1851 Foucault proved experimentally that the
+velocity of light was less in water than in air, as it should be if the
+wave theory be true, and this has been considered a crucial experiment
+which took away the last hope for the corpuscular theory, and
+demonstrated the existence of the ether as a space-filling medium
+capable of transmitting light-waves known to have a velocity of 186,000
+miles per second. It was called the luminiferous ether, to distinguish
+it from other ethers which had also been imagined, such as electric
+ether for electrical phenomena, magnetic ether for magnetic phenomena,
+and so on--as many ethers, in fact, as there were different kinds of
+phenomena to be explained.
+
+It was Faraday who put a stop to the invention of ethers, by suggesting
+that the so-called luminiferous ether might be the one concerned in all
+the different phenomena, and who pointed out that the arrangement of
+iron filings about a magnet was indicative of the direction of the
+stresses in the ether. This suggestion did not meet the approval of the
+mathematical physicists of his day, for it necessitated the abandonment
+of the conceptions they had worked with, as well as the terminology
+which had been employed, and made it needful to reconstruct all their
+work to make it intelligible--a labour which was the more distasteful as
+it was forced upon them by one who, although expert enough in
+experimentation, was not a mathematician, and who boasted that the most
+complicated mathematical work he ever did was to turn the crank of a
+calculating machine; who did all his work, formed his conclusions, and
+then said--"The work is done; hand it over to the computers."
+
+It has turned out that Faraday's mechanical conceptions were right.
+Every one now knows of Maxwell's work, which was to start with Faraday's
+conceptions as to magnetic phenomena, and follow them out to their
+logical conclusions, applying them to molecules and the reactions of the
+latter upon the ether. Thus he was led to conclude that light was an
+electro-magnetic phenomenon; that is, that the waves which constitute
+light, and the waves produced by changing magnetism were identical in
+their nature, were in the same medium, travelled with the same velocity,
+were capable of refraction, and so on. Now that all this is a matter of
+common knowledge to-day, it is curious to look back no further than ten
+years. Maxwell's conclusions were adopted by scarcely a physicist in
+the world. Although it was known that inductive action travelled with
+finite velocity in space, and that an electro-magnet would affect the
+space about it practically inversely as the square of the distance, and
+that such phenomena as are involved in telephonic induction between
+circuits could have no other meaning than the one assigned by Maxwell,
+yet nearly all the physicists failed to form the only conception of it
+that was possible, and waited for Hertz to devise apparatus for
+producing interference before they grasped it. It was even then so new,
+to some, that it was proclaimed to be a demonstration of the existence
+of the ether itself, as well as a method of producing waves short enough
+to enable one to notice interference phenomena. It is obvious that Hertz
+himself must have had the mechanics of wave-motion plainly in mind, or
+he would not have planned such experiments. The outcome of it all is,
+that we now have experimental demonstration, as well as theoretical
+reason for believing, that the ether, once considered as only
+luminiferous, is concerned in all electric and magnetic phenomena, and
+that waves set up in it by electro-magnetic actions are capable of being
+reflected, refracted, polarized, and twisted, in the same way as
+ordinary light-waves can be, and that the laws of optics are applicable
+to both.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+PROPERTIES OF MATTER AND ETHER
+
+Properties of Matter and Ether compared--Discontinuity
+ _versus_ Continuity--Size of atoms--Astronomical
+ distances--Number of atoms in the universe--Ether
+ unlimited--Kinds of Matter, permanent qualities
+ of--Atomic structure; vortex-rings, their
+ properties--Ether structureless--Matter
+ gravitative, Ether not--Friction in Matter, Ether
+ frictionless--Chemical properties--Energy in
+ Matter and in Ether--Matter as a transformer
+ of Energy--Elasticity--Vibratory rates and
+ waves--Density--Heat--Indestructibility of
+ Matter--Inertia in Matter and in Ether--Matter
+ not inert--Magnetism and Ether waves--States
+ of Matter--Cohesion and chemism affected by
+ temperature--Shearing stress in Solids and in
+ Ether--Ether pressure--Sensation dependent upon
+ Matter--Nervous system not affected by Ether
+ states--Other stresses in Ether--Transformations
+ of Motion--Terminology.
+
+
+A common conception of the ether has been that it is a finer-grained
+substance than ordinary matter, but otherwise so like the latter that
+the laws found to hold good with matter were equally applicable to the
+ether, and hence the mechanical conceptions formed from experience in
+regard to the one have been transferred to the other, and the properties
+belonging to one, such as density, elasticity, etc., have been asserted
+as properties of the other.
+
+There is so considerable a body of knowledge bearing upon the
+similarities and dissimilarities of these two entities that it will be
+well to compare them. After such comparison one will be better able to
+judge of the propriety of assuming them to be subject to identical laws.
+
+
+1. MATTER IS DISCONTINUOUS.
+
+Matter is made up of atoms having dimensions approximately determined to
+be in the neighbourhood of the one fifty-millionth of an inch in
+diameter. These atoms may have various degrees of aggregation;--they may
+be in practical contact, as in most solid bodies such as metals and
+rocks; in molecular groupings as in water, and in gases such as
+hydrogen, oxygen, and so forth, where two, three, or more atoms cohere
+so strongly as to enable the molecules to act under ordinary
+circumstances like simple particles. Any or all of these molecules and
+atoms may be separated by any assignable distance from each other. Thus,
+in common air the molecules, though rapidly changing their positions,
+are on the average about two hundred and fifty times their own diameter
+apart. This is a distance relatively greater than the distance apart of
+the earth and the moon, for two hundred and fifty times the diameter of
+the earth will be 8000 x 250 = 2,000,000 miles, while the distance to
+the moon is but 240,000 miles. The sun is 93,000,000 miles from the
+earth, and the most of the bodies of the solar system are still more
+widely separated, Neptune being nearly 3000 millions of miles from the
+sun. As for the fixed stars, they are so far separated from us that, at
+the present rate of motion of the solar system in its drift through
+space--500 millions of miles in a year--it would take not less than
+40,000 years to reach the nearest star among its neighbours, while for
+the more remote ones millions of years must be reckoned. The huge space
+separating these masses is practically devoid of matter; it is a vacuum.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS CONTINUOUS.
+
+The idea of continuity as distinguished from discontinuity may be gained
+by considering what would be made visible by magnification. Water
+appears to the eye as if it were without pores, but if sugar or salt be
+put into it, either will be dissolved and quite disappear among the
+molecules of the water as steam does in the air, which shows that there
+are some unoccupied spaces between the molecules. If a microscope be
+employed to magnify a minute drop of water it still shows the same lack
+of structure as that looked at with the unaided eye. If the magnifying
+power be the highest it may reveal a speck as small as the
+hundred-thousandth part of an inch, yet the speck looks no different in
+character. We know that water is composed of two different kinds of
+atoms, hydrogen and oxygen, for they can be separated by chemical means
+and kept in separate bottles, and again made to combine to form water
+having all the qualities that belonged to it before it was decomposed.
+If a very much higher magnifying power were available, we should
+ultimately be able to see the individual water molecules, and recognize
+their hydrogen and oxygen constituents by their difference in size, rate
+of movements, and we might possibly separate them by mechanical methods.
+What one would see would be something very different in structure from
+the water as it appears to our eyes. If the ether were similarly to be
+examined through higher and still higher magnifying powers, even up to
+infinity, there is no reason for thinking that the last examination
+would show anything different in structure or quality from that which
+was examined with low power or with no microscope at all. This is all
+expressed by saying that the ether is a continuous substance, without
+interstices, that it fills space completely, and, unlike gases,
+liquids, and solids, is incapable of absorbing or dissolving anything.
+
+
+2. MATTER IS LIMITED.
+
+There appears to be a definite amount of matter in the visible universe,
+a definite number of molecules and atoms. How many molecules there are
+in a cubic inch of air under ordinary pressure has been determined, and
+is represented approximately by a huge number, something like a thousand
+million million millions.
+
+When the diameter of a molecule has been measured, as it has been
+approximately, and found to be about one fifty-millionth of an inch,
+then fifty million in a row would reach an inch, and the cube of fifty
+million is 125,000,000000,000000,000000, one hundred and twenty-five
+thousand million million millions. In a cubic foot there will of course
+be 1728 times that number. One may if one likes find how many there may
+be in the earth, and moon, sun and planets, for the dimensions of them
+are all very well known. Only the multiplication table need be used, and
+the sum of all these will give how many molecules there are in the solar
+system. If one should feel that the number thus obtained was not very
+accurate, he might reflect that if there were ten times as many it would
+add but another cipher to a long line of similar ones and would not
+materially modify it. The point is that there is a definite, computable
+number. If one will then add to these the number of molecules in the
+more distant stars and nebulae, of which there are visible about
+100,000,000, making such estimate of their individual size as he thinks
+prudent, the sum of all will give the number of molecules in the visible
+universe. The number is not so large but it can be written down in a
+minute or two. Those who have been to the pains to do the sum say it may
+be represented by seven followed by ninety-one ciphers. One could easily
+compute how many molecules so large a space would contain if it were
+full and as closely packed as they are in a drop of water, but there
+would be a finite and not an infinite number, and therefore there is a
+limited number of atoms in the visible universe.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS UNLIMITED.
+
+The evidence for this comes to us from the phenomena of light.
+Experimentally, ether waves of all lengths are found to have a velocity
+of 186,000 miles in a second. It takes about eight minutes to reach us
+from the sun, four hours from Neptune the most distant planet, and from
+the nearest fixed star about three and a half years. Astronomers tell us
+that some visible stars are so distant that their light requires not
+less than ten thousand years and probably more to reach us, though
+travelling at the enormous rate of 186,000 miles a second. This means
+that the whole of space is filled with this medium. If there were any
+vacant spaces, the light would fail to get through them, and stars
+beyond them would become invisible. There are no such vacant spaces, for
+any part of the heavens shows stars beaming continuously, and every
+increase in telescopic power shows stars still further removed than any
+seen before. The whole of this intervening space must therefore be
+filled with the ether. Some of the waves that reach us are not more than
+the hundred-thousandth of an inch long, so there can be no crack or
+break or absence of ether from so small a section as the
+hundred-thousandth of an inch in all this great expanse. More than this.
+No one can think that the remotest visible stars are upon the boundary
+of space, that if one could get to the most distant star he would have
+on one side the whole of space while the opposite side would be devoid
+of it. Space we know is of three dimensions, and a straight line may be
+prolonged in any direction to an infinite distance, and a ray of light
+may travel on for an infinite time and come to no end provided space be
+filled with ether.
+
+How long the sun and stars have been shining no one knows, but it is
+highly probable that the sun has existed for not less than 1000 million
+years, and has during that time been pouring its rays as radiant energy
+into space. If then in half that time, or 500 millions of years, the
+light had somewhere reached a boundary to the ether, it could not have
+gone beyond but would have been reflected back into the ether-filled
+space, and such part of the sky would be lit up by this reflected light.
+There is no indication that anything like reflection comes to us from
+the sky. This is equivalent to saying that the ether fills space in
+every direction away from us to an unlimited distance, and so far is
+itself unlimited.
+
+
+3. MATTER IS HETEROGENEOUS.
+
+The various kinds of matter we are acquainted with are commonly called
+the elements. These when combined in various ways exhibit characteristic
+phenomena which depend upon the kinds of matter, the structure and
+motions which are involved. There are some seventy different kinds of
+this elemental matter which may be identified as constituents of the
+earth. Many of the same elements have been identified in the sun and
+stars, such for instance as hydrogen, carbon, and iron. Such phenomena
+lead us to conclude that the kinds of matter elsewhere in the universe
+are identical with such as we are familiar with, and that elsewhere the
+variety is as great. The qualities of the elements, within a certain
+range of temperature, are permanent; they are not subject to
+fluctuations, though the qualities of combinations of them may vary
+indefinitely. The elements therefore may be regarded as retaining their
+identity in all ordinary experience.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS HOMOGENEOUS.
+
+One part of the ether is precisely like any other part everywhere and
+always, and there are no such distinctions in it as correspond with the
+elemental forms of matter.
+
+
+4. MATTER IS ATOMIC.
+
+There is an ultimate particle of each one of the elements which is
+practically absolute and known as an atom. The atom retains its identity
+through all combinations and processes. It may be here or there, move
+fast or slow, but its atomic form persists.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS NON-ATOMIC.
+
+One might infer, from what has already been said about continuity, that
+the ether could not be constituted of separable particles like masses of
+matter; for no matter how minute they might be, there would be
+interspaces and unoccupied spaces which would present us with phenomena
+which have never been seen. It is the general consensus of opinion
+among those who have studied the subject that the ether is not atomic in
+structure.
+
+
+5. MATTER HAS DEFINITE STRUCTURE.
+
+Every atom of every element is so like every other atom of the same
+element as to exhibit the same characteristics, size, weight, chemical
+activity, vibratory rate, etc., and it is thus shown conclusively that
+the structural form of the elemental particles is the same for each
+element, for such characteristic reactions as they exhibit could hardly
+be if they were mechanically unlike.
+
+Of what form the atoms of an element may be is not very definitely
+known. The earlier philosophers assumed them to be hard round particles,
+but later thinkers have concluded that atoms of such a character are
+highly improbable, for they could not exhibit in this case the
+properties which the elements do exhibit. They have therefore dismissed
+such a conception from consideration. In place of this hypothesis has
+been substituted a very different idea, namely, that an atom is a
+vortex-ring[1] of ether floating in the ether, as a smoke-ring puffed
+out by a locomotive in still air may float in the air and show various
+phenomena.
+
+[Footnote 1: Vortex-rings for illustration may be made by having a
+wooden box about a foot on a side, with a round orifice in the middle of
+one side, and the side opposite covered with stout cloth stretched tight
+over a framework. A saucer containing strong ammonia water, and another
+containing strong hydrochloric acid, will cause dense fumes in the box,
+and a tap with the hand upon the cloth back will force out a ring from
+the orifice. These may be made to follow and strike each other,
+rebounding and vibrating, apparently attracting each other and being
+attracted by neighbouring bodies.
+
+By filling the mouth with smoke, and pursing the lips as if to make the
+sound _o_, one may make fifteen or twenty small rings by snapping the
+cheek with the finger.]
+
+A vortex-ring produced in the air behaves in the most surprising manner.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 4.--Method of making vortex-rings and their
+behaviour.]
+
+1. It retains its ring form and the same material rotating as it
+starts with.
+
+2. It can travel through the air easily twenty or thirty feet in a
+second without disruption.
+
+3. Its line of motion when free is always at right angles to the
+plane of the ring.
+
+4. It will not stand still unless compelled by some object. If
+stopped in the air it will start up itself to travel on without
+external help.
+
+5. It possesses momentum and energy like a solid body.
+
+6. It is capable of vibrating like an elastic body, making a
+definite number of such vibrations per second, the degree of
+elasticity depending upon the rate of vibration. The swifter the
+rotation, the more rigid and elastic it is.
+
+7. It is capable of spinning on its own axis, and thus having rotary
+energy as well as translatory and vibratory.
+
+8. It repels light bodies in front of it, and attracts into itself
+light bodies in its rear.
+
+9. If projected along parallel with the top of a long table, it will
+fall upon it every time, just as a stone thrown horizontally will
+fall to the ground.
+
+10. If two rings of the same size be travelling in the same line,
+and the rear one overtakes the other, the front one will enlarge its
+diameter, while the rear one will contract its own till it can go
+through the forward one, when each will recover its original
+diameter, and continue on in the same direction, but vibrating,
+expanding and contracting their diameters with regularity.
+
+11. If two rings be moving in the same line, but in opposite
+directions, they will repel each other when near, and thus retard
+their speed. If one goes through the other, as in the former case,
+it may quite lose its velocity, and come to a standstill in the air
+till the other has moved on to a distance, when it will start up in
+its former direction.
+
+12. If two rings be formed side by side, they will instantly collide
+at their edges, showing strong attraction.
+
+13. If the collision does not destroy them, they may either break
+apart at the point of the collision, and then weld together into a
+single ring with twice the diameter, and then move on as if a single
+ring had been formed, or they may simply bounce away from each
+other, in which case they always rebound _in a plane_ at right
+angles to the plane of collision. That is, if they collided on their
+sides, they would rebound so that one went up and the other down.
+
+14. Three may in like manner collide and fuse into a single ring.
+
+Such rings formed in air by a locomotive may rise wriggling in the air
+to the height of several hundred feet, but they are soon dissolved and
+disappear. This is because the friction and viscosity of the air robs
+the rings of their substance and energy. If the air were without
+friction this could not happen, and the rings would then be persistent,
+and would retain all their qualities.
+
+Suppose then that such rings were produced in a medium without friction
+as the ether is believed to be, they would be permanent structures with
+a variety of properties. They would occupy space, have definite form and
+dimensions, momentum, energy, attraction and repulsion, elasticity; obey
+the laws of motion, and so far behave quite like such matter as we know.
+For such reasons it is thought by some persons to be not improbable
+that the atoms of matter are minute vortex-rings of ether in the ether.
+That which distinguishes the atom from the ether is the form of motion
+which is embodied in it, and if the motion were simply arrested, there
+would be nothing to distinguish the atom from the ether into which it
+dissolved. In other words, such a conception makes the atoms of matter a
+form of motion of the ether, and not a created something put into the
+ether.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS STRUCTURELESS.
+
+If the ether be the boundless substance described, it is clear it can
+have no form as a whole, and if it be continuous it can have no minute
+structure. If not constituted of atoms or molecules there is nothing
+descriptive that can be said about it. A molecule or a particular mass
+of matter could be identified by its form, and is thus in marked
+contrast with any portion of ether, for the latter could not be
+identified in a similar way. One may therefore say that the ether is
+formless.
+
+
+6. MATTER IS GRAVITATIVE.
+
+The law of gravitation is held as being universal. According to it every
+particle of matter in the universe attracts every other particle. The
+evidence for this law in the solar system is complete. Sun, planets,
+satellites, comets and meteors are all controlled by gravitation, and
+the movements of double stars testify to its activity among the more
+distant bodies of the universe. The attraction does not depend upon the
+kind of matter nor the arrangement of molecules or atoms, but upon the
+amount or mass of matter present, and if it be of a definite kind of
+matter, as of hydrogen or iron, the gravitative action is proportional
+to the number of atoms.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS GRAVITATIONLESS.
+
+One might infer already that if the ether were structureless, physical
+laws operative upon such material substances as atoms could not be
+applicable to it, and so indeed all the evidence we have shows that
+gravitation is not one of its properties. If it were, and it behaved in
+any degree like atomic structures, it would be found to be denser in the
+neighbourhood of large bodies like the earth, planets, and the sun.
+Light would be turned from its straight path while travelling in such
+denser medium, or made to move with less velocity. There is not the
+slightest indication of any such effect anywhere within the range of
+astronomical vision.
+
+Gravitation then is a property belonging to matter and not to ether.
+The impropriety of thinking or speaking of the ether as matter of any
+kind will be apparent if one reflects upon the significance of the law
+of gravitation as stated. Every particle of matter in the universe
+attracts every other particle. If there be anything else in the universe
+which has no such quality, then it should not be called matter, else the
+law should read: Some particles of matter attract some other particles,
+which would be no law at all, for a real physical law has no exceptions
+any more than the multiplication table has. Physical laws are physical
+relations, and all such relations are quantitative.
+
+
+7. MATTER IS FRICTIONABLE.
+
+A bullet shot into the air has its velocity continuously reduced by the
+air, to which its energy is imparted by making it move out of its way. A
+railway train is brought to rest by the friction brake upon the wheels.
+The translatory energy of the train is transformed into the molecular
+energy called heat. The steamship requires to propel it fast, a large
+amount of coal for its engines, because the water in which it moves
+offers great friction--resistance which must be overcome. Whenever one
+surface of matter is moved in contact with another surface there is a
+resistance called friction, the moving body loses its rate of motion,
+and will presently be brought to rest unless energy be continuously
+supplied. This is true for masses of matter of all sizes and with all
+kinds of motion. Friction is the condition for the transformation of all
+kinds of mechanical motions into heat. The test of the amount of
+friction is the rate of loss of motion. A top will spin some time in the
+air because its point is small. It will spin longer on a plate than on
+the carpet, and longer in a vacuum than in the air, for it does not have
+the air friction to resist it, and there is no kind or form of matter
+not subject to frictional resistance.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS FRICTIONLESS.
+
+The earth is a mass of matter moving in the ether. In the equatorial
+region the velocity of a point is more than a thousand miles in an hour,
+for the circumference of the earth is 25,000 miles, and it turns once on
+its axis in 24 hours, which is the length of the day. If the earth were
+thus spinning in the atmosphere, the latter not being in motion, the
+wind would blow with ten times hurricane velocity. The friction would be
+so great that nothing but the foundation rocks of the earth's crust
+could withstand it, and the velocity of rotation would be reduced
+appreciably in a relatively short time. The air moves along with the
+earth as a part of it, and consequently no such frictional destruction
+takes place, but the earth rotates in the ether with that same rate, and
+if the ether offered resistance it would react so as to retard the
+rotation and increase the length of the day. Astronomical observations
+show that the length of the day has certainly not changed so much as the
+tenth of a second during the past 2000 years. The earth also revolves
+about the sun, having a speed of about 19 miles in a second, or 68,000
+miles an hour. This motion of the earth and the other planets about the
+sun is one of the most stable phenomena we know. The mean distance and
+period of revolution of every planet is unalterable in the long run. If
+the earth had been retarded by its friction in the ether the length of
+the year would have been changed, and astronomers would have discovered
+it. They assert that a change in the length of a year by so much as the
+hundredth part of a second has not happened during the past thousand
+years. This then is testimony, that a velocity of nineteen miles a
+second for a thousand years has produced no effect upon the earth's
+motion that is noticeable. Nineteen miles a second is not a very swift
+astronomical motion, for comets have been known to have a velocity of
+400 miles a second when in the neighbourhood of the sun, and yet they
+have not seemed to suffer any retardation, for their orbits have not
+been shortened. Some years ago a comet was noticed to have its periodic
+time shortened an hour or two, and the explanation offered at first was
+that the shortening was due to friction in the ether although no other
+comet was thus affected. The idea was soon abandoned, and to-day there
+is no astronomical evidence that bodies having translatory motion in the
+ether meet with any frictional resistance whatever. If a stone could be
+thrown in interstellar space with a velocity of fifty feet a second it
+would continue to move in a straight line with the same speed for any
+assignable time.
+
+As has been said, light moves with the velocity of 186,000 miles per
+second, and it may pursue its course for tens of thousands of years.
+There is no evidence that it ever loses either its wave-length or
+energy. It is not transformed as friction would transform it, else there
+would be some distance at which light of given wave-length and amplitude
+would be quite extinguished. The light from distant stars would be
+different in character from that coming from nearer stars. Furthermore,
+as the whole solar system is drifting in space some 500,000,000 of miles
+in a year, new stars would be coming into view in that direction, and
+faint stars would be dropping out of sight in the opposite direction--a
+phenomenon which has not been observed. Altogether the testimony seems
+conclusive that the ether is a frictionless medium, and does not
+transform mechanical motion into heat.
+
+
+8. MATTER IS AEOLOTROPIC.
+
+That is, its properties are not alike in all directions. Chemical
+phenomena, crystallization, magnetic and electrical phenomena show each
+in their way that the properties of atoms are not alike on opposite
+faces. Atoms combine to form molecules, and molecules arrange themselves
+in certain definite geometric forms such as cubes, tetrahedra, hexagonal
+prisms and stellate forms, with properties emphasized on certain faces
+or ends. Thus quartz will twist a ray of light in one direction or the
+other, depending upon the arrangement which may be known by the external
+form of the crystal. Calc spar will break up a ray of light into two
+parts if the light be sent through it in certain directions, but not if
+in another. Tourmaline polarizes light sent through its sides and
+becomes positively electrified at one end while being heated. Some
+substances will conduct sound or light or heat or electricity better in
+one direction than in another. All matter is magnetic in some degree,
+and that implies polarity. If one will recall the structure of a
+vortex-ring, he will see how all the motion is inward on one side and
+outward on the other, which gives different properties to the two sides:
+a push away from it on one side and a pull toward it on the other.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS ISOTROPIC.
+
+That is, its properties are alike in every direction. There is no
+distinction due to position. A mass of matter will move as freely in one
+direction as in another; a ray of light of any wave-length will travel
+in it in one direction as freely as in any other; neither velocity nor
+direction are changed by the action of the ether alone.
+
+
+9. MATTER IS CHEMICALLY SELECTIVE.
+
+When the elements combine to form molecules they always combine in
+definite ways and in definite proportions. Carbon will combine with
+hydrogen, but will drop it if it can get oxygen. Oxygen will combine
+with iron or lead or sodium, but cannot be made to combine with
+fluorine. No more than two atoms of oxygen can be made to unite with one
+carbon atom, nor more than one hydrogen with one chlorine atom. There is
+thus an apparent choice for the kind and number of associates in
+molecular structure, and the instability of a molecule depends
+altogether upon the presence in its neighbourhood of other atoms for
+which some of the elements in the molecule have a stronger attraction
+or affinity than they have for the atoms they are now combined with.
+Thus iron is not stable in the presence of water molecules, and it
+becomes iron oxide; iron oxide is not stable in the presence of hot
+sulphur, it becomes an iron sulphide. All the elements are thus
+selective, and it is by such means that they may be chemically
+identified.
+
+There is no phenomenon in the ether that is comparable with this.
+Evidently there could not be unless there were atomic structures having
+in some degree different characteristics which we know the ether to be
+without.
+
+
+10. THE ELEMENTS OF MATTER ARE HARMONICALLY RELATED.
+
+It is possible to arrange the elements in the order of their atomic
+weights in columns which will show communities of property. Newlands,
+Mendeleeff, Meyer, and others have done this. The explanation for such
+an arrangement has not yet been forthcoming, but that it expresses a
+real fact is certain, for in the original scheme there were several gaps
+representing undiscovered elements, the properties of which were
+predicted from that of their associates in the table. Some of these have
+since been discovered, and their atomic weight and physical properties
+accord with those predicted.
+
+With the ether such a scheme is quite impossible, for the very evident
+reason that there are no different things to have relation with each
+other. Every part is just like every other part. Where there are no
+differences and no distinctions there can be no relations. The ether is
+quite harmonic without relations.
+
+
+11. MATTER EMBODIES ENERGY.
+
+So long as the atoms of matter were regarded as hard round particles,
+they were assumed to be inert and only active when acted upon by what
+were called forces, which were held to be entities of some sort,
+independent of matter. These could pull or push it here or there, but
+the matter was itself incapable of independent activity. All this is now
+changed, and we are called upon to consider every atom as being itself a
+form of energy in the same sense as heat or light are forms of energy,
+the energy being embodied in particular forms of motion. Light, for
+instance, is a wave motion of the ether. An atom is a rotary ring of
+ether. Stop the wave motion, and the light would be annihilated. Stop
+the rotation, and the atom would be annihilated for the same reason. As
+the ray of light is a particular embodiment of energy, and has no
+existence apart from it, so an atom is to be regarded as an embodiment
+of energy. On a previous page it is said that energy is the ability of
+one body to act upon and move another in some degree. An atom of any
+kind is not the inert thing it has been supposed to be, for it can do
+something. Even at absolute zero, when all its vibratory or heat energy
+would be absent, it would be still an elastic whirling body pulling upon
+every other atom in the universe with gravitational energy, twisting
+other atoms into conformity with its own position with its magnetic
+energy; and, if such ether rings are like the rings which are made in
+air, will not stand still in one place even if no others act upon it,
+but will start at once by its own inherent energy to move in a right
+line at right angles to its own plane and in the direction of the whirl
+inside the ring. Two rings of wood or iron might remain in contact with
+each other for an indefinite time, but vortex-rings will not, but will
+beat each other away as two spinning tops will do if they touch ever so
+gently. If they do not thus separate it is because there are other forms
+of energy acting to press them together, but such external pressure will
+be lessened by the rings' own reactions.
+
+It is true that in a frictionless medium like the ether one cannot at
+present see how such vortex-rings could be produced in it. Certainly not
+by any such mechanical methods as are employed to make smoke-rings in
+air, for the friction of the air is the condition for producing them.
+However they came to be, there is implied the previous existence of the
+ether and of energy in some form capable of acting upon it in a manner
+radically different from any known in physical science.
+
+There is good spectroscopic evidence that in some way elements of
+different kinds are now being formed in nebulae, for the simplest show
+the presence of hydrogen alone. As they increase in complexity other
+elements are added, until the spectrum exhibits all the elements we know
+of. It has thus seemed likely either that most of what are called
+elements are composed of molecular groupings of some fundamental
+element, which by proper physical methods might be decomposed, as one
+can now decompose a molecule of ammonia or sulphuric acid, or that the
+elements are now being created by some extra-physical process in those
+far-off regions. In either case an atom is the embodiment of energy in
+such a form as to be permanent under ordinary physical circumstances,
+but of which, if in any manner it should be destroyed, only the form
+would be lost. The ether would remain, and the energy which was embodied
+would be distributed in other ways.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS ENDOWED WITH ENERGY.
+
+The distinction between energy in matter and energy in the ether will be
+apparent, on considering that both the ether and energy in some form
+must be conceived as existing independent of matter; though every atom
+were annihilated, the ether would remain and all the energy embodied in
+the atoms would be still in existence in the ether. The atomic energy
+would simply be dissolved. One can easily conceive the ether as the same
+space-filling, continuous, unlimited medium, without an atom in it. On
+this assumption it is clear that no form of energy with which we have to
+deal in physical science would have any existence in the ether; for
+every one of those forms, gravitational, thermal, electric, magnetic, or
+any other--all are the results of the forms of energy in matter. If
+there were no atoms, there would be no gravitation, for that is the
+attraction of atoms upon each other. If there were no atoms, there could
+be no atomic vibration, therefore no heat, and so on for each and all.
+Nevertheless, if an atom be the embodiment of energy, there must have
+been energy in the ether before any atom existed. One of the properties
+of the ether is its ability to distribute energy in certain ways, but
+there is no evidence that of itself it ever transforms energy. Once a
+given kind of energy is in it, it does not change; hence for the
+apparition of a form of energy, like the first vortex-ring, there must
+have been not only energy, but some other agency capable of transforming
+that energy into a permanent structure. To the best of our knowledge
+to-day, the ether would be absolutely helpless. Such energy as was
+active in forming atoms must be called by another name than what is
+appropriate for such transformations as occur when, for instance, the
+mechanical energy of a bullet is transformed into heat when the target
+is struck. Behind the ether must be assumed some agency, directing and
+controlling energy in a manner totally different from any agency, which
+is operative in what we call physical science. Nothing short of what is
+called a miracle will do--an event without a physical antecedent in any
+way necessarily related to its factors, as is the fact of a stone
+related to gravity or heat to an electric current.
+
+Ether energy is an endowment instead of being an embodiment, and implies
+antecedents of a super-physical kind.
+
+
+12. MATTER IS AN ENERGY TRANSFORMER.
+
+As each different kind of energy represents some specific form of
+motion, and _vice versa_, some sort of mechanism is needful for
+transforming one kind into another, therefore molecular structure of
+one kind or another is essential. The transformation is a mechanical
+process, and matter in some particular and appropriate form is the
+condition of its taking place. If heat appears, then its antecedent has
+been some other form of motion acting upon the substance heated. It may
+have been the mechanical motion of another mass of matter, as when a
+bullet strikes a target and becomes heated; or it may be friction, as
+when a car-axle heats when run without proper oiling to reduce friction;
+or it may be condensation, as when tinder is ignited by condensing the
+air about it; or chemical reactions, when molecular structure is changed
+as in combustion, or an electrical current, which implies a dynamo and
+steam-engine or water-power. If light appears, its antecedent has been
+impact or friction, condensation or chemical action, and if electricity
+appears the same sort of antecedents are present. Whether the one or the
+other of these forms of energy is developed, depends upon what kind of a
+structure the antecedent energy has acted upon. If radiant energy,
+so-called, falls upon a mass of matter, what is absorbed is at once
+transformed into heat or into electric or magnetic effects; _which_ one
+of these depends upon the character of the mechanism upon which the
+radiant energy acts, but the radiant energy itself, which consists of
+ether-waves, is traceable back in every case to a mass of matter having
+definite characteristic motions.
+
+One may therefore say with certainty that every physical phenomenon is a
+change in the direction, or velocity, or character, of the energy
+present, and such change has been produced by matter acting as a
+transformer.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS A NON-TRANSFORMER.
+
+It has already been said that the absence of friction in the ether
+enables light-waves to maintain their identity for an indefinite time,
+and to an indefinitely great distance. In a uniform, homogeneous
+substance of any kind, any kind of energy which might be in it would
+continue in it without any change. Uniformity and homogeneity imply
+similarity throughout, and the necessary condition for transformation is
+unlikeness. One might not look for any kind of physical phenomenon which
+was not due to the presence and activity of some heterogeneity.
+
+As a ray of light continues a ray of light so long as it exists in free
+ether, so all kinds of radiations, of whatever wave-length, continue
+identical until they fall upon some mechanical structure called matter.
+Translatory motion continues translatory, rotary continues rotary, and
+vibratory continues to be vibratory, and no transforming change can
+take place in the absence of matter. The ether is helpless.
+
+
+13. MATTER IS ELASTIC.
+
+It is commonly stated that certain substances, like putty and dough, are
+inelastic, while some other substances, like glass, steel, and wood, are
+elastic. This quality of elasticity, as manifested in such different
+degrees, depends upon molecular combinations; some of which, as in glass
+and steel, are favourable for exhibiting it, while others mask it, for
+the ultimate atoms of all kinds are certainly highly elastic.
+
+The measure of elasticity in a mass of matter is the velocity with which
+a wave-motion will be transmitted through it. Thus the elasticity of the
+air determines the velocity of sound in it. If the air be heated, the
+elasticity is increased and the sound moves faster. The rates of such
+sound-conduction range from a few feet in a second to about 16,000, five
+times swifter than a cannon ball. In such elastic bodies as vibrate to
+and fro like the prongs of a tuning-fork, or give sounds of a definite
+pitch, the rate of vibration is determined by the size and shape of the
+body as well as by their elementary composition. The smaller a body is,
+the higher its vibratory rate, if it be made of the same material and
+the form remains the same. Thus a tuning-fork, that may be carried in
+the waistcoat-pocket, may vibrate 500 times a second. If it were only
+the fifty-millionth of an inch in size, but of the same material and
+form, it would vibrate 30,000,000000 times a second; and if it were made
+of ether, instead of steel, it would vibrate as many times faster as the
+velocity of waves in the ether is greater than it is in steel, and would
+be as many as 400,000000,000000 times per second. The amount of
+displacement, or the amplitude of vibration, with the pocket-fork might
+be no more than the hundredth of an inch, and this rate measured as
+translation velocity would be but five inches per second. If the fork
+were of atomic magnitude, and should swing its sides one half the
+diameter of the atom, or say the hundred-millionth of an inch, the
+translational velocity would be equivalent to about eighty miles a
+second, or a hundred and fifty times the velocity of a cannon ball,
+which may be reckoned at about 3000 feet.
+
+That atoms really vibrate at the above rate per second is very certain,
+for their vibrations produce ether-waves the length of which may be
+accurately measured. When a tuning-fork vibrates 500 times a second, and
+the sound travels 1100 feet in the same interval, the length of each
+wave will be found by dividing the velocity in the air by the number of
+vibrations, or 1100 / 500 = 2.2 feet. In like manner, when one knows
+the velocity and wave-length, he may compute the number of vibrations by
+dividing the velocity by the wave-length. Now the velocity of the waves
+called light is 186,000 miles a second, and a light-wave may be one
+forty thousandth of an inch long. The atom that produces the wave must
+be vibrating as many times per second as the fifth thousandth of an inch
+is contained in 186,000 miles. Reducing this number to inches we have
+
+186,000 x 5280 x 12
+------------------- = 400,000,000,000,000, nearly.
+ 1/40,000
+
+This shows that the atoms are minute elastic bodies that change their
+form rapidly when struck. As rapid as the change is, yet the rate of
+movement is only one-fifth that of a comet when near the sun, and is
+therefore easily comparable with other velocities observed in masses of
+matter.
+
+These vibratory motions, due to the elasticity of the atoms, is what
+constitutes heat.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS ELASTIC.
+
+The elasticity of a mass of matter is its ability to recover its
+original form after that form has been distorted. There is implied that
+a stress changes its shape and dimensions, which in turn implies a
+limited mass and relative change of position of parts and some degree
+of discontinuity. From what has been said of the ether as being
+unlimited, continuous, and not made of atoms or molecules, it will be
+seen how difficult, if not impossible, it is to conceive how such a
+property as elasticity, as manifested in matter, can be attributed to
+the ether, which is incapable of deformation, either in structure or
+form, the latter being infinitely extended in every direction and
+therefore formless. Nevertheless, certain forms of motion, such as
+light-waves, move in it with definite velocity, quite independent of how
+they originate. This velocity of 186,000 miles a second so much exceeds
+any movement of a mass of matter that the motions can hardly be
+compared. Thus if 400 miles per second be the swiftest speed of any mass
+of matter known--that of a comet near the sun--the ether-wave moves
+186,000 / 400 = 465 times faster than such comet, and 900,000 times
+faster than sound travels in air. It is clear that if this rate of
+motion depends upon elasticity, the elasticity must be of an entirely
+different type from that belonging to matter, and cannot be defined in
+any such terms as are employed for matter.
+
+If one considers gravitative phenomena, the difficulty is enormously
+increased. The orbit of a planet is never an exact ellipse,
+on account of the perturbations produced by the planetary
+attractions--perturbations which depend upon the direction and distance
+of the attracting bodies. These, however, are so well known that slight
+deviations are easily noticed. If gravitative attraction took any such
+appreciable time to go from one astronomical body to another as does
+light, it would make very considerable differences in the paths of the
+planets and the earth. Indeed, if the velocity of gravitation were less
+than a million times greater than that of light, its effects would have
+been discovered long ago. It is therefore considered that the velocity
+of gravitation cannot be less than 186000,000000 miles per second. How
+much greater it may be no one can guess. Seeing that gravitation is
+ether-pressure, it does not seem probable that its velocity can be
+infinite. However that may be, the ability of the ether to transmit
+pressure and various disturbances, evidently depends upon properties so
+different from those that enable matter to transmit disturbances that
+they deserve to be called by different names. To speak of the elasticity
+of the ether may serve to express the fact that energy may be
+transmitted at a finite rate in it, but it can only mislead one's
+thinking if he imagines the process to be similar to energy transmission
+in a mass of matter. The two processes are incomparable. No other word
+has been suggested, and perhaps it is not needful for most scientific
+purposes that another should be adopted, but the inappropriateness of
+the one word for the different phenomena has long been felt.
+
+
+14. MATTER HAS DENSITY.
+
+This quality is exhibited in two ways in matter. In the first, the
+different elements in their atomic form have different masses or atomic
+weights. An atom of oxygen weighs sixteen times as much as an atom of
+hydrogen; that is, it has sixteen times as much matter, as determined by
+weight, as the hydrogen atom has, or it takes sixteen times as many
+hydrogen atoms to make a pound as it takes of oxygen atoms. This is
+generally expressed by saying that oxygen has sixteen times the density
+of hydrogen. In like manner, iron has fifty-six times the density, and
+gold one hundred and ninety-six. The difference is one in the structure
+of the atomic elements. If one imagines them to be vortex-rings, they
+may differ in size, thickness, and rate of rotation; either of these
+might make all the observed difference between the elements, including
+their density. In the second way, density implies compactness of
+molecules. Thus if a cubic foot of air be compressed until it occupies
+but half a cubic foot, each cubic inch will have twice as many molecules
+in it as at first. The amount of air per unit volume will have been
+doubled, the weight will have been doubled, the amount of matter as
+determined by its weight will have been doubled, and consequently we say
+its density has been doubled.
+
+If a bullet or a piece of iron be hammered, the molecules are compacted
+closer together, and a greater number can be got into a cubic inch when
+so condensed. In this sense, then, density means the number of molecules
+in a unit of space, a cubic inch or cubic centimeter. There is implied
+in this latter case that the molecules do not occupy all the available
+space, that they may have varying degrees of closeness; in other words,
+matter is discontinuous, and therefore there may be degrees in density.
+
+
+THE ETHER HAS DENSITY.
+
+It is common to have the degree of density of the ether spoken of in the
+same way, and for the same reason, that its elasticity is spoken of. The
+rate of transmission of a physical disturbance, as of a pressure or a
+wave-motion in matter, is conditioned by its degree of density; that is,
+the amount of matter per cubic inch as determined by its weight; the
+greater the density the slower the rate. So if rate of speed and
+elasticity be known, the density may be computed. In this way the
+density of the ether has been deduced by noting the velocity of light.
+The enormous velocity is supposed to prove that its density is very
+small, even when compared with hydrogen. This is stated to be about
+equal to that of the air at the height of two hundred and ten miles
+above the surface of the earth, where the air molecules are so few that
+a molecule might travel for 60,000,000 miles without coming in collision
+with another molecule. In air of ordinary density, a molecule can on the
+average move no further than about the two-hundred-and-fifty-thousandth
+of an inch without such collision. It is plain the density of the ether
+is so far removed from the density of anything we can measure, that it
+is hardly comparable with such things. If, in addition, one recalls the
+fact that the ether is homogeneous, that is all of one kind, and also
+that it is not composed of atoms and molecules, then degree of
+compactness and number of particles per cubic inch have no meaning, and
+the term density, if used, can have no such meaning as it has when
+applied to matter. There is no physical conception gained from the study
+of matter that can be useful in thinking of it. As with elasticity, so
+density is inappropriately applied to the ether, but there is no
+substitute yet offered.
+
+
+15. MATTER IS HEATABLE.
+
+So long as heat was thought to be some kind of an imponderable thing,
+which might retain its identity whether it were in or out of matter,
+its real nature was obscured by the name given to it. An imponderable
+was a mysterious something like a spirit, which was the cause of certain
+phenomena in matter. Heat, light, electricity, magnetism, gravitation,
+were due to such various agencies, and no one concerned himself with the
+nature of one or the other. Bacon thought that heat was a brisk
+agitation of the particles of substances, and Count Rumford and Sir
+Humphrey Davy thought they proved that it could be nothing else, but
+they convinced nobody. Mayer in Germany and Joule in England showed that
+quantitative relations existed between work done and heat developed, but
+not until the publication of the book called _Heat as a Mode of Motion_,
+was there a change of opinion and terminology as to the nature of heat.
+For twenty years after that it was common to hear the expressions heat,
+and radiant heat, to distinguish between phenomena in matter and what is
+now called radiant energy radiations, or simply ether-waves. Not until
+the necessity arose for distinguishing between different forms of
+energy, and the conditions for developing them, did it become clear to
+all that a change in the form of energy implied a change in the form of
+motion that embodied it. The energy called heat energy was proved to be
+a vibratory motion of molecules, and what happened in the ether as a
+result of such vibrations is no longer spoken of as heat, but as ether
+waves. When it is remembered that the ultimate atoms are elastic bodies,
+and that they will, if free, vibrate in a periodic manner when struck or
+shaken in any way, just as a ball will vibrate after it is struck, it is
+easy to keep in mind the distinction between the mechanical form of
+motion spent in striking and the vibratory form of the motion produced
+by it. The latter is called heat; no other form of motion than that is
+properly called heat. It is this alone that represents temperature, the
+rate and amplitude of such atomic and molecular vibrations as constitute
+change, of form. Where molecules like those in a gas have some freedom
+of movement between impacts, they bound away from each other with
+varying velocities. The path of such motion may be long or short,
+depending upon the density or compactness of the molecules, but such
+changes in position are not heat for a molecule any more than the flight
+of a musket ball is heat, though it may be transformed into heat on
+striking the target.
+
+This conception of heat as the rapid change in the form of atoms and
+molecules, due to their elasticity, is a phenomenon peculiar to matter.
+It implies a body possessing form that may be changed; elasticity, that
+its changes may be periodic, and degrees of freedom that secure space
+for the changes. Such a body may be heated. Its temperature will depend
+upon the amplitude of such vibrations, and will be limited by the
+maximum amplitude.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS UNHEATABLE.
+
+The translatory motion of a mass of matter, big or little, through the
+ether, is not arrested in any degree so far as observed, but the
+internal vibratory motion sets up waves in the ether, the ether absorbs
+the energy, and the amplitude is continually lessened. The motion has
+been transferred and transformed; transferred from matter to the ether,
+and transformed from vibratory to waves travelling at the rate of
+186,000 miles per second. The latter is not heat, but the result of
+heat. With the ether constituted as described, such vibratory motion as
+constitutes heat is impossible to it, and hence the characteristic of
+heat-motion in it is impossible; it cannot therefore be heated. The
+space between the earth and the sun may have any assignable amount of
+energy in the form of ether waves or light, but not any temperature. One
+might loosely say that the temperature of empty spaces was absolute
+zero, but that would not be quite correct, for the idea of temperature
+cannot properly be entertained as applicable to the ether. To say that
+its temperature was absolute zero, would serve to imply that it might be
+higher, which is inadmissible.
+
+When energy has been transformed, the old name by which the energy was
+called must be dropped. Ether cannot be heated.
+
+
+16. MATTER IS INDESTRUCTIBLE.
+
+This is commonly said to be one of the essential properties of matter.
+All that is meant by it, however, is simply this: In no physical or
+chemical process to which it has been experimentally subjected has there
+been any apparent loss. The matter experimented upon may change from a
+solid or liquid to a gas, or the molecular change called chemical may
+result in new compounds, but the weight of the material and its atomic
+constituents have not appreciably changed. That matter cannot be
+annihilated is only the converse of the proposition that matter cannot
+be created, which ought always to be modified by adding, by physical or
+chemical processes at present known. A chemist may work with a few
+grains of a substance in a beaker, or test-tube, or crucible, and after
+several solutions, precipitations, fusions and dryings, may find by
+final weighing that he has not lost any appreciable amount, but how much
+is an appreciable amount? A fragment of matter the ten-thousandth of an
+inch in diameter has too small a weight to be noted in any balance, yet
+it would be made up of thousands of millions of atoms. Hence if, in the
+processes to which the substance had been subjected, there had been the
+total annihilation of thousands of millions of atoms, such phenomenon
+would not have been discovered by weighing. Neither would it have been
+discovered if there had been a similar creation or development of new
+matter. All that can be asserted concerning such events is, that they
+have not been discovered with our means of observation.
+
+The alchemists sought to transform one element into another, as lead
+into gold. They did not succeed. It was at length thought to be
+impossible, and the attempt to do it an absurdity. Lately, however,
+telescopic observation of what is going on in nebulae, which has already
+been referred to, has somewhat modified ideas of what is possible and
+impossible in that direction. It is certainly possible roughly to
+conceive how such a structure as a vortex-ring in the ether might be
+formed. With certain polarizing apparatus it is possible to produce rays
+of circularly polarized light. These are rays in which the motion is an
+advancing rotation like the wire in a spiral spring. If such a line of
+rotations in the ether were flexible, and the two ends should come
+together, there is reason for thinking they would weld together, in
+which case the structure would become a vortex-ring and be as durable as
+any other. There is reason for believing, also, that somewhat similar
+movements are always present in a magnetic field, and though we do not
+know how to make them close up in the proper way, it does not follow
+that it is impossible for them to do so.
+
+The bearing of all this upon the problem of the transmutation of
+elements is evident. No one now will venture to deny its possibility as
+strongly as it was denied a generation ago. It will also lead one to be
+less confident in the theory that matter is indestructible. Assuming the
+vortex-ring theory of atoms to be true, if in any way such a ring could
+be cut or broken, there would not remain two or more fragments of a ring
+or atom. The whole would at once be dissolved into the ether. The ring
+and rotary energy that made it an atom would be destroyed, but not the
+substance it was made of, nor the energy which was embodied therein. For
+a long time philosophers have argued, and commonsense has agreed with
+them, that an atom which could not be ideally broken into two parts was
+impossible, that one could at any rate think of half an atom as a real
+objective possibility. This vortex-ring theory shows easily how possible
+it is to-day to think what once was philosophically incredible. It shows
+that metaphysical reasoning may be ever so clear and apparently
+irrefragable, yet for all that it may be very unsound. The trouble does
+not come so much from the logic as from the assumption upon which the
+logic is founded. In this particular case the assumption was that the
+ultimate particles of matter were hard, irrefragable somethings, without
+necessary relations to anything else, or to energy, and irrefragable
+only because no means had been found of breaking them.
+
+The destructibility or indestructibility of the ether cannot be
+considered from the same standpoint as that for matter, either ideally
+or really. Not ideally, because we are utterly without any mechanical
+conceptions of the substance upon which one can base either reason or
+analogy; and not really, because we have no experimental evidence as to
+its nature or mode of operation. If it be continuous, there are no
+interspaces, and if it be illimitable there is no unfilled space
+anywhere. Furthermore, one might infer that if in any way a portion of
+the ether could be annihilated, what was left would at once fill up the
+vacated space, so there would be no record left of what had happened.
+Apparently, its destruction would be the destruction of a substance,
+which is a very different thing from the destruction of a mode of
+motion. In the latter, only the form of the motion need be destroyed to
+completely obliterate every trace of the atom. In the former, there
+would need to be the destruction of both substance and energy, for it is
+certain, for reasons yet to be attended to, that the ether is saturated
+with energy.
+
+One may, without mechanical difficulties, imagine a vortex-ring
+destroyed. It is quite different with the ether itself, for if it were
+destroyed in the same sense as the atom of matter, it would be changed
+into something else which is not ether, a proposition which assumes the
+existence of another entity, the existence for which is needed only as a
+mechanical antecedent for the other. The same assumption would be needed
+for this entity as for the ether, namely, something out of which it was
+made, and this process of assuming antecedents would be interminable.
+The last one considered would have the same difficulties to meet as the
+ether has now. The assumption that it was in some way and at some time
+created is more rational, and therefore more probable, than that it
+either created itself or that it always existed. Considered as the
+underlying stratum of matter, it is clear that changes of any kind in
+matter can in no way affect the quantity of ether.
+
+
+17. MATTER HAS INERTIA.
+
+The resistance that a mass of matter opposes to a change in its position
+or rate and direction of movement, is called inertia. That it should
+actively oppose anything has been already pointed out as reason for
+denying that matter is inert, but inertia is the measure of the reaction
+of a body when it is acted upon by pressure from any source tending to
+disturb its condition of either rest or motion. It is the equivalent of
+mass, or the amount of matter as measured by gravity, and is a fixed
+quantity; for inertia is as inherent as any other quality, and belongs
+to the ultimate atoms and every combination of them. It implies the
+ability to absorb energy, for it requires as much energy to bring a
+moving body to a standstill as was required to give it its forward
+motion.
+
+Both rotary and vibratory movements are opposed by the same property. A
+grindstone, a tuning-fork, and an atom of hydrogen require, to move them
+in their appropriate ways, an amount of energy proportionate to their
+mass or inertia, which energy is again transformed through friction into
+heat and radiated away.
+
+One may say that inertia is the measure of the ability of a body to
+transfer or transform mechanical energy. The meteorite that falls upon
+the earth to-day gives, on its impact, the same amount of energy it
+would have given if it had struck the earth ten thousand years ago. The
+inertia of the meteor has persisted, not as energy, but as a factor of
+energy. We commonly express the energy of a mass of matter by
+_mv_^{2}/2, where _m_ stands for the mass and _v_ for its velocity. We
+might as well, if it were as convenient, substitute inertia for mass,
+and write the expression _iv_^{2}/2, for the mass, being measured by its
+inertia, is only the more common and less definitive word for the same
+thing. The energy of a mass of matter is, then, proportional to its
+inertia, because inertia is one of its factors. Energy has often been
+treated as if it were an objective thing, an entity and a unity; but
+such a conception is evidently wrong, for, as has been said before, it
+is a product of two factors, either of which may be changed in any
+degree if the other be changed inversely in the same degree. A cannon
+ball weighing 1000 pounds, and moving 100 feet per second, will have
+156,000 foot-pounds of energy, but a musket ball weighing an ounce will
+have the same amount when its velocity is 12,600 feet per second.
+Nevertheless, another body acting upon either bullet or cannon ball,
+tending to move either in some new direction, will be as efficient
+while those bodies are moving at any assignable rate as when they are
+quiescent, for the change in direction will depend upon the inertia of
+the bodies, and that is constant.
+
+The common theory of an inert body is one that is wholly passive, having
+no power of itself to move or do anything, except as some agency outside
+itself compels it to move in one way or another, and thus endows it with
+energy. Thus a stone or an iron nail are thought to be inert bodies in
+that sense, and it is true that either of them will remain still in one
+place for an indefinite time and move from it only when some external
+agency gives them impulse and direction. Still it is known that such
+bodies will roll down hill if they will not roll up, and each of them
+has itself as much to do with the down-hill movement as the earth has;
+that is, it attracts the earth as much as the earth attracts it. If one
+could magnify the structure of a body until the molecules became
+individually visible, every one of them would be seen to be in intense
+activity, changing its form and relative position an enormous number of
+times per second in undirected ways. No two such molecules move in the
+same way at the same time, and as all the molecules cohere together,
+their motions in different directions balance each other, so that the
+body as a whole does not change its position, not because there is no
+moving agency in itself, but because the individual movements are
+scattering, and not in a common direction. An army may remain in one
+place for a long time. To one at a distance it is quiescent, inert. To
+one in the camp there is abundant sign of activity, but the movements
+are individual movements, some in one direction and some in another, and
+often changing. The same army on the march has the same energy, the same
+rate of individual movement; but all have a common direction, it moves
+as a whole body into new territory. So with the molecules of matter. In
+large masses they appear to be inert, and to do nothing, and to be
+capable of doing nothing. That is only due to the fact that their energy
+is undirected, not that they can do nothing. The inference that if
+quiescent bodies do not act in particular ways they are inert, and
+cannot act in any kind of a way, is a wrong inference. An illustration
+may perhaps make this point plainer. A lump of coal will be still as
+long as anything if it be undisturbed. Indeed, it has thus lain in a
+coal-bed for millions of years probably, but if coal be placed where it
+can combine with oxygen, it forthwith does so, and during the process
+yields a large amount of energy in the shape of heat. One pound of coal
+in this way gives out 14,000 heat units, which is the equivalent of
+11,000,000 foot-pounds of work, and if it could be all utilized would
+furnish a horse-power for five and a half hours. Can any inert body
+weighing a pound furnish a horse-power for half a day? And can a body
+give out what it has not got? Are gunpowder and nitro-glycerine inert?
+Are bread and butter and foods in general inert because they will not
+push and pull as a man or a horse may? All have energy, which is
+available in certain ways and not in others, and whatever possesses
+energy available in any way is not an ideally inert body. Lastly, how
+many inert bodies together will it take to make an active body? If the
+question be absurd, then all the phenomena witnessed in bodies, large or
+small, are due to the fact that the atoms are not inert, but are
+immensely energetic, and their inertia is the measure of their rates of
+exchanging energy.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS CONDITIONALLY POSSESSED OF INERTIA.
+
+A moving mass of matter is brought to rest by friction, because it
+imparts its motion at some rate to the body it is in contact with.
+Generally the energy is transformed into heat, but sometimes it appears
+as electrification. Friction is only possible because one or both of the
+bodies possess inertia. That a body may move in the ether for an
+indefinite time without losing its velocity has been stated as a reason
+for believing the ether to be frictionless. If it be frictionless, then
+it is without inertia, else the energy of the earth and of a ray of
+light would be frittered away. A ray of light can only be transformed
+when it falls upon molecules which may be heated by it. As the ether
+cannot be heated and cannot transform translational energy, it is
+without inertia for _such_ a form of motion and its embodied energy.
+
+It is not thus with other forms of energy than the translational. Atomic
+and molecular vibrations are so related to the ether that they are
+transformed into waves, which are conducted away at a definite rate.
+This shows that such property of inertia as is possessed by the ether is
+selective and not like that of matter, which is equally "inertiative"
+under all conditions. Similarly with electric and magnetic phenomena, it
+is capable of transforming the energy which may reside as stress in the
+ether, and other bodies moving in the space so affected meet with
+frictional resistance, for they become heated if the motion be
+maintained. On the other hand, there is no evidence that the body which
+produced the electric or magnetic stress suffers any degree of friction
+on moving in precisely the same space. A bar magnet rotating on its
+longitudinal axis does not disturb its own field, but a piece of iron
+revolving near the magnet will not only become heated, but will heat the
+stationary magnet. Much experimental work has been done to discover, if
+possible, the relation of a magnet to its ether field. As the latter is
+not disturbed by the rotation of the magnet, it has been concluded that
+the field does not rotate; but as every molecule in the magnet has its
+own field independent of all the rest, it is mechanically probable that
+each such field does vary in the rotation, but among the thousands of
+millions of such fields the average strength of the field does not vary
+within measurable limits. Another consideration is that the magnetic
+field itself, when moved in space, suffers no frictional resistance.
+There is no magnetic energy wasted through ether inertia. These
+phenomena show that whether the ether exhibits the quality called
+inertia depends upon the kind of motion it has.
+
+
+18. MATTER IS MAGNETIC.
+
+The ordinary phenomenon of magnetism is shown by bringing a piece of
+iron into the neighbourhood of a so-called magnet, where it is attracted
+by the latter, and if free to move will go to and cling to the magnet. A
+delicately suspended magnetic needle will be affected appreciably by a
+strong magnet at the distance of several hundred feet. As the strength
+of such action varies inversely as the square of the distance from the
+magnet, it is evident there can be no absolute boundary to it. At a
+distance from an ordinary magnet it becomes too weak to be detected by
+our methods, not that there is a limit to it. It is customary to think
+of iron as being peculiarly endowed with magnetic quality, but all kinds
+of matter possess it in some degree. Wood, stone, paper, oats, sulphur,
+and all the rest, are attracted by a magnet, and will stick to it if the
+magnet be a strong one. Whether a piece of iron itself exhibits the
+property depends upon its temperature, for near 700 degrees it becomes
+as magnetically indifferent as a piece of copper at ordinary
+temperature. Oxygen, too, at 200 degrees below the zero of Centigrade
+adheres to a magnet like iron.
+
+In this as in so many other particulars, how a piece of matter behaves
+depends upon its temperature, not that the essential qualities are
+modified in any degree, but temperature interferes with atomic
+arrangement and aggregation, and so disguises their phenomena.
+
+As every kind of matter is thus affected by a magnet, the manifestations
+differing but in degree, it follows that all kinds of atoms--all the
+elements--are magnetic. An inherent property in them, as much so as
+gravitation or inertia; apparently a quality depending upon the
+structure of the atoms themselves, in the same sense as gravitation is
+thus dependent, as it is not a quality of the ether.
+
+An atom must, then, be thought of as having polarity, different
+qualities on the two sides, and possessing a magnetic field as extensive
+as space itself. The magnetic field is the stress or pressure in the
+ether produced by the magnetic body. This ether pressure produced by a
+magnet may be as great as a ton per square inch. It is this pressure
+that holds an armature to the magnet. As heat is a molecular condition
+of vibration, and radiant energy the result of it, so is magnetism a
+property of molecules, and the magnetic field the temporary condition in
+the ether, which depends upon the presence of a magnetic body. We no
+longer speak of the wave-motion in the ether which results from heat, as
+heat, but call it radiation, or ether waves, and for a like reason the
+magnetic field ought not to be called magnetism.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS NON-MAGNETIC.
+
+A magnetic field manifests itself in a way that implies that the ether
+structure, if it may be said to have any, is deformed--deformed in such
+a sense that another magnet in it tends to set itself in the plane of
+the stress; that is, the magnet is twisted into a new position to
+accommodate itself to the condition of the medium about it. The new
+position is the result of the reaction of the ether upon the magnet and
+ether pressure acting at right angles to the body that produced the
+stress. Such an action is so anomalous as to suggest the propriety of
+modifying the so-called third law of motion, viz., action and reaction
+are equal and opposite, adding that sometimes action and reaction are at
+right angles.
+
+There is no condition or property exhibited by the ether itself which
+shows it to have any such characteristic as attraction, repulsion, or
+differences in stress, except where its condition is modified by the
+activities of matter in some way. The ether itself is not attracted or
+repelled by a magnet; that is, it is not a magnetic body in any such
+sense as matter in any of its forms is, and therefore cannot properly be
+called magnetic.
+
+It has been a mechanical puzzle to understand how the vibratory motions
+called heat could set up light waves in the ether seeing that there is
+an absence of friction in the latter. In the endeavour to conceive it,
+the origin of sound-waves has been in mind, where longitudinal air-waves
+are produced by the vibrations of a sounding body, and molecular impact
+is the antecedent of the waves. The analogy does not apply. The
+following exposition may be helpful in grasping the idea of such
+transformation and change of energy from matter to the ether.
+
+Consider a straight bar permanent magnet to be held in the hand. It has
+its north and south poles and its field, the latter extending in every
+direction to an indefinite distance. The field is to be considered as
+ether stress of such a sort as to tend to set other magnets in it in new
+positions. If at a distance of ten feet there were a delicately-poised
+magnet needle, every change in the position of the magnet held in the
+hand would bring about a change in the position of the needle. If the
+position of the hand magnet were completely reversed, so the south pole
+faced where the north pole faced before, the field would have been
+completely reversed, and the poised needle would have been pushed by the
+field into an opposite position. If the needle were a hundred feet away,
+the change would have been the same except in amount. The same might be
+said if the two were a mile apart, or the distance of the moon or any
+other distance, for there is no limit to an ether magnetic field.
+Suppose the hand magnet to have its direction completely reversed once
+in a second. The whole field, and the direction of the stress, would
+necessarily be reversed as often. But this kind of change in stress is
+known by experiment to travel with the speed of light, 186,000 miles a
+second; the disturbance due to the change of position of the magnet will
+therefore be felt in some degree throughout space. In a second and a
+third of a second it will have reached the moon, and a magnet there will
+be in some measure affected by it. If there were an observer there with
+a delicate-enough magnet, he could be witness to its changes once a
+second for the same reason one in the room could. The only difference
+would be one of amount of swing. It is therefore theoretically possible
+to signal to the moon with a swinging magnet. Suppose again that the
+magnet should be swung twice a second, there would be formed two waves,
+each one half as long as the first. If it should swing ten times a
+second, then the waves would be one-tenth of 186,000 miles long. If in
+some mechanical way it could be rotated 186,000 times a second, the wave
+would be but one mile long. Artificial ways have been invented for
+changing this magnet field as many as 100 million times a second, and
+the corresponding wave is less than a foot long. The shape of a magnet
+does not necessarily make it weaker or stronger as a magnet, but if the
+poles are near together the magnetic field is denser between them than
+when they are separated. The ether stress is differently distributed for
+every change in the relative positions of the poles.
+
+A common U-magnet, if struck, will vibrate like a tuning-fork, and gives
+out a definite pitch. Its poles swing towards and away from each other
+at uniform rates, and the pitch of the magnet will depend upon its size,
+thickness, and the material it is made of.
+
+Let ten or fifteen ohms of any convenient-sized wire be wound upon the
+bend of a commercial U-magnet. Let this wire be connected to a telephone
+in its circuit. When the magnet is made to sound like a tuning-fork, the
+pitch will be reproduced in the telephone very loudly. If another magnet
+with a different pitch be allowed to vibrate near the former, the pitch
+of the vibrating body will be heard in the telephone, and these show
+that the changing magnetic field reacts upon the quiescent magnet, and
+compels the latter to vibrate at the same rate. The action is an ether
+action, the waves are ether waves, but they are relatively very long. If
+the magnet makes 500 vibrations a second, the waves will be 372 miles
+long, the number of times 500 is contained in 186,000 miles. Imagine the
+magnet to become smaller and smaller until it was the size of an atom,
+the one-fifty-millionth of an inch. Its vibratory rate would be
+proportionally increased, and changes in its form will still bring about
+changes in its magnetic field. But its magnetic field is practically
+limitless, and the number of vibrations per second is to be reckoned
+as millions of millions; the waves are correspondingly short,
+small fractions of an inch. When they are as short as the
+one-thirty-seven-thousandth of an inch, they are capable of affecting
+the retina of the eye, and then are said to be visible as red light. If
+the vibratory rate be still higher, and the corresponding waves be no
+more than one-sixty-thousandth of an inch long, they affect the retina
+as violet light, and between these limits there are all the waves that
+produce a complete spectrum. The atoms, then, shake the ether in this
+way because they all have a magnetic hold upon the ether, so that any
+disturbance of their own magnetism, such as necessarily comes when they
+collide, reacts upon the ether for the same reason that a large magnet
+acts thus upon it when its poles approach and recede from each other. It
+is not a phenomenon of mechanical impact or frictional resistance, since
+neither are possible in the ether.
+
+
+19. MATTER EXISTS IN SEVERAL STATES.
+
+Molecular cohesion exists between very wide ranges. When strong, so if
+one part of a body is moved the whole is moved in the same way, without
+breaking continuity or the relative positions of the molecules, we call
+the body a solid. In a liquid, cohesion is greatly reduced, and any part
+of it may be deformed without materially changing the form of the rest.
+The molecules are free to move about each other, and there is no
+definite position which any need assume or keep. With gases, the
+molecules are without any cohesion, each one is independent of every
+other one, collides with and bounds away from others as free elastic
+particles do. Between impacts it moves in what is called its free path,
+which may be long or short as the density of the gas be less or greater.
+
+These differing degrees of cohesion depend upon temperature, for if the
+densest and hardest substances are sufficiently heated they will become
+gaseous. This is only another way of saying that the states of matter
+depend upon the amount of molecular energy present. Solid ice becomes
+water by the application of heat. More heat reduces it to steam; still
+more decomposes the steam molecules into oxygen and hydrogen molecules;
+and lastly, still more heat will decompose these molecules into their
+atomic state, complete dissociation. On cooling, the process of
+reduction will be reversed until ice has been formed again.
+
+Cohesive strength in solids is increased by reduction of temperature,
+and metallic rods become stronger the colder they are.
+
+No distinction is now made between cohesion and chemical affinity, and
+yet at low temperatures chemical action will not take place, which
+phenomenon shows there is a distinction between molecular cohesion and
+molecular structure. In molecular structure, as determined by chemical
+activity, the molecules and atoms are arranged in definite ways which
+depend upon the rate of vibrations of the components. The atoms are set
+in definite positions to constitute a given molecule. But atoms or
+molecules may cohere for other reasons, gravitative or magnetic, and
+relative positions would be immaterial. In the absence of temperature, a
+solid body would be solider and stronger than ever, while a gaseous mass
+would probably fall by gravity to the floor of the containing vessel
+like so much dust. The molecular structure might not be changed, for
+there would be no agency to act upon it in a disturbing way.
+
+
+THE ETHER HAS NO CORRESPONDING STATES.
+
+Degrees of density have already been excluded, and the homogeneity and
+continuity of the ether would also exclude the possibility of different
+states at all comparable with such as belong to matter. As for cohesion,
+it is doubtful if the term ought to be applied to such a substance. The
+word itself seems to imply possible separateness, and if the ether be a
+single indivisible substance, its cohesion must be infinite and is
+therefore not a matter of degree. The ether has sometimes been
+considered as an elastic solid, but such solidity is comparable with
+nothing we call solid in matter, and the word has to be defined in a
+special sense in order that its use may be tolerated at all. In addition
+to this, some of the phenomena exhibited by it, such as diffraction and
+double refraction, are quite incompatible with the theory that the ether
+is an elastic solid. The reasons why it cannot be considered as a liquid
+or gas have been considered previously.
+
+The expression _states of matter_ cannot be applied to the ether in any
+such sense as it is applied to matter, but there is one sense when
+possibly it may be considered applicable. Let it be granted that an atom
+is a vortex-ring of ether in the ether, then the state of being in ring
+rotation would suffice to differentiate that part of the ether from the
+rest, and give to it a degree of individuality not possessed by the
+rest; and such an atom might be called a state of ether. In like manner,
+if other forms of motion, such as transverse waves, circular and
+elliptical spirals, or others, exist in the ether, then such movements
+give special character to the part thus active, and it would be proper
+to speak of such states of the ether, but even thus the word would not
+be used in the same sense as it is used when one speaks of the states of
+matter as being solid, liquid, and gaseous.
+
+
+20. SOLID MATTER CAN EXPERIENCE A SHEARING STRESS, LIQUIDS AND GASES
+CANNOT.
+
+A sliding stress applied to a solid deforms it to a degree which depends
+upon the stress and the degree of rigidity preserved by the body. Thus
+if the hand be placed upon a closed book lying on the table, and
+pressure be so applied as to move the upper side of the book but not the
+lower, the book is said to be subject to a shearing stress. If the
+pressing hand has a twisting motion, the book will be warped. Any solid
+may be thus sheared or warped, but neither liquids nor gases can be so
+affected. Molecular cohesion makes it possible in the one, and the lack
+of it, impossible in the others. The solid can maintain such a
+deformation indefinitely long, if the pressure does not rupture its
+molecular structure.
+
+
+THE ETHER CAN MAINTAIN A SHEARING STRESS.
+
+The phenomena in a magnetic field show that the stress is of such a sort
+as to twist into a new directional position the body upon which it acts
+as exhibited by a magnetic needle, also as indicated by the transverse
+vibrations of the ether waves, and again by the twist given to plane
+polarized light when moving through a magnetic field. These are all
+interpreted as indicative of the direction of ether stress, as being
+similar to a shearing stress in solid matter. The fact has been adduced
+to show the ether to be a solid, but such a phenomenon is certainly
+incompatible with a liquid or gaseous ether. This kind of stress is
+maintained indefinitely about a permanent magnet, and the mechanical
+pressure which may result from it is a measure of the strength of the
+magnetic field, and may exceed a thousand pounds per square inch.
+
+
+21. OTHER PROPERTIES OF MATTER.
+
+There are many secondary qualities exhibited by matter in some of its
+forms, such as hardness, brittleness, malleability, colour, etc., and
+the same ultimate element may exhibit itself in the most diverse ways,
+as is the case with carbon, which exists as lamp-black, charcoal,
+graphite, jet, anthracite and diamond, ranging from the softest to the
+hardest of known bodies. Then it may be black or colourless. Gold is
+yellow, copper red, silver white, chlorine green, iodine purple. The
+only significance any or all of such qualities have for us here is that
+the ether exhibits none of them. There is neither hardness nor
+brittleness, nor colour, nor any approach to any of the characteristics
+for the identification of elementary matter.
+
+
+22. SENSATION DEPENDS UPON MATTER.
+
+However great the mystery of the relation of body to mind, it is quite
+true that the nervous system is the mechanism by and through which all
+sensation comes, and that in our experience in the absence of nerves
+there is neither sensation nor consciousness. The nerves themselves are
+but complex chemical structures; their molecular constitution is said to
+embrace as many as 20,000 atoms, chiefly carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and
+nitrogen. There must be continuity of this structure too, for to sever a
+nerve is to paralyze all beyond. If all knowledge comes through
+experience, and all experience comes through the nervous system, the
+possibilities depend upon the mechanism each one is provided with for
+absorbing from his environment, what energies there are that can act
+upon the nerves. Touch, taste, and smell imply contact, sound has
+greater range, and sight has the immensity of the universe for its
+field. The most distant but visible star acts through the optic nerve to
+present itself to consciousness. It is not the ego that looks out
+through the eyes, but it is the universe that pours in upon the ego.
+
+Again, all the known agencies that act upon the nerves, whether for
+touch or sound or sight, imply matter in some of its forms and
+activities, to adapt the energy to the nervous system. The mechanism
+for the perception of light is complicated. The light acts upon a
+sensitive surface where molecular structure is broken up, and this
+disturbance is in the presence of nerve terminals, and the sensation is
+not in the eye but in the sensorium. In like manner for all the rest; so
+one may fairly say that matter is the condition for sensation, and in
+its absence there would be nothing we call sensation.
+
+
+THE ETHER IS INSENSIBLE TO NERVES.
+
+The ether is in great contrast with matter in this particular. There is
+no evidence that in any direct way it acts upon any part of the nervous
+system, or upon the mind. It is probable that this lack of relation
+between the ether and the nervous system was the chief reason why its
+discovery was so long delayed, as the mechanical necessities for it even
+now are felt only by such as recognize continuity as a condition for the
+transmission of energy of whatever kind it may be. Action at a distance
+contradicts all experience, is philosophically incredible, and is
+repudiated by every one who once perceives that energy has two
+factors--substance and motion.
+
+The table given below presents a list of twenty-two of the known
+properties of matter contrasted with those exhibited by the ether. In
+none of them are the properties of the two identical, and in most of
+them what is true for one is not true for the other. They are not simply
+different, they are incomparable.
+
+From the necessities of the case, as knowledge has been acquired and
+terminology became essential for making distinctions, the ether has been
+described in terms applicable to matter, hence such terms as mass,
+solidity, elasticity, density, rigidity, etc., which have a definite
+meaning and convey definite mechanical conceptions when applied to
+matter, but have no corresponding meaning and convey no such mechanical
+conceptions when applied to the ether. It is certain that they are
+inappropriate, and that the ether and its properties cannot be described
+in terms applicable to matter. Mathematical considerations derived from
+the study of matter have no advantage, and are not likely to lead us to
+a knowledge of the ether.
+
+Only a few have perceived the inconsistency of thinking of the two in
+the same terms. In his _Grammar of Science_, Prof. Karl Pearson says,
+"We find that our sense-impressions of hardness, weight, colour,
+temperature, cohesion, and chemical constitution, may all be described
+by the aid of the motions of a single medium, which itself is conceived
+to have no hardness, weight, colour, temperature, nor indeed elasticity
+of the ordinary conceptual type."
+
+None of the properties of the ether are such as one would or could have
+predicted if he had had all the knowledge possessed by mankind. Every
+phenomenon in it is a surprise to us, because it does not follow the
+laws which experience has enabled us to formulate for matter. A
+substance which has none of the phenomenal properties of matter, and is
+not subject to the known laws of matter, ought not to be called matter.
+Ether phenomena and matter phenomena belong to different categories, and
+the ends of science will not be conserved by confusing them, as is done
+when the same terminology is employed for both.
+
+There are other properties belonging to the ether more wonderful, if
+possible, than those already mentioned. Its ability to maintain enormous
+stresses of various kinds without the slightest evidence of
+interference. There is the gravitational stress, a direct pull between
+two masses of matter. Between two molecules it is immeasurably small
+even when close together, but the prodigious number of them in a bullet
+brings the action into the field of observation, while between such
+bodies as the earth and moon or sun, the quantity reaches an astonishing
+figure. Thus if the gravitative tension due to the gravitative
+attraction of the earth and moon were to be replaced by steel wires
+connecting the two bodies to prevent the moon from leaving its orbit,
+there would be needed four number ten steel wires to every square inch
+upon the earth, and these would be strained nearly to the breaking
+point. Yet this stress is not only endured continually by this pliant,
+impalpable, transparent medium, but other bodies can move through the
+same space apparently as freely as if it were entirely free. In addition
+to this, the stress from the sun and the more variable stresses from the
+planets are all endured by the same medium in the same space and
+apparently a thousand or a million times more would not make the
+slightest difference. Rupture is impossible.
+
+Electric and magnetic stresses, acting parallel or at right angles to
+the other, exist in the same space and to indefinite degrees, neither
+modifying the direction nor amount of either of the others.
+
+These various stresses have been computed to represent energy, which if
+it could be utilized, each cubic inch of space would yield five hundred
+horse-power. It shows what a store-house of energy the ether is. If
+every particle of matter were to be instantly annihilated, the universe
+of ether would still have an inexpressible amount of energy left. To
+draw at will directly from this inexhaustible supply, and utilize it for
+the needs of mankind, is not a forlorn hope.
+
+The accompanying table presents these contrasting properties for
+convenient inspection.
+
+
+CONTRASTED PROPERTIES OF MATTER AND THE ETHER.
+
+ MATTER. ETHER.
+
+ 1. Discontinuous Continuous
+ 2. Limited Unlimited
+ 3. Heterogeneous Homogeneous
+ 4. Atomic Non-atomic
+ 5. Definite structure Structureless
+ 6. Gravitative Gravitationless
+ 7. Frictionable Frictionless
+ 8. AEolotropic Isotropic
+ 9. Chemically selective ----
+10. Harmonically related ----
+11. Energy embodied Energy endowed
+12. Energy transformer Non-transformer
+13. Elastic Elastic?
+14. Density Density?
+15. Heatable Unheatable
+16. Indestructible? Indestructible
+17. Inertiative Inertiative conditionally
+18. Magnetic ----
+19. Variable states ----
+20. Subject to shearing stress
+ in solid Shearing stress maintained
+21. Has Secondary qualities ----
+22. Sensation depends upon Insensible to nerves
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Antecedents of Electricity--Nature of what is
+ transformed--Series of transformations for the
+ production of light--Positive and negative
+ Electricity--Positive and negative twists--Rotations
+ about a wire--Rotation of an arc--Ether a
+ non-conductor--Electro-magnetic waves--Induction
+ and inductive action--Ether stress and atomic
+ position--Nature of an electric current--Electricity
+ a condition, not an entity.
+
+
+So far as we have knowledge to-day, the only factors we have to consider
+in explaining physical phenomena are: (1) Ordinary matter, such as
+constitutes the substance of the earth, and the heavenly bodies; (2) the
+ether, which is omnipresent; and (3) the various forms of motion, which
+are mutually transformable in matter, and some of which, but not all,
+are transformable into ether forms. For instance, the translatory motion
+of a mass of matter can be imparted to another mass by simple impact,
+but translatory motion cannot be imparted to the ether, and, for that
+reason, a body moving in it is not subject to friction, and continues
+to move on with velocity undiminished for an indefinite time; but the
+vibratory motion which constitutes heat is transformable into
+wave-motion in the ether, and is transmitted away with the speed of
+light. The kind of motion which is thus transformed is not even a
+to-and-fro swing of an atom, or molecule, like the swing of a pendulum
+bob, but that due to a change of form of the atoms within the molecule,
+otherwise there could be no such thing as spectrum analysis. Vibratory
+motion of the matter becomes undulatory motion in the ether. The
+vibratory motion we call heat; the wave-motion we call sometimes radiant
+energy, sometimes light. Neither of these terms is a good one, but we
+now have no others.
+
+It is conceded that it is not proper to speak of the wave-motion in the
+ether as _heat_; it is also admitted that the ether is not heated by the
+presence of the wave--or, in other words, the temperature of the ether
+is absolute zero. Matter only can be heated. But the ether waves can
+heat other matter they may fall on; so there are three steps in the
+process and two transformations--(1) vibrating matter; (2) waves in the
+ether; (3) vibration in other matter. Energy has been transferred
+indirectly. What is important to bear in mind is, that when a form of
+energy in matter is transformed in any manner so as to lose its
+characteristics, it is not proper to call it by the same name after as
+before, and this we do in all cases when the transformation is from one
+kind in matter to another kind in matter. Thus, when a bullet is shot
+against a target, before it strikes it has what we call mechanical
+energy, and we measure that in foot-pounds; after it has struck the
+target, the transformation is into heat, and this has its mechanical
+equivalent, but is not called mechanical energy, nor are the motions
+which embody it similar. The mechanical ideas in these phenomena are
+easy to grasp. They apply to the phenomena of the mechanics of large and
+small bodies, to sound, to heat, and to light, as ordinarily considered,
+but they have not been applied to electric phenomena, as they evidently
+should be, unless it be held that such phenomena are not related to
+ordinary phenomena, as the latter are to one another.
+
+When we would give a complete explanation of the phenomena exhibited by,
+say, a heated body, we need to inquire as to the antecedents of the
+manifestation, and also its consequents. Where and how did it get its
+heat? Where and how did it lose it? When we know every step of those
+processes, we know all there is to learn about them. Let us undertake
+the same thing for some electrical phenomena.
+
+First, under what circumstances do electrical phenomena arise?
+
+(1) _Mechanical_, as when two different kinds of matter are subject to
+friction.
+
+(2) _Thermal_, as when two substances in molecular contact are heated at
+the junction.
+
+(3) _Magnetic_, as when any conductor is in a changing magnetic field.
+
+(4) _Chemical_, as when a metal is being dissolved in any solution.
+
+(5) _Physiological_, as when a muscle contracts.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 5.--Frictional electrical machine.]
+
+Each of these has several varieties, and changes may be rung on
+combinations of them, as when mechanical and magnetic conditions
+interact.
+
+(1) In the first case, ordinary mechanical or translational energy is
+spent as friction, an amount measurable in foot-pounds, and the factors
+we know, a pressure into a distance. If the surface be of the same kind
+of molecules, the whole energy is spent as heat, and is presently
+radiated away. If the surfaces are of unlike molecules, the product is a
+compound one, part heat, part electrical. What we have turned into the
+machine we know to be a particular mode of motion. We have not changed
+the amount of matter involved; indeed, we assume, without specifying and
+without controversy, that matter is itself indestructible, and the
+product, whether it be of one kind or another, can only be some form of
+motion. Whether we can describe it or not is immaterial; but if we agree
+that heat is vibratory molecular motion, and there be any other kind of
+a product than heat, it too must also be some other form of motion. So
+if one is to form a conception of the mechanical origin of electricity,
+this is the only one he can have--transformed motion.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 6.--Thermo-pile.]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 7.--Dynamo.]
+
+(2) When heat is the antecedent of electricity, as in the thermo-pile,
+that which is turned into the pile we know to be molecular motion of a
+definite kind. That which comes out of it must be some equivalent
+motion, and if all that went in were transformed, then all that came out
+would be transformed, call it by what name we will and let its amount be
+what it may.
+
+(3) When a conductor is moved in a magnetic field, the energy spent is
+measurable in foot-pounds, as before, a pressure into a distance. The
+energy appears in a new form, but the quantity of matter being
+unchanged, the only changeable factor is the kind of motion, and that
+the motion is molecular is evident, for the molecules are heated.
+Mechanical or mass motion is the antecedent, molecular heat motion is
+the consequent, and the way we know there has been some intermediate
+form is, that heat is not conducted at the rate which is observed in
+such a case. Call it by what name one will, some form of motion has been
+intermediate between the antecedent and the consequent, else we have
+some other factor of energy to reckon with than ether, matter and
+motion.
+
+(4) In a galvanic battery, the source of electricity is chemical action;
+but what is chemical action? Simply an exchange of the constituents of
+molecules--a change which involves exchange of energy. Molecules capable
+of doing chemical work are loaded with energy. The chemical products of
+battery action are molecules of different constitution, with smaller
+amounts of energy as measured in calorics or heat units. If the results
+of the chemical reaction be prevented from escaping, by confining them
+to the cell itself, the whole energy appears as heat and raises the
+temperature of the cell. If a so-called circuit be provided, the energy
+is distributed through it, and less heat is spent in the cell, but
+whether it be in one place or another, the mass of matter involved is
+not changed, and the variable factor is the motion, the same as in the
+other cases. The mechanical conceptions appropriate are the
+transformation of one kind of motion into another kind by the mechanical
+conditions provided.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 8.--Galvanic Battery.]
+
+(5) Physiological antecedents of electricity are exemplified by the
+structure and mode of operation of certain muscles (Fig. 9, _a_) in the
+torpedo and other electrical animals. The mechanical contraction of them
+results in an electrical excitation, and, if a proper circuit be
+provided, in an electric current. The energy of a muscle is derived from
+food, which is itself but a molecular compound loaded with energy of a
+kind available for muscular transformation. Bread-and-butter has more
+available energy, pound for pound, than has coal, and can be substituted
+for coal for running an engine. It is not used, because it costs so much
+more. There is nothing different, so far as the factors of energy go,
+between the food of an animal and the food of an engine. What becomes of
+the energy depends upon the kind of structure it acts on. It may be
+changed into translatory, and the whole body moves in one direction; or
+into molecular, and then appears as heat or electrical energy.
+
+If one confines his attention to the only variable factor in the energy
+in all these cases, and traces out in each just what happens, he will
+have only motions of one sort or another, at one rate or another, and
+there is nothing mysterious which enters into the processes.
+
+We will turn now to the mode in which electricity manifests itself, and
+what it can do. It may be well to point out at the outset what has
+occasionally been stated, but which has not received the philosophical
+attention it deserves--namely, that electrical phenomena are reversible;
+that is, any kind of a physical process which is capable of producing
+electricity, electricity is itself able to produce. Thus to name a few:
+If mechanical motion develops electricity, electricity will produce
+mechanical motion; the movement of a pith ball and an electric motor are
+examples. If chemical action can produce it, it will produce chemical
+action, as in the decomposition of water and electro-plating. As heat
+may be its antecedent, so will it produce heat. If magnetism be an
+antecedent factor, magnetism may be its product. What is called
+induction may give rise to it in an adjacent conductor, and, likewise,
+induction may be its effect.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 9.--Torpedo.]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 10.--Dynamo and Motor.]
+
+Let us suppose ourselves to be in a building in which a steam-engine is
+at work. There is fuel, the furnace, the boiler, the pipes, the engine
+with its fly-wheel turning. The fuel burns in the furnace, the water is
+superheated in the boiler, the steam is directed by the pipes, the
+piston is moved by the steam pressure, and the fly-wheel rotates
+because of proper mechanism between it and the piston. No one who has
+given attention to the successive steps in the process is so puzzled as
+to feel the need of inventing a particular force, or a new kind of
+matter, or any agency, at any stage of the process, different from the
+simple mechanical ones represented by a push or a pull. Even if he
+cannot see clearly how heat can produce a push, he does not venture to
+assume a genii to do the work, but for the time is content with saying
+that if he starts with motion in the furnace and stops with the motion
+of the fly-wheel, any assumption of any other factor than some form of
+motion between the two would be gratuitous. He can truthfully say that
+he understands the _nature_ of that which goes on between the furnace
+and the wheel; that it is some sort of motion, the particular kind of
+which he might make out at his leisure.
+
+Suppose once more that, across the road from an engine-house, there was
+another building, where all sorts of machines--lathes, planers, drills,
+etc.--were running, but that the source of the power for all this was
+out of sight, and that one could see no connection between this and the
+engine on the other side of the street. Would one need to suppose there
+was anything mysterious between the two--a force, a fluid, an immaterial
+something? This question is put on the supposition that one should not
+be aware of the shaft that might be between the two buildings, and that
+it was not obvious on simple inspection how the machines got their
+motions from the engine. No one would be puzzled because he did not know
+just what the intervening mechanism might be. If the boiler were in the
+one building, and the engine in the other with the machines, he could
+see nothing moving between them, even if the steam-pipes were of glass.
+If matter of any kind were moving, he could not see it there. He would
+say there _must_ be something moving, or pressure could not be
+transferred from one place to the other.
+
+Substitute for the furnace and boiler a galvanic battery or a dynamo;
+for the machines of the shop, one or more motors with suitable wire
+connections. When the dynamo goes the motors go; when the dynamo stops
+the motors stop; nothing can be seen to be turning or moving in any way
+between them. Is there any necessity for assuming a mysterious agency,
+or a force of a _nature_ different from the visible ones at the two ends
+of the line? Is it not certain that the question is, How does the motion
+get from one to the other, whether there be a wire or not? If there be a
+wire, it is plain that there is motion in it, for it is heated its whole
+length, and heat is known to be a mode of motion, and every molecule
+which is thus heated must have had some antecedent motions. Whether it
+be defined or not, and whether it be called by one name or another, are
+quite immaterial, if one is concerned only with the _nature_ of the
+action, whether it be matter or ether, or motion or abracadabra.
+
+Once more: suppose we have a series of active machines. (Fig. 11.) An
+arc lamp, radiating light-waves, gets its energy from the wire which is
+heated, which in turn gets its energy from the electric current; that
+from a dynamo, the dynamo from a steam-engine; that from a furnace and
+the chemical actions going on in it. Let us call the chemical actions A,
+the furnace B, the engine C, the dynamo D, the electric lamp E, the
+ether waves F. (Fig. 12.)
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 11.]
+
+The product of the chemical action of the coal is molecular motion,
+called heat in the furnace. The product of the heat is mechanical motion
+in the engine. The product of the mechanical motion is electricity in
+the dynamo. The product of the electric current in the lamp is
+light-waves in the ether. No one hesitates for an instant to speak of
+the heat as being molecular motion, nor of the motions of the engine as
+being mechanical; but when we come to the product of the dynamo, which
+we call electricity, behold, nearly every one says, not that he does not
+know what it is, but that no one knows! Does any one venture to say he
+does not know what heat is, because he cannot describe in detail just
+what goes on in a heated body, as it might be described by one who saw
+with a microscope the movements of the molecules? Let us go back for a
+moment to the proposition stated early in this book, namely, that if any
+body of any magnitude moves, it is because some other body in motion and
+in contact with it has imparted its motion by mechanical pressure.
+Therefore, the ether waves at F (Fig. 11) imply continuous motions of
+some sort from A to F. That they are all motions of ordinary matter from
+A to E is obvious, because continuous matter is essential for the
+maintenance of the actions. At E the motions are handed over to the
+ether, and they are radiated away as light-waves.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 12.]
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 13.]
+
+A puzzling electrical phenomenon has been what has been called its
+duality-states, which are spoken of as positive and negative. Thus, we
+speak of the positive plate of a battery and the negative pole of a
+dynamo; and another troublesome condition to idealize has been, how it
+could be that, in an electric circuit, there could be as much energy at
+the most remote part as at the source. But, if one will take a limp
+rope, 8 or 10 feet long, tie its ends together, and then begin to twist
+it at any point, he will see the twist move in a right-handed spiral on
+the one hand, and in a left-handed spiral on the other, and each may be
+traced quite round the circuit; so there will be as much twist, as much
+motion, and as much energy in one part of the rope as in any other; and
+if one chooses to call the right-handed twist positive, and the
+left-handed twist negative, he will have the mechanical phenomenon of
+energy-distribution and the terminology, analogous to what they are in
+an electric conductor. (Fig. 13.) Are the cases more dissimilar than the
+mechanical analogy would make them seem to be?
+
+Are there any phenomena which imply that rotation is going on in an
+electric conductor? There are. An electric arc, which is a current in
+the air, and is, therefore, less constrained than it is in a conductor,
+rotates. Especially marked is this when in front of the pole of a
+magnet; but the rotation may be noticed in an ordinary arc by looking at
+it with a stroboscope disk, rotated so as to make the light to the eye
+intermittent at the rate of four or five hundred per second. A ray of
+plane polarized light, parallel with a wire conveying a current, has its
+plane of vibration twisted to the right or left, as the current goes
+one way or the other through the wire, and to a degree that depends upon
+the distance it travels; not only so, but if the ray be sent, by
+reflection, back through the same field, it is twisted as much more--a
+phenomenon which convinces one that rotation is going on in the space
+through which the ray travels. If the ether through which the ray be
+sent were simply warped or in some static stress, the ray, after
+reflection, would be brought back to its original plane, which is not
+the case. This rotation in the ether is produced by what is going on in
+the wire. The ether waves called light are interpreted to imply that
+molecules originate them by their vibrations, and that there are as many
+ether waves per second as of molecular vibrations per second. In like
+manner, the implication is the same, that if there be rotations in the
+ether they must be produced by molecular rotation, and there must be as
+many rotations per second in the ether as there are molecular rotations
+that produce them. The space about a wire carrying a current is often
+pictured as filled with whorls indicating this motion (Fig. 14), and one
+must picture to himself, not the wire as a whole rotating, but each
+individual molecule independently. But one is aware that the molecules
+of a conductor are practically in contact with each other, and that if
+one for any reason rotates, the next one to it would, from frictional
+action, cause the one it touched to rotate in the opposite direction,
+whereas, the evidence goes to show that all rotation is in the same
+direction.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 14.]
+
+How can this be explained mechanically? Recall the kind of action that
+constitutes heat, that it is not translatory action in any degree, but
+vibratory, in the sense of a change of form of an elastic body, and
+this, too, of the atoms that make up the molecule of whatever sort. Each
+atom is so far independent of every other atom in the molecule that it
+can vibrate in this way, else it could not be heated. The greater the
+amplitude of vibration, the more free space to move in, and continuous
+contact of atoms is incompatible with the mechanics of heat. There must,
+therefore, be impact and freedom alternating with each other in all
+degrees in a heated body. If, in any way, the atoms themselves _were_
+made to rotate, their heat impacts not only would restrain the
+rotations, but the energy also of the rotation motion would increase the
+vibrations; that is, the heat would be correspondingly increased, which
+is what happens always when an electric current is in a conductor. It
+appears that the cooler a body is the less electric resistance it has,
+and the indications are that at absolute zero there is no resistance;
+that is, impacts do not retard rotation, but it is also apparent that
+any current sent through a conductor at that temperature would at once
+heat it. This is the same as saying that an electric current could not
+be sent through a conductor at absolute zero.
+
+So far, mechanical conceptions are in accordance with electrical
+phenomena, but there are several others yet to be noted. Electrical
+phenomena has been explained as molecular or atomic phenomena, and there
+is one more in that category which is well enough known, and which is so
+important and suggestive, that the wonder is its significance has not
+been seen by those who have sought to interpret electrical phenomena.
+The reference is to the fact that electricity cannot be transmitted
+through a vacuum. An electric arc begins to spread out as the density of
+the air decreases, and presently it is extinguished. An induction spark
+that will jump two or three feet in air cannot be made to bridge the
+tenth of an inch in an ordinary vacuum. A vacuum is a perfect
+non-conductor of electricity. Is there more than one possible
+interpretation to this, namely, that electricity is fundamentally a
+molecular and atomic phenomenon, and in the absence of molecules cannot
+exist? One may say, "Electrical _action_ is not hindered by a vacuum,"
+which is true, but has quite another interpretation than the implication
+that electricity is an ether phenomenon. The heat of the sun in some way
+gets to the earth, but what takes place in the ether is not
+heat-transmission. There is no heat in space, and no one is at liberty
+to say, or think, that there can be heat in the absence of matter.
+
+When heat has been transformed into ether waves, it is no longer heat,
+call it by what name one will. Formerly, such waves were called
+heat-waves; no one, properly informed, does so now. In like manner, if
+electrical motions or conditions in matter be transformed, no matter
+how, it is no longer proper to speak of such transformed motions or
+conditions as electricity. Thus, if electrical energy be transformed
+into heat, no one thinks of speaking of the latter as electrical. If the
+electrical energy be transformed into mechanical of any sort, no one
+thinks of calling the latter electrical because of its antecedent. If
+electrical motions be transformed into ether actions of any kind, why
+should we continue to speak of the transformed motions or energy as
+being electrical? Electricity may be the antecedent, in the same sense
+as the mechanical motion of a bullet may be the antecedent of the heat
+developed when the latter strikes the target; and if it be granted that
+a vacuum is a perfect non-conductor of electricity, then it is
+manifestly improper to speak of any phenomenon in the ether as an
+electrical phenomenon. It is from the failure to make this distinction
+that most of the trouble has come in thinking on this subject. Some have
+given all their attention to what goes on in matter, and have called
+that electricity; others have given their attention to what goes on in
+the ether, and have called that electricity, and some have considered
+both as being the same thing, and have been confounded.
+
+Let us consider what is the relation between an electrified body and the
+ether about it.
+
+When a body is electrified, the latter at the same time creates an ether
+stress about it, which is called an electric field. The ether stress may
+be considered as a warp in the distribution of the energy about the body
+(Fig. 15), by the new positions given to the molecules by the process of
+electrification. It has been already said that the evidence from other
+sources is that atoms, rather than molecules, in larger masses, are what
+affect the ether. One is inclined to inquire for the evidence we have as
+to the constitution of matter or of atoms. There is only one hypothesis
+to-day that has any degree of probability; that is, the vortex-ring
+theory, which describes an atom as being a vortex-ring of ether in the
+ether. It possesses a definite amount of energy in virtue of the motion
+which constitutes it, and this motion differentiates it from the
+surrounding ether, giving it dimensions, elasticity, momentum, and the
+possibility of translatory, rotary, vibratory motions, and combinations
+of them. Without going further into this, it is sufficient, for a
+mechanical conception, that one should have so much in mind, as it will
+vastly help in forming a mechanical conception of reactions between
+atoms and the ether. An exchange of energy between such an atom and the
+ether is not an exchange between different kinds of things, but between
+different conditions of the same thing. Next, it should be remembered
+that all the elements are magnetic in some degree. This means that they
+are themselves magnets, and every magnet has a magnetic field unlimited
+in extent, which can almost be regarded as a part of itself. If a magnet
+of any size be moved, its field is moved with it, and if in any way the
+magnetism be increased or diminished, the field changes correspondingly.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 15.]
+
+Assume a straight bar electro-magnet in circuit, so that a current can
+be made intermittent, say, once a second. When the circuit is closed and
+the magnet is made, the field at once is formed and travels outwards at
+the rate of 186,000 miles per second. When the current stops, the field
+adjacent is destroyed. Another closure develops the field again, which,
+like the other, travels outwards; and so there may be formed a series of
+waves in the ether, each 186,000 miles long, with an electro-magnetic
+antecedent. If the circuit were closed ten times a second, the waves
+would be 18,600 miles long; if 186,000 times a second, they would be but
+one mile long. If 400 million of millions times a second, they would be
+but the forty-thousandth of an inch long, and would then affect the eye,
+and we should call them light-waves, but the latter would not differ
+from the first wave in any particular except in length. As it is proved
+that such electro-magnetic waves have all the characteristics of light,
+it follows that they must originate with electro-magnetic action, that
+is, in the changing magnetism of a magnetic body. This makes it needful
+to assume that the atoms which originate waves are magnets, as they are
+experimentally found to be. But how can a magnet, not subject to a
+varying current, change its magnetic field? The strength or density of a
+magnetic field depends upon the form of the magnet. When the poles are
+near together, the field is densest; when the magnet is bent back to a
+straight bar, the field is rarest or weakest, and a change in the form
+of the magnet from a U-form to a straight bar would result in a change
+of the magnetic field within its greatest limits. A few turns of
+wire--as has been already said--wound about the poles of an ordinary
+U-magnet, and connected to an ordinary magnetic telephone, will enable
+one, listening to the latter, to hear the pitch of the former loudly
+reproduced when the magnet is struck like a tuning-fork, so as to
+vibrate. This shows that the field of the magnet changes at the same
+rate as the vibrations.
+
+Assume that the magnet becomes smaller and smaller until it is of the
+dimensions of an atom, say for an approximation, the fifty-millionth of
+an inch. It would still have its field; it would still be elastic and
+capable of vibration, but at an enormously rapid rate; but its vibration
+would change its field in the same way, and so there would be formed
+those waves in the ether, which, because they are so short that they can
+affect the eye, we call light. The mechanical conceptions are
+legitimate, because based upon experiments having ranges through nearly
+the whole gamut as waves in ether.
+
+The idea implies that every atom has what may be loosely called an
+electro-magnetic grip upon the whole of the ether, and any change in the
+former brings some change in the latter.
+
+Lastly, the phenomenon called induction may be mechanically conceived.
+
+It is well known that a current in a conductor makes a magnet of the
+wire, and gives it an electro-magnetic field, so that other magnets in
+its neighbourhood are twisted in a way tending to set them at right
+angles to the wire. Also, if another wire be adjacent to the first, an
+electric current having an opposite direction is induced in it. Thus:
+
+Consider a permanent magnet A (Fig. 15), free to turn on an axis in the
+direction of the arrow. If there be other free magnets, B and C, in
+line, they will assume such positions that their similar poles all point
+one way. Let A be twisted to a position at right angles, then B will
+turn, but in the opposite direction, and C in similar. That is, if A
+turn in the direction of the hands of a clock, B and C will turn in
+opposite directions. These are simply the observed movements of large
+magnets. Imagine that these magnets be reduced to atomic dimensions, yet
+retaining their magnetic qualities, poles and fields. Would they not
+evidently move in the same way and for the same reason? If it be true,
+that a magnet field always so acts upon another as to tend by rotation
+to set the latter into a certain position, with reference to the stress
+in that field, then, _wherever there is a changing magnetic field, there
+the atoms are being adjusted by it_.
+
+[Illustration: FIG. 16.]
+
+Suppose we have a line of magnetic needles free to turn, hundreds or
+thousands of them, but disarranged. Let a strong magnetic field be
+produced at one end of the line. The field would be strongest and best
+conducted along the magnet line, but every magnet in the line would be
+compelled to rotate, and if the first were kept rotating, the rotation
+would be kept up along the whole line. This would be a mechanical
+illustration of how an electric current travels in a conductor. The
+rotations are of the atomic sort, and are at right angles to the
+direction of the conductor.
+
+That which makes the magnets move is inductive magnetic ether stress,
+but the advancing motion represents mechanical energy of rotation, and
+it is this motion, with the resulting friction, which causes the heat in
+a conductor.
+
+What is important to note is, that the action in the ether is not
+electric action, but more properly the result of electro-magnetic
+action. Whatever name be given to it, and however it comes about, there
+is no good reason for calling any kind of ether action electrical.
+
+Electric action, like magnetic action, begins and ends in matter. It is
+subject to transformations into thermal and mechanical actions, also
+into ether stress--right-handed or left-handed--which, in turn, can
+similarly affect other matter, but with opposite polarities.
+
+In his _Modern Views of Electricity_, Prof. O. J. Lodge warns us, quite
+rightly, that perhaps, after all, there is no such _thing_ as
+electricity--that electrification and electric energy may be terms to be
+kept for convenience; but if electricity as a term be held to imply a
+force, a fluid, an imponderable, or a thing which could be described by
+some one who knew enough, then it has no degree of probability, for
+spinning atomic magnets seem capable of developing all the electrical
+phenomena we meet. It must be thought of as a _condition_ and not as an
+entity.
+
+
+THE END
+
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+Transcriber's Note
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