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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65699 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65699)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Life and death, by Albert Dastre
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Life and death
-
-Author: Albert Dastre
-
-Translator: William John Greenstreet
-
-Release Date: June 25, 2021 [eBook #65699]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Turgut Dincer, Les Galloway and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE AND DEATH ***
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
-in hyphenation and accents have been standardised but all other
-spelling and punctuation remains unchanged.
-
-In the section on The Instinct of Life, fifth paragraph “and Flourens
-has reduced the ratio to that of 5:1, which would still give us 120
-years.” the 120 has been corrected to 100.
-
-In Book V, Chapter III, Chemical Changes, “and at the same time would
-transform an amido-group into an amido-group.” is as printed.
-
-Italics are represented thus _italic_, superscripts thus y^ and
-subscripts thus y⌄.
-
-
-
-
- LIFE AND DEATH.
-
-
-
-
- LIFE AND DEATH
-
- BY
-
- A. DASTRE,
- PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGY AT THE SORBONNE.
-
- TRANSLATED BY
- W. J. GREENSTREET, M.A., F.R.A.S.
-
- THE WALTER SCOTT PUBLISHING CO., LTD.,
- PATERNOSTER SQUARE, LONDON, E.C.
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS,
- 153-157 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.
- 1911
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE.
-
-
-The educated and inquiring public of the present day addresses to the
-experts who have specialized in every imaginable subject the question
-that was asked in olden times of Euclid by King Ptolemy Philadelphus,
-Protector of Letters. Recoiling in dismay from the difficulties
-presented by the study of mathematics and annoyed at his slow progress,
-he inquired of the celebrated geometer if there was not some royal
-road, could he not learn geometry more easily than by studying the
-Elements. The learned Greek replied, “There is no royal road.” These
-royal roads making every branch of science accessible to the cultivated
-mind did not exist in the days of Ptolemy and Euclid. But they do exist
-to-day. These roads form what we call Scientific Philosophy.
-
-Scientific philosophy opens a path through the hitherto inextricable
-medley of natural phenomena. It throws light on facts, it lays bare
-principles, it replaces contingent details by essential facts. And
-thus it makes science accessible and communicable. Intellectually it
-performs a very lofty function.
-
-There is virtually a philosophy of every science. There is therefore
-a philosophy of the science which deals with the phenomena of life
-and death—_i.e._, of physiology. I have endeavoured to give a summary
-of this philosophy in this volume. I have had in view two classes of
-readers. In the first place there are readers of general culture who
-are desirous of knowing something of the trend of ideas in biology.
-They already form quite a large section of the great public.
-
-These scholars and inquirers, with Bacon, believe that the only science
-is general science. What they want to know is not what instruments we
-use, our processes, our technique, and the thousand and one details of
-the experiments on which we spend our lives in the laboratory. What
-they are interested in are the general truths we have acquired, the
-problems we are trying to solve, the principles of our methods, the
-progress of our science in the past, its state in the present, its
-probable course in the future.
-
-But I venture to think that this book is also addressed to another
-class of readers, to those whose professional study is physiology.
-To them it is dedicated. They have been initiated into the mysteries
-of the science. They are learning it by practice. That is the right
-method. Practice makes perfect. Claude Bernard used to say that in
-order to be an expert in experimental science you must first be “a
-laboratory rat.” And among us there are many such “laboratory rats.”
-They are guided in the daily task of investigation by a dim instinct
-of the path and of the direction of contemporary physiology. Perhaps
-it may be of assistance to them to find their more or less unconscious
-ideas here expressed in an explicit form.
-
- A. DASTRE.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- BOOK I.
-
- THE FRONTIERS OF SCIENCE. GENERAL THEORIES OF
- LIFE AND DEATH. THEIR SUCCESSIVE TRANSFORMATIONS.
-
- CHAP. PAGE
-
- I. EARLY THEORIES 1
-
- II. ANIMISM 5
-
- III. VITALISM 15
-
- IV. THE MONISTIC THEORY 34
-
- V. THE EMANCIPATION OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH FROM
- THE YOKE OF PHILOSOPHICAL DOCTRINE 42
-
-
- BOOK II.
-
- THE DOCTRINE OF ENERGY AND THE LIVING WORLD.
- GENERAL IDEAS OF LIFE. ALIMENTARY LIFE.
-
- I. ENERGY IN GENERAL 57
-
- II. ENERGY IN BIOLOGY 97
-
- III. ALIMENTARY ENERGETICS 116
-
-
- BOOK III.
-
- THE CHARACTERS COMMON TO LIVING BEINGS.
-
- I. DOCTRINE OF VITAL UNITY 146
-
- II. MORPHOLOGICAL UNITY OF LIVING BEINGS 157
-
- III. CHEMICAL UNITY OF LIVING BEINGS 173
-
- IV. TWOFOLD CONDITIONS OF VITAL PHENOMENA.
- IRRITABILITY 188
-
- V. THE SPECIFIC FORM: ITS ACQUISITION, ITS REPARATION 199
-
- VI. NUTRITION. FUNCTIONAL ASSIMILATION. FUNCTIONAL
- DISTRIBUTION. ASSIMILATING SYNTHESIS 209
-
-
- BOOK IV.
-
- THE LIFE OF MATTER.
-
- I. UNIVERSAL LIFE (OPINIONS OF THE PHILOSOPHERS
- AND POETS). CONTINUITY BETWEEN BRUTE BODIES
- AND LIVING BODIES. ORIGIN OF THE PRINCIPLE OF
- CONTINUITY 239
-
- II. ORIGIN OF LIVING MATTER IN BRUTE MATTER 249
-
- III. ORGANIZATION AND CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF LIVING
- MATTER AND BRUTE MATTER 255
-
- IV. EVOLUTION AND MUTABILITY OF LIVING MATTER AND
- BRUTE MATTER 259
-
- V. THE COMPOSITION OF THE SPECIFIC FORM. LIVING
- BODIES AND CRYSTALS. CICATRIZATION 281
-
- VI. NUTRITION IN THE LIVING BEING AND IN THE
- CRYSTAL 290
-
- VII. GENERATION IN BRUTE BODIES AND LIVING BODIES.
- SPONTANEOUS GENERATION 294
-
-
- BOOK V.
-
- SENESCENCE AND DEATH.
-
- I. THE DIFFERENT POINTS OF VIEW FROM WHICH DEATH
- MAY BE REGARDED 307
-
- II. CONSTITUTION OF THE ORGANISMS. PARTIAL DEATH.
- COLLECTIVE DEATHS 312
-
- III. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF
- CELLULAR DEATHS. NECROBIOSIS 321
-
- IV. APPARENT PERRENNITY OF COMPLEX INDIVIDUALS 330
-
- V. IMMORTALITY OF THE PROTOZOA AND OF SLIGHTLY
- DIFFERENTIATED CELLS 334
-
- VI. LETHALITY OF THE METAZOA AND OF DIFFERENTIATED
- CELLS 340
-
- VII. MAN. THE INSTINCT OF LIFE AND THE INSTINCT OF
- DEATH 345
-
- INDEX 361
-
-
-
-
- LIFE AND DEATH.
-
- BOOK I.
-
- THE FRONTIERS OF SCIENCE—GENERAL THEORIES OF LIFE AND DEATH—THEIR
- SUCCESSIVE TRANSFORMATIONS.
-
- Chapter I. Early Theories.—II. Animism.—III. Vitalism.—IV. Monism.—V.
- Emancipation of Scientific Research from the Yoke of Philosophy.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- EARLY THEORIES.
-
- Animism—Vitalism—The Physico-Chemical Theory—Their Survival and
- Transformations.
-
-
-The fundamental theories of science are but the expression of its
-most general results. What, then, is the most general result of the
-development of physiology or biology—that is to say, of that department
-of science which has life as its object? What glimpse do we get of the
-fruit of all our efforts? The answer is evidently the response to that
-essential question—What is Life?
-
-There are beings which we call living beings; there are bodies which
-have never been alive—inanimate bodies; and there are bodies which are
-no longer alive—dead bodies. The fact that we use these terms implies
-the idea of a common attribute, of a _quid proprium_, life, which
-exists in the first, has never existed in the second, and has ceased
-to exist in the last. Is this idea correct? Suppose for a moment that
-this is so, that this implicit supposition has a foundation, and that
-there really is something which corresponds to the word “_life_.” Must
-we then wait for the last days of physiology, and in a measure for its
-last word before we know what is hidden behind this word, “life”?
-
-Yes, no doubt positive science should be precluded from dealing with
-questions of this kind, which are far too general. It should be limited
-to the study of second causes. But, as a matter of fact, scientific men
-in no age have entirely conformed to this provisional or definitive
-antagonism. As the human mind cannot rest satisfied with indefinite
-attempts, or with ignorance pure and simple, it has always asked, and
-even now asks, from the spirit of system the solution which science
-refuses. It appeals to philosophical speculation. Now, philosophy, in
-order to explain life and death, offers us hypotheses. It offers us
-the hypotheses of thirty, of a hundred, or two thousand years ago.
-It offers us animism; vitalism in its two forms, unitary vitalism
-or the doctrine of vital force, and dismembered vitalism or the
-doctrine of vital properties; and finally, materialism, a mechanical
-theory, unicism or monism,—to give it all its names—_i.e._, the
-physico-chemical doctrine of life. There are, therefore, at the present
-day, in biology, representatives of these three systems which have
-never agreed on the explanation of vital phenomena—namely, animists,
-vitalists, and monists. But it is pretty clear that there must have
-been some change between yesterday and to-day. Not in vain has general
-science and biology itself made the progress which we know has been
-made since the Renaissance, and especially during the course of the
-nineteenth century. The old theories have been compelled to take new
-shape, such parts as have become obsolete have been cut away, another
-language is spoken—in a word, the theories have become rejuvenated. The
-neo-animists of our day, Chauffard in 1878, von Bunge in 1889, and more
-recently Rindfleisch, do not hold exactly the same views as Aristotle,
-St. Thomas Aquinas, or Stahl. Contemporary neo-vitalists, physiologists
-like Heidenhain, chemists like Armand Gautier, or botanists like Reinke
-do not between 1880 and 1900 hold the same views as Paracelsus in
-the fifteenth century and Van Helmont in the seventeenth, as Barthez
-and Bordeu at the end of the eighteenth, or as Cuvier and Bichat at
-the beginning of the nineteenth century. Finally, the mechanicians
-themselves, whether they be disciples of Darwin and Haeckel, as
-most biologists of our own time, or disciples of Lavoisier, as most
-physiologists of the present day, have passed far beyond the ideas of
-Descartes. They would reject the coarse materialism of the celebrated
-philosopher. They would no longer consider the living organism as a
-machine, composed of nothing but wheels, springs, levers, presses,
-sieves, pipes, and valves; or again of matrasses, retorts, or alembics,
-as the iatro-mechanicians and would-be chemists of other days believed.
-
-All that is changed, at any rate in form. If we look back only thirty
-or forty years we see that the old doctrines have undergone more or
-less profound modifications. The changes of form, which have been
-made necessary by the acquisitions of contemporary science, enable us
-to appreciate its progress. They enable us to give an account of the
-progress of biology, and for this reason they deserve to be examined
-with some attention. It is into this examination that I ask my readers
-to accompany me.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- ANIMISM.
-
- The Common Characteristic of Animism and Vitalism: the Human
- Statue—Primitive Animism—Stahl’s Animism—First Objection with
- Reference to the Relation between Soul and Body—Second Objection: the
- Unconscious Character of Vital Operations—Twofold Modality of the
- Soul—Continuity of the Soul and Life.
-
-
-Children are taught that there are three kingdoms in Nature—the mineral
-kingdom and the two living kingdoms, animal and vegetable. This is the
-whole of the sensible world. Then above all that is placed the world of
-the soul. School-boys therefore have no doubts on the doctrines that we
-discuss here. They have the solution. To them there are three distinct
-spheres, three separate worlds—matter, life, and thought.
-
-It is this preconceived idea that we are about to examine. Current
-opinion solves _a priori_ the question of the fundamental homogeneity
-or lack of resemblance of these three orders of phenomena—the phenomena
-of inanimate nature, of living nature, and of the thinking soul.
-_Animism_, _vitalism_, and _monism_ are, in reality, different ways of
-looking at them. They are the different answers to this question:—Are
-vital, psychic, and physico-chemical manifestations essentially
-distinct? Vitalists distinguish between life and thought, animists
-identify them. In the opposite camp mechanicians, materialists, or
-monists make the same mistake as the animists, but to that mistake they
-add another: they assimilate the forces at play in animals and plants
-to the general forces of the universe; they confuse all three—soul,
-life, inanimate nature.
-
-These problems belong on many sides to metaphysical speculation. They
-have been discussed by philosophers; they have been solved from time
-immemorial in different ways, for reasons and by arguments which it is
-not our purpose to examine here, and which, moreover, have not changed.
-But on some sides they belong to science, and must be tested in the
-light of its progress. Cuvier and Bichat, for example, considered that
-the forces in action in living beings were not only different from
-physico-mechanical forces, but were utterly opposed to them. We now
-know that this antagonism does not exist.
-
-The preceding doctrines, therefore, depend up to a certain point on
-experiment and observation. They are subject to the test of experiment
-and observation in proportion as the latter can give us information
-on the degree of difference or analogy presented by psychic, vital,
-and physico-chemical facts. Now, scientific investigations have thrown
-light on these points. There is no doubt that the analogies and the
-resemblances of these three orders of manifestations have appeared more
-and more numerous and striking as our knowledge has advanced. Hence it
-is that animism can count to-day but very few advocates in biological
-science. Vitalism in its different forms counts more supporters, but
-the great majority have adopted the physico-chemical theory.
-
-Both animism and vitalism separate from matter a directing principle
-which guides it. At bottom they are mythological theories somewhat
-similar to the paganism of old. The fable of Prometheus or the story
-of Pygmalion contains all that is essential. An immaterial principle,
-divine, stolen by the Titan from Jupiter, or obtained from Venus by
-the Cypriot sculptor, descends from Olympus and animates the form,
-till then inert, which has been carved in the marble or modelled in
-the clay. In a word, there is a human statue. It receives a breath of
-heavenly fire, a vital force, a divine spark, a soul, and behold! it is
-alive. But this breath can also leave it. An accident happens, a clot
-in a vein, a grain of lead in the brain—the life escapes, and all that
-is left is a corpse. A single instant has proved sufficient to destroy
-its fascination. This is how all men picture to their minds the scene
-of death. The breath escapes; something flies away, or flows away with
-the blood. The happy genius of the Greeks conceived a graceful image
-of this, for they represented the life or the soul in the form of a
-butterfly (Psyche) leaving the body, an ethereal butterfly, as it were,
-opening its sapphire wings.
-
-But what is this subtle and transient guest of the human statue, this
-passing stranger which makes of the living body an inhabited house?
-According to the animists it is the soul itself, in the sense in which
-the word is understood by philosophers; the immortal and reasoning
-soul. To the vitalists it is an inferior, subordinate soul; a soul, as
-it were, of secondary majesty, the vital force, or in a word, life.
-
-_Primitive Animism._—Animism is the oldest and most primitive of the
-conceptions presented to the human mind. But in so far as it is a
-co-ordinated doctrine, it is the most recent. In fact it only received
-its definitive expression in the eighteenth century, from Stahl, the
-philosopher-physician and chemist.
-
-According to Tylor, one of the first speculations of primitive man, of
-the savage, is as to the difference between the living body and the
-corpse. The former is an inhabited house, the latter is empty. To such
-rudimentary intellects the mysterious inhabitant is a kind of _double_
-or duplicate of the human form. It is only revealed by the shadow
-which follows the body when illuminated by the sun, by the image of
-its reflection in the water, by the echo which repeats the voice. It
-is only seen in a dream, and the figures which people and animate our
-dreams are nothing but these doubled, impalpable beings. Some savages
-believe that at the moment of death the double, or the soul, takes up
-its residence in another body. Sometimes each individual possesses, not
-one of these souls, but several. According to Maspero, the Egyptians
-counted at least five, of which the principle, the _ka_ or _double_,
-would be the aeriform or vaporous image of the living form. Space is
-peopled by souls on their travels, which leave one set of bodies to
-occupy another set. After having been the cause of life in the bodies
-which they animated, they react from without on other beings, and are
-the cause of all sorts of unexpected events. They are benevolent or
-malevolent spirits.
-
-Analogy inevitably leads simple minds to extend the same ideas to
-animals and plants; in a word, to attribute souls to everything alive,
-souls more or less nomadic, wandering, or interchangeable, as is
-taught in the doctrine of metempsychosis. Mons. L. Errera points out
-that this primitive, co-ordinated, hierarchized doctrine—meet subject
-for the poet’s art—is the basis of all ancient mythologies.
-
-_The Animism of Stahl._—Modern animism was much more narrow in scope.
-It was a medical theory—_i.e._ almost exclusive to man. Stahl had
-adopted it in a kind of reaction against the exaggerations of the
-mechanical school of his time. According to him, the life of the body
-is due to the intelligent and reasoning soul. It governs the corporeal
-substance and directs it towards an assigned end. The organs are its
-instruments. It acts on them directly, without intermediaries. It
-makes the heart beat, the muscles contract, the glands secrete, and
-all the organs perform their functions. Nay more, it is itself the
-architectonic soul, which has constructed and which maintains the body
-which it rules. It is the _mens agitat molem_ of Virgil.
-
-It is remarkable that these ideas, so excessively and exaggeratedly
-spiritualistic, should have been brought forward by a chemist and a
-physician, while ideas completely opposed to these were admitted by
-philosophers like Descartes and Leibniz, who were decided believers
-in the spirituality of the soul. Stahl had been Professor of Medicine
-at the University of Halle, physician to the Duke of Saxe-Weimar,
-and later to the King of Prussia. He left an important medical and
-chemical work, both theoretical and practical. He is the author of the
-celebrated theory of phlogiston, which held its ground in chemistry up
-to the time of Lavoisier. He died about 1734.
-
-Animism survived him for some time, maintained by the zeal of a few
-faithful disciples. But after the witty mockery of Bordeu,[1] in 1742,
-it began to decay. We must, however, point out that an attempt to
-revive this theory was made in 1878 by a well-known doctor of the last
-generation, E. Chauffard. While preserving the essential features of
-the theory, this learned physician proposed to bring it into harmony
-with modern science, and to free it from all the reproaches which had
-been levelled at it.
-
- [1] In a thesis presented in 1742 at Montpellier, Bordeu, then only
- twenty years of age, made game of the tasks imposed by animists on
- the Soul, “which has to moisten the lips when required;” or, “whose
- anger produces the symptoms of certain diseases;” or again, “which
- is prevented by the consequences of original sin from guiding and
- directing the body.”
-
-_The Animism of E. Chauffard._—These reproaches were numerous. The
-most serious is of a philosophic nature. It rises from the difficulty
-of conceiving a direct and immediate action of the soul, considered as
-a spiritual principle, upon the matter of the body. There is such an
-abyss—hewn by the philosophic mind itself—between soul and body, that
-it is impossible to imagine any relation between them. We can only get
-a glimpse of how the soul might become an instrument of action.
-
-This was the problem which sorely tried the genius of Leibniz.
-Descartes, in earlier days, attacked it vigorously, like an Alexander
-cutting the Gordian knot. He separated the soul from the body, and
-made of the latter a pure machine in the government of which the soul
-had no part. He attributed all the known manifestations of vital
-activity to inanimate forces. Leibniz, also, was compelled to reject
-all action, all contact, all direct relation, every real bond between
-soul and body, and to imagine between them a purely metaphysical
-relation—pre-established harmony:—“Soul and body agree in virtue of
-this harmony, the harmony pre-established since the creation, and
-in no way by a mutual, actual, physical influence. Everything that
-takes place in the soul takes place as if there were no body, and so
-everything takes place in the body as if there were no soul.” At this
-point we almost reach a scientific materialism. It is easy for the
-materialist to break this frail tie of pre-established harmony which so
-loosely unites body and soul, and to exhibit the organism as under the
-sole control of universal mechanics and physics.
-
-Thus the weak point of Stahl’s animism was the supposition of a
-direct action exercised on the organism by a distinct, heterogeneous,
-spiritual principle.
-
-Chauffard has endeavoured to avoid this pitfall. In conformity with
-modern ideas, he has brought together what the ancient philosophers
-and Stahl himself separated—the activity of matter and the activity of
-the soul. “Thought, action, function, are embraced in an indissoluble
-union.” This is the classical but not very lucid theory which has been
-so often reproduced—_Homo factus est anima vivens_—which Bossuet has
-expressed in the celebrated formula: “Soul and body form a natural
-whole.”
-
-A second objection raised against animism is that the soul acts
-consciously, with reflection, and with volition, and that its essential
-attributes are not found in most physiological phenomena, which, on the
-contrary are automatic, involuntary, and unconscious. The contradictory
-nature of these characteristics has obliged vitalists to conceive of
-a vital principle distinct from thought. Chauffard, agreeing here
-with Boullieu, Tissot, and Stahl himself, does not accept this
-distinction; he refuses to shatter the unity of the vivifying and
-thinking principle. He prefers to attribute to the soul two modes of
-action: the one which is exercised on the acts of thought, and hence
-it proceeds consciously, with reflection, and with volition; the other
-exercising control over the physiological phenomena which it governs,
-“by unconscious impressions, and by instinctive determinations, obeying
-primordial laws.” This soul is hardly in keeping with his definition of
-a conscious, reflecting, and voluntary principle; it is a new soul, a
-somatic soul, singularly akin to that _rachidian soul_ which, according
-to Pflüger, a well-known German physiologist, resides in each segment
-of the spinal marrow, and is responsible for reflex movements.
-
-_Twofold Modality of the Soul._—This twofold modality of the soul, this
-duality admitted by Stahl and his disciples, was repugnant to many
-thinkers, and it is this repugnance that gave rise to the vitalistic
-school. It appeared to them to be a heresy tainted by materialism—and
-so it was. In this lay the strength and the weakness of animism. It
-admits of a unique animating principle for all the manifestations of
-the living being, for the higher facts in the realm of thought, and for
-the lower facts connected with the body. It throws down the barriers
-which separate them. It fills up the gap between the different forms of
-human activity, and assimilates them the one to the other.
-
-Now this is precisely what materialism does. It, too, reduces to
-a single order the psychical and physiological phenomena, between
-which it no longer recognizes anything but a difference of degree,
-thought being only a maximum of the vital movement, or life a minimum
-of thought. In truth, the aims of the two schools are diametrically
-opposed; the one claims to raise corporeal activity to the dignity
-of thinking activity, and to spiritualize the vital fact; the other
-lowers the former to the level of the latter and materializes the
-psychic fact. But, though the intentions are different, the result is
-identical. Spiritualistic monism inclines towards materialistic monism.
-One step more, and the soul, confused with life, will be confused with
-physical forces.
-
-On the other hand, twofold modality has this advantage, that it
-escapes the objection drawn from the existence of so many living
-beings to which a thinking soul cannot be attributed; an anencephalous
-fœtus, the young of the higher animals, the lower animals and plants,
-living without thought, or with a minimum of real, conscious thought.
-The advocate of animism replies that this physiological activity
-is still a soul, but one which is barely aware of its existence—a
-gleam of consciousness. In this theory, the knowledge of self, the
-consciousness, is of all degrees. On the other hand, in the eyes of the
-vitalist, it is an absolute fact which allows of no attenuation, of no
-middle course between the being and the non-being.
-
-It is this conception of the continuity of the soul and life, it is
-the affirmation of a possible lowering of the complete consciousness
-down to a mere gleam of knowledge, and finally down to unconscious
-vital activity, which saved animism from complete shipwreck. That is
-why this ancient doctrine finds, even in the present day, a few rare
-supporters. An able German scientist, G. von Bunge, well known for
-his researches in physiological chemistry, professes animistic views
-in a work which appeared in 1889. He attributes to organized beings a
-guiding principle, a kind of vital soul. A distinguished naturalist,
-Rindfleisch, of Lübeck, has likewise taken his place among the
-advocates of what we may call neo-animism.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- VITALISM.
-
- Its Extreme Forms—Early Vitalism, and Modern Neo-vitalism—Advantage
- of distinguishing between Soul and Life—§ 1. _The Vitalism of
- Barthez_—Its Extension—The Seat of the Vital Principle—The Vital
- Knot—The Vital Tripod—Decentralisation of the Vital Principle—§ 2.
- _The Doctrine of Vital Properties_—Galen, Van Helmont, Xavier Bichat,
- and Cuvier—Vital and Physical Properties antagonistic—§ 3. _Scientific
- Neo-vitalism_—Heidenhain—§ 4. _Philosophical Neo-vitalism_—Reinke.
-
-
-_Extreme Forms: Early Vitalism and Modern Neo-vitalism._—Contemporary
-neo-vitalism has weakened primitive vitalism in some important points.
-The latter made of the vital fact something quite specific, irreducible
-either to the phenomena of general physics or to those of thought.
-It absolutely isolated life, separating it above from the soul, and
-below from inanimate matter. This sequestration is nowadays much less
-rigorous. On the psychical side the barrier remains, but it is lowered
-on the material side. The neo-vitalists of to-day recognize that the
-laws of physics and chemistry are observed within, as well as without,
-the living body; the same natural forces intervene in both, only they
-are “otherwise directed.”
-
-The vital principle of early times was a kind of anthromorphic, pagan
-divinity. To Aristotle, this force, the _anima_, _the Psyche_, worked,
-so to speak, with human hands. According to the well-known expression,
-its situation in the human body corresponds to that of a pilot on a
-vessel, or to that of a sculptor or his assistant before the marble or
-clay. And, in fact, we have no other clear image of a cause external
-to the object. We have no other representation of a force external to
-matter than that which is offered by the craftsman making an object, or
-in general by the human being with his activity, free, or supposed to
-be free, and directed towards an end to be realized.
-
-Personifications of this kind, the mythological entities, the imaginary
-beings, the ontological fictions, which ever filled the stage in the
-mind of our predecessors, have definitely disappeared; no longer
-have they a place in the scientific explanations of our time. The
-neo-vitalists replace them by _the idea of direction_, which is another
-form of the same idea of finality. The series of second causes in the
-living being seems to be regulated in conformity with a plan, and
-directed with a view to carrying it out. The tendency which exists
-in every being to carry out this plan,—that is to say, the tendency
-towards its end,—gives the impulse that is necessary to carry it out.
-Neo-vitalists claim that vital force directs the phenomena which it
-does not produce, and which are in reality carried out by the general
-forces of physics and chemistry.
-
-Thus, the directing impulse, _considered as really active_, is the last
-concession of modern vitalism. If we go further, and if we refuse to
-the directing idea executive power and efficient activity, the vital
-principle is weakened, and we abandon the doctrine. We can no longer
-invoke it. We cease to be vitalists if the part played by the vital
-principle is thus far restricted. At first it was both the author of
-the plan and the universal architect of the organic edifice; it is
-now only the architect directing his workmen, and they are physical
-and chemical agents. It is now reduced to the plan of the work, and
-even this plan has no objective existence; it is now only an _idea_. It
-has only a shadow of reality. To this it has been reduced by certain
-biologists. For this we may thank Claude Bernard; and he has thereby
-placed himself outside and beyond the weakest form of vitalism. He
-did not consider the _idea of direction_ as a real principle. The
-connection of phenomena, their harmony, their conformity to a plan
-grasped by the intellect, their fitness for a purpose known to the
-intellect, are to him but a mental necessity, a metaphysical concept.
-The plan which is carried out has only a subjective existence; the
-directing force has no efficient virtue, no executive power; it does
-not emerge from the intellectual domain in which it took its rise, and
-does not “react on the phenomena which enabled the mind to create it.”
-
-It is between these two extreme incarnations of the vital principle, on
-the one hand an executive agent, on the other a simple directing plan,
-that the motley procession of vitalist doctrines passes on its way.
-At the point of departure we have a vital force, personified, acting,
-as we have stated, as if with human hands fashioning obedient matter;
-this is the pure and primitive form of the theory. At the other extreme
-we have a vital force which is now only a directing idea, without
-objective existence, and without an executive rôle; a mere concept
-by which the mind gathers together and conceives of a succession of
-physico-chemical phenomena. On this side we are brought into touch with
-monism.
-
-_The Reasons given by the Vitalists for distinguishing Soul from
-Life._—It is, in particular, on the opposite side, in the psychical
-world, that the early vitalists professed to entrench themselves.
-We have just seen that their doctrines were not so subtle as those
-of to-day; the vital principle to them was a real agent, and not an
-ideal plan in the process of being carried out. But they distinguished
-this spiritual principle from another co-existent with it in superior
-living beings—at any rate, in man: the thinking soul. They boldly
-distinguished between them, because the activity of the one is
-manifested by knowledge and volition, while on the contrary, the
-manifestations of the other for the most part escape both consciousness
-and volition.
-
-In fact, we know nothing of what goes on in the normal state of our
-organs. Their perfect performance of their functions is translated to
-us solely by an obscure feeling of comfort. We do not feel the beating
-of the heart, the periodic dilations of the arteries, the movements of
-the lungs or intestine, the glands at their work of secretion, or the
-thousand reflex manifestations of our nervous system. The soul, which
-is conscious of itself, is nevertheless ignorant of all this vital
-movement, and is therefore external to it.
-
-This is the view of all the philosophers of antiquity. Pythagoras
-distinguished the real soul, the thinking soul, the _Nous_, the
-intelligent and immortal principle, characterized by the attributes of
-consciousness and volition, from the vital principle, the _Psyche_,
-which gives breath and animation to the body, and which is a soul of
-secondary majesty, active, transient, and mortal. Aristotle did the
-same. On the one side he placed the soul properly so called, the _Nous_
-or intellect—that is to say, the understanding with its rational
-intelligence; on the other side was the directing principle of life,
-the irrational and vegetative Psyche.
-
-This distinction agrees with the fact of the diffusion of life. Life
-does not belong to the superior animals alone, and to the man in whom
-we can recognize a reasoning soul. It is extended to the vast multitude
-of humbler beings to which such lofty faculties cannot be attributed,
-the invertebrates, microscopic animals, and plants. The advantage is
-compensated for by the inconvenience of breaking down all continuity
-between the soul and life; a continuity which is the principle of the
-two other doctrines, animism and monism, and which is, we may say, the
-very aim and the unquestionable tendency of science.
-
-As for classical philosophy, it satisfies the necessity of establishing
-the unity of the living being,—_i.e._, of bringing into harmony soul
-and body,—but in a manner which we need not here discuss. It attributes
-to the soul several modalities, several distinct powers: powers of
-the vegetative life, powers of the sensitive life, and powers of the
-intellectual life. And this other solution of the problem would be, in
-the opinion of M. Gardair, in complete agreement with the doctrines of
-St. Thomas Aquinas.
-
-
- § 1. THE VITALISM OF BARTHEZ: ITS EXTENSION.
-
-
-Vitalism reached its most perfect expression in the second half
-of the eighteenth century in the hands of the representatives of
-the Montpellier school—Bordeu, Grimaud, and Barthez. The last, in
-particular, contributed to the prevalence of the doctrine in medical
-circles. A man of profound erudition, a collaborates with d’Alembert
-in the _Encyclopædia_, he exercised quite a preponderant influence
-on the medicine of his day. Stationed at Paris during part of his
-career, physician to the King and the Duke of Orleans, we may say
-that he supported his theories by every imaginable influence which
-might contribute to their success. In consequence of this, the medical
-schools taught that vital phenomena are the immediate effects of a
-force which has no analogues outside the living body. This conception
-reigned unchallenged up to the days of Bichat.
-
-After Bichat, the vitalism of Barthez, more or less modified by the
-ideas of the celebrated anatomist, continued to hold its own in all the
-schools of Europe until about the middle of the nineteenth century.
-Johannes Müller, the founder of physiology in Germany, admitted, about
-1833, the existence of a unique vital force “aware of all the secrets
-of the forces of physics and chemistry, but continually in conflict
-with them, as the supreme cause and regulator of all phenomena.” When
-death came, this principle disappeared and left no trace behind. One
-of the founders of biological chemistry, Justus Liebig, who died in
-1873, shared these ideas. The celebrated botanist, Candolle, who lived
-up to 1893, taught at the beginning of his career that the vital
-force was one of the four forces ruling in nature, the other three
-being—attraction, affinity, and intellectual force. Flourens, in
-France, made the vital principle one of the five properties of forces
-residing in the nervous system. Another contemporary, Dressel, in 1883,
-endeavoured to bring back into fashion this rather primitive, monistic,
-and efficient vitalism.
-
-_The Seat of the Vital Principle._—Meanwhile, another question was
-asked with reference to this vital principle. It was a question of
-ascertaining its seat: or, in other words, of finding its place in
-the organism. Is it spread throughout the organism, or is it situated
-in some particular spot from which it acts upon every part of the
-body? Van Helmont, a celebrated scientist at the end of the sixteenth
-century, who was both physician and alchemist, gave the first and
-rather quaint solution of this difficulty. The vital principle,
-according to him, was situated in the stomach, or rather in the opening
-of the pylorus. It was the _concierge_, so to speak, of the stomach.
-The Hebrew idea was more reasonable. The life was connected with the
-blood, and was circulated with it by means of all the veins of the
-organism. It escaped from a wound at the same time as the liquid blood.
-It is clear that in this belief we see why the Jews were forbidden to
-eat meat which had not been bled.
-
-_The Vital Knot._—In 1748 a doctor named Lorry found that a very small
-wound in a certain region of the spinal marrow brought on sudden
-death. The position of this remarkable point was ascertained in 1812
-by Legallois, and more accurately still by Flourens in 1827. It is
-situated in the rachidian bulb, at the level of the junction of the
-neck and the head; or more precisely, on the floor of the fourth
-ventricle, near the origin of the eighth pair of cranial nerves. This
-is what was called the _vital knot_. Upon the integrity of this spot,
-which is no bigger than the head of a pin, depends the life of the
-animal. Those who believed in a localisation of the vital principle
-thought that they had found the seat desired; but for that to be so the
-destruction of this spot must be irremediable, and must necessarily
-cause death. But if the _vital knot_ be destroyed, and respiration be
-artificially induced by means of a bellows, the animal resists: it
-continues to live. It is only the nervous stimulating mechanism of the
-respiratory movements which has been attacked in one of its essential
-parts.
-
-Life, therefore, resides no more in this point than it does in the
-blood or in the stomach. Later experiment has shown that it resides
-everywhere, that each organ enjoys an independent life. Each part of
-the body is, to use Bordeu’s strong expression, “_an animal in an
-animal_”; or to adopt the phrase due to Bichat, “_a particular machine
-within the general machine_.”
-
-_The Vital Tripod._—What then is life, or, in other words, what is the
-biological activity of the individual, of the animal, of man? It is
-clearly the sum total, or rather, the harmony of these partial lives
-of the different organs. But in this harmony it seems that there are
-certain instruments which dominate and sustain the others. There are
-some whose integrity is more necessary to the preservation of existence
-and health, and of which any lesion makes death more inevitable. They
-are the lungs, the heart, and the brain. Death always ensues, said
-the early doctors, if any one of these three organs be injured. Life
-depends, therefore, on them, as if upon a three-legged support. Hence
-the idea of the _vital tripod_. It is no longer a single seat for
-the vital principle, but a kind of throne on three-supports. Life is
-decentralized.
-
-This was only the first step, very soon followed by many others, in the
-direction of vital decentralization. Experiment showed, in fact, that
-every organ separated from the body will continue to live if provided
-with the proper conditions. And here, it is not only a question of
-inferior beings; of plants that are propagated by slips; of the _hydra_
-which Trembley cut into pieces, each of which generated a complete
-hydra; of the _naïs_ which C. Bonnet cut up into sections, each of
-which reconstituted a complete annelid. There is no exception to the
-rule.
-
-_Decentralization of the Vital Principle._—The result is the same in
-the higher vertebrates, only the experiment is much more difficult. At
-the Physiological Congress of Turin in 1901, Locke showed the heart
-of a hare, extracted from the body of the animal, and beating for
-hours as energetically and as regularly as if it were in its place.
-He suspended it in the air of a room at the normal temperature, the
-sole condition being that it was irrigated with a liquid composed of
-certain constituents. The animal had been dead some time. More recently
-Kuliabko has shown in the same way the heart of a man still beating,
-although the man had been dead some eighteen hours. The same experiment
-is repeated in any physiological laboratory, in a much easier manner,
-with the heart of a tortoise. This organ, extracted from the body,
-fitted up with rubber tubes to represent its arteries and veins, and
-filled with the defibrinated blood of a horse or an ox taken from the
-slaughter-house, works for hours and days pumping the liquid blood into
-its rubber aorta, just as if it were pumping it into the living aorta.
-
-But it is unnecessary to multiply examples. Every organ can be made
-to live for a longer or shorter period even though removed from its
-natural position; muscles, nerves, glands, and even the brain itself.
-Each organ, each tissue therefore enjoys an independent existence;
-it lives and works for itself. No doubt it shares in the activity of
-the whole, but it may be separated therefrom without being thereby
-placed in the category of dead substances. For each aliquot part of the
-organism there is a partial life and a partial death.
-
-This decentralization of the vital activity is finally extended in
-complex beings from the organs to the tissues, and from the tissues
-to the anatomical elements—the cells. The idea of decentralization
-has given birth to the second form of vitalism, a softened down and
-weakened form—namely, pluri-vitalism, or the theory of vital properties.
-
-
- § 2. THE THEORY OF VITAL PROPERTIES.
-
-
-The advocates of the theory of vital properties have cut up into
-fragments the monistic and indivisible guiding principle of Bordeu and
-Barthez. They have given it new currency—pluri-vitalism. This theory
-maintains the existence of spiritual powers of a lower order, which
-control phenomena more intimately than the vital principle did. These
-powers, less lofty in their dignity than the rational soul of the
-animists, or the soul of secondary majesty of the unitarian vitalists,
-are eventually incorporated in the living matter of which they will
-then be no longer more than the properties. Brought into closer
-connection therefore with the sensible world, they will be more in
-harmony with the spirit of research and with scientific progress.
-
-The defect of the earlier conceptions, their common illusion, rose from
-their seeking the cause outside the object, from their demanding an
-explanation of vital phenomena from a principle external to living,
-immaterial, and unsubstantial matter. Here this defect is less marked.
-The pluri-vitalists will in turn appeal to the vital properties as
-modes of activity, inherent in the living substance in which and by
-which they are manifested, and derived from the arrangement of the
-molecules of this substance—that is to say, from its organization. This
-is almost the conception of the present day.
-
-But this progress will only be realized at the end of the evolution
-of the pluri-vitalist theory. At the outset this theory seems an
-exaggeration of its predecessor, and a still more exaggerated form of
-the mythological paganism with which it was reproached. The archeus,
-the blas, the properties, the spirits—all have at first the effect
-of the genii or of the gods imagined by the ancients to preside over
-natural phenomena, of Neptune stirring up the waters of the sea, and
-of Eolus unchaining the winds. These divinities of the ancient world,
-the nymphs, the dryads, and the sylvan gods, seem to be transported to
-the Middle Ages, to that age of argument, that philosophical period of
-the history of humanity, and there metamorphosed into occult causes,
-immaterial powers, and personified forces.
-
-_Galen._—The first of the pluri-vitalists was Galen, the physician of
-Marcus Aurelius, the celebrated author of an Encyclopædia of which the
-greater part has been lost, and of which the one book preserved held
-its own as the anatomical oracle and breviary throughout the Middle
-Ages. According to Galen the human machine is guided by three kinds
-of spirits: _animal spirits_, presiding over the activity of the
-nervous system; _vital spirits_ governing most of the other functions;
-and finally, _natural spirits_ regulating the liver and susceptible
-of incorporation in the blood. In the sixteenth century, in the time
-of Paracelsus, Galen’s spirits became _Olympic spirits_. They still
-presided over the functional activity of the organs, the liver, heart,
-and brain, but they also existed in all the bodies of nature.
-
-_Van Helmont._—Finally, the theory was laid down by Van Helmont,
-physician, chemist, experimentalist, and philosopher, endowed with
-a rare and penetrating intellect. Here we find many profound truths
-combined with fantastic dreams. Refusing to admit the direct action of
-an immaterial agent, such as the soul, on inert matter, on the body, he
-filled up the abyss which separated them by creating a whole hierarchy
-of immaterial principles which played the part of mediators and
-executive agents. At the head of this hierarchy was placed the thinking
-and immortal soul; below was the sensitive and mortal soul, having for
-its minister the _principal archeus_, the _aura vitalis_, a kind of
-incorporeal agent, which is remarkably like the vital principle, and
-which had its seat at the orifice of the stomach. Below again were the
-subordinate agents, the _blas_, or _vulcans_ placed in each organ, and
-intelligently directing its mechanism like skillful workmen.
-
-These chimerical ideas are not, however, so far astray as the theory
-of vital properties. When we see a muscle contract, we say that this
-phenomenon is due to a vital property—_i.e._, a property without any
-analogue in the physical world, namely _contractility_, in the same
-way the nerve possesses two vital properties, _excitability_ and
-_conductibility_, which Vulpian proposed to blend into one, calling it
-_neurility_. These are mere names, serving as a kind of shorthand; but
-to those who believe that there is something real in it, this something
-is not very far from the _blas_ of Van Helmont. _Vulcans_, hidden in
-the muscle or the nerve, are here detected by attraction, there by
-the production and the propagation of the nervous influx; that is to
-say, by phenomena of which we as yet know no analogues in the physical
-world, but of which we cannot say that they do not exist.
-
-_X. Bichat and G. Cuvier: Vital and Physical Properties
-Antagonistic._—The archeus and the blas of Van Helmont were but a
-first rough outline of vital properties. Xavier Bichat, the founder of
-general anatomy, wearied of all these incorporeal entities, of these
-unsubstantial principles with which biology was encumbered, undertook
-to get rid of them by the methods of the physicist and the chemist. The
-physics and the chemistry of his day referred phenomenal manifestations
-to the properties of matter, gravity, capillarity, magnetism, etc.
-Bichat did the same. He referred vital manifestations to the properties
-of living tissues, if not, indeed, of living matter. Of these
-properties as yet but very few were known: the irritability described
-by Glisson, which is the excitability of current physiology; and the
-irritability of Haller, which is nothing but muscular contractility.
-Others had to be discovered.
-
-There is no need to recall the mistake made by Bichat and followed
-by most scientific men of his time, such as Cuvier in France, and J.
-Müller in Germany, for the story has been told by Claude Bernard. His
-mistake was in considering the vital properties not only as distinct
-from physical properties but even as opposed to them. The one
-preserve the body, the others tend to destroy it. They are always in
-conflict. Life is the victory of the one; death is the triumph of the
-other. Hence the celebrated definition given by Bichat: “Life is the
-sum total of functions which resist death,” or the definition of the
-Encyclopædia: “Life is the contrary of death.”
-
-Cuvier has illustrated this conception by a graphic picture. He
-represents a young woman in all the health and strength of youth
-suddenly stricken by death. The sculptural forms collapse and show the
-angularities of the bones; the eyes so lately sparkling become dull;
-the flesh tint gives place to a livid pallor; the graceful suppleness
-of the body is now rigidity, “and it will not be long before more
-horrible changes ensue; the flesh becomes blue, green, black, one part
-flows away in putrid poison, and another part evaporates in infectious
-emanations. Finally, nothing is left but saline or earthy mineral
-principles, all the rest has vanished.” Now, according to Cuvier, what
-has happened?
-
-These alterations are the effect of external agents, air, humidity, and
-heat. They have acted on the corpse just as they used to act on the
-living being; but before death their assault had no effect, because it
-was repelled by the vital properties. Now that life has disappeared
-the assault is successful. We know now that external agents are not
-the cause of these disorders. They are caused by the microbes of
-putrefaction. It is against _them_ that the organs were struggling, and
-not against physical forces.
-
-The mistake made by Bichat and Cuvier was inexcusable, even in their
-day. They were wrong not to attach the importance they deserved to
-Lavoisier’s researches. He had asserted, apropos of animal heat and
-respiration, the identity of the action of physical agents in the
-living body and in the external world. On the other hand, Bichat, by a
-flash of genius, decentralized life, dispersing the vital properties
-in the tissues, or, as we should now say, in the living matter. It was
-from the comparison between the constitution and the properties of
-living matter and those of inanimate matter that light was to come.
-
-
- § 3. SCIENTIFIC NEO-VITALISM.
-
-
-We can now understand the nature of modern neo-vitalism. It borrows
-from its predecessor its fundamental principle—namely, the specificity
-of the _vital fact_. But this specificity is no longer _essential_, it
-is only _formal_. The difference between it and the physical fact grows
-less and almost vanishes. It consists of a diversity of mechanisms or
-executive agents. For example, digestion transforms the alimentary
-starch in the intestines into sugar; the chemist does the same in his
-laboratory, only he employs acids, while the organism employs special
-agents, ferments, in this case a diastase. It is a particular form of
-chemistry, but still it is a chemistry. That is how Claude Bernard
-looked at it. The vital fact was not fundamentally distinguished from
-the physico-chemical fact, but only in form.
-
-This expurgated and accommodated vitalism (Claude Bernard pushed his
-concessions so far as to call his doctrine “physico-chemical vitalism”)
-was revived a few years ago by Chr. Bohr and Heidenhain.
-
-Other biologists, instead of attributing the difference between the
-phenomena of the two orders to the manner of their occurrence, seem to
-admit the complete identity of the mechanisms. It is no longer then in
-itself, individually, that the vital act is particularized, but in the
-manner in which it is linked to others. The vital order is a series of
-physico-chemical acts realizing an ideal plan.
-
-Neo-vitalism has therefore assumed two forms, one the more scientific
-and the other the more philosophical.
-
-_Chr. Bohr and Heidenhain._—Its scientific form was given to it by
-Chr. Bohr, an able physiologist at Copenhagen, and by Heidenhain,
-a professor at Breslau, who was one of the lights of contemporary
-German physiology. The course of their researches led these two
-experimentalists, working independently, to submit to fresh
-investigation the ideas of Lavoisier and those of Bichat, on the
-relation of physico-chemical forces to the vital forces.
-
-It was by no means a question of a general inquiry, deliberately
-instituted with the object of discovering the part played respectively
-by physical and physiological factors in the performance of the various
-functions. Such an investigation would have taken several generations
-to complete. No; the question had only come up incidentally. Chr. Bohr
-had studied with the utmost care the gaseous exchanges which take place
-between the air and the blood in the lungs. The gaseous mixture and
-the liquid blood are face to face; they are separated by thin membrane
-formed of living cells. Will this membrane behave as an inert membrane
-deprived of vitality, and therefore obeying the physical laws of the
-diffusion of gases? Well! no. It does not so behave. The most careful
-measurements of pressures and of solubilities leave no doubt in this
-respect. The living elements of the pulmonary membrane must therefore
-intervene in order to disturb the physical phenomenon. Things happen
-as if the exchanged gases were subjected not to a simple diffusion,
-a physical fact obeying certain rules, but to a real secretion, a
-physiological or vital phenomenon, obeying laws which are also fixed,
-but different from the former.
-
-On the other hand, Heidenhain was led about the same time to analogous
-conclusions with respect to the liquid exchanges which take place
-within the tissues, between the liquids (lymphs) which bathe the
-blood-vessels externally and the blood which those vessels contain.
-The phenomenon is very important because it is the prologue of the
-actions of nutrition and assimilation. Here again, the two factors of
-exchange are brought into relation through a thin wall, the wall of
-the blood-vessel. The physical laws of diffusion, of osmosis, and of
-dialysis, enable us to foretell what would take place if the vitality
-of the elements of the wall did not intervene. Heidenhain thought he
-observed that things took place otherwise. The passage of the liquids
-is disturbed by the fact that the cellular elements are alive. It
-assumes the characteristics of a physiological act, and no longer
-those of a physical act. Let us add that the interpretation of these
-experiments is difficult, and it has given rise to controversies which
-still persist.
-
-These two examples, around which others might be grouped, have led
-certain physiologists to diminish the importance of the physical
-factors in the functional activity of the living being to the advantage
-of the physiological factors. It would therefore seem that the vital
-force, to use a rather questionable form of language, withdraws in
-a certain measure the organized being from the realm of physical
-forces—and this conclusion is one form of contemporary neo-vitalism.
-
-
- § 4. PHILOSOPHICAL NEO-VITALISM.
-
-
-Contemporary neo-vitalism has assumed another form, more philosophical
-than scientific, by which it is brought closer to vitalism, properly
-so called. We should like to mention the experiment of Reinke,[2] in
-Germany. Reinke is a botanist of distinction, who distinguishes the
-speculative from the positive domain of science, and cultivates both
-with success.
-
- [2] Reinke, _Die Welt als That_; Berlin, 1899.
-
-His ideas are analogous to those of A. Gautier, of Chevreul, and of
-Claude Bernard himself. He thinks, with these masters, that the mystery
-of life is not to be found in the nature of the forces that it brings
-into play, but in the direction that it gives them. All these thinkers
-are struck by the order and the direction impressed upon the phenomena
-which take place in the living being, by their interconnection, by
-their apparent adaptation to an end, by the kind of impression that
-they give of a plan which is being carried out. All these reflections
-lead Reinke to attach great weight to the idea of a “directing force.”
-
-The physico-chemical energies are no doubt the only ones which are
-manifested in the organized being, but they are directed as a blind man
-is by his guide. It seems as if a _double_ accompanies them like a
-shadow. This intelligent guide of blind, material force is what Reinke
-calls a _dominant_. Nothing could be more like the blas and the archeus
-of Van Helmont. Material energies would thus be paired off with their
-blas, their dominants, in the living organisms. In them there would
-therefore be two categories of force: “material forces,” or rather,
-material energies obeying the laws of universal energetics; and in the
-second place, intelligent “spiritual forces,” the dominants. When the
-sculptor is working his marble, in every blow which elicits a spark
-there is something more than the strong force of the hammer. There is
-thought, the volition of the artist, which is realizing a plan. In a
-machine there is more than machinery. Behind the wheels is the object
-which the author had in view when he adjusted them for a determined
-end. The energies spent in action are regulated by the adjustment—that
-is to say, by the dominants due to the intellect of the constructor.
-
-Thus it is in the living machine. The dominants in this case are the
-guardians of the plan, the agents of the aim in view. Some regulate
-the functional activity of the living body, and some regulate its
-development and its construction. Such is the second form, the
-philosophical form, extreme and teleological, of contemporary
-neo-vitalism.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE MONISTIC THEORY.
-
- Physico-chemical Theory of Life.—Iatro-mechanism.—Descartes,
- Borelli.—Iatro-chemistry.—Sylvius le Boë.—The Physico-chemical Theory
- of Life.—Matter and Energy.—Heterogeneity is merely the result of the
- arrangement or combination of homogeneous bodies.—Reservation relative
- to the world of thought.—The Kinetic Theory.
-
-
-The unicist or monistic doctrine gives us a third way of conceiving
-the functional activity of the living being, by levelling and
-blending its three forms of activity—spiritual, vital, and material.
-It was expressed in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in
-“iatro-mechanism” and “iatro-chemistry,” conceptions to which have more
-recently succeeded the physico-chemical doctrine of life, and finally
-“current materialism.”
-
-Materialism is not only a biological interpretation; it is a universal
-interpretation applicable to the whole of nature, because it is
-based on a determinate conception of matter. Here we find ourselves
-confronted by the eternal enigma discussed by philosophers relative
-to this fundamental problem of force and matter. We know what
-answers were given to the problem by the Ionic philosophers—Thales,
-Democritus, Heraclitus, and Anaxagoras, who discarded the agency of
-every spiritual power external to matter. The explanation of the
-world, the explanation of life, were reduced to the play of physical
-or mechanical forces. Epicurus, a little later, maintained that the
-knowledge of matter and its different forms accounts for all phenomena,
-and therefore for those of life.
-
-Descartes, sharply separating the metaphysical world—that is to say,
-the soul defined by its attribute, thought—from the physical or
-material world characterized by extension, practically came to the same
-conclusions as the materialists of antiquity. To him, as to them, the
-living body was a mere machine.
-
-_Iatro-mechanism. Descartes. Borelli._—This, then, is the theory of the
-iatro-mechanicians, of which we may consider Descartes the founder,
-instead of the Greek philosophers. These ideas held their own for two
-centuries, and were productive of such fruitful results in the hands of
-Borelli, Pitcairn, Hales, Bernoulli, and Boerhaave, as to justify the
-jest of Bacon that “the philosophy of Epicurus had done less harm to
-science than that of Plato.” The iatro-mechanic school tenaciously held
-its own until Bichat came upon the scene.
-
-_Iatro-chemistry. Sylvius le Boë._—It was from a reaction against their
-exaggerations that Stahl created animism, and the Montpellier school
-created vitalism. We gather some idea of the extravagant character
-of their explanations by reading Boerhaave. To this celebrated
-doctor the muscles were springs, the heart was a pump, the kidneys
-a sieve, and the secretions of the glandular juices were produced
-by pressure; the heat of the body was the result of the friction of
-the globules of blood against the walls of the blood-vessels; it was
-greater in the lungs because the vessels of the lungs were supposed
-to be narrower than those of other organs. The inadequacy of these
-explanations suggested the idea of completing them by the aid of
-the chemistry which was then springing into being. This chemistry,
-rudimentary as it was, longed for a share in the government of living
-bodies and in the explanation of their phenomena. Distillations,
-fermentations, and effervescences are now seen to play their rôle, a
-rôle which was premature and carried to excess. Iatro-chemistry from
-the general point of view is only an aspect of iatro-mechanics; but it
-is also an auxiliary. Sylvius le Boë and Willis were its most eminent
-representatives. This theory remained in the background until chemistry
-made its great advance—that is to say, in the days of Lavoisier. After
-that, its importance has gradually increased, particularly in the
-present day. Nowadays, the general tendency is to regard the organic
-functional activity, or even morphogeny—_i.e._, whatever there is
-that is most peculiar to and characteristic of living beings—as a
-consequence of the chemical composition of their substance. This is a
-point of capital importance, and to it we must recur.
-
-_The Physico-chemical Theory of Life._—Contemporary biological schools
-have made many efforts to secure themselves from any slips on the
-philosophical side. They have avoided in most cases the psychological
-problem; they have deliberately refrained from penetrating into the
-world of the soul. Hence, _the physico-chemical theory_ of life has
-been built up free from spiritualistic difficulties and objections.
-But this prudence did not exclude the tendency. And there is no doubt,
-as Armand Gautier said, that “real science can affirm nothing, but
-it also can deny nothing outside observable facts;” and again, that
-“only a science progressing backwards can venture to assert that matter
-alone exists, and that its laws alone govern the world.” It is none the
-less true that by establishing the continuity between inert matter and
-living matter, we thereby render probable the continuity between the
-world of life and the world of thought.
-
-_Matter and Energy._—Besides, and without any wish to enter into
-this burning controversy, it is only too evident that there is no
-agreement as to the terms that are used, and in particular as to
-“matter” and “laws of matter.” It is not necessary to repeat that the
-geometrical mould in which Descartes cast his philosophy has long
-since been broken. The celebrated philosopher, in defining matter by
-one attribute—extension, does not enable us to grasp its activity, an
-activity revealed by all natural facts; and in defining the soul by
-thought alone, prevents us from seeking in it the principle of this
-material activity. This purely passive matter, consisting of extension
-alone, this _bare matter_ was to Leibniz a pure concept. A philosopher
-of our own time, M. Magy, has called it a sensorial illusion. The
-bodies of nature exhibit to us _matter clad_ with energy, formed by
-the indissoluble union of extension with an inseparable dynamical
-principle. The Stoics declared that matter is mobile and not immobile,
-active and not inert. Leibniz also had this in his mind when he
-associated it indissolubly with an active principle, an “entelechy.”
-Others have said that matter is “an assemblage of forces,” or with P.
-Boscovitch, “a system of indivisible points without extension, centres
-of force, in fact.” Space would be the geometrical locus of these
-points.
-
-In this conception the materialistic school finds the explanation of
-all phenomenality. Physical properties, vital phenomena, psychical
-facts, all have their foundation in this immanent activity. Material
-activity is a minimum of soul or thought which, by continuous gradation
-and progressive complexity, without solution of continuity, without
-an abrupt transition from the homogeneous to the heterogeneous, rises
-through the series of living beings to the dignity of the human soul.
-The observation of the transitions, an imperfect tracing of the
-geometrical method of limits, thus enables us to pass from material to
-vital, and from thence to psychical activity.
-
-_Apparent Heterogeneity is the Result of the Arrangement or the
-Combination of Homogeneous Bodies._—In this system, material energy,
-life, soul would only be more and more complex combinations of the
-consubstantial activity with material atoms. Life appears distinct from
-physical force, and thought from life, because the analysis has not yet
-advanced far enough. Thus, glass would appear to the ancient Chaldeans
-distinct from the sand and salt of which they made it. In the same way,
-again, water, to modern eyes, is distinct from its constituents, oxygen
-and hydrogen. The whole difficulty is that of explaining what this
-“arrangement” of the elements can introduce that is new in the aspect
-of the compound. We must know what novelty and apparent homogeneity
-the variety of the combinations, which are only special arrangements
-of the elementary parts, may produce in the phenomena. But we do
-not know, and it is this ignorance which leads us to consider them
-as heterogeneous, irreducible, and distinct in principle. The vital
-phenomenon, the complexus of physico-chemical facts, thus appears to us
-essentially different from those facts, and that is why we picture to
-ourselves “dominants” and “directing forces” more or less analogous to
-the sidereal guiding principle of Kepler, which, before the discovery
-of universal attraction, regulated the harmony of the movements of the
-planets.
-
-_A Reservation relative to the Psychical Order._—The scientific mind
-has shown in every age a real predilection towards the mechanical or
-materialistic theory. Contemporary scientists as a whole have accepted
-it in so far as it blends the vital and the physical orders. Objections
-and contradictions are only offered in the realm of psychology. A.
-Gautier, for example, has contested with infinite originality and
-vigour the claims of the materialists who would reduce the phenomenon
-of thought to a material phenomenon. The most general characteristic
-of material phenomenality is—as we shall later see—that it may be
-considered as a mutation of energy—_i.e._, it obeys the laws of
-energetics. Now thought, says A. Gautier, is not a form of material
-energy. Thought, comparison, volition, are not acts of material
-phenomenality; they are states. They are realities; they have no
-mass; they have no physical existence. They respond to adjustments,
-arrangements, and concerted groupings of material manifestations of
-chemical molecules. They escape the laws of energetics.
-
-_Kinetic Theory._—We shall lay aside for a moment this serious problem
-relative to the limits of the world of conscious thought and of the
-world of life. It is on the other side, on the frontiers of living and
-inanimate nature, that the mechanical view triumphs. It has furnished a
-universal conception agreeing with phenomena of every kind—viz., the
-kinetic theory, which ascribes everything in nature to the movements of
-particles, molecules, or atoms.
-
-The living and the physical orders are here reduced to one unique
-order, because all the phenomena of the sensible universe are
-themselves reduced to one and the same mechanics, and are represented
-by means of the atom and of motion. This conception of the world,
-which was that of the philosophers of the Ionic school in the remotest
-antiquity, which was modified later by Descartes and Leibniz, has
-passed into modern science under the name of the kinetic theory. The
-mechanics of atoms ponderable or imponderable, would contain the
-explanation of all phenomenality. If it were a question of physical
-properties or vital manifestations, the objective world in final
-analysis would offer us nothing but motion. Every phenomenon would be
-expressed by an atomistic integral, and that is the inner reason of
-the majestic unity which reigns in modern physics. The forces which
-are brought into play by Life are no longer to be distinguished in
-this ultimate analysis from other natural forces. All are blended in
-molecular mechanics.
-
-The philosophical value of this theory is undeniable. It has exercised
-on physical science an influence which is justified by the discoveries
-which it has suggested. But to biology, on the other hand, it has lent
-no aid. It is precisely because it descends too deeply into things, and
-analyzes them to the uttermost, that it ceases to throw any light upon
-them. The distance between the hypothetical atom and the apparent and
-concrete fact is too great for the one to be able to throw light on the
-other. The vital phenomenon vanishes with its individual aspect; its
-features can no longer be distinguished.
-
-Besides, a whole school of contemporary physicists (Ostwald of Leipzig,
-Mach of Vienna) is beginning to cast some doubt on the utility of the
-kinetic hypothesis in the future of physics itself, and is inclined to
-propose to substitute for it the theory of energetics. We shall see,
-in every case, that this other conception, as universal as the kinetic
-theory, _the theory of Energy_, causes a vivid light to penetrate into
-the depths of the most difficult problems in physiology.
-
-Such are, with their successive transformations, the three principal
-theories, the three great currents between which biology has been
-tossed to and fro. They are sufficiently indicative of the state of
-positive science in each age, but one is astonished that they are not
-more so; and this is due to the fact that these conceptions are too
-general. They soar too high above reality. More characteristic in this
-respect will be particular theories of the principal manifestations of
-living matter, of its perpetuity by generation, of the development by
-which it acquires its individual form, on heredity. It is here that it
-is of importance to grasp the progressive march of science—that is to
-say, the design and the plan of the building which is being erected,
-“blindly, so to speak,” by the efforts of an army of workers, an army
-becoming more numerous day by day.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
-THE EMANCIPATION OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH FROM THE YOKE OF PHILOSOPHICAL
- THEORIES.
-
- The excessive use of Hypothetical Agents in Physiological
- Explanations—§ 1. _Vital Phenomena in Fully-constituted
- Organisms_—Provisory Exclusion of the Morphogenic idea—The Realm
- of the Morphogenic Idea as the Sanctuary of Vital Force—§ 2. _The
- Physiological Domain properly so called_—Harmony and Connection
- of Phenomena—Directive Forces—Claude Bernard’s Work—Exclusion
- of Vital Force, of Final Cause, of the “Caprice” of Living
- Nature—Determinism—The Comparative Method—Generality of Vital
- Phenomena—Views of Pasteur.
-
-
-The theories whose history we have just sketched in broad outline long
-dominated science and exercised their influence on its progress.
-
-This domination has ceased to exist. Physiology has emancipated itself
-from their sway, and this, perhaps, is the most important revolution
-in the whole history of biology. Animism, vitalism, materialism,
-have ceased to exercise their tyranny on scientific research. These
-conceptions have passed from the laboratory to the study; from being
-physiological, they have become philosophical.
-
-This result is the work of the physiologists of sixty years ago. It
-is also the consequence of the general march of science and of the
-progress of the scientific spirit, which shows a more and more marked
-tendency to separate completely the domain of facts from the domain of
-hypotheses.
-
-_Excessive Use of Hypothetical Agents in Physiological
-Explanations._—It may be said that in the early part of the nineteenth
-century, in spite of the efforts of a few real experimenters from
-Harvey to Spallanzani, Hales, Laplace, Lavoisier, and Magendie, the
-science of the phenomena of life had not followed the progress of
-the other natural sciences. It remained in the fog of scholasticism.
-Hypotheses were mingled with facts, and imaginary agents carried out
-real acts, in inexpressible confusion. The soul (_animism_), the vital
-force (_vitalism_), and the final cause (_finalism_, _teleology_)
-served to explain everything.
-
-In truth, it was also at this time that physical agents, electric and
-magnetic fluids, or, again, chemical affinity, played an analogous
-part in the science of inanimate nature. But there was at least this
-difference in favour of physicists and chemists, that when they had
-attributed some new property or aptitude to their hypothetical agents
-they respected what they attributed. The physiological physicians
-respected no law, they were subject to no restraint. Their vital force
-was capricious; its spontaneity made anticipation impossible; it acted
-arbitrarily in the healthy body; it acted more arbitrarily still in the
-diseased body. All the subtlety of medical genius was called into play
-to divine the fantastic behaviour of the spirit of disease. If we speak
-here of physiologists and doctors alone and do not quote biologists, it
-is because the latter had not yet made their appearance as authorities;
-their science had remained purely descriptive, and they had not yet
-begun to explain phenomena.
-
-Such was the state of things during the first years of the nineteenth
-century. It lasted, thanks to the founders of contemporary
-physiology—Claude Bernard in France, and Brücke, Dubois-Reymond,
-Helmholtz, and Ludwig in Germany—until a separation took place between
-biological research and philosophical theories. This delimitation
-operated in physiology properly so called—_i.e._ in a branch of the
-biological domain in which as yet joint tenancy had been the rule. An
-important revolution fixed the respective divisions of experimental
-science and philosophical interpretation. It was understood that the
-one ends where the other begins, that the one follows the other,
-that one may not cross the other’s path. There is between them only
-one doubtful region about which there is dispute, and this uncertain
-frontier is constantly being shifted and science daily gains what
-philosophy loses.
-
-
- § 1. VITAL PHENOMENA IN CONSTITUTED ORGANISMS.
-
-
-A displacement of this kind had taken place at the time of which we
-speak. It was agreed, that as far as concerns the phenomena which take
-place in _a constructed and constituted living organism_, it would
-no longer be permissible to allow to intervene in their explanation
-forces or energies other than those which are brought into play in
-inanimate nature. Just as when explaining the working of a clock, the
-physicist will not invoke the volition or the art of the maker, or
-the design that he had in view, but only the connection of causes and
-effects which he has utilized; so, for the living machine, whether
-the most complex, such as the human body, or the most elementary,
-such as the cell, we may not invoke a final cause, a vital force,
-external to that organism and acting on it from without, but only the
-connections and the fluctuations of effects which are the sole actual
-and efficient causes. In other words Ludwig, and Claude Bernard in
-particular, expelled from the domain of active phenomenality the three
-chimeras—Vital Force, Final Cause, and the “Caprice” of Living Nature.
-
-But the living being is not only a _completely constructed and
-completely constituted_ organism. It is not a finished clock. It is a
-clock which is making itself, a mechanism which is constructing and
-perpetuating itself. Nothing of the kind is known to us in inanimate
-nature. Physiology has found—in what is called morphogeny—its temporary
-limit. It is beyond this limit, it is in the study of phenomena by
-which the organism is constructed and perpetuated, it is in the region
-of the functions of generation and development, that philosophical
-doctrines expand and flourish. This is the present frontier of these
-two powers, philosophy and science. We shall presently delimit them
-more precisely. W. Kühne, a well-known scientist whose death is
-deplored, not in Germany alone, amused himself by studying the division
-of biological doctrines among the members of learned societies and in
-the world of academies. He summed up this kind of statistical inquiry
-by saying in 1898 at the Cambridge Congress, that physiologists were
-nearly all advocates of the physico-chemical doctrine of life, and that
-the majority of naturalists were advocates of vital force, and of the
-theory of final causes.
-
-_Domain of the Morphogenic Idea as the Last Sanctuary of Vital
-Force._—We see the reason for this. Physiology, in fact, has taken
-up its position in the explanation of the functional activity of
-the constituted organism—_i.e._, on a ground where intervene, as we
-shall show further on, no energies and no matter other than universal
-energies and matter. Naturalists, on the other hand, have more
-especially considered—and from the descriptive point of view alone,
-at least up to the times of Lamarck and Darwin—the functions, the
-generation, the development and the evolution of species. Now these
-functions are most refractory and inaccessible to physico-chemical
-explanations. So, when the time came to give an account of what they
-had done, the zoologists had substituted for executive agents nothing
-but vital force under its different names. To Aristotle it is the vital
-force itself which, as soon as it is introduced into the body of the
-child, moulds its flesh and fashions it in the human form. Contemporary
-naturalists, the Americans C. O. Whitman and C. Philpotts, for example,
-take the same line of argument. Others, such as Blumenbach and Needham,
-in the eighteenth century, invoked the same division under another
-name, that of the _nisus formativus_. Finally, others play with words;
-they talk of heredity, of adaptation, of atavism, as if these were
-real, active, and efficient beings; while they are only appellations,
-names applied to collections of facts.
-
-This region was therefore eminently favourable to the rapid increase of
-hypotheses, and so they abounded. There were the theories of Buffon,
-of Lamarck, of Darwin, of Herbert Spencer, of E. Haeckel, of His, of
-Weismann, of De Vries, and of W. Roux. Each biologist of any mark
-had his own, and the list is endless. But here already this domain of
-theoretical speculation is checked on various sides by experiment.
-J. Loeb, a pure physiologist, has recently given his researches a
-direction in which zoology believes may be found the explanation of
-the mysterious part played by the male element in fecundation. On
-the other hand, the first experiment of the artificial division of
-the living cell (_merotomy_), with its light upon the part played by
-the nucleus in the preservation and regeneration of the living form,
-is also the work of a physiological experimenter. It dates back to
-1852, and is due to Augustus Waller. This experiment was made on the
-sensitive nervous cell of the spinal ganglions and on the motor cell
-of the anterior cornua of the spinal cord. The effects were correctly
-interpreted twelve or fifteen years later. All that zoologists have
-done is to repeat, perhaps unconsciously, this celebrated experiment
-and to confirm the result.
-
-Thus we see that the attack upon the vitalist sanctuary has commenced.
-But it would be a grave mistake to suppose that final cause and vital
-force are on the point of being dislodged from their entrenchments.
-Philosophical speculation has an ample field before it. Its frontiers
-may recede. For a long time yet there will be room for a more or less
-modernized vitalism.
-
-
- § 2. THE PHYSIOLOGICAL DOMAIN PROPERLY SO CALLED.
-
-
-Vitalism is even found installed in the region of physiology, although
-for the moment this science limits its ambition to the consideration
-of the completely constructed organized being, perfected in its form.
-The explanation of the working of this constituted machine cannot be
-complete until we take into account the harmony and the adjustment of
-its parts.
-
-_Harmony and Connection of Parts: Directive Forces._—These constituent
-parts are the cells. We know that the progress of anatomy has resulted
-in the cellular doctrine—_i.e._, in the two-fold affirmation that the
-most complicated organism is composed of microscopic elements, the
-cells, all similar, true stones of the living building, and that it
-derives its origin from a single cell, egg, or spore, the sexual cell,
-or cell of germination. The phenomena of life, looked at from the point
-of view of the formed individual, are therefore harmonized in space;
-just as, regarded from the point of view of the individual in formation
-and in the species, they are connected in time. This harmony and this
-connection are in the eyes of the majority of men of science the most
-characteristic properties of the living being. This is the domain of
-_vital specificity_, of the _directive forces_ of Claude Bernard and A.
-Gautier, and of the _dominants_ of Reinke. It is not certain, however,
-that this order of facts is more specific than the other. Generation
-and development have been considered by many physiologists, and quite
-recently by Le Dantec, as simple aspects or modalities of nutrition or
-assimilation, the common and fundamental property of every living cell.
-
-_The Work of Claude Bernard. Exclusion of Vital Force, of Vital Cause,
-of the “Caprice” of Living Nature._—It is not, however, a slight
-advance or inconsiderable advantage to have eliminated vitalistic
-hypotheses from almost the whole domain of present-day physiology, and
-to have them, as it were, thrown back into its hinterland. This is the
-work of the scientific men of the first half of the nineteenth century,
-and particularly of Claude Bernard, who has thereby won the name of
-the founder or lawgiver of physiology. They found in the old medical
-school an obstinate adversary glorying in its sterile traditions. In
-vain was it proved that vital force cannot be an efficient cause; that
-it was a creation of the brain, an insubstantial phantom introduced
-into the anatomical marionette and moving it by strings at the will of
-any one—its adepts having only to confer upon it a new kind of activity
-to account for the new act. All that had been shown with the utmost
-clearness by Bonnet of Geneva, and by many others. It had also been
-said that the teleological explanation is equally futile, since it
-assigns to the present, which exists, an inaccessible, and evidently
-ultimately inadequate cause, which does not yet exist. These objections
-were in vain.
-
-_Determinism._—And so it was not by theoretical arguments that the
-celebrated physiologist dealt with his adversaries, but by a kind of
-lesson on things. In fact he was continually showing by examples that
-vitalism and the theory of final causes were idle errors which led
-astray experimental investigation; that they had prevented the progress
-of research and the discovery of the truth in every case and on every
-point in which they had been invoked. He laid down the principle of
-_biological determinism_, which is nothing but the negation of the
-“caprice” of living nature. This postulate, so evident that there was
-no need to enunciate it in the physical sciences, had to be shouted
-from the housetops for the benefit of supporters of vital spontaneity.
-It is the statement that, under determined circumstances materially
-identical, the same vital phenomena will be identically reproduced.
-
-_Comparative Method._—Claude Bernard completed this critical work by
-laying down the laws of experiment on living beings. He commended as
-the rational method of research the _comparative method_. This should
-be, and is in fact, the daily instrument of all those who work in
-physiology. It compels the investigator in every research bearing
-on organized beings to institute a series of tests, such that the
-conditions which are unknown and impossible to know may be regarded
-as identical from one test to another; and when we are certain that a
-single condition is variable, it compels him to discover the character
-of the condition we are dealing with, and to learn to appreciate, and
-to measure its influence. It is safe to say that the errors which are
-daily committed in biological work have their cause in some infraction
-of this golden rule. In physical science the obligation to follow
-the comparative method is much less felt. In most cases the _witness
-test_[3] is useless. In physiology the witness test is indispensable.
-
- [3] In an article on the experimental method recently published in the
- _Dictionnaire de Physiologie_, M. Ch. Richet writes as follows:—“We
- must therefore never cease to carry out comparative experiments.
- I do not hesitate to say that this comparison is the basis of the
- experimental method.” It is in fact what was taught by Claude
- Bernard in maxim and by example. It is no exaggeration to assert
- that nine-tenths of the errors which take place in research work
- are imputable to some breach of this method. When an investigator
- makes a mistake, save in the case of material error, it is almost
- certainly due to the fact that he has neglected to carry out one
- of the comparative tests required in the problem before him. The
- following is an instance which happened since the above pages were
- written:—Several years ago a chemist announced the existence in the
- blood serum of a ferment, lipase, capable of saponifying fats—that is
- to say, of extracting from them the fatty acid. From this he deduced
- many consequences relative to the mechanism of fermentations. But on
- the other hand, it has been since shown (April 1902) that this lipase
- of the serum does not exist. How did the error arise? The author in
- question had mixed normally obtained serum with oil, and he had noted
- the acidification of the mixture; he assured himself of the fact by
- adding carbonate of soda. He saw the alkalinity of the mixture, serum
- + oil + carbonate of soda, diminish, and he drew the conclusion that
- the acid came from the saponified oil. He did not make the comparative
- test, serum + carbonate of soda. If he had done so, he would have
- ascertained that it also succeeded, and that therefore as the acid did
- not come from the saponification of the oil, since there was none, its
- production could not prove the existence of a lipase.
-
-_Generality of Vital Phenomena._—If we add that Claude Bernard opposed
-the narrow opinion, so dear to early medicine, which limited the
-consideration of vitality to man, and the contrary notion of the
-essential generality of the phenomena of life from man to the animal,
-and from the animal to the plant, we shall have given very briefly an
-idea of the kind of revolution which was accomplished about the year
-1864, the date of the appearance of the celebrated _l’Introduction à la
-médecine expérimentale_.
-
-The ideas we have just recalled seem to be as evident as they are
-simple. These principles appear so well founded that in a measure they
-form an integral part of contemporary mentality. What scientist would
-nowadays deliberately venture to explain some biological fact by the
-intervention of the evidently inadequate vital force or final cause?
-And who, to account for the apparent inconsistency of the result,
-would bring forward the “caprice” of living nature? And who again would
-openly dispute the utility of the comparative method?
-
-What the physiologists of to-day, according to Claude Bernard, would no
-longer do, their predecessors would do, and not the least important of
-them. Longet, for example, at a full meeting of the Académie, apropos
-of recurrent sensibility, and Colin (of Alfort), communicating his
-statistical results on the temperature of two hearts, accepted more or
-less explicitly the indetermination of vital facts. And why confine
-our remarks to our predecessors? The scientists of to-day are much
-the same. So here again we see the reappearance of the phantom of the
-final cause in so-called scientific explanations. One fact is accounted
-for by the necessity of the self-defence of the organism; another by
-the necessity to a warm-blooded animal of keeping its temperature
-constant. Le Dantec has recently reproached zoologists for giving as
-an explanation of fecundation the advantage that an animal enjoys in
-having a double line of ancestors. We might as well say, as L. Errera
-has pointed out, that the inundations of the Nile occur in order to
-bring fertility to Egypt.
-
-We must not therefore depreciate the marvellous work which has
-emancipated modern physiology from the tutelage of early theories.
-The witnesses of this revolution appreciated its importance. One of
-them remarked as follows, on the appearance of _l’Introduction à la
-médecine expérimentale_, which contained, however, only a portion of
-the theory:—“Nothing more luminous, more complete, or more profound,
-has ever been written upon the true principles of an art so difficult
-as that of experiment. This book is scarcely known because it is on a
-level to which few people nowadays attain. The influence it will have
-on medical science, on its progress, and on its very language, will
-be enormous. I cannot now prove my assertion, but the reading of this
-book will leave so strong an impression that I cannot help thinking
-that a new spirit will at once inspire these splendid researches.”
-This was said by Pasteur in 1866. That is what he thought of the work
-of his senior and his rival, at the moment when he himself was about
-to inspire those “splendid researches” with the movement of reform,
-the importance and the consequences of which have no equivalent in
-the history of science. By their discoveries and their teaching, by
-their examples and their principles, Claude Bernard and Pasteur have
-succeeded in emancipating a portion of the domain of vital facts from
-the direct intervention of hypothetical agents and first causes. They
-were compelled, however, to leave to philosophical speculation, to
-directing forces, to animism, to vitalism, an immense provisory field,
-the field which corresponds to the functions of generation and of
-development, to the life of the species and to its variations. Here we
-find them again in various disguises.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK II.
-
- THE DOCTRINE OF ENERGY AND THE LIVING WORLD.
-
- Summary: General Ideas of Life.—Elementary Life.—Chapter I. Energy
- in General.—Chapter II. Energy in Biology.—Chapter III. Alimentary
- Energetics.
-
-
- GENERAL IDEAS OF LIFE. ELEMENTARY LIFE.
-
-
-_Life is the Sum-total of the Phenomena Common to all Living Beings.
-Elementary Life._—Living beings differ more in form and configuration
-than in their manner of being. They are distinguished more by their
-anatomy than by their physiology. There are, in fact, phenomena common
-to all, from the highest to the lowest. This is because there is that
-similar or identical foundation, that _quid commune_ which has enabled
-us to apply to them the common name of “living beings.” Claude Bernard
-gave to this sum-total of manifestations common to all (nutrition,
-reproduction) the name of _elementary life_. To him _general
-physiology_ was _the study of elementary life_; the two expressions
-were equivalent, and they were equivalent to a longer formula which
-the illustrious biologist has given as a title to one of his most
-celebrated works—_The Study of the Phenomena Common to all Living
-Beings, Animals, and Plants_. From this point of view each being is
-distinguished from another being as a given _individual_ and as a
-particular _species_; but all are in some way alike and thus resemble
-one another: common life, elementary life, the essential phenomena of
-life; it is _life itself_.[4]
-
- [4] Le Dantec has objected to this conception of phenomena common to
- different living beings. He insists that all phenomena which take
- place in a given living being are proper to him, and differ, however
- slightly, from those of another individual. The objection is more
- specious than real.
-
-The manifestations of life may therefore be regarded from the point
-of view of what is most general among them. As we go down the scale
-of anatomical organization, as we pass from apparatus (circulatory,
-digestive, respiratory, nervous) to the _organs_ which compose them,
-from the organs to the _tissues_, and finally from the tissues to the
-_anatomical elements_ or _cells_ of which they are formed, we approach
-that common, physiological dynamism which is _elementary life_, but we
-do not actually reach it. The cell, the anatomical element, is still a
-complicated structure. The elementary fact is further from us and lower
-down. It is in the living matter, in the molecule of this matter, and
-there we must seek it.
-
-Galen gave in days gone by as the object of researches on life, the
-knowledge of the use of the different organs of the animal machine;
-“de usu partium.” Later, Bichat assigned to them as their end the
-determination of the _properties of tissues_. Modern anatomists and
-zoologists try to reach the constituent element of these tissue—the
-cell. Their dream is to construct a _cellular physiology_, a
-_physiological cytology_; but we must go further than that.
-
-_General Physiology, Cellular Physiology, the Energetics of Living
-Beings._—General physiology, as was taught by Pflüger and his school,
-claims to go deeper down than the apparatus, or the organ, or even
-the cell. As in the case of physics, general physiology endeavours to
-reach, and really does in many cases reach, as far as the molecule.
-It is not cellular, it is _molecular_. Already, in fact, the efforts
-of modern science have succeeded in penetrating into the most general
-phenomena of the living being—those attributable to living matter,
-or, to speak more clearly, those which result from the play of the
-universal laws of matter at work in this particular medium which is the
-organized being.
-
-Robert Mayer and Helmholtz have the honour of having set physiology in
-the right road. They founded _the energetics of living beings_—_i.e._,
-they regarded the phenomena of life from the point of view of energy,
-which is the factor of all the phenomena of the universe.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- ENERGY IN GENERAL.
-
- Origin of the Idea of Energy.—The Phenomena of Nature bring into play
- only two Elements, Matter and Energy.—§ 1. Matter.—§ 2. Energy.—§ 3.
- Mechanical Energy.—§ 4. Thermal Energy.—§ 5. Chemical Energy.—§ 6.
- The Transformations of Energy.—§ 7. The Principles of Energetics.—The
- Principle of the Conservation of Energy.—§ 8. Carnot’s Principle.—The
- Degradation of Energy.
-
-
-_Origin of the Idea of Energy._—A new term, namely _energy_, has been
-for some years introduced into natural science, and has ever since
-assumed a more and more important place. It is owing to the English
-physicists, and especially to the English electrical engineers, that
-this expression has made its way into technology, an expression which
-is part and parcel of both languages, and which has the same meaning
-in both. The idea it expresses is, in fact, of infinite value in
-industrial applications, and that is why its use has gradually spread
-and become generalized. But it is not merely a practical idea. It is
-above all a theoretical idea of capital importance to pure theory. It
-has become the point of departure of a science, _energetics_, which,
-although born but yesterday, already claims to embrace, co-ordinate,
-and blend within itself all the other sciences of physical and living
-nature, which the imperfection of our knowledge alone had hitherto kept
-distinct and apart.
-
-On the threshold of this new science we find inscribed _the principle
-of the conservation of energy_, which has been presented to us by
-some as Nature’s supreme law, and which we may say dominates natural
-philosophy. Its discovery marked a new era and accomplished a profound
-revolution in our conception of the universe. It is due to a doctor,
-Robert Mayer, who practised in a little town in Wurtemberg, and who
-formulated the new principle in 1842, and afterwards developed its
-consequences in a series of publications between 1845 and 1851. They
-remained almost unknown until Helmholtz, in his celebrated memoir on
-the conservation of force, brought them to light and gave them the
-importance they deserved. From that time forward the name of the doctor
-of Heilbronn, until then obscure, has taken its place among the most
-honoured names in the history of science.[5]
-
- [5] Mayer’s claim to fame has been disputed. A Scotch physicist, P.
- G. Tait, has investigated the history of the law of the conservation
- of energy, which is the history of the idea of energy. The conception
- has taken time to penetrate the human mind, but its experimental proof
- is of recent date. P. G. Tait finds an almost complete expression
- of the law of the conservation of energy in Newton’s third law of
- motion—namely, “the law of the equality of action and reaction,” or
- rather, in the second explanation which Newton gave of that law. In
- fact, it was from this law that Helmholtz deduced it in 1847. He
- showed that the law of the equality of action and reaction, considered
- as a law of nature, involved the impossibility of perpetual motion,
- and the impossibility of perpetual motion is, in another form, the
- conservation of energy.
-
- At a meeting of the Academy of Science, at Berlin, 28th March 1878,
- Du Bois-Reymond violently attacked Tait’s contention. The honour
- of having been the first to conceive of the idea of energy and
- conservation was awarded to Leibniz. Newton had no right to it, for
- he appealed to divine intervention to set the planetary system on its
- path when disturbed by accumulated perturbations. On the other hand,
- Colding claims to have drawn his knowledge of the law of conservation
- from d’Alembert’s principle. Whatever may be the theoretical
- foundations of this law, we are here dealing with its experimental
- proof. According to Tait, the proof can no more be attributed to R.
- Mayer than to Seguin. The real modern authors of the principle of the
- conservation of energy, who gave an experimental proof of it, are
- Colding, of Copenhagen, and Joule, of Manchester.
-
-As for _energetics_, of which thermodynamics is only a section, it is
-agreed that even if it cannot forthwith absorb mechanics, astronomy,
-physics, chemistry, and physiology, and build up that general science
-which will be in the future the one and only science of nature, it
-furnishes a preparation for that ideal state, and is a first step in
-the ascent to definite progress.
-
-Here I propose to expound these new ideas, in so far as they contain
-anything universally accessible; and in the second place, I propose to
-show their application to physiology—that is to say, to point out their
-rôle and their influence in the phenomena of life.
-
-_Postulate: the Phenomena of Nature bring into play only two Elements,
-Matter and Energy._—If we try to account for the phenomena of the
-universe, we must admit with most physicists that they bring into play
-two elements, and two elements only; namely, _matter_ and _energy_. All
-manifestations are exhibited in one or other of these two forms. This,
-we may say, is the postulate of experimental science.
-
-Just as gold, lead, oxygen, the metalloids, and the metals are
-different kinds of matter, so it has been recognized that sound, light,
-heat, and generally, the imponderable agents of the days of early
-physics, are different varieties of energy. The first of these ideas
-is older and more familiar to us, but it has not for that reason a more
-certain existence. Energy is objective reality for the same reason that
-matter is. The latter certainly appears more tangible and more easily
-grasped by the senses. But, upon reflection, we are assured that the
-best proof of their existence, in both cases, is given by the law of
-their conservation—that is to say, their persistence in subsisting.
-
-The objective existence of matter and that of energy will therefore
-be taken here as a postulate of physical science. Metaphysicians may
-discuss them. We have but little room for such a discussion.
-
-
- § I. MATTER.
-
-
-It is certainly difficult to give a definition of matter which will
-satisfy both physicists and metaphysicians.
-
-_Mechanical Explanation of the Universe. Matter is Mass._—Physicists
-have a tendency to consider all natural phenomena from the point of
-view of mechanics. They believe that there is a mechanical explanation
-of the universe. They are always on the look out for it, implicitly or
-explicitly. They endeavour to reduce each category of physical facts
-to the type of the facts of mechanics. They have made up their minds
-to see nowhere anything but the play of motion and force. Astronomy
-is celestial mechanics. Acoustics is the mechanics of the vibratory
-movements of the air or of sonorous bodies. Physical optics has become
-the mechanics of the undulations of the ether, after having been the
-mechanics of emission—a wonderful mechanics which represents exactly
-all the phenomena of light, and furnishes us with a perfect objective
-image of it. Heat, in its turn, has been reduced to a mode of motion,
-and thermodynamics claims to embrace all its manifestations. As early
-as 1812, Sir Humphry Davy wrote as follows:—“The immediate cause of
-heat is motion, and the laws of transmission are precisely the same
-as those of the transmission of motion.” From that time forth, this
-conception developed into what is really a science. The constitution
-of gases has been conceived by means of two elements—particles, and
-the motions of these particles, determined in the strictest detail.
-And finally, in spite of the difficulties of the representation of
-electrical and magnetic phenomena after Ampère and before Maxwell and
-Hertz, physicists have been able to announce in the second half of the
-nineteenth century the unity of the physical forces realized in and
-by mechanics. From that time forth, all phenomena have been conceived
-as motion or modes of motion, only differing essentially one from the
-other in so far as motions may differ—that is to say, in the masses of
-the moving particles, their velocities, and their trajectories. The
-external world has appeared essentially homogeneous; it has fallen a
-prize to mechanics. Above all, there is heterogeneity in ourselves. It
-is in the brain, which responds to the nervous influx engendered by the
-longitudinal vibration of the air, by the specific sensation of sound,
-which responds to the transverse vibration of the ether by a luminous
-sensation, and in general to each form of motion by an irreducible
-specific sensation.
-
-Forty years have passed since the mechanical explanation of the
-universe reached its definite and perfect form. It dominates physics
-under the name of the _theory of kinetic energy_. The minds of men
-in our own time are so strongly impregnated with this idea that most
-scientists of ordinary culture get no glimpse of the world of phenomena
-but by means of this conception. And yet it is only an hypothesis.
-But it is so simple, so intuitive, and appears to be so thoroughly
-verified by experiment, that we have ceased to recognize its arbitrary
-and unnecessarily contingent character. Many physicists from this
-standpoint consider the kinetic theory as an imperishable monument.
-
-However, as in the case of H. Poincaré, the most eminent physicists and
-mathematicians are not the dupes of this system; and without failing to
-recognize the immense services which it has rendered to science, they
-are perfectly well aware that it is only a system, and that there may
-be other systems. Certain among them, such as Ostwald, Mach, and Duhem,
-believe that the monument is showing signs of decay, and at present the
-theory is opposed by another theory—namely, the theory of _energy_.
-
-The theory of _energy_ is usually considered and presented as a
-consequence of the kinetic theory; but it is perfectly independent of
-it, and it is, in fact, without relying on the kinetic theory, without
-assuming the unity of physical forces, which are combined in molecular
-mechanics, that we shall expound the general system.
-
-This is not the point at issue for the moment. It is not a question
-of deciding the reality or the merit of this or that mechanical
-explanation; it is a question of something more general, because upon
-it depends the _idea of matter_. It is a question of knowing if there
-are any explanations other than mechanical. The illustrious English
-physicist, Lord Kelvin, does not seem willing to admit this. “I am
-never satisfied,” he said, in his _Molecular Mechanics_, “until I have
-made a mechanical model of the object. If I can make this model, I
-understand; if I cannot, I do not understand.”
-
-This tendency of so vigorous a mind to be content only with mechanical
-explanations, has been that of the majority of scientific men up to the
-present day, and from it has arisen the scientific idea of matter.
-
-What is matter, in fact, to the student of mechanics? It is mass. All
-mechanics is constructed of masses and forces. Laplace said: “The mass
-of a body is the sum of its material points.” To Poisson, mass is the
-quantity of matter of which a body is composed. Matter is therefore
-confused with mass. Now, mass is the characteristic of the motion of
-a body under the action of a given force; it defines obedience or
-resistance to the causes of motion; it is the _mechanical parameter_;
-it is the co-efficient proper to every mobile body; it is the first
-_invariant_ of which a conception has been established by science.
-
-In fact, the word matter appears to be used in other senses by
-physicists, but this is only apparently so. They have but broadened the
-idea of the mechanicians. They have characterized matter by the whole
-series of phenomenal manifestations which are _proportional to mass_,
-such as weight, volume, chemical properties—so that we may say that the
-notion of matter does not intervene scientifically with a different
-signification from that of mass.
-
-_Two kinds of Matter. Ponderable and Imponderable._—In physics we
-distinguish between two kinds of matter—ponderable, obeying the law of
-universal attraction or weight, and imponderable matter or ether, which
-we assume to exist and to escape the action of that force. Ether has no
-weight, or extremely little weight. It is material in so far as it has
-mass. It is its mass which confers existence on it from the mechanical
-point of view—a logical existence, inferred from the necessity of
-explaining the propagation of heat, light, or electricity.
-
-It may be observed that the use of mass really comes to bringing
-another element, force, to intervene, and we shall see that force is
-connected with energy; thus it comes to defining matter indirectly by
-energy. The two fundamental elements are not therefore irreducible; on
-the contrary, they should be one and the same thing.
-
-_Energy is the only Objective Reality._—This fusion into one will
-become more evident still when we examine the different kinds of
-energy, each of which exactly corresponds to one of the aspects of
-active matter. Shall we define matter by _extension_, by the portion
-of space it occupies, as certain philosophers do? The physicist will
-answer that space is only known to us by the expenditure of energy
-necessary to penetrate it (the activity of our different senses). And
-then what is weight? It is _energy of position_ (universal attraction).
-And so with the other attributes. So that if matter were separated
-from the energetic phenomena by means of which it is revealed to
-us—weight or energy of position, impenetrability or energy of volume,
-chemical properties or chemical energies, mass or capacity for kinetic
-energy—the very idea of matter would vanish. And that comes to saying
-that fundamentally there is only one objective reality, _energy_.
-
-_Philosophical Point of View._—But from the philosophical point of view
-are there objective realities? That is a wider question which throws
-doubt upon matter itself, and which it is not our place to investigate
-here. A metaphysician may always discuss and deny the existence of
-the objective world. It may be maintained that man knows nothing
-beyond his sensations, and that he only objectivates them and projects
-them outside himself by a kind of hereditary illusion. We must avoid
-taking sides in all these difficulties. Physics for the moment ignores
-them—_i.e._, postpones their consideration.
-
-In a first approximation we agree to consider ponderable matter only.
-Chemistry acquaints us with its different forms. They are the different
-simple bodies, metalloids, metals, and the compound bodies, mineral
-or organic. Hence we may say that chemistry is _the history of the
-transformations of matter_. From the time of Lavoisier this science has
-followed the transformations of matter, balance in hand, and ascertains
-that they are accomplished without change of weight.
-
-_Law of the Conservation of Matter._—Imagine a system of bodies
-enclosed in a closed vessel, and the vessel placed in the scale of a
-balance. All the chemical reactions capable of completely modifying the
-state of this system have no effect upon the scale of the balance. The
-total weight is the same before, during, and after. It is precisely
-this equality of weight which is expressed in all the equations with
-which treatises on chemistry are filled.
-
-From a higher point of view we recognize here, in this _law of
-Lavoisier_ or of the _conservation of weight_, the verification of one
-of the great laws of nature which we extend to every kind of matter,
-ponderable or not. It is the _law of the conservation of matter_, or
-again, of the indestructibility of matter—“Nothing is lost, nothing
-is created, all is transformation.” This is exactly what Tait held,
-this impossibility of creating or destroying matter which at the same
-time is a proof of its objective existence. This indestructibility
-of ponderable matter is at the same time the fundamental basis of
-chemistry. Chemical analysis could not exist if the chemist were not
-sure that the contents of his vessel at the end of his operations ought
-to be quantitatively, that is to say by weight, the same as at the
-beginning, and during the whole course of the experiment.[6]
-
- [6] It must be added that the absolute rigour of this law has been
- called in question in recent researches. It would only have an
- approximate value.
-
-
- § 2. ENERGY.
-
-
-_The Idea of Energy Derived from the Kinetic Theory._—The notion of
-energy is not less clear than the notion of matter, it is only more
-novel to our minds. We are led to it by the mechanical conception which
-now dominates the whole of physics, _the kinetic conception_, according
-to which in the sensible universe there are no phenomena but those of
-motion. Heat, sound, light, with all their manifestations so complex
-and so varied, may, according to this theory, be explained by motion.
-But then, if outside the brain and the mind which has consciousness and
-which perceives, Nature really offers us only motion, it follows that
-all phenomena are essentially homogenous among one another, and that
-their apparent heterogeneity is only the result of the intervention of
-our sensorium. They differ only in so far as movements are capable of
-differing—that is to say, in velocity, mass, and trajectory. There is
-something fundamental which is common to them and this _quid commune_
-is _energy_. Thus the idea of energy may be derived from the kinetic
-conception, and this is the usual method of exposition.
-
-This method has the great inconvenience of causing an idea which lays
-claim to reality to depend upon an hypothesis. And besides that, it
-gives a view of it which may be false. It makes of the different forms
-of energy something more than varieties which are equivalent to one
-another. It makes of them _one and the same thing_. It blends into one
-the modalities of energy and mechanical energy. For the experimental
-idea of equivalence, the kinetic theory substitutes the arbitrary idea
-of the equality, the blending, and the fundamental homogeneity of
-phenomena. This no doubt is how the founders of energetics, Helmholtz,
-Clausius, and Lord Kelvin understood things. But a more attentive study
-and a more scrupulous determination not to go beyond the teaching
-of experiment should compel us to reform this manner of looking at
-it. And it is Ostwald’s merit that, after Hamilton, he insisted on
-this truth—that the various kinds of physical magnitudes furnished
-by the observation of phenomena are different and characteristic. In
-particular, we may distinguish among them those which belong to the
-order of _scalar_ magnitudes and others which are of the order of
-_vector_ magnitudes.
-
-_The Idea of Energy derived from the Connection of Phenomena._—The idea
-of energy is not absolutely connected with the kinetic theory, and it
-should not be exposed therefore to the vicissitudes experienced by that
-theory. It is of a higher order of truth. We can derive it from a less
-unsafe idea, namely that of the _connection of natural phenomena_. To
-conceive it we must get accustomed to this primordial truth, that there
-are no _phenomena isolated_ in time and space. This statement contains
-the whole point of view of energetics.
-
-The physics of early days had only an incomplete view of things, for it
-considered phenomena independently the one of the other.
-
-Phenomena for purposes of analysis were classed in separate and
-distinct compartments: weight, heat, electricity, magnetism, light.
-Each phenomenon was studied without reference to that it succeeded or
-that which should follow. Nothing could be more artificial than such a
-method as this. In fact, there is a sequence in everything, everything
-is connected up, _everything precedes and succeeds in nature_—in
-nature there are only series. The isolated fact without antecedent or
-consequent is a myth. Each phenomenal manifestation is in solidarity
-with another. It is a metamorphosis of one state of things into
-another. It is transformation. It implies a state of things anterior to
-that which we are observing, a phenomenal form which has preceded the
-form of the present moment.
-
-Now there exists a link between the anterior state and the succeeding
-state—that is to say, between the new form which is appearing and the
-preceding form which is disappearing. The science of energy shows
-that something has passed from the first condition to the second,
-but covering itself as it were with a new garment; in a word, that
-something active and permanent subsists in the passage from one
-condition to another, and that what has changed is only the aspect, the
-appearance.
-
-This constant something which is perceived beneath the inconstancy and
-the variety of forms, and which circulates in a certain manner from the
-antecedent phenomenon to its successor, is energy.
-
-But still this is only a very vague view, and it may seem arbitrary.
-It may be made more exact by examples borrowed from the different
-categories of natural phenomena. There are energetic modalities in
-relation with the different phenomenal modalities. The different orders
-of phenomena which may be presented—mechanical, chemical, thermal,
-electrical—give rise to corresponding forms of energy.
-
-When to a mechanical phenomenon succeeds a mechanical, thermal,
-or electrical phenomenon, we say, embracing transformation in its
-totality, that there has been a transformation of mechanical energy
-into another form of energy, mechanical, thermal, or electrical, etc.
-
-This idea becomes more precise if we examine successively each of these
-cases and the laws which regulate them.
-
-
- § 3. MECHANICAL ENERGY.
-
-
-Mechanical energy is the simplest and the oldest known.
-
-_Mechanical Elements: Time, Space, Force, Work, Power._—Mechanical
-phenomena may be considered under two fundamental conditions—_time_ and
-_space_, which are, in a measure, logical elements, to which may be
-joined a third element, itself experimental, having its foundations in
-our sensations—namely, _force_, _work_, or _power_.
-
-The ideas of force, work, and power, are drawn from the experience man
-has of his muscular activity. Nevertheless the greatest mathematical
-minds from from Descartes to Leibniz have been obliged to define and
-explain them clearly.
-
-_Force_.—The prototype of force is weight, universal attraction.
-Experiment shows us that every body falls as long as no obstacle
-opposes its fall. This is so universal a property of matter that it
-serves to define it. The _force_, weight, is therefore the name given
-to the cause of the fall of the bodies.
-
-Force in general is the _cause of motion_. Hence force exists only in
-so far as there is motion. There would be no force without action. This
-is Newton’s point of view. It did not prevail, and was not the point
-of view of his successors. The name of force has been given not only
-to the cause which produces or modifies motion, but to the cause which
-resists and prevents it. And then not only have _forces in action_ been
-considered (dynamics), but _forces at rest_ (statics). Now, to Newton
-there was no statics. Forces do not continue to exist when they produce
-no motion; they are not in equilibrium, they are destroyed.
-
-The idea of force therefore is a metaphysical idea which contains the
-idea of _cause_. But it becomes experimental immediately it is looked
-upon as resisting motion, according to the point of view of Newton’s
-opponents. Its foundations lie in the muscular activity of man.
-
-Man can support a burden without bending or moving. This burden is
-a weight—that is to say, a mass acted on by the force of weight.
-Man resists this force so as to prevent its effect. If it were not
-annihilated by man’s _effort_, this effect would be the motion or
-the fall of the heavy body. The _effort_ and the force are thus in
-equilibrium, and the effort is equal and opposite to the force. It
-gives to the man who exercises it the conscious idea of _force_. Thus
-we know of force through effort. Every clear idea that we can have of
-_force_ springs from the observation of our muscular effort.
-
-The notion of force is thus an anthropomorphic notion. When an effect
-is produced in nature outside human intervention, we say that it is
-by something analogous to what in man is effort, and we give to this
-something a name which is also analogous, namely _force_. To give a
-name to _effort_ and to compare efforts in magnitude, we need not know
-all about them, nor need we know in what they essentially consist, of
-what series of physical, chemical, and physiological actions they are
-the consequence. And so it is with force. It is a resistance to motion
-or the cause of motion. This cause of motion may be an anterior motion
-(kinetic force). It may be an anterior physical energy (physical and
-chemical forces).
-
-Forces are measured in the C.G.S. system by comparing them with the
-unit called the Dyne.[7] In practice they are compared with a much
-larger unit—the gramme, which is the weight, the force acting on a unit
-of mass of one centimetre of distilled water at a temperature of 4° C.
-
- [7] The dyne is the force which applied to the unit of mass produces a
- unit of acceleration.
-
-_Work._—The muscular activity of man may be brought into play in yet
-another manner. When we employ workmen, as Carnot said in his _Essai
-sur l’équilibre et le mouvement_, it is not a question of “knowing the
-burdens that they can carry without moving from their position,” but
-rather the burdens that they can carry from one point to another. For
-instance, a workman may have to lift the water from the bottom of a
-well to a given height, and the case is the same for the animals we
-employ. “This is what we understand by force when we say that the force
-of a horse is equal to the force of seven men. We do not mean that if
-seven men were pulling in one direction and the horse in another that
-there would be equilibrium, but that in a piece of work the horse alone
-would lift, for example, as much water from the bottom of a well to a
-given height as the seven men together would do in the same time.”[8]
-
- [8] These words spoil the statement, for time has nothing to do with
- it.
-
-Here, then, we have to do with the second form of muscular activity,
-which is called in mechanics, “work”—at least, if in the preceding
-quotation we attach no particular importance to the words “in the same
-time,” and retain the employment of muscular activity only “under
-constant conditions.” Mechanical work is compared with the elevation of
-a certain weight to a certain height. It is measured by the product of
-the force (understood in the sense in which it was used just now—that
-is to say, as causing or resisting motion) and the displacement due to
-this motion. The unit is the Kilogrammetre—that is to say, the work
-necessary to lift a weight of one kilogramme to the height of one
-metre.
-
-It will be remarked that the idea of time does not intervene in our
-estimation of work. The notion of work is independent of the ideas
-of velocity and time. “The greater or less time that we take to do a
-piece of work is of no more assistance in measuring its magnitude than
-the number of years that a man may have taken to grow rich or to ruin
-himself can help to estimate the present amount of his fortune.”
-
-Going back to Carnot’s comparison, an employer who employed his workmen
-only on piece-work,—that is to say, who would only care about the
-amount of work done, and would be indifferent to the time that they
-took over it,—would be at the same point of view as the advocates of
-the mechanical theory. M. Bouasse, whom we follow here, has remarked
-that this idea of mechanical work may be traced back to Descartes. His
-predecessors, and Galileo in particular, had quite a different idea of
-the way in which mechanical activity should be measured; and so, among
-the mathematicians of the eighteenth century, Leibniz and, later, John
-Bernoulli were almost alone in looking at it from this point of view.
-
-_Energy._—Work thus understood is _mechanical energy_. It represents
-the lasting and objective effect of the mechanical activity independent
-of all the circumstances under which it was carried out. The same
-work may be done under very different conditions of time, velocity,
-force, and displacement. It is therefore the permanent element in the
-variety of mechanical aspects. Work, for example, in the collision of
-bodies when the motion of a body appears to be destroyed on impact
-with another, reappears as indestructible _vis viva_. This, then, is
-exactly what we call _energy_; and if we agree to give it this name,
-we may say that the conservation of energy is invariable throughout all
-mechanical transformations.
-
-_Distinction between Work and Force, and between Energy and Work._—The
-history of mechanics shows us what trouble has been taken and what
-efforts have been made to distinguish work (now mechanical energy) from
-force.
-
-It is worth while insisting on this distinction. It could be easily
-shown that force has no objective existence. It has no duration,
-no permanence. It does not survive its effect, motion. There is no
-conservation of force. It passes instantly from infinity to zero.
-It is a _vectorial magnitude_—that is to say, it involves the idea
-of direction. Work, on the other hand, is the real element; it is
-a _scalar magnitude_ involving the idea of opposite directions,
-indicated by the signs + and-. Work and force are heterogeneous
-magnitudes. Energy, and this is the only characteristic by which it is
-distinguished from work, is an _absolute magnitude_ to which we may not
-even give opposite signs.
-
-An example may perhaps throw these characteristics into relief—namely,
-the hydraulic press. We have on the platform exactly the work which has
-been done on the other side. The machine has only made it change its
-form. On the contrary, the force has been infinitely multiplied. We
-may, in fact, consider an infinite number of surfaces equal to that of
-a small piston, placed and orientated at will within the liquid; each,
-according to Pascal’s principle, will support a pressure equal to that
-which is exercised. As soon as we cease to support it, this infinity
-falls at once to zero. Now what real thing could pass instantly from
-infinity to zero?
-
-That skilful and very able physiologist, M. Chauveau, has endeavoured
-to use the same term _energy of contraction_ for the two phenomena of
-effort (force) and work. It seems, however, from the point of view
-of the expenditure imposed on the organism, that these two modes of
-activity, _static contraction_ (effort), and _dynamical contraction_
-(work), may be, in fact, perfectly comparable. But although this manner
-of conceiving the phenomena may certainly be exact, and may be of great
-value, the idea of force must none the less remain distinct from that
-of work. The persistence of the author in violating established custom
-in this connection has prevented him from enabling mechanicians and
-even some physiologists to understand and accept very useful truths.
-
-_Power._—The idea of mechanical _power_ differs from those of force
-and work. The idea of time must intervene. It is not sufficient, in
-fact, in order to characterize a mechanical operation, to point to
-the task accomplished. It may be necessary or useful to know how much
-time it required. This is true, especially when we are concerned with
-the circumstances as well as the results of the performance of the
-work; and this is the case when we wish to compare machines. We say
-that the machine which does the work in the shortest space of time is
-the most powerful. The unit of power is the Kilogrammetre-second—that
-is to say, the power of a machine which does a kilogrammetre in a
-second. In manufactures we generally employ a unit 75 times greater
-than this—a _horse-power_. This is the power of a machine which does
-75 kilogrammetres a second. In the electrical industry we measure by
-_kilowatts_, which are equivalent to 1.36 horse power, or by a _watt_,
-a unit a thousand times smaller.
-
-Let us add that the power of a machine is not an absolute and permanent
-characteristic of the machine. It depends on the circumstances under
-which the work is carried out, and that is why, in particular, we
-cannot appreciate the power of the human machine in comparison with
-industrial machines. Experience has shown that the mechanical power
-of living beings depends upon the nature of the work they are doing.
-In this connection we may mention some very interesting experiments
-communicated to the Institute, in the year VI., by the celebrated
-physicist, Coulomb. A man of the average weight of 70 kilogrammes was
-made to climb the stairs of a house 20 metres high. He ascended at the
-rate of 14 metres a minute, and he performed this daily task for four
-effective hours. This work was equivalent to 235,000 kilogrammetres.
-But if, instead of climbing without a burden, the same man had had to
-carry a load, the result would have been quite different. Coulomb’s
-workman took up six loads of wood a day to a height of 12 metres in 66
-journeys, corresponding to a maximum work of 109,000 instead of 235,000
-kilogrammetres. The mechanical power of the human machine thus varied
-in the two cases in the ratio of 235 to 109.
-
-_The Two Aspects of Mechanical Energy: Kinetic and Potential._—Energy,
-or mechanical work, may present itself in two forms—kinetic energy,
-corresponding to the mechanical phenomenon which has really taken
-place, and _potential energy_, or the energy of reserve.
-
-A body which has been raised to a certain height will, if it be let
-fall, perform work which can be exactly measured in kilogrammetres by
-the product of its weight into the height it falls. Such work may be
-utilized in many ways. In this way, for instance, public clocks are
-worked. Now, as long as the clock-weight is raised and not let go, and
-as long as it is motionless, the physics of early days would say that
-there is nothing to discuss; the phenomenon is the fall; it is going to
-take place, but at the present moment there has been no fall.
-
-In energetics we do not reason in this way. We say that the body
-possesses a _capacity for work_ which will be manifested when the
-opportunity arises, a storage of energy, a virtual or _potential
-energy_, or again, an _energy of position_, which will be transformed
-into actual energy or real work as soon as the body falls.
-
-Let us ask whence this energy arises. It proceeds from the previous
-operation which has raised the weight from the surface of the soil
-to the position it occupies. For example, if it is a question of the
-weights of a public clock, which, by its fall, will develop in 15
-days the work that is necessary to turn the wheels, to strike the
-bell, and to turn the hands, this work ought to bring to our minds the
-exactly equal and opposite work done by the clockmaker, who has to
-carry the clock-weight and to lift it up from the ground to its point
-of departure. The work of the fall is the faithful counterpart of the
-work of elevation. The phenomenon has therefore in reality two phases.
-We find in the second exactly what was put into the first, the same
-quantity of energy—_i.e._, the same work. Between these phases comes
-the intermediary phase of which we say that it is a period of virtual
-_or potential energy_. This is a way of remembering in some measure the
-preceding phenomenon—_i.e._, the work of lifting up, and of indicating
-the phenomena which will follow—_i.e._, the work of the fall. And thus
-we connect by our thoughts the present situation with the antecedent
-and with the consequent position, and it is from this consideration of
-continuity alone that the conception of energy springs—that is to say,
-of something which is conserved and is found to be permanent in the
-succession of phenomena. This energy of which we lose no trace does
-not appear to us new when it is manifested. Our imagination eventually
-materializes the idea of it. We follow it as a real thing, having
-an objective existence, which is asleep during the latent potential
-period, and is revealed or manifested later.
-
-Among other examples, that of the coiled spring which is unwound is
-particularly suitable for showing this fundamental character of the
-idea of mechanical energy, an idea which is the clearest of all.
-Machines are only transformers and not creators of mechanical energy.
-They only change one form into another.
-
-In the same way, too, a stream of water or the torrent of a mountainous
-region may be utilized for setting in motion the wheels and the
-turbines of the factories situated in the valley. Its descent produces
-the mechanical work which would be a creation _ex nihilo_ if we do not
-connect the phenomenon with its antecedents. We look on it as a simple
-restitution, if we think of the origin of this water which has been
-transported and lifted in some way to its level by the play of natural
-forces—evaporation under the action of the sun, the formation of
-clouds, transport by winds, etc. And we here again see that a complex
-energy has been transformed, in its first phenomenal condition, into
-_potential energy_, and that this potential energy is always expended
-in the second phase without loss or gain.
-
-_The Different Kinds of Mechanical Energy; of Motion, of
-Position._—There are as many forms of energy as there are distinct
-categories of phenomena or of varieties in these categories. Physicists
-distinguish between two kinds of mechanical energy—energy of motion
-and energy of position. The energy of position presents several
-variants—energy of distance, which corresponds to force: of this we
-have just spoken; energy of surface, which corresponds to particular
-phenomena of surface tension; and energy of volume which corresponds
-to the phenomena of pressure. Energy of motion, _kinetic energy_, is
-measured in two ways: as work (the product of force and displacement,
-W = _fs_) or as _vis viva_ (half the product of the mass into the square
-of the velocity U = _mv^2_∕2.)[9]
-
- [9] We therefore notice that the measures of force and work bring in
- mass, space, and time. The typical force, weight, is given by w = mg.
- On the other hand, we have by the laws of falling bodies _v_ = _gt_;
- _s_ = 1∕2_gt^2_; whence _g_ = 2_s_∕_t^2_; _w_ = _m_(2_s_∕_t^2_); or,
- if F be the force, M the mass, L the space described, and T the time,
- we have F = MLT^{-2}, which expresses what are called the dimensions
- of the force—that is to say, the magnitudes with their degree, which
- enter into its expression. We may thus easily obtain the dimensions of
- work:—
-
- _Work_ = _f_ × _s_ = _mv^2_∕2 = ML^2T^{-2}.
-
-
- § 4. THERMAL ENERGY.
-
-
-In the elements of physics it is nowadays taught that mechanical
-work may be transformed into heat, and reciprocally that heat may be
-transformed into mechanical work. Friction, impact, pressure, and
-expansion destroy or annihilate the mechanical energy communicated to
-a body or to the organs of a machine. With the disappearance of motion
-we note the appearance of heat. Examples abound. The tyre of a wheel
-is heated by the friction of the road. Portions of steel are warmed
-by the impact with stone, as in the old flint and steel. Two pieces
-of ice were melted by Davy, who rubbed them one against the other,
-the external temperature being below zero. The boiling of a mass of
-water caused by a drill was noticed by Rumford in 1790, during the
-manufacture of bronze cannon. Metal, beaten on an anvil, is heated. A
-leaden ball flattened against a resisting obstacle shows increase of
-temperature carried to the point of fusion. Finally, and symbolically,
-we have the origin of fire in the fable of Prometheus, by rubbing
-together the pieces of wood which the Hindoos called _pramantha_.
-Correlation is constant between the thermal and mechanical phenomena,
-a correlation that becomes evident as soon as observers have ceased to
-restrict themselves to the determination in isolation of the one fact
-or the other. There is never any real destruction of heat and motion
-in the true sense of the word; what disappears in one form appears
-again in another; just as if something indestructible were appearing in
-a series of successive disguises. This impression is translated into
-words when we speak of the metamorphosis of mechanical into thermal
-energy.
-
-_The Mechanical Equivalent of Heat._—The interpretation assumes a
-remarkable character of precision, which at once strikes the mind
-when physics applies to these transformations the almost absolute
-accuracy of its measurements. We then find that the rate of exchange
-is invariable. Transformations of heat into motion, and of motion into
-heat, take place according to a rigorous numerical law, which brings
-into exact correspondence the quantity of each. Mechanical effect
-is estimated, as we have seen, by work, that is in kilogrammetres.
-Heat is measured in calories, the calorie being the quantity of heat
-necessary to raise from 0°C to 1°C a kilogramme of water (Calorie) or
-one gramme of water (calorie). It is found that whatever may be the
-bodies and the phenomena which serve as intermediaries for carrying
-out this transformation, we must always expend 425 kilogrammetres to
-create a Calorie, or expend 0·00234 Calories to create a kilogrammetre.
-The number 425 is the mechanical equivalent of the Calorie, or, as
-is incorrectly stated, of the heat. It is this constant fact which
-constitutes _the principle of the equivalence of heat and of mechanical
-work_.
-
-
- § 5. CHEMICAL ENERGY.
-
-
-We cannot yet actually measure chemical activity directly, but we know
-that chemical action may give rise to all other phenomenal modalities.
-It is their most ordinary source, and it is to it that industries
-appeal to obtain heat, electricity, and mechanical action. In the
-steam engine, for instance, the work that is received arises from the
-combustion of carbon by the oxygen of the air. This gives rise to the
-heat which vaporizes the water, produces the tension of the steam,
-and ultimately produces the displacement of the piston. The theory of
-the steam engine might be reduced to these two propositions: chemical
-activity gives rise to heat, and heat gives rise to motion; or to use
-the language to which the reader by now will be accustomed, chemical
-energy is transformed into thermal energy, and that into mechanical
-energy. It is a series of phases and of instantaneous changes, and the
-exchange is always affected according to a fixed rate.
-
-_The Measurement of Chemical Energy._—Our knowledge of chemical energy
-is less advanced than that of the energies of heat and sensible motion.
-We have not yet reached the stage of numerical verifications. We can
-only therefore affirm the equivalence of chemical and thermal energies
-without the aid of numerical constants, because we do not yet, in
-the present state of science, know how to measure chemical energy
-directly. Other known energies are always the product of two factors:
-the mechanical energy of position, or work, is measured by the product
-of the force _f_, and the displacement _s_; work = _fs_; the mechanical
-energy of motion, U = 1∕2_mv^2_, is measured by the product of the mass
-into half the square of the velocity. Thermal energy is measured by
-the product of the temperature and the specific heat; electric energy
-by the product of the quantity of electricity (in coulombs) and of the
-electromotive force (in volts). As for chemical energy, we guess that
-it may be valued directly according to Berthollet’s system, adopted by
-the Norwegian chemists, Guldberg and Waage, by means of the product of
-the masses and of a force, or co-efficient of affinity, which depends
-on the nature of the substances which are brought together, on the
-temperature, and on the other physical circumstances of the reaction.
-On the other hand, the researches of M. Berthelot enable us in many
-cases to obtain an indirect valuation in terms of the equivalent heat.
-
-_Its Two Forms._—It is interesting to note that chemical energy may
-also be regarded from the two states of _potential_ and _kinetic
-energy_. The coal-oxygen system, to burn in the furnace of the steam
-engine, must be primed by preliminary work (local ignition), just as
-the weight that is raised and left motionless at a certain height
-requires a small effort to be detached from its support. When this
-condition is fulfilled, energy is at once manifest. We must admit that
-it existed in the latent state, in the state of _chemical potential
-energy_. Under the impulse received, the carbon combines with the
-oxygen and forms carbonic acid, C + 2O becomes CO⌄{2}; potential energy
-is changed into actual chemical energy, and immediately afterwards into
-thermal energy. We should have only a very incomplete and fragmentary
-view of the reality of things if we were to consider this phenomenon
-of combustion in isolation. We must consider it in connection with
-what has actually created the energy which it is about to dissipate.
-This antecedent fact is the action of the sun upon the green leaf. The
-carbon which burns in the furnace of the machine comes from the mine in
-which it was stored in the form of coal—that is to say, of a product
-which was vegetable in its primitive form, and which was formed at the
-expense of the carbonic acid of the air. The plant had separated, at
-the expense of the solar energy, the carbon from the oxygen to which it
-was united in the carbonic acid of the atmosphere. It had created the
-system C + 2O. So that the solar energy produces the chemical potential
-energy which was so long before it was utilized. Combustion expends
-this energy in making carbonic acid over again.
-
-_Materialization of Energy._—The fertility of the idea of energy is
-therefore, as we see from all these examples, due to the relations
-it establishes between the natural phenomena of which it exhibits
-the necessary relation, destroyed by the excessive analysis of early
-science. It shows us that in the world of phenomena there is nothing
-but transformations of energy. And we regard these transformations
-themselves as the circulation of a kind of indestructible agent which
-passes from one form of determination to another, as if it were
-simply putting on a fresh disguise. If our intellect requires images
-or symbols to embrace the facts and to grasp their relation, it may
-introduce them here. It will materialize energy, it will make of it a
-kind of imaginary being, and confer upon it an objective reality. And
-for the mind, as long as it does not become the dupe of the phantom
-which it itself has created, this is an eminently comprehensive
-artifice which enables us to grasp readily the relations between
-phenomena and their bond of affiliation.
-
-The world appears to us then, as we said at the outset, constructed
-with singular symmetry. It offers to us nothing but transformations of
-matter and transformations of energy; these two kinds of metamorphoses
-being governed by two laws equally inevitable, the conservation
-of matter and the conservation of energy. The first of these laws
-expresses the fact that matter is indestructible, and passes from
-one phenomenal determination to another at a rate of equivalence
-measured by weight; the second, that energy is indestructible, and
-that it passes from one phenomenal determination to another at a rate
-of equivalence fixed for each category by the discoveries of the
-physicists.
-
-
- § 6. TRANSFORMATIONS OF ENERGY.
-
-
-The idea of energy has become the point of departure of a science,
-_Energetics_, to the establishment of which a large number of
-contemporary physicists, among whom are Ostwald, Le Châtelier, etc.,
-have devoted their efforts. It is the study of phenomena, regarded
-from the point of view of _energy_. I have said that it claims to
-co-ordinate and to embrace all other sciences.
-
-The first object of energetics should be the consideration of the
-different forms of energy at present known, their definition and their
-measurement. This is what we have just done in broad outline.
-
-In the second place, each form of energy must be regarded with
-reference to the rest, so as to determine if the transformation of this
-into that is directly realizable, and by what means, and, finally,
-according to what rate of equivalence. This new chapter is a laborious
-task which would compel us to traverse the whole field of physics.
-
-Of this long examination we need only concern ourselves here with three
-or four results which will be more particularly important in the case
-of applications to living beings. They refer to mechanical energy, to
-the relations of thermal energy and chemical energy, to the complete
-rôle of thermal energy, and finally to the extreme adaptability of
-electrical energy.
-
-1. _Transformation of Mechanical Energy._—Mechanical energy may change
-into every other form of energy, and all others can change into it,
-with but one exception, that of chemical energy. Mechanical effort does
-not produce chemical combination. What we know of the part played by
-pressure in the reactions of dissociation seems at first to contradict
-this assertion. But this is only in appearance. Pressure intervenes in
-these operations only as _preliminary work_ or _priming_, the purpose
-of which is to bring the bodies into contact in the exact state in
-which they must be for the chemical affinities to be able to enter into
-play.
-
-2. _Transformation of Thermal Energy; Priming._—Thermal (or luminous)
-energy does not change directly into chemical energy. In fact, heat and
-light favour and even determine a large number of chemical reactions;
-but if we go down to the foundation of things we are not long before
-we feel assured that heat and light only serve in some measure for
-_priming_ for the phenomenon, for preparing the chemical action, for
-bringing the body into the physical state (liquid, steam) or to the
-degree of temperature (400° C. for instance, for the combination of
-oxygen and hydrogen) which are the preliminary indispensable conditions
-for the entry upon the scene of chemical affinities.
-
-On the contrary, chemical energy may really be transformed into
-thermal energy. We have an instance of this in the reactions which
-take place without the aid of external energy; and again, in those
-very numerous cases which, such as the combustion of hydrogen and
-carbon, or the decomposition of explosives, the reactions continue
-when once primed. I may make a further observation apropos of thermal
-and photic energy. These are not two really and essentially distinct
-forms, as was thought in the early days of physics. When we consider
-things objectively, there is absolutely no light without heat; light
-and heat are one and the same agent. According as it is at this or
-that degree of its scale of magnitude, it makes a stronger impression
-on the skin (sensation of heat) or on the retina (sensation of light)
-of man and animals. The difference may be put down to the diversity of
-the work and not to that of the agent. The kinetic theory shows us that
-the agent is qualitatively identical. The words heat and light only
-express the chance of the meeting of the radiant agent with a skin and
-a retina. At the lowest degree of activity this agent exerts no action
-on the terminations of the thermal cutaneous nerves, nor on the optic
-nerve-terminations. As this degree is raised the former of these nerves
-are affected (cold, heat) and are so to the exclusion of the nerves of
-vision. Then they are both affected (sensation of heat and light), and
-finally, beyond that, sight alone is affected. The transformation of
-one energy into the other is therefore here reduced to the possibility
-of increasing or decreasing the intensity of the action of this common
-agent in the exact proportions suitable for passing from one of the
-conditions to the other; and this is easy when it is a question of
-going up the scale in the case of light, and, on the contrary, it is
-not realizable directly, that is to say without external assistance,
-when it is a question of going down the scale again, in the case of
-heat.
-
-3. _Heat a Degraded Form of Energy._—We have seen that thermal energy
-is not directly transformed into chemical energy. There is yet another
-restriction in the case of this thermal energy if we study the laws
-which govern the circulation and the transformations of thermal energy;
-and the most important comes from the impossibility of transporting it
-from a body at a lower temperature to a body at a higher temperature.
-On the whole, and because of these restrictions, thermal energy is an
-imperfect variety of universal energy, or, as the English physicists
-call it, a degraded form.
-
-4. _Simple Transformations of Electrical Energy. Its Intermediary
-Rôle._—On the other hand, electrical energy represents a perfected and
-infinitely advantageous form of this same universal energy, and this
-explains the vast development of its industrial applications within
-less than a century. It is not that it is better known than the others
-in its nature and in the secret of its action. On the contrary, there
-is more dispute than ever as to its nature. To some, electricity,
-which is transported and propagated with the speed of light, is a real
-flux of the ether as was taught by Father Secchi, who compared it to a
-current of water in a pipe. It would do its work, just as the water of
-the mill does its work by flowing over a wheel or through a turbine.
-Electricity, like water in this case, would not be an energy in itself,
-but a means of transporting energy.
-
-To others, such as Clausius, Hertz, and Maxwell, it is not so; the
-electric current is not a transport of energy. It is a state of the
-ether of a peculiar, specific kind, periodically produced (electric
-oscillation), and propagated with a speed of the order of that of light.
-
-However that may be, what constitutes the essential peculiarity
-of electrical energy, and what causes its value, is that it is an
-incomparable agent of transformation. Every known form of energy
-may be converted into it, and inversely, electrical energy may be
-changed with the utmost facility into all other energies. This extreme
-adaptability assigns to it the part of an intermediary between the
-other less tractable agents. Mechanical energy, for instance, lends
-itself with difficulty to the production of light, that is to say, to
-a metamorphosis into photic energy (a variety of thermal energy). A
-fall of water cannot be directly utilized for lighting purposes. The
-mechanical work of this fall, which cannot be exploited in its present
-form, serves to set in motion in industrial lighting the installations,
-the electric machines, and the dynamos which feed the incandescent
-lamps. Mechanical work is changed into electrical energy, and it, in
-its turn, into thermal or photic energy. Electricity has here played
-the part of a useful intermediary.
-
-The last part of energetics must be consecrated to the study of the
-general principles of this science. These principles are two in number,
-the principle of the _conservation of energy_, or Mayer’s principle,
-and the principle of the transformation of energy, or Carnot’s
-principle. The doctrine of energy thus reduces to two fundamental laws
-the multitude of laws, often known as “general,” to which natural
-science is subject.
-
-
- § 7. THE PRINCIPLE OF THE CONSERVATION OF ENERGY.
-
-
-In all that precedes, the principle of conservation has intervened at
-every step. In fact, the very idea of energy is connected with the
-existence of this principle. We first discover the idea in the work of
-the philosophical mathematicians who established the foundations of
-mechanics:—Newton, Leibniz, d’Alembert, and Helmholtz; or of inductive
-physicists such as Lord Kelvin. Its experimental proof, sketched by
-Marc Seguin and R. Mayer, is due to Colding and Joule.
-
-_It is Independent of the Kinetic Theory._—Mayer’s law states that
-energy is indestructible; that all phenomenality is nothing but a
-transformation of energy from one form to another, and that this
-transformation takes place either at equal values, or rather, at a
-certain rate of equivalence. This is what takes place when thermal
-energy is transformed into mechanical energy (equivalent 425). This
-rate of equivalence is fixed by the researches of physicists for each
-category of energy.
-
-It will be noticed that this law and this theory of energy, which
-is always presented by authors of elementary books as a consequence
-of the kinetic theory, is quite independent of it. In the preceding
-lines we have not even mentioned its name. We have not assumed that
-all phenomena are movements or transformations of movements, whether
-sensible or vibratory; we have not affirmed that what was passing from
-one phenomenal determination to another was the _vis viva_ of the
-motion, as is the case in the impact of elastic bodies. No doubt the
-kinetic theory affords us a very striking image of these truths which
-are independent of it; but it may be false: and the theory of energy
-which assumes the minimum of possible hypotheses would yet be true.
-
-_It contains a great many other Principles._—The principle of the
-conservation of energy contains a large number of the most general
-principles of science. It may be shown without much difficulty that,
-for example, it contains the principle of the inertia of matter, laid
-down by Galileo and Descartes; that of the equality of action and
-reaction, due to Newton; and even that of the conservation of matter,
-or rather of mass, due to Lavoisier. And finally, it contains the
-experimental law of equivalence connected with the name of the English
-physicist Joule, from which may be derived the Law of Hess and the
-principle of the initial and final states which we owe to Berthelot.
-
-_It involves the Law of Equivalence._—Here we may be content with
-noticing that the law of the conservation of energy involves the
-existence of relations of equivalence between the different varieties.
-A certain quantity of a given energy, measured, as we have seen, by
-the product of two factors, is equivalent to a certain fixed quantity
-of quite a different form of energy into which it may be converted.
-The laws which govern energetic transformations therefore contain,
-from both the qualitative and the quantitative points of view, all the
-connections of the phenomena of the universe. To study these laws in
-their detail is the task that physics must take upon itself.
-
-The conversion one into the other of the different forms of energy by
-means of equivalents is only a possibility. It is subject, in fact, to
-all sorts of restrictions, of which the most important are due to the
-second principle.
-
-
- § 8. CARNOT’S PRINCIPLE. ITS GENERALITY.
-
-
-The second fundamental principle is that of the transformations of
-equilibrium, or of the conditions of reversibility, or again, Carnot’s
-principle. This principle, which first assumed a concrete form in
-thermodynamics, has been very widely extended. It has reached a degree
-of generality such that contemporary theoretical physicists such as
-Lord Kelvin, Le Châtelier, etc., consider it the universal law of
-physical, mechanical, and chemical equilibrium.
-
-Carnot’s principle contains, as was shown by G. Robin, d’Alembert’s
-principle of virtual velocities, and according to physicists of
-to-day, as we have just remarked, it contains the laws peculiar to
-physico-chemical equilibrium. The application of this principle
-gives us the differential equations from which are derived numerical
-relations between the different energies, or the different modalities
-of universal energy.
-
-_Its Character._—It is very remarkable that we cannot give a general
-enunciation of this principle which by its revealing power has changed
-the face of physics. This is because it is less a law, properly so
-called, than a method or manner of interpreting the relations of the
-different forms of energy, and particularly the relations of heat and
-mechanical energy.
-
-_Conversion of Work into Heat and Vice-versâ._—The conversion of
-work into heat is accomplished without difficulty. For example, the
-hammering of a piece of iron on an anvil may bring it to a red heat.
-A shell which passes through an armour plate is heated, and melts and
-volatilizes the metal all round the hole it has made. By utilizing
-mechanical action under the form of friction all energy can be
-converted into heat.
-
-The inverse transformation of heat into work, on the contrary, cannot
-be complete. The best motor that we can think of, and _à fortiori_ the
-best we can realize, can only transform a third or a fourth of the heat
-with which it is supplied.
-
-This is an extremely important fact. It is of incalculable importance
-to natural philosophy, and may be ranked among the greatest discoveries.
-
-_Higher and Degraded Forms of Energy._—Of these we may give an account
-by distinguishing among the forms of universal energy _higher forms_,
-and _lower_ or _degraded forms_. Here we have the principle of the
-_degradation of energy_ on its trial, and it may be regarded as a
-particular aspect of the second principle of energetics, or Carnot’s
-principle. Mechanical energy is a higher form. Thermal energy is
-a lower form, a degraded form, and one which has degrees in its
-degradation. Higher energy, in general, may be completely converted
-into lower energy; for example, work into heat: the slope is easy to
-descend, but it is difficult to retrace our steps; lower energy can be
-only partially transformed into higher energy, and the fraction thus
-utilizable depends upon certain conditions on which Carnot’s principle
-has thrown considerable light.
-
-Thus, although in theory the thermal energy of a body may have its
-equivalent in mechanical energy, the complete transformation is only
-realizable from the latter to the former, and not from the former to
-the latter. This is due to a condition of thermal energy which is
-called _temperature_. The same quantity of thermal energy, of heat,
-may be stored in the same thermal body at different temperatures. If
-this quantity of thermal energy is in a very hot body we can utilize
-a large portion of it; if it is in a relatively cold body we can only
-convert a small portion of it into mechanical work. Thus the value of
-energy,—_i.e._, its capacity of being converted into a higher and more
-useful form,—depends on temperature.
-
-_The Capacity of Conversion depends on Temperature._—The conversion
-of heat into work assumes two bodies of different temperatures, the
-one warm and the other cold; a boiler and a condenser. Every thermal
-machine conveys a certain amount of heat from the boiler to the
-condenser, and what is not thus carried is changed into work. This
-residue is only a small fraction, a quarter, or at most a third of the
-heat employed, and that, too, in the theoretically perfect machine, in
-the ideal machine.
-
-This output, this utilizable fraction depends on the fall of
-temperature from the higher to the lower level, just as the work of a
-turbine depends on the height of the waterfall which passes through it.
-But it also depends on the conditions of this fall, on the accessory
-losses from radiation and conduction. However, Carnot has shown that
-the output is the same, and a maximum for the same fall of temperature,
-whatever be the working agent (steam, hot air, etc.), and whatever be
-the machine—provided that this agent, this substance which works is not
-exposed to accessory losses, that it is never in contact with a body
-having temperature different to its own—or again, that it is connected
-only with bodies impermeable to heat.
-
-This is Carnot’s principle in one of its concrete forms.
-
-A machine which realizes this condition, that the agent (steam,
-alcohol, ether) is in relation, at all phases of its function, with
-bodies which can neither take heat from it nor give heat to it, is a
-_reversible machine_. Such a machine is perfect. The fraction of heat
-that it transforms into motion is constant; it is a maximum; it is
-independent of the motor, of its organs, of the agent: it accurately
-expresses the transformability of the heat agent into a mechanical
-agent under the given conditions.
-
-_The Degradation and Restoration of Energy._—The fraction not utilized,
-that which is carried to the condenser at a lower temperature, is
-_degraded_. It can only be used by a new agent, in a new machine in
-which the boiler has exactly the same temperature as the condenser in
-the first machine, and the new condenser has a lower temperature, and
-so on. The proportion of utilizable energy thus goes on diminishing.
-Its utilization requires conditions more and more difficult to
-realize. The thermal energy loses its potential and its value, and is
-further and further degraded as its temperature approaches that of the
-surrounding medium.
-
-The degraded energy, theoretically, has kept its equivalent value but,
-practically, it is incapable of conversion. However, it is shown in
-physics that it can be raised and re-established at its initial level.
-But for that purpose another energy must be utilized and degraded for
-its benefit.
-
-_The End of the Universe._—What we have just seen with respect to
-heat and motion is to some degree true of all other forms of energy,
-as Lord Kelvin has shown. The principle of the degradation of energy
-is very general. Every manifestation of nature is an energetic
-transformation. In each of these transformations there is a degradation
-of energy—_i.e._, a certain fraction is lowered and becomes less easily
-transformable. So that the energy of the universe is more and more
-degraded; the higher forms are lowered to the thermal form, the latter
-increasing at temperatures which become more and more uniform. The
-end of the universe, from this point of view, would then be unity of
-(thermal) energy in uniformity of temperature.
-
-_Importance of the Idea of Energy in Physiology._—I have said that the
-application of Carnot’s principle furnished numerical relations between
-the different energetic transformations.
-
-The science of living beings has not yet reached that point of
-development at which it is possible for us to obtain its numerical
-relations. However, the consideration of energy and the principle of
-conservation has altered the outlook of physiology on many questions
-which are of the highest importance.
-
-The determination of the sources from which plants and animals draw
-their vital energies; the mediate transformation of chemical energy
-into animal heat in nutrition, or into motion in muscular contraction;
-the chemical evolution of foods; the study of soluble ferments—all
-these questions are of considerable importance when we wish to
-understand the mechanisms of life. They are therefore departments of
-physiological energetics in which great advances have already been
-made.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- ENERGY IN BIOLOGY.
-
- § 1. Energy in Living Beings.—§ 2. The First Law of Biological
- Energetics:—All Vital Phenomena are Energetic Transformations.—§
- 3. Second Law:—The Origin of Vital Energy is in Chemical Energy.
- Functional Activity and Destruction.—§ 4. Third Law:—The Final Form of
- Energetic Transformation in the Animal is Thermal Energy. Heat is an
- Excretum.
-
-
-The theory of energy was thought of and utilized in physiology before
-it was introduced into physics, in which it has exercised such an
-extraordinary influence. Robert Mayer was a physicist and a doctor.
-Helmholtz was equally at home in physiology and in physics. From
-the outset both had seen in this new idea a powerful instrument of
-physiological research. The volume in which Robert Mayer expounded,
-in 1845, his remarkable views on organic movement in relation to
-nutrition, and Helmholtz’ commentary leave us in no doubt in this
-respect. The essay on the mechanical equivalent of heat, of a more
-particularly physical character, is six years later than the earlier
-work.
-
-_The Relations between Energetics and Biology._—The theory of energy is
-therefore only returning to its cradle; and to that cradle it returns
-with all the sanction of physical proof, as the most general theory
-ever proposed in natural philosophy, and the theory least encumbered
-with hypotheses. It reduces all particular laws to two fundamental
-principles—that of the conservation of energy, which contains the
-principles of Galileo and Descartes, of Newton, of Lavoisier, Joule’s
-law, Hess’s law, and Berthelot’s principle of the initial and final
-states; and also Carnot’s principle, from which are deduced the laws
-of physico-chemical and chemical equilibrium. These two principles
-therefore sum up the whole of natural science. They express the
-necessary relation of all the phenomena of the universe, their
-uninterrupted gentic connection, and their continuity.
-
-_A priori_ there would be little likelihood that a doctrine, so
-universal and so thoroughly verified in the physical world, could be
-restricted, and thus be useless to the living world. Such a supposition
-would be contrary to the scientific method, which always tends to the
-generalization and the explanation of elementary laws. The human mind
-has always proceeded thus: it has applied to the unknown order of
-living phenomena the most general laws of contemporary physics.
-
-This application has been found legitimate, and has been justified by
-experiment whenever it has been a question of the laws or of the really
-fundamental or elementary conditions of phenomena. It has, on the other
-hand, however, been unfortunate when it has stopped short of secondary
-characteristics. When we now concede the subjection of living beings
-to these general laws of energetics, we are following a traditional
-method. There is no doubt that this application is legitimate, and that
-experiment will justify it _a posteriori_.
-
-I will therefore grant, as a provisional _postulate_, the consequences
-of which will have to be ultimately justified, that the living and
-inanimate world alike show us nothing but _transformations of matter_
-and _transformations of energy_. The word phenomenon will have no
-other signification, whatever be the circumstances under which the
-phenomenon occurs. The varied manifestations which translate the
-activity of living beings thus correspond to transformations of energy,
-to conversions of one form into another, in conformity with the rules
-of equivalence laid down by the physicists. This conception may be
-formulated in the following manner:—_The phenomena of life have the
-same claim to be energetic metamorphoses as the other phenomena of
-nature_.
-
-This postulate is the foundation of biological energetics. It may be
-useful to give some explanation relative to the signification, the
-origin, and the scope of this statement.
-
-Biological energetics is nothing but general physiology reduced to the
-principles that are common to all the physical sciences. Robert Mayer
-and Helmholtz gave the best description of this science, and laid
-down its limits by defining it as “the study of the phenomena of life
-regarded from the point of view of energy.”
-
-
- § 1. ENERGY AT PLAY IN LIVING BEINGS. COMMON OR PHYSICAL ENERGIES.
- VITAL ENERGIES.
-
-
-Our first object will be to define and to enumerate the energies
-at play in living beings; to determine their more or less easy
-transformations from one to another, to bring to light the general
-laws which govern those transformations, and finally to apply them to
-the detailed study of phenomena. This programme may be divided into
-four parts.
-
-In the physical world the specific forms of energy are not numerous.
-When we have mentioned mechanical, chemical, radiant (thermal and
-photic) energies, electrical energy, with which is blended magnetic
-energy, we have exhausted the catalogue of natural agents.
-
-But is this list for ever closed? Are vital energies comprised in this
-list? These are the first questions which we must ask ourselves.
-
-The iatro-mechanical school, on _a priori_ grounds give an affirmative
-answer. No doubt there are in the living organism many manifestations
-which are pure physical manifestations of known energies, mechanical,
-chemical, thermal, etc. But are all the manifestations of the living
-being of this order? Are they all, henceforth, reducible to the
-categories and varieties of energy which are investigated in physics?
-This is the claim of the mechanical school. But the claim is rash. Our
-fundamental postulate affirms, in principle, that universal energy is
-manifested in living beings; but, as a matter of fact, there is no
-reason for the assertion that it does not assume particular forms,
-according to the circumstances peculiar to the conditions under which
-they are produced.
-
-These _special forms of energy_ manifested in the conditions suitable
-to living beings would swell the list drawn up by the physicists. And
-it would not be the first instance of an extension of this kind. The
-history of science records many remarkable cases. Scarcely a century
-has passed since we first heard of electrical energy. This discovery
-in the world of energy, which took place, so to speak, before our very
-eyes, of an agent which plays so large a part in nature, clearly leaves
-the door open to other surprises.
-
-We shall therefore concede that there may be other forms of energy
-at work in living beings than those we already know in the physical
-world. This reservation would enable us to discover at once the
-essential characteristics by which vital phenomena are henceforth
-reduced to universal physics, and the purely formal differences still
-distinguishing them.
-
-If there are really special energies in living beings, our monistic
-postulate leads us to assert that these energies are homogeneous with
-the others, and that they do not differ from them more than they differ
-among themselves. It is probable that some day they will be discovered
-external to living bodies, if the material conditions (which it is
-always possible to imagine) are realized externally to them. And if we
-must admit that the peculiarity of the medium is such that these forms
-must remain indefinitely peculiar to living beings, we may assert with
-every confidence that these special energies do not obey special laws.
-They are subject to the two fundamental principles of Robert Mayer
-and Carnot. They are exchanged according to fixed laws with the other
-physical forms of energies at present known.
-
-To sum up, then, we must establish three categories in the forms of
-energy which express the phenomena of vitality.
-
-In the first place, most of these energies are those which have
-already been studied and recognized in general physics. They are
-the same energies: chemical, thermal, mechanical, with their
-characteristics of mutability, their lists of equivalents, and their
-actual and potential stales.
-
-In the second place, it may happen, and it probably will happen, as it
-happened in the last century in the case of electricity, that some new
-form of energy will be discovered belonging to the universal order as
-to the living order. This will be a conquest of general physics as well
-as of biology.
-
-And finally we may rigorously and provisionally admit a last category
-of _vital energies properly so called_.
-
-It is difficult to give much precision to the idea of _vital energies
-properly so called_.
-
-It will be easier to measure them by means of equivalents than to
-indicate their nature. Besides, this is the ordinary rule in the case
-of physical agents. We can measure them, although we know not what they
-are.
-
-_Characteristics of Vital Energies._—We see why we cannot exhibit
-with precision, _a priori_, the nature of vital energies. In the
-first place, they are expressed by what takes place in the tissues
-in activity, and this cannot at present be identified with the known
-types of physical, chemical, and mechanical phenomena. This is a first,
-intrinsic reason for not being able to distinguish them readily, since
-what takes place is not distinguished by the phenomenal appearances to
-which we are accustomed.
-
-There is a second, intrinsic reason. These vital phenomena are
-intermediary, as we shall see, between manifestations of known
-energies. They lie between a chemical phenomenon which always precedes
-them, and a thermal phenomenon which always follows them. They are
-lost sight of, as it were, between manifestations which strike our
-attention. Generally speaking, intermediary energies often escape us
-even in physics. Only the extreme manifestations are clearly seen.
-In the presence of the organism we are, as it were, in electric
-lighting works which are run by a fall of water, and at first we only
-see the mechanical energy of the falling water, of the turbine and
-dynamo at work, and the photic energy of the lamps which give the
-light. Electrical energy, an intermediary, which has only a transient
-existence, does not impose itself on our attention.
-
-And so _vital energies_ for this twofold reason, intrinsic and
-extrinsic, are not readily apparent. To reveal them, the careful
-analysis of the physiologists is required. They are acts, in most
-cases silent and invisible, which we should scarcely recognize but
-by their effects, after they have terminated in familiar, phenomenal
-forms. This is, for example, what goes on in the muscle in process of
-shortening, in the nerve carrying the nervous influx, in the secreting
-gland. And this is what constitutes the different forms of energy
-which we call _vital properties_. M. Chauveau and M. Laulanié use
-the phrase _physiological work_ to distinguish them. _Vital energy_
-would be preferable. It better expresses the analogy of this special
-form with the other forms of universal energy; it helps us better to
-understand that we must henceforth consider it as exchangeable by means
-of equivalents with the energies of the physical world just as they are
-exchangeable one with another.
-
-
- § 2. FIRST LAW OF BIOLOGICAL ENERGETICS.
-
-
-It is easy to understand, after these remarks, the significance and
-the scope of this assertion which contains the first principle of
-biological energetics—namely, that the phenomena of life have the same
-claim to be called energetic metamorphoses as the other phenomena of
-nature.
-
-_Irreversibility of Vital Energies._—However, there is one
-characteristic of vital energies which deserves the closest attention.
-Their transformations have a direction which is in some measure
-inevitable. They descend a slope which they never re-ascend. They
-appear to be irreversible. Ostwald has rightly insisted on this
-fundamental characteristic, which no doubt is not that of all the
-phenomena of the living being without exception, but which is certainly
-that of the most essential phenomena. There are reversible phenomena
-in organisms; there are energetic transformations which may take
-place from one form of energy to another, or _vice versâ_. But the
-most characteristic phenomena of vitality do not act in this way. We
-shall presently see that most functional physiological acts begin
-with chemical and end with thermal action. The series of energetic
-transformations takes place in an inevitable direction, from chemical
-to thermal energy. The order of succession of ordinary energies is
-thus determined in the machine of the organism, and therefore by
-the conditions of the machine. The order of transformation of vital
-energies is still more rigorously regulated, and the phenomena of life
-evolve from childhood to ripened years, and thence to old age, without
-a possible return.
-
-The laws of biological energetics are three in number. First of all,
-there is the fundamental principle which we have just developed, and
-which is, so to speak, laid down _a priori_; and there are two other
-principles, those established by experiment and summing-up, as it were,
-the multitude of known physiological effects. Of these two experimental
-laws, one refers to the _origin_ and the other to the _termination of
-the energies developed in living beings_.
-
-
- § 3. SECOND LAW OF BIOLOGICAL ENERGETICS.
-
-
-_The Origin of Vital Energy._—Vital energies have their origin in one
-of the _external or common energies_—not in any one we choose, as might
-be supposed, but in one only: chemical energy. The third principle will
-show us that they terminate in another energy or a few others, also
-completely fixed.
-
-It follows that the phenomena of life must appear to us to be a
-circulation of energy which, starting from one fixed point in the
-physical world, returns to that world by a few points, also fixed,
-after a transient passage through the animal organism.
-
-Or more precisely, it is a transposition from the realm of matter
-into the world of energy, of the idea of the _vital vortex_ of
-Cuvier and the biologists. They defined life by its most constant
-property—nutrition. Nutrition was exactly this current of matter which
-the organism obtains from without by alimentation, and which it throws
-out again by excretion; and the even momentary interruption of which,
-if complete, would be the signal of death. The cycle of energy is the
-exact counterpart of this cycle of matter.
-
-The second truth taught us by general physiology, a truth which
-physiology learned from experiment, is enunciated as follows:—_The
-maintenance of life consumes none of its energy. It borrows from the
-external world all the energy which it expends, and borrows it in the
-form of potential chemical energy._ This is a translation into the
-language of energetics of the results acquired in animal physiology
-during the last fifty years. No comment is needed to exhibit the
-importance of such a truth. It reveals the origin of animal activity.
-It reveals the source from which proceeds that energy which at some
-moment of its transformations in the animal organism will be a _vital
-energy_.
-
-The _primum movens_ of vital activity is, therefore, according to this
-law, the chemical energy stored up in the immediate principles of the
-organism.
-
-Let us try to follow, for a moment, this energy through the organism
-and to specify the circumstances of its transformations.
-
-_Organic Functional Activity, and the Destruction of
-Reserve-stuff._—Let us suppose then, for this purpose, that our
-attention is directed to a given limited part of this organism, to
-a certain tissue. Let us seize it, so to speak, by observation at a
-given moment, and let us make an examination of the functional activity
-starting from this conventional moment. This functional activity,
-like all other vital phenomena, will be the result, as we have just
-explained, of a transformation of the potential chemical energy
-contained in the materials held in reserve in the tissue. This is our
-first perceptible fact. This energy, when disengaged, will furnish to
-the vital action the means by which it may be prolonged.
-
-There is, then, a _functional destruction_. There is, at the beginning
-of the functional process, and by a necessary effect of that very
-process, a liberation of chemical energy; and that can only take place
-by a decomposition of the immediate principles of the tissue, or, as we
-may say, by a destruction of organic material. Claude Bernard insisted
-on this consideration, that the vital function is accompanied by a
-destruction of organic material. “When a movement is produced, when a
-muscle is contracted, when volition and sensibility are manifested,
-when thought is exercised, when a gland secretes, then the substance
-of the muscles, of the nerves, of the brain, of the glandular tissue,
-is disorganized, is destroyed, and is consumed.” Energetics enables us
-to grasp the deeply-seated reason of this coincidence between chemical
-destruction and the functional activity, the existence of which Claude
-Bernard intuitively suspected. A portion of organic material is
-decomposed, is chemically simplified, becomes less complex, and loses
-in this kind of descent the chemical energy which it contained in its
-potential state. It is this energy which becomes the very texture of
-the vital phenomenon.
-
-It is clear that the reserve of energy thus expended must be replaced,
-because the organism remains in equilibrium. Alimentation provides for
-this.
-
-How does it provide for it? This is a question which deserves detailed
-examination. We cannot incidentally treat it in full; we can only
-indicate its main features.
-
-_How the supply of Reserve Stuff is kept up._—We know that food does
-not directly replace the reserve of energy consumed by the functional
-activity. It is not its potential chemical energy which replaces,
-purely and simply, the energy brought into play, consumed, or, better
-still, transformed in the active organ, or tissue. Food as it is
-introduced, inert food, does not, in fact, take up its place _as it
-is_, without undergoing changes in that organ and that tissue, in order
-to restore the _status quo ante_.
-
-Before building up the tissue it will have undergone various
-modifications in the digestive apparatus. It will have also undergone
-changes in the circulatory apparatus, in the liver, and in the
-very organ we are considering. It is after all these changes that
-assimilation takes place. It will find its place and will have then
-passed into the state of _reserve_.
-
-The food digested, modified, and finally incorporated as an integral
-part in the tissue in which it will be expended, is therefore in a new
-state, differing more or less from its state when it was ingested. It
-is a part of the living tissue in the state of constitutive reserve.
-Its potential chemical energy is not the same as that of the food
-introduced. It may differ from it very remarkably in consequence of
-sudden alterations.
-
-We do not know for certain at the expense of what category of foods
-this or that given organ builds up its reserve stuff. There is a
-belief, for instance, according to M. Chauveau, that the muscle does
-its work at the expense of the reserve of glycogen which it contains.
-The potential chemical energy of this substance would be a source of
-muscular mechanical energy. But we do not know exactly at the expense
-of what foods, albumenoids, fats, or carbohydrates the muscle builds
-up the reserve of _glycogen_ expended during its contraction. It is
-probable that it builds it up at the expense of each of the three
-categories after the various more or less simple alterations undergone
-by the materials in the digestive tube, the blood, the liver, or other
-organs.
-
-This building up of reserve stuff, the complement and counterpart of
-_functional destruction_, is not chemical synthesis. It is, on the
-contrary, generally, and on the whole, a simplification of the food
-that has been introduced. This is true, at least as far as the muscle
-is concerned. However, to this operation, Claude Bernard has given the
-name of _organizing synthesis_, but the phrase is not a happy one. But
-in no case was the eminent physiologist deceived as to the character of
-the operation. “The organizing synthesis,” says he, “remains internal,
-silent, hidden in its phenomenal expression, gathering together
-noiselessly the materials which will be expended.”
-
-These considerations enable us to understand the existence of the
-two great categories into which the eminent physiologist divides
-the phenomena of animal life: the phenomena of the _destruction of
-reserve-stuff_ corresponding to _functional facts_—that is to say
-expenditures of energy; and the _plastic phenomena_ of the _building-up
-of reserves_ of organic regeneration, corresponding to _functional
-repose_—_i.e._, to the supply of food to the tissues.
-
-_Distinction between Active Protoplasm and Reserve-stuff._—If it is not
-exactly in these terms that Claude Bernard formulated this fruitful
-idea, it is at any rate in this way that it is to be interpreted.
-This can be done by giving it a little more precision. We apply
-more rigorously than that great physiologist the distinction drawn
-by himself between _really active and living protoplasm_ and the
-_reserve-stuff_ which it prepares. To the latter is restricted the
-destruction by the functional activity and the building up by repose.
-
-The classification of Claude Bernard is strictly true for
-reserve-stuff. It is easy to criticize the wavering and, as it were,
-dimly groping expressions in which the celebrated physiologist has
-shrouded his ideas. The old adage will excuse him: _Obscuritate rerum
-verba obscurantur_. In the depths of his ignorance he had a flash
-of genius; perhaps he did not find the definitive and, as it were,
-clearly-cut formula defining what was in his mind. But, in this
-respect, he has left his successors an easy task.
-
-_The Law of Functional Assimilation._—The progress of physiological
-knowledge compels us therefore to distinguish in the constitution of
-anatomical elements two parts—the materials of _reserve-stuff_ and the
-_really active_ and _living protoplasm_. We have just seen how the
-reserve-stuff behaves, alternately destroyed by functional activity,
-and built up afterwards by the ingestion of food, followed by the
-operations of digestion, elaboration, and assimilation. It remains to
-ask how this really living and protoplasmic matter behaves. Does it
-follow the same law? Is it destroyed during the functional activity,
-and is it afterwards replaced? As to this we can express no opinion.
-M. le Dantec fills a gap in our knowledge, in this respect, by an
-hypothesis. He assumes that this essentially active matter grows during
-functional activity, and is destroyed during repose. This is what
-he calls the _law of functional assimilation_. The protoplasm would
-therefore behave in an exactly contrary manner to the reserve-stuff.
-It will be its counterpart. But this is only an hypothesis which, in
-the present state of our knowledge, cannot be verified by experiment
-We are at liberty to assert either that the protoplasm increases by
-functional activity or that it is destroyed. Neither the arguments nor
-the objections pro or con have any decisive value. The facts alleged on
-either side are capable of too many interpretations.[10]
-
- [10] The reason is to be found in the large number of indeterminates
- in the problem we have to solve. It will be sufficient to enumerate
- them: the two substances which exist in the anatomical element,
- protoplasm and reserve-stuff, to which are attributed contrary roles;
- the two conditions attributable to the protoplasm, of manifested or
- latent activity; the faculty possessed by both of being prolonged for
- an indeterminate period, and of encroaching each on its protagonist
- when its existence is at stake. Here are more elements than are
- necessary to explain the positive or negative results of all the
- experiments in the world.
-
-The only favourable argument (not demonstrative) is furnished by
-energetics. It is this. The _re-building of the protoplasm_ is not
-like the _organisation of reserve-stuff_, a slightly complicated or
-even simplified phenomenon, as happens in the case of the reserve of
-muscular glycogen. The glycogen, in fact, is built up at the expense
-of foods chemically more complex. It is, on the contrary, a clearly
-synthetic phenomenon, certainly of chemical complexity, since it ends
-in building up the active protoplasm which is, in some measure, of
-the highest scale of complexity. Its formation at the expense of the
-simplest alimentary materials requires, therefore, an appreciable
-quantity of energy.
-
-The assimilation which organizes the active protoplasm therefore
-requires energy for its realization. Now, at the moment of functional
-activity, and by a necessary consequence thereof, the chemical
-destruction or simplification of the substance of reserve takes place.
-Here is something that meets the case, and we may note the coincidence.
-It does not mean that the disposable energy is really used to increase
-the protoplasm, nor that the protoplasm itself is thereby increased.
-It merely signifies that the wherewithal exists to provide for that
-increase if it takes place.
-
-It is therefore _possible_ that the active protoplasm follows the law
-of functional assimilation; but it is _certain_ that the reserve-stuff
-follows the law laid down by Claude Bernard.
-
-All these considerations definitely result in the confirmation of this
-second law of general physiology, according to which all vital energies
-are borrowed from the potential chemical energy of the reserve-stuff of
-alimentary origin.
-
-
- § 4. THE THIRD LAW OF BIOLOGICAL ENERGETICS.
-
-
-The third law of biological energetics is also drawn from experiment.
-It relates no longer to the point of departure of the cycle of animal
-energy, but to its final position. _The energetic transformations of
-the animal end in thermal energy._
-
-This is the most novel part of the theory, and, if we may say so, that
-least understood by physiologists themselves. The energy resulting
-from the chemical potential of food, having passed through the
-organism (or simply through the organ which we are considering in
-action), and having given rise to phenomenal appearances more or less
-diversified, more or less dim or clear, obscure or obvious, which are
-the characteristic or still irreducible manifestations of vitality,
-finally returns to the physical world. This return takes place (with
-certain exceptions which will be presently indicated) under the
-ultimate form of thermal energy. This we are taught by experiment. The
-phenomena of functional activity are exothermal.
-
-Real vital phenomena thus lie between the chemical energy which gives
-rise to them, and the thermal phenomena to which they in their turn
-give rise. The place of the vital fact in the cycle of universal energy
-is therefore completely determined. This conclusion is of the utmost
-importance to biology. It may be expressed in a concise formula which
-sums up in a few words all that natural philosophy can teach as to
-energetics applied to living beings. “Vital energy is a transformation
-of chemical energy into thermal energy.”
-
-_Exceptions._—There are some exceptions to the rigour of this
-statement, but they are not many in number. We must first of all remark
-that it applies to _animal life_ alone.
-
-In the case of vegetables, looked at as a whole, the law must be
-modified. Their vital energy has another origin, and another final
-form. Instead of being the destroyers of chemical potential energy,
-they are its creators. They build up by means of the inert and simple
-materials afforded them by the atmosphere and the soil, the immediate
-principles by which their cells are filled. Their vital functional
-activity forms by synthesis of the reserves, carbo-hydrates (sugars and
-starches), fats, albuminoid nitrogenous materials—that is to say, the
-same three principal categories of foods as those used by animals.
-
-And to return to the latter, it should be observed that thermal energy
-is not the only final form of vital energy, as this dogmatic statement
-would have it supposed. It is only the principle of the final forms.
-The cycle of energy occasionally terminates in mechanical energy
-(phenomena of motion) and in a less degree in other energies; such
-as, for example, the electrical energy produced by the functional
-activity of the nerves and muscles in all animals, or in the functional
-activity of special organs in rays, torpedo-fish, and the malapterurus
-electricus, or finally, in the photic energy of phosphorescent animals.
-But these are secondary facts.
-
-_Heat is an Excretum._-The third principle of biological energetics
-may be therefore thus enunciated:—_Vital energy in its final form
-becomes thermal energy._ This principle teaches us that if chemical
-energy is the primitive generating form of vital energies, thermal
-energy is the form of waste, of emunctory, the degraded form as the
-physicists would say. Heat is in the dynamical order an excretion of
-animal life, as urea, carbonic acid and water, are excreta in the
-substantial order. By a false interpretation of the principle of the
-mechanical equivalence of heat, or through ignorance of Carnot’s
-principle, certain physiologists have fallen into error when they
-still speak of the transformation of heat into motion or into into
-electricity in the animal organism. Heat is transformed into nothing
-in the animal organism. It is dissipated. Its utility arises not from
-its energetic value, but from the part it plays as a primer in the
-chemical reactions, as has been explained with reference to the general
-characteristics of chemical energy.
-
-_The Effect of Energetics on our Knowledge of the Relations of
-the Universe._—The consequences of these principles of energetic
-physiology, which give us so much and which are so clear, are of the
-greatest importance from the practical as well as from the theoretical
-point of view.
-
-In the first place, they show us the position and the rank of the
-phenomena of life in the universe as a whole. They throw fresh light on
-the noble harmony of the animal and vegetable kingdoms which Priestley,
-Ingenhousz, Senebier, and the chemical school of the beginning of the
-nineteenth century discovered, and which was expounded by Dumas with
-incomparable lucidity and brilliance. Energetics is expressed in a
-line. “The animal world expends the energy accumulated by the vegetable
-world.” It extends these views beyond the living kingdoms. It shows how
-the vegetable world itself draws its activity from the energy radiated
-by the sun, and how animals restore it again, in dissipated heat,
-to the cosmic medium. It extends the harmony of the two kingdoms to
-the whole of nature. The new science makes of the whole universe one
-connected system.
-
-From a more limited point of view, and so that we may not restrict
-ourselves to a consideration of the domain of animal physiology,
-the laws of energetics sum up and explain a multitude of facts and
-of experimental laws—for example, the law of the intermittence of
-physiological activity, the facts of fatigue, the rôle and the general
-principles of alimentation, and the conditions of muscular contraction.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- ALIMENTARY ENERGETICS.
-
- Various Problems of Alimentation. § 1. _Food the source of Energy
- and Matter._ The two forms of Energy afforded by Food—Vital Energy,
- Thermal Energy. Food the source of Heat. The rôle of Heat.—§ 2.
- _Measure of the output of Energy_—by the Calometric Method—by the
- Chemical Method.—§ 3. The regular type of Food, Biothermogenic, and
- the irregular type, Thermogenic.—§ 4. Food considered as the source
- of Heat. The Law of Surfaces. The limits of Isodynamics.—§ 5. Plastic
- rôle of Food. Preponderance of Nitrogenous Foods.
-
-
-Among the problems on which energetics has thrown a vivid light we have
-mentioned alimentation, muscular contraction, and, more general still,
-the intermittence of vital functional activity. We shall begin with the
-study of alimentation.
-
-_The Different Problems of Alimentation._—What is a food? In what does
-alimentation consist? The dictionary of the _Académie_ will give us
-our first answer. It tells us that the word food is applied to “every
-kind of matter, whatever may be its nature, which habitually serves
-or may serve for nutrition.” This is very well put, but here again
-we must know what nutrition is, and that is not a simple matter; in
-fact, it practically means whatever is usually placed on the table in
-a civilized and polished society. But it is just the profound reasons
-for this traditional practice that we are trying to discover.
-
-The problem of alimentation may be looked at in a thousand ways. It
-is culinary, no doubt, and gastronomic; but it is also economical and
-social, agricultural, fiscal, hygienic, medical, and even moral. But
-first and foremost, it is physiological. It comprises and assumes the
-knowledge of the general composition of foods, of their transformations
-in the digestive apparatus, and their comparative utility in the
-maintenance and the sound functional activity of the organism. To
-this first group of subjects for our discussion are attached others
-relating to the effects of inanition, of insufficient alimentation, and
-of over-feeding. And in order to throw light on all these aspects of
-the problem of alimentation, we have to lay bare the most intimate and
-delicate reactions by which the organism is maintained and recruited,
-and, in the words of a celebrated physiologist, “to penetrate into
-the kitchen of vital phenomena.” And here neither Apicius, nor
-Brillat-Savarin, nor Berchoux, nor the moralists, nor the economists
-are of any use to us as guides. We must appeal to the scientists, who,
-following the example of Lavoisier, Berzelius, Regnault, and Liebig,
-have applied to the study of living beings the resources of general
-science, and have thus founded _chemical biology_.
-
-This branch of science developed considerably in the second half of
-the nineteenth century. It has now its methods, its technique, its
-chairs at the universities, its laboratories, and its literature.
-It has particularly applied itself to the study of the “material
-changes” or the _metabolism_ of living beings, and with that object in
-view it has done two things. In the first place, it has determined
-the composition of the constituent materials of the organism; then
-analyzing qualitatively and quantitatively all that penetrates into
-that organism in a given time—that is to say, all the alimentary or
-respiratory ingesta, and all that issues from the organism, _i.e._,
-all the excreta, all the _egesta_,—it has drawn up _nutritive balance
-sheets_, corresponding to the various conditions of life, whether
-naturally or artificially created. And thus we can determine the
-alimentary régimes which give too much, and which give too little, and
-which finally restore equilibrium.
-
-We do not propose to give a detailed account of this scientific
-movement. This may be done in monographs. All we wish to indicate
-here is the most general result of these laborious researches—that is
-to say, the laws and the doctrines which are derived from them, and
-the theories to which they have given birth. It is by this alone that
-they are brought into relation with general science, and may therefore
-interest the reader. The facts of detail are never lacking to the
-historian; it is more profitable to show the movement of ideas. The
-theories of alimentation bring into conflict very different conceptions
-of the vital functional activity. And here we find a confused medley of
-opinions on which it is not without interest to endeavour to throw some
-light.
-
-
- § 1. FOOD, A SOURCE OF ENERGY AND MATTER.
-
-
-_Definitions of Food._—Before the introduction into physiology of the
-notion of energy, no one had succeeded in giving an exact idea and a
-precise definition of food and alimentation. Every physiologist and
-medical man who attempted it had failed, and this for various reasons.
-
-The general cause of this failure was that most definitions, popular or
-technical, interposed the condition that the food must be introduced
-into the digestive apparatus. “It is,” said they, “a substance which
-when introduced into the digestive tube undergoes, etc., etc.”
-But plants draw food from the soil, and they possess no digestive
-apparatus; many animals have no intestinal tube; and in the case of
-certain rotifera, the females possess a digestive apparatus, while the
-males have none. Nevertheless all animals feed.
-
-On the other hand, there are other substances than those which use the
-digestive tract for the purpose of entering the organism, and which are
-eminently useful or necessary to the maintenance of life. In particular
-we may mention oxygen.
-
-The distinctive feature of food is its _utility_—when conveniently
-introduced or employed—to the living being. Claude Bernard’s definition
-is this:—A substance taken in the external medium “necessary for the
-maintenance of the phenomena of the healthy organism and for the
-reparation of the losses it constantly suffers.” “A substance which
-supplies an element necessary for the constitution of the organism, or
-which _diminishes its disintegration_” (stored-up food); this is the
-definition of C. Voit, the German physiologist. M. Duclaux says, in
-his turn, but in far too general terms, that it is a substance which
-contributes to assure the sound functional activity of any of the
-organs of the living being. None of these ways of describing food gives
-a complete idea.
-
-_Food, the Source of Energy and Matter._—The intervention of the
-notion of energy enables us more completely to understand the true
-nature of food. We must, in fact, have recourse to the energetic
-conception if we desire to take into account all that the organism
-requires from food. It not only requires _matter_, but also, and most
-important of all, energy.
-
-Investigators so far concentrated their thoughts exclusively on the
-necessity of a supply of matter—that is to say, they only looked upon
-one side of the problem. The living body presents, at each of its
-points, an uninterrupted series of disintegrations and reconstitutions,
-the materials being supplied from without by alimentation, and rejected
-by excretion. Cuvier gave to this unceasing circulation of ambient
-matter throughout the vital world the name of _vital vortex_, and he
-rightly saw in it the characteristic of nutrition, and the distinctive
-feature of life.
-
-This idea of the _cycle of matter_ has been completed in our own
-time by that of the _cycle of energy_. All the phenomena of the
-universe, and therefore those of life, are conceived of as energetic
-transformations. We now look at them in their relationship instead of
-considering them individually as of old. Each has an antecedent and a
-consequent unity with which it is connected in magnitude by the law of
-equivalents taught us by contemporary physics. And thus we may conceive
-of their succession as the cycle of a kind of indestructible agent,
-which changes only apparently, or assumes another form as it passes
-from one to the other, but its magnitude remains unaltered. This is
-energy. Thus, in the living being there is not only a circulation of
-matter, but also a circulation of energy.
-
-The most general result of research in physiological chemistry
-from the time of Lavoisier down to our own day has been to teach us
-that _the antecedent of the vital phenomenon is always a chemical
-phenomenon_. The vital energies are derived from the potential chemical
-energy accumulated in the immediate constituent principles of the
-organism. In the same way _the consequent phenomenon of the vital
-phenomenon is in general a thermal phenomenon_. The final form of vital
-energy is thermal energy. These three assertions as to the nature, the
-origin, and the final form of vital phenomena constitute the three
-fundamental principles, the three laws, of biological energetics.
-
-_Food, a Source of Heat. It is not quâ source of heat that food is
-the source of vital energy._—The place of vital energy in the cycle
-of universal energy is completely determined. It lies between the
-chemical energy which is its generating form and the thermal energy
-which is its form of disappearance, of breakdown, the “degraded form,”
-as the physicists say. Hence we have a result which can be immediately
-applied in the theory of food—namely, that heat is in the dynamical
-order an excretum of the animal life rejected by the living being,
-just as in the substantial order, urea, carbonic acid and water, are
-the materials used up and again rejected by it. We therefore must
-not think of the transformation in the animal organism of heat into
-vital energy, as certain physiologists always do. Nor must we think,
-with Béclard, of its transformation into muscular movement; or, as
-others have maintained, into animal electricity. This is not only
-an error of doctrine but an error of fact. It proceeds from a false
-interpretation of the principle of the mechanical equivalent of heat
-and a misunderstanding of Carnot’s principle. Thermal energy does not
-repeat the course of the energetic flux in the animal organism. The
-heat is not transformed into anything. It is simply dissipated.
-
-_The Part played by Animal Heat as a Condition of Physiological
-Manifestations._—Does this mean that heat is useless to life in the
-very beings in which it is most abundantly produced—_i.e._, in man
-and in the warm-blooded vertebrates? So far from this being so, it is
-necessary to life. But its utility has a peculiar character which must
-neither be misunderstood nor exaggerated. It is not transformed into
-chemical or vital reactions, but merely creates for them a favourable
-condition.
-
-According to the first principle of energetics, for the vital fact
-to be derived from the thermal fact, the heat must be preliminarily
-transformed into chemical energy, since chemical energy is necessarily
-an antecedent and generating form of vital energy. Now this regressive
-transformation is impossible according to the current theories of
-general physics. The part played by heat in the act of chemical
-combination is that of a primer to the reaction. It consists in
-placing the reacting bodies, by changing their state or by modifying
-their temperature, in the condition in which they ought to be for the
-chemical forces to come into play. For example, in the combination of
-hydrogen and oxygen by setting light to an explosive mixture, heat
-only acts as a primer to the phenomenon, because the two gases which
-are passive at ordinary temperatures, require to be raised to 400°
-C. before chemical affinity comes into play. And so it is with the
-reactions which go on in the organism. They have a maximum temperature,
-and the part played by animal heat is to furnish them with it.
-
-It follows that heat intervenes in animal life in two capacities—first
-and foremost as _excretum_, or end of the vital phenomenon, of
-_physiological work_; and on the other hand, as a _condition_ or
-_primer_ of the chemical reactions of the organism; and generally,
-as a favourable condition for the appearance of the physiological
-manifestations of living matter. Thus, it is not dissipated in sheer
-waste.
-
-I was led to adopt these views some years ago from certain experiments
-on the rôle played in food by alcohol. I did not then know that they
-had already been expressed by one of the masters of contemporary
-physiology, M. A. Chauveau, and that they were related in his mind to
-a series of conceptions and of researches of great interest, in the
-development of which I have since then taken a share.
-
-_Two Forms of Energy supplied to Animals by Food._—To say that food is
-simultaneously a supply of energy and a supply of matter, is really to
-express in a single sentence the fundamental conception of biology, in
-virtue of which life brings into play no substratum or characteristic
-dynamism. According to this, the living being appears to us as the seat
-of an incessant circulation of matter and energy, starting from the
-external world and returning to it. All food is nothing but this matter
-and this energy. All its characteristics, our views as to its rôle, its
-evolution, all the rules of alimentation are simple consequences of
-this principle, interpreted by the light of energetics.
-
-And first of all, let us ask what forms of energy are afforded by food?
-It is easy to see that there are two—food is essentially a source of
-chemical energy; and secondarily and accessorily, it is a source of
-heat. Chemical energy is the only energy, according to the second
-law of energetics, which may be transformed into vital energy. It is
-true at any rate for animals; for in plants it is otherwise. There the
-vital cycle has neither the same point of departure nor the same final
-position. The circulation of energy does not take place in the same
-manner.
-
-On the other hand, and this we are taught by the third law, energy
-brought into play in vital phenomena is finally liberated and restored
-to the physical world in the form of heat. We have just said that this
-release of heat is employed in raising the temperature of the living
-being. It is animal heat.
-
-Thus there are two forms of energy supplied by food, chemical and
-thermal.
-
-It must be added that these are not the only forms, but the principal,
-and by far the most important. It is not absolutely true that heat is
-the only outcome of the vital cycle. It is only so in the subject in
-repose, contented to live idly without doing external mechanical work,
-without lifting a tool or a weight, even that of its own body. And
-again, speaking in this way, we neglect all the movements and all the
-mechanical work which is done without exercise of the volition, by the
-beating of the heart and of the arteries, the movements of respiration,
-and the contractions of the digestive tube.
-
-Mechanical work is, in fact, another possible termination of the cycle
-of energy. But there is no longer anything necessary or inevitable
-in this, since motion and the use of force are in a certain measure
-subordinated to the capricious volition of the animal.[11]
-
- [11] There is another reason why the rôle of mechanical energy,
- compared with that of thermal energy, is reduced, in the partition of
- afferent, alimentary energy—at least, in animals which have not to do
- excessive work. The unit of heat, the Calorie, is equivalent to 425
- units of work—_i.e._, to 425 kilogrammetres. In the animal at rest,
- the number of kilogrammetres representing the different quantities
- of work done is small, the number of corresponding Calories is 425
- times smaller. It becomes almost negligeable in comparison with the
- considerable number of Calories dissipated in the form of heat.
-
-At other times, again, it is an electrical phenomenon which terminates
-the vital cycle, and it is, in fact, in this way that things happen
-in the functional activity of the nerves and muscles in all animals,
-and in the functional activity of the electrical organ in fish, such
-as the ray and the torpedo. Finally, the termination may be a photic
-phenomenon, and this is what happens in phosphorescent animals.
-
-It is idle to diminish the power of these principles by proceeding
-to enumerate the whole of the exceptions to their validity. We know
-perfectly well that there are no absolute principles in nature. Let
-us say, then, that the energy which temporarily animates the living
-being is furnished to it by the external world under the exclusive
-form of potential chemical energy; but that, if there is only one door
-of entry, there are two exits. It may return to the external world
-in the principal form of thermal energy and in the accessory form of
-mechanical energy.
-
-
- § 2. MEASUREMENT OF THE SUPPLY OF ALIMENTARY ENERGY.
-
-
-_Calorimetric Method._—From what has preceded it is clear that if the
-energetic _flux_ which circulates through the animal emerges, _in
-toto_, in the state of heat, the measurement of this heat becomes the
-measurement of the vital energy itself, for the origin of which we
-must go back to the food. If the flux is divided into two currents,
-mechanical and thermal, they must both be measured and the sum of their
-values taken. If the animal does not produce mechanical work, and all
-ends in heat, we have only to capture, by means of a calorimeter,
-this energetic flux as it emerges, and thus measure in magnitude and
-numerically the energy in motion in the living being. Physiologists use
-for this purpose various types of apparatus. Lavoisier and Laplace used
-an ice calorimeter—that is to say, a block of ice in which they shut up
-a small animal, such as a guinea-pig; they then measured its thermal
-production by the quantity of ice it caused to melt. In one of their
-experiments, for instance, they found that a guinea-pig had melted 341
-grammes of ice in the space of ten hours, and had therefore set free 27
-Calories.
-
-But since those days more perfect instruments have been invented.
-M. d’Arsonval employed an air calorimeter, which is nothing but a
-differential thermometer very ingeniously arranged, and giving an
-automatic record. Messrs. Rosenthal, Richet, Hirn and Kaufmann,
-and Lefèvre have used more or less simplified or complicated air
-calorimeters. Others, following the example of Dulong and Despretz,
-have used calorimeters of air and mercury, or with Liebermester,
-Winternitz, and J. Lefèvre (of Havre), have had recourse to baths.
-Here, then, there is a considerable movement of research which has led
-to the discovery of very interesting facts.
-
-_Measurement of the Supply of Alimentary Energy by the Chemical
-Method._—We may again reach our result in another way. Instead of
-surprising the current of energy as it emerges and in the form of
-heat, we may try and capture it at its entry in the form of potential
-chemical energy.
-
-The evaluation of potential chemical energy may be effected with the
-same unit of measurement as the preceding—that is to say, the Calorie.
-If we consider man and mammals, for example, we know that there is
-only apparently an infinite variety in their foods. We may say that
-they feed on only three substances. It is a very remarkable fact that
-all the complexity and multiplicity of foods, fruits, grains, leaves,
-animal tissues, and vegetable products of which use is made, reduce to
-so great a simplicity and uniformity, that all these substances are of
-three types only: albuminoids, such as albumen or white of egg—foods of
-animal origin or varieties of albumen; carbo-hydrates, which are more
-or less disguised varieties of sugar; and finally, fats.
-
-Here, then, from the chemical point of view, leaving out certain
-mineral substances, are the principal categories of alimentary
-substances. Here, with the oxygen that is brought in by respiration, is
-everything that penetrates the organism.
-
-And now, what comes out of the organism? Three things only, water,
-carbonic acid, and urea. But the former are the products of the
-combustion of the latter. If we consider an adult organism in perfect
-equilibrium, which varies throughout the experiment neither in
-weight nor in composition, we may say that the receipts balance the
-expenditure. Albumen, sugar, fat, plus the oxygen brought in, balance
-quantitatively the water, carbonic acid, and urea expelled. Things
-happen, in fact, as if the foods of the three categories were burned up
-more or less completely by the oxygen.
-
-It is this combustion that we have known since the days of Lavoisier
-to be the source of animal heat. We can easily determine the quantity
-of heat left by albumen passing into the state of urea, and by the
-starch, the sugars, and the fats reduced to the state of water and
-carbonic acid. This quantity of heat does not depend on the variety
-of the unknown intermediary products which have been formed in the
-organism. Berthelot has shown that this quantity of heat which measures
-the chemical energy liberated by these substances is identical with
-the quantity obtained by burning the sugar and the fats in a chemical
-apparatus, in a calorimetric bomb, until we get carbonic acid and
-water, and by burning albumen till we get urea. This result is a
-consequence of Berthelot’s _principle of initial and final states_.
-The liberated heat only depends on the initial and final states, and
-not on the intermediary states. The heat left in the economy by the
-food being the same as that left in the calorimetric bomb, it is easy
-for the chemist to determine it. It has thus been discovered that
-one gramme of albumen produces 4.8 Calories, one gramme of sugar 4.2
-Calories, and one gramme of fat 9.4 Calories. We thus gather what a
-given ration—a mixture in certain proportions of these different kinds
-of foods—supplies to the organism and what energy it gives it, measured
-in Calories.
-
-The calculation may be carried out to a high degree of accuracy if,
-instead of confining ourselves to the broad features of the problem, we
-enter into rigorous detail. It is only, in fact, approximately that we
-have reduced all foods to albumen, sugar, and fat, and all excreta to
-water, carbonic acid, and urea.
-
-The reality is a little more complicated. There are varieties of
-albumen, carbo-hydrates, and fatty bodies, the heats of combustion of
-which in the organism oscillate in the neighbourhood of the numbers
-4.8, 4.2, and 9.4. Each of these bodies has been individually examined,
-and numerical tables have been drawn up by Berthelot, Rubner, Stohmann,
-Van Noorden, etc. The tables exhibit the thermal value or energetic
-value of very different kinds of foods.
-
-In our climate, the adult average man, doing no laborious work, daily
-consumes a maintenance ration composed, as a rule, of 100 grammes of
-albuminoids, 49 grammes of fats, and 403 grammes of carbo-hydrates.
-This ration has an energetic value of 2,600 Calories.
-
-It is therefore, thanks to the victories won in the field of
-thermo-chemistry, and to the principles laid down since 1864 by M.
-Berthelot, that this second method of attack on nutritive dynamism has
-been rendered possible. Physiologists, by the aid of these methods,
-have drawn up _balance-sheets of energy_ for living beings just as they
-had previously established _balance-sheets of matter_.
-
-Now, it is precisely researches of this kind that we have indicated
-here as a consequence of biological energetics, which in reality have
-helped to build up that principle. These researches have shown us
-that, in conformity with the _principles of thermodynamics_, there
-was not, in fact, in the organism, any transformation of heat into
-mechanical work, as the physiologists for a short time supposed, on
-the authority of Berthelot. With the help of our theory this mistake
-is no longer possible. The doctrine of energetics shows us in fact
-the current of energy dividing itself, as it issues from the living
-being, into two divergent branches, the one thermal and the other
-mechanical, external the one to the other although both issuing from
-the same common trunk, and having between them no relation but this,
-that the sum of their discharges represents the total of the energy
-in motion. Let us now translate these very simple notions into the
-more or less barbarous jargon in use in physiology. We shall be
-convinced as we go on of the truth of the saying of Buffon, that
-“the language of science is more difficult to learn than the science
-itself.” We shall say, then, that chemical energy, that the unit of
-weight of the food which may be placed in the organism, constitutes
-the alimentary _potential_, the _energetic value_ of this substance,
-its _dynamogenic power_. It is measured in units of heat, in Calories,
-which the substance may leave in the organism. The evaluation is made
-according to the principles of thermo-chemistry, by means of the
-numerical tables of Berthelot, Rubner, and Stohmann. The same number
-also expresses the _thermogenic power_, virtual or theoretical, of the
-alimentary substance. This energy being destined to be transformed
-into _vital energies_ (Chauveau’s _physiological work_, _physiological
-energy_), the dynamogenic or thermogenic value of the food is at the
-same time its biogenetic value. Two weights of different foods which
-supply the organism with the same number of Calories,—_i.e._ for which
-these numerical values are the same,—will be called _isodynamic_ or
-_isodynamogenic_, _isobiogenetic_, _isoenergetic_ weights. They will
-be equivalent from the point of view of their alimentary value. And
-finally, if, as is usually the case, the cycle of energy ends in the
-production of heat, the food which has been utilized for this purpose
-has a real _thermogenic value_, identical with its theoretical
-thermogenic value. In this case it might be determined experimentally
-by direct calorimetry, measuring the heat produced by the animal
-supposed absolutely unchanged and identical before and after the
-consumption of the food.
-
-
- § 3. DIFFERENT TYPES OF FOODS. THE REGULAR, BIOTHERMOGENIC TYPE AND
- THE IRREGULAR, THERMOGENIC TYPE.
-
-
-Food is a source of thermal energy for the organism because it is
-decomposed within it, and undergoes within it a chemical degradation.
-Physiological chemistry tells us that whatever be the manner in which
-it is broken up, it always results in the same body and always sets
-free the same quantity of heat. But if the point of departure and the
-point of arrival are the same, it is possible that the path pursued is
-not constantly identical. For example, one gramme of fat will always
-give the same quantity of heat, 9.4 Calories, and will always come
-to its final state of carbonic acid and water; but from the fat to
-the mixture of carbonic acid gas and water there are many different
-intermediaries. In a word we get the conception of varied cycles of
-alimentary evolutions.
-
-From the point of view of the heat produced it has just been said that
-these cycles are equivalent. But are they equivalent from the vital
-point of view? This is an essential question.
-
-Let us imagine the most ordinary alternative. Food passes from the
-natural to the final state after being incorporated with the elements
-of the tissues, and after having taken part in the vital operations.
-The chemical potential only passes into thermal energy after having
-passed through a certain intermediary phase of vital energy. This
-is the normal case, _the regular type of alimentary evolution_. It
-may be said in this case that the food has fulfilled the whole of
-its function, it has served for the vital functional activity before
-producing heat. It has been _biothermogenic_.
-
-_The irregular or pure thermogenic type._—And now let us conceive of
-the most simple _irregular or aberrant type_. Food passes from the
-initial to the final state without incorporation in the living cells of
-the organism, and without taking part in the vital functional activity.
-It remains confined in the blood and the circulating liquids, but it
-undergoes in the end, however, the same molecular disintegration as
-before, and sets free the same quantity of heat Its chemical energy
-changes at once into thermal energy. Food is a _pure thermogen_. It
-has fulfilled only one part of its work. It has been of slight vital
-utility.
-
-Does this ever occur in reality? Are there foods which would be only
-_pure thermogens_—that is to say, which would not in reality be
-incorporated with the living anatomical elements, which would form no
-part of them either in a state of provisory constituents of the living
-protoplasm, or in the state of reserve-stuff; which would remain in the
-internal medium, in the blood and the lymph, and would there undergo
-their chemical evolution? Or again, if the whole of the food does not
-escape assimilation, would it be possible for part to escape it? Would
-it be possible for one part of the same alimentary substance to be
-incorporated, and for the rest to be kept in the blood or the lymph,
-in the circulating liquids _ad limina corporis_, so to speak? In other
-words, can the same food be according to circumstances a _biothermogen_
-or a _pure thermogen_? Some physiologists—Fick of Wurzburg, for
-instance—have claimed that this is really the case for most
-nitrogenous elements, carbohydrates, and fats; all would be capable
-of evolving according to the two types. On the other hand, Zuntz and
-von Mering have absolutely denied the existence of the aberrant or
-pure thermogenic type. No substances would be directly decomposed in
-the organic liquids apart from the functional intervention of the
-histological elements. Finally, other authors teach that there is a
-small number of alimentary substances which thus undergoes direct
-combustion, and among them is alcohol.
-
-_Liebig’s Superfluous Consumption._—Liebig’s _theory of superfluous
-consumption_ and Voit’s _theory of the circulating albumen_ assert
-that the proteid foods undergo partial direct combustion in the
-blood vessels. The organism only incorporates what is necessary for
-physiological requirements. As for the surplus of the food that is
-offered it, it accepts it, and, so to speak, squanders it; it burns it
-directly; and we have a “sumptuary” consumption, consumption _de luxe_.
-
-In this connection arose a celebrated discussion which still divides
-physiologists. If we disengage the essential body of the discussion
-from all that envelops it, we see that it is fundamentally a question
-of deciding whether a food always follows the same evolution whatever
-the circumstances may be, and particularly when it is introduced in
-great excess. Liebig thought that the superabundant part, escaping
-the ordinary process, was destroyed by direct combustion. He affirmed,
-for instance, that nitrogenous substances in excess were directly
-burned in the blood instead of passing through their usual cycle of
-vital operations. We might express the same idea by saying that they
-then undergo an accelerated evolution. Instead of passing through the
-blood in the anatomical element, to return in the dismembered form from
-the anatomical element to the blood, their breaking up takes place in
-the blood itself. They save a displacement, and therefore in reality
-remain external to the construction of the living edifice. Their
-energy, crossing the intermediary vital stage, passes with a leap from
-the chemical to the thermal form. Liebig’s doctrine reduced to this
-fundamental idea deserved to survive, but mistakes in minor details
-involved its ruin.
-
-_Voit’s Circulating Albumen._—A few years later C. Voit, a celebrated
-physiological chemist of Munich, revived it in a more extravagant form.
-He held that almost the whole of the albuminoid element is burned
-directly in the blood. He interpreted certain experiments on the
-utilization of nitrogenous foods by imagining that these substances
-when introduced into the blood were divided as a result of digestion
-into two parts: the one very small, which was incorporated with the
-living elements, and passed into the stage of _organized albumen_, the
-other, corresponding to the greater part of the alimentary albumen,
-remained mingled with the blood and lymph, and was subjected in this
-medium to direct combustion. This was _circulating albumen_. In this
-theory the tissues are almost stable; the organic liquids alone are
-subjected to oxydizing transformations, to nutritive metabolism. The
-accelerated evolution, which Liebig considered as an exceptional case,
-was to C. Voit the rule.
-
-_Current Ideas as to the Rôle of Foods._—The ideas of to-day are not
-those of Voit; but they do not, however, differ from them essentially.
-We no longer admit that the greater part of the ingested and digested
-albumen remains confined in the circulating medium external to the
-anatomical elements. It is held, with Pflüger and the school of Bonn,
-that it penetrates the anatomical element and is incorporated in it;
-but in agreement with Voit it is believed that a very small part is
-assimilated to the really living matter, to the protoplasm properly
-so called; the greater part is deposited in the cellular element as
-reserve-stuff. The material, properly so called, of the living machine
-does not undergo destruction and reparation as extensively as our
-predecessors supposed. There is no need for great reparation. On the
-contrary, the physiological activity consumes to a great extent the
-reserve-stuff. And the greater part of the food, after having undergone
-suitable elaboration, serves to replace the reserve-stuff destroyed in
-each anatomical element by the vital functional activity.
-
-_Experimental Facts._—Among the facts which brought physiologists
-of the school of Voit to believe that most foods do not get beyond
-the internal medium, there is one which may well be mentioned here.
-It has been observed that the consumption of oxygen in respiration
-increases notably (about a fifth of its value) immediately after a
-meal. What does this mean? The interval is too short for the digested
-alimentary substances to have been elaborated and incorporated in the
-living cells. It is supposed that an appreciable time is required
-for this complete assimilation. The products of alimentary digestion
-are therefore in all probability still in the blood, and in the
-interstitial liquids in communication with it. The increase of oxygen
-consumed would show that a considerable portion of these nutritive
-substances absorbed and passed into the blood would be oxydized and
-then and there destroyed. But this interpretation, however probable
-it may be, does not really fit in with the facts in such a way that
-we may consider it as proved. Certain experiments by Zuntz and Mering
-are opposed to the idea that combustion in the blood is easy. These
-physiologists injected certain oxydizable substances into the vessels
-without being able to detect any instantaneous oxidation. It is only
-fair to add that against these fruitless attempts other more fortunate
-experiments may be quoted.
-
-_Category of Purely Thermogenic Foods, with Accelerated Evolution.
-Alcohol. Acids of Fruits._—The accelerated evolution of foods—an
-evolution which takes place in the blood, that is to say outside the
-really living elements—remains, therefore, very uncertain as far as
-ordinary food is concerned. It has been thought that it was a little
-less uncertain as far as the special category of alcohol, acids of
-fruits, and glycerine is concerned.
-
-Some authors consider these bodies as pure thermogens. When alcohol
-is ingested in moderate doses, they say that about a tenth of the
-quantity absorbed becomes fixed in the living tissues; the rest is
-“circulating alcohol.” It is oxidized directly in the blood and in
-the lymph, without intervening in the vital functions other than by
-the heat it produces. From the point of view of the energetic theory
-these are not real foods, because their potential energy is not
-transformed into any kind of vital energy, but passes at once to the
-thermal form. On the other hand, other physiologists look upon alcohol
-as really a food. According to them everything is called a food which
-is transformed in the organism with the production of heat; and they
-measure the nutritive value of a substance by the number of Calories
-it can give up to the organism. So that alcohol would be a better food
-than carbohydrated and nitrogenous substances. A definite quantity of
-alcohol, a gramme for instance, is equivalent from the thermal point of
-view to 1.66 grammes of sugar, 1.44 of albumen, or 0.73 of fat. These
-quantities would be _isodynamic_.
-
-Experiment has not entirely decided for or against this theory.
-However, the first tests have not been very favourable to it.
-The researches of C. von Noorden and his pupils, Stammreich and
-Miura, have clearly and directly established that alcohol cannot
-be substituted in a maintenance ration for an exactly isodynamic
-quantity of carbohydrates. If the substitution is effected, a ration
-only just capable of maintaining the organism in equilibrium becomes
-insufficient. The animal decreases in weight. It loses more nitrogenous
-matter than it can recover from its diet, and this situation cannot be
-sustained for long. On the other hand, the celebrated researches of
-the American physiologist, Atwater, would plead, on the contrary, in
-favour of almost isodynamic substitution. Finally, Duclaux has shown
-that alcohol is a real food, biothermogenic for certain vegetable
-organisms. But urea is also a food for _micrococcus ureæ_. It does not
-follow that it is a food for mammals. We have not reached the solution
-yet—_adhuc sub judice_.
-
-_Conclusion: The Energetic Character of Food._—To sum up we have
-confined ourselves, in what has been said, to the consideration of a
-single character of food, and really the most essential, its energetic
-character. Food must furnish energy to the organism, and for that
-purpose it is decomposed and broken up within it, and issues from it
-simplified. It is thus, for instance, that the fats, which from the
-chemical point of view are complicated molecular edifices, escape in
-the form of carbonic acid and water. And so it is with carbo-hydrates,
-starchy and sugary substances. This is because these compounds descend
-to a lower degree of complexity during their passage through the
-organism, and by this drop, as it were, they get rid of the chemical
-energy which they contained in the potential state. Thermo-chemistry
-enables us to deduce from the comparison of the initial and final
-states the value of the energy absorbed by the living being. This
-energetic, dynamogenic or thermogenic value, thus gives a measure
-of the alimentary capacity of the substance. A gramme of fat, for
-instance, gives to the organism a quantity of energy equivalent to 9.4
-Calories; the thermogenic value of the albumenoids is 4.8 Calories.
-The thermogenic or thermal value of carbohydrates is less than 4.7
-calories. This being so, we understand why the animal is nourished by
-foods which are products very high in the scale of chemical complexity.
-
-
- § 4. FOOD CONSIDERED EXCLUSIVELYY AS SOURCE OF HEAT.
-
-
-We have seen that food is, in the first place, a source of _chemical
-energy_; and, in the second place, a source of _vital energy_—finally,
-and consequently, a source of thermal energy. It is this last point
-of view which has exclusively struck the attention of certain
-physiologists, and hence has arisen a peculiar manner of conceiving the
-rôle of food. It consists in looking on food as a source of thermal
-energy.
-
-This conception is easily applied to warm-blooded animals, but to them
-exclusively—and this is where it first fails. The animal is warmer than
-the environment in general. It is constantly giving out heat to it. To
-repair this loss of heat it takes in food in exact proportion to the
-loss it sustains. When it is a question of cold-blooded vertebrates,
-which live in water and in most cases have an internal temperature
-which is not distinguishable from that of the environment, we see less
-clearly the thermal rôle of food. It seems then that the production of
-heat is an episodic phenomenon, not existing for itself.
-
-However that may be, food is in the second place a source of thermal
-energy for the organism. Can it be said, inversely, that every
-substance which we introduce into the economy, and which is there
-broken up and gives off heat, is a food? This is a moot point. We dealt
-just now with purely thermogenic foods. However, most physiologists
-are inclined to give a positive answer. In their eyes the idea of food
-cannot be considered apart from the fact of the production of heat.
-They take the effect for the cause. To these physiologists everything
-ingested is called food, if it gives off heat within the body.
-
-To be heated by food is, indeed, an imperious necessity for the higher
-animals. If this need be not satisfied the functional activities
-become enervated; the animal falls into a state of torpor; and if it
-is capable of attenuated, of more or less latent, life it sleeps in
-a state of hibernation; but if it is not capable of this, it dies.
-The warm-blooded animal with a fixed temperature is so organized that
-this constancy of temperature is necessary to the exercise and to the
-conservation of life. To maintain this indispensable temperature there
-must be a continual supply of thermal energy. According to this, the
-necessity of alimentation is confused with the necessity of a supply
-of heat to cover the deficit which is due to the inevitable cooling
-of the organism. This is the point of view taken up by theorists, and
-we cannot say that they have no right to do so. We can only protest
-against the exaggeration of this principle, and the subordination
-of the other rôles of food to this single role as a thermogen. It
-is the magnitude of the thermal losses which, according to these
-physiologists, determines the need for food, and regulates the total
-value of the maintenance ration. From the quantitative view it is
-approximately true. From the qualitative point of view it is false.
-
-Such is the theory opposed to the theory of chemical and vital energy.
-It has on its side a large number of experts, among whom are Rubner,
-Stohmann, and von Noorden. It has been defended in an article in
-the _Dictionnaire de Physiologie_ by Ch. Richet and Lapicque. They
-hold that thermogenesis absolutely dominates the play of nutritive
-exchanges; and it is the need for the production of heat that
-regulates the total demand for Calories which every organism requires
-from its ration. It is not because it produces too much heat that
-the organism gets rid of it peripherally: it is rather because it
-inevitably disperses it that it is adapted to produce it.
-
-_Rubner’s Experiments._—This conception of the rôle of alimentation
-is based on two arguments. The first is furnished by Rubner’s last
-experiment (1893). A dog in a calorimeter is kept alive for a rather
-long period (two to twelve days); the quantity of heat produced in this
-lapse of time is measured, and it is compared with the heat afforded by
-the food. In all cases the agreement is remarkable. But is it possible
-that there should be no such agreement? Clearly no, because there is a
-well-known regulating mechanism which always exactly proportions the
-losses and the gains of heat to the necessity of maintaining the fixed
-internal temperature. This first argument is, therefore, not conclusive.
-
-The second argument is drawn from what has been called the _law of
-surfaces_, clearly perceived by Regnault and Reiset in their celebrated
-memoir in 1849, formulated by Rubner in 1884, and beautifully
-demonstrated by Ch. Richet. In comparing the maintenance rations
-for subjects of very different weights, placed under very different
-conditions, it is found that the food always introduces the same
-number of Calories for the same extent of skin—_i.e._, for the same
-cooling surface. The numerical data collected by E. Voit show that,
-under identical conditions, warm-blooded animals daily expend the same
-quantity of heat per unit of surface—namely, 1.036 Calories per square
-yard. The average ration introduces exactly the amount of food which
-gives off sensibly this number of Calories. Now, this is an interesting
-fact, but, like the preceding, it has no demonstrative force.
-
-_Objections. The Limits of Isodynamism._—On the contrary, there are
-serious objections. The thermal value of the nutritive principles only
-represents one feature of their physiological rôle. In fact, animals
-and man are capable of extracting the same profit and the same results
-from rations in which one of the foods is replaced by an _isodynamic_
-proportion of the other two—that is to say, a proportion developing the
-same quantity of heat. But this substitution has very narrow limits.
-Isodynamism—that is to say, the faculty that food has of supplying _pro
-ratâ_ its thermal values—is limited all round by exceptions. In the
-first place, there are a few nitrogenous foods that no other nutritive
-principle can supply; and besides, beyond this minimum, when the
-supply takes place, it is not perfect. Lying between the albuminoids
-and the carbohydrates relatively to the fats, it is not between these
-two categories relatively to nitrogenous substances if the thermal
-power of food were the only thing that had to be considered in it, the
-isodynamic supply would not fail in a whole category of principles such
-as alcohol, glycerin, and the fatty acids. Finally, if the thermal
-power of a food is the sole measure of its physiological utility,
-we are compelled to ask why a dose of food may not be replaced by a
-dose of heat. External warming might take the place of the internal
-warming given by food. We might be ambitious enough to substitute for
-rations of sugar and fat an isodynamic quantity of heat-giving coal,
-and so nourish the man by suitably warming his room. In reality, food
-has many other offices to fulfill than that of warming the body and
-of giving it energy—that is to say, of providing for the functional
-activity of the living machine. It must also serve to provide for
-wear and tear. The organism needs a suitable quantity of certain
-fixed principles, organic and mineral. These substances are evidently
-intended to replace those which have been involved in the cycle of
-matter, and to reconstitute the organic material. To these materials we
-may give the name of _histogenetic_ foods (repairing the tissues), or
-of _plastic_ foods.
-
-
- § 5. THE PLASTIC RÔLE OF FOOD.
-
-
-_Opinions of the Early Physiologists._—It is from this point of view
-that the ancients regarded the rôle of alimentation. Hippocrates,
-Aristotle, and Galen believed in the existence of a unique nutritive
-substance, existing in all the infinitely different bodies that man
-and the animals utilize for their nourishment. It was Lavoisier
-who first had the idea of a dynamogenic or thermal rôle of foods.
-Finally, the general view of these two species of attributes and their
-marked distinction is due to J. Liebig, who called them _plastic_ and
-_dynamogenic_ foods. In addition he thought that the same substance
-should accumulate the same attributes, and that this was the case with
-the albuminoid foods, which were at once _plastic_ and _dynamogenic_.
-
-_Preponderance of Nitrogenous Foods._—Magendie, in 1836, was the
-pioneer who introduced in this interminable list of foods the first
-simple division. He divided them into proteid substances, still called
-albuminoids, nitrogenous, quaternary, and _ternary substances_. Proteid
-substances are capable of maintaining life. Hence the preponderant
-importance given by the eminent physiologist to this order of foods.
-These results have since been verified. Pflüger, of Bonn, gave a
-very convincing proof of this a few years ago. He fed a dog, made it
-work, and finally fattened it, by giving it nothing at all to eat but
-meat from which had been extracted, as thoroughly as possible, every
-other substance.[12] The same experiment showed that the organism can
-manufacture fats and carbo-hydrates at the expense of the nitrogenous
-food, when it does not find them ready formed in the ration. The
-albumen will suffice for all the needs of energy and and matter. To
-sum up, there is no necessary fat, no carbohydrate is necessary;
-albuminoids alone are indispensable. Theoretically, the animal and man
-alike could maintain life by the exclusive use of proteid food; but,
-practically, this is not possible for man, because of the enormous
-amount of meat which would have to be used (3 kilogrammes a day).
-
- [12] It is not certain, however, that all the precautions taken
- have the desired result. You cannot entirely deprive meat of its
- carbohydrates.
-
-Ordinary alimentation comprises a mixture of three orders of
-substances, and to this mixture albumen brings the plastic element
-materially necessary for the reparation of the organism; it also is
-the source of energy. The two other varieties only bring energy. In
-this mixed regimen the quantity of albumen must never descend below a
-certain minimum. The efforts of physiologists of late years have tended
-to fix with precision this minimum ration of albuminoids—or as we may
-briefly put it, of _albumen_—below which the organism would perish.
-Voit had found 118 grammes of albumen necessary for the average adult
-man weighing 70 kilos. This figure is certainly too high. The Japanese
-doctors, Mori, Tsuboï, and Murato, have shown that a considerable
-portion of the population of Japan is content with a diet much poorer
-in nitrogen, and suffers no inconvenience. The Abyssinians, according
-to Lapicque, ingest, on the average, only 67 grammes of albumen per
-day. A Scandinavian physiologist, Siven, experimenting on himself,
-found that he could reduce the ration of albumen necessary to the
-maintenance and equilibrium of the organism to the lowest figures
-which have been yet reached—namely, from 35 to 46 grammes a day. These
-experiments, however, must be confirmed and interpreted. Besides, it
-is important to point out that the most advantageous ration of albumen
-requires to be a good deal above the strictly sufficient quantity.
-
-It only remains to refer to several other recent researches. The most
-important of many are those published by M. Chauveau, on the reciprocal
-transformation of the immediate principles in the organism according
-to the conditions of its functioning and the circumstances of its
-activity. To deal with these researches with as much detail as they
-deserve, we must study the physiology of muscular contraction and of
-movement—that is to say, of muscular energetics.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK III.
-
- THE CHARACTERS COMMON TO LIVING BEINGS.
-
- Chapter I. Summary: The doctrine of vital unity.—Chapter II. The
- morphological unity of living beings.—Chapter III. The chemical unity
- of living beings.—Chapter IV. The mutability of living beings.—Chapter
- V. The specific form, its acquisition, and reparation.—Chapter VI.
- Nutrition.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- THE DOCTRINE OF VITAL UNITY.
-
- Phenomena common to all living beings—Theory of vital duality—Unity in
- the formation of immediate principles—Unity in the digestive acts—The
- common vital fund.
-
-
-When we ask the various philosophical schools what life is, some show
-us a chemical retort, and others show us a soul. Whether vitalists
-or of the mechanical school, these are the adversaries who since
-philosophy began have vainly contested the possession of the secret
-of life. We need not concern ourselves with this eternal quarrel. We
-need not ask Pythagoras, Plato, Aristotle, Hippocrates, Paracelsus,
-Van Helmont, and Stahl what idea they formed of the vital principle;
-nor need we probe to the depths the ideas of living nature held by
-Epicurus, Democritus, Boerhaave, Willis, and Lamettrie; nor need we
-apply to the iatromechanicians nor to the chemists. We may do better
-than that. We may ask nature itself.
-
-_Phenomena Common to Living Beings._—Nature shows us an infinite number
-of beings, animal or vegetable, described in ordinary language as
-_living beings_. This language implicitly assumes something common to
-them all, a universal manner of being which belongs to them without
-distinction, without regard to differences of species, types, or
-kingdoms. On the other hand, anatomical analysis teaches us that
-animated beings and plants may be divided into parts ever decreasing
-in complexity, of which the last and the simplest is the _anatomical
-element_, the _cell_, the microscopic organic unit which, too, is
-alive. Common opinion suspects that all these beings, whether entire
-as in the case of animal and vegetable individuals, or fragmentary as
-in the case of cellular elements, have the same manner of being, and
-present the same body of common characteristics which rightly gives
-them this unmistakable title of living beings. Life then essentially
-would be this manner of being, common to animals, vegetables, and their
-elements. To seize in isolation these common, necessary, and permanent
-features, and then to synthetize them into a whole, will be the really
-scientific method of defining life, and of explaining its nature.
-
-And here then immediately arises a fundamental question which gives
-one pause, a question of fact which must be solved before we can
-go further. Is there really a common manner of being in all these
-things? Are _animal life, vegetable life_, and the life of the
-elements or _elementary life_, all the same? Is there a sum total of
-characteristics which may define life in general?
-
-The physiologists, following in the steps of Claude Bernard, respond in
-the affirmative. They accept as valid and convincing the proof given of
-this vital community by the illustrious experimentalist. However there
-are some rare exceptions to this universal assent. In this concert
-of approval there is at least one discordant voice, that of M. F. Le
-Dantec.[13]
-
- [13] M. Le Dantec, of whose philosophical and rigorously systematic
- mind I have the highest opinion, has laid down a new conception of
- life, the essential basis of which is this very distinction between
- elementary life and ordinary life; between the life of the elements
- or of the beings formed from a single cell, protophytes and protozoa,
- and the life of ordinary animals and plants, which are multicellular
- complexes, and for that reason called _metazoa_ and _metaphytes_.
-
- Further, in the _elementary life_ peculiar to monocellular beings
- (protozoa and cellular elements), M. Le Dantec distinguishes three
- manners of being:—The first condition, which is elementary life
- manifested in all its perfection, cellular health; the second
- condition is deteriorated elementary life, _cellular disease_; and the
- third condition, which is _latent life_. I should say at once that in
- so far as the fundamental distinction of the phenomena of _elementary
- life_ and those of the general life of animals and ordinary plants,
- metazoa or metaphytes is concerned, we find it neither justified nor
- useful. And further, _manifested elementary life_, as M. Le Dantec
- understands it, would only belong to a small number of _elementary
- beings_—for the protozoa, starting with the infusoria, are not among
- the number—and to a still smaller number of _anatomical elements_,
- since among the vertebrates we recognize as almost the only elements
- satisfying it, the ovule, and perhaps the leucocyte. Physiologists,
- therefore, do not agree with M. Le Dantec as to the utility of adding
- one condition more to those we all admit—namely, manifested animal
- life and latent life.
-
-_The Doctrine of the Vital Duality of Animals and Plants._—There are,
-therefore, biologists who, in the domain of theory and in virtue of
-more or less well-founded conceptions or interpretations, separate
-_elementary life_ from other vital forms, and thus break the bond of
-vital unity proclaimed by Claude Bernard. This monistic doctrine at the
-outset met with other opponents, and that, too, in the domain of facts.
-But it triumphed over them and became established. We have to deal with
-scientists like J. B. Dumas and Boussingault, who drew a dividing line
-between _animal life_ and _vegetable life_.
-
-But let us in a few words recall to the reader this victorious struggle
-of the monistic doctrine against the dualism of the two kingdoms. If
-we consider an animal in action, said the champions of vital dualism,
-we agree that it feels, moves, breathes, digests, and finally, that
-it destroys by a real operation of chemical analysis the materials
-afforded to it by its ambient world. It is in these phenomena that are
-manifested its activity, its life. Now, added the dualists, plants do
-not feel, do not move, do not breathe, and do not digest. They build
-up from immediate principles, by an operation of chemical synthesis,
-the materials they borrow from the soil which bears them, or from the
-atmosphere which surrounds them. There is, therefore, nothing in common
-between the representatives of the two kingdoms if we confine ourselves
-to the examination of the actual phenomena which take place in them.
-To find a resemblance between the animal and the vegetable, said the
-dualists, we must set aside what they _do_, for they do different,
-or even contrary things. We must consider whence they come and what
-they _become_. Both originate in organisms similar to themselves.
-They grow, evolve, and generate as they themselves were generated.
-In other words, while their acts separate plants from animals, their
-mode of origin and evolution alone bring them together. Such analogies
-are of no slight importance; but they were neutralized by their
-dissimilarities, which were exaggerated by the dualistic school.
-
-It is clear that the word _life_ would lose all actual significance to
-those who would reduce it to the faculty of evolution, and who would
-separate all its real manifestations in animated beings and in plants.
-If there are two lives, the one animal and the other vegetable, there
-are no more; or, what comes to the same thing, there is an infinite
-number of lives which have nothing in common but the name, or at most,
-the possession of some secondary characteristics. There are as many of
-them as there are different beings, for each has its own particular
-evolution. Here the specific is the negation of the general and it
-destroys it instead of being subordinate to it. The principle of life
-becomes for each being something as individual as its own evolution.
-And this, if we think it out, is how the philosophers look at life,
-and it is the real reason of their disagreement with the physiological
-school.
-
-_Proof of the Monistic Theory._—On the other hand, under the
-disguise of living forms, the physiologist recognizes the existence
-of an identical basis. His trained ear marks amid the overcharged
-instrumentation of the vital work the recognizable undertones of
-a constant theme. It was the work of Claude Bernard to bring this
-common basis to light. He shows that plants live as animals do, that
-they breathe, digest, have sensory reactions, move essentially like
-animals, destroy and build up in the same manner the immediate chemical
-principles. For that purpose it was necessary to pass in review,
-examining them from their foundation and distinguishing the essential
-from the secondary, the different vital manifestations—digestion,
-respiration, sensibility, motility, and nutrition. This is what Claude
-Bernard did in his work _Sur les Phénomènes de la vie communs aux
-animaux et aux plantes_. We need only to sketch in broad outline the
-characteristic features of his lengthy demonstration.
-
-_Unity in the Formation of Immediate Chemical Principles._—The first
-and most important of the differences pointed out between the life of
-animals and that of plants was relative to the formation of immediate
-principles. On this ground, indeed, vital dualism raised its fortress.
-The animal kingdom was considered in its totality as the parasite of
-the vegetable kingdom. To J. B. Dumas, animals, whatever they may be,
-make neither fat nor any elementary organic matter; they borrow all
-their foods, whether they be sugars or starches, fats or nitrogenous
-substances, from the vegetable kingdom. About the year 1843 the
-researches of the chemists, and of Payen in particular, succeeded in
-proving the presence, almost constant, of fatty matters in vegetables;
-and, further, these matters existed there in proportions more than
-sufficient to explain how the beast which fed upon them was fattened.
-The chemists attributed to nature as much practical sense as they
-themselves possessed; and since the hay and the grass of the ration
-brought fat ready made to the horse, the cow, and the sheep, they
-declared that the animal organism had nothing whatever to do but to
-put this food into the tissues, or to arrange for it to pass into the
-milk. But nature is not so wise and economical as was supposed at
-the Académie des Sciences. After a memorable debate, in which Dumas,
-Boussingault, Payen, Liebig, Persoz, Chossat, Milne-Edwards, and
-Flourens took part, and, later on, Berthelot and Claude Bernard, it was
-agreed that the animal does not grow fat from the fatty food which is
-supplied it, and that it makes its own fat just as the vegetable does,
-but in another manner. In the same way sugar, the normal constituent
-substance necessary for the nutrition of animals and plants, instead of
-being a vegetable product passing by alimentation from the herbivorous
-animals and thence to the carnivorous, is manufactured by the animal
-itself. Generally speaking, immediate principles have an equal claim
-to existence in the two kingdoms. Both form and destroy the substances
-indispensable to life.
-
-Here, then, one of the barriers between animal life and vegetable life
-is overthrown and destroyed.
-
-_Unity of Digestive Acts in Animals and Plants._—Similarly, another
-barrier falls if we show that digestion, long considered the exclusive
-function of animals, and, in particular, of the higher animals, is in
-reality universal.
-
-Cuvier pointed out the absence of a digestive apparatus as a very
-general and distinctive characteristic of plants. But the absence
-of a digestive apparatus does not necessarily imply the absence of
-digestion. The essential act of digestion is independent of the
-infinite variety of the organs, just as a reaction is independent of
-the form of the vessel in which it takes place. It is, in fact, a
-chemical transformation of an alimentary substance. This transformation
-may be realized outside the organism, _in vitro_, just as it can in
-the living being without masticating organs, without an intestinal
-apparatus, without glands, in a vessel placed in a stove, simply by
-means of a few soluble ferments—pepsine, trypsine, amylolytic diastases.
-
-All alimentary substances, whether taken from without or borrowed
-from the reserves accumulated in the internal stores of the organism,
-must undergo preparation. This preparation is digestion. Digestion is
-the prologue of nutrition. It is over when the reparative substance,
-whether food or reserve-stuff, is brought into a state enabling it to
-pass into the blood, and to be utilized by the organism.
-
-_The Identity of Categories of Foods in the Two Kingdoms._—Now the
-alimentary substances are the same in the two kingdoms, and so
-is their digestive preparation. Alimentary materials are of four
-kinds: albuminoid, starchy, fatty, and sugary substances. The animal
-takes them from without (food properly so-called), or from within
-(reserve-stuff). Man obtains starch, for instance, from different
-farinaceous dishes. It may, however, equally well be borrowed from
-the reserve of flour that we carry within us in our liver, which is a
-veritable granary, full of floury substance, glycogen. And so it is
-with vegetables. The potato has its store of flour in its tuber just as
-the animal has in its liver. The grain which is about to germinate has
-it in reserve-stuff in its cotyledons, or in its albumen. The bud which
-is about to develop into a tree or a flower carries it at its base.
-
-The same conclusions are true for another class of substances, the
-sugars. They may be a food taken from without, or a reserve deposited
-in the tissues. The animal takes from without, in fruits for instance,
-the ordinary sugar which pleases its taste. Beetroot, when flowering
-and fructifying, draws this substance from its roots in which stores
-have been amassed. The sugar cane when running to seed takes the sugar
-from the stores which it possesses in its cane. Brewer’s yeast, the
-_saccharomyces cerevisiæ_, the agent of alcoholic fermentation, finds
-this same substance in the sugary juices favourable to its development.
-
-In the same way, identically fatty substances, either in the
-form of food or of reserve-stuff, serve for nutrition to animals
-and vegetables; and that is again true of the substances of the
-fourth class, albuminoids, identical in the two kingdoms, foods or
-reserve-stuff, equally utilizable in both after digestion.
-
-_Identity of the Digestive Agents and Mechanisms in Plants and
-Animals._—Now, the results of contemporary research have been to
-establish a surprising resemblance in the modifications experienced
-by these foods, or reserve stuffs, in animals and plants; and even
-resemblances in the agents which realize them, and in the mechanisms by
-which they are performed. There is a real unity. The flour accumulated
-in the tuber of the potato is liquefied and digested on the appearance
-of the buds or of the flower, just as the starch of the liver or the
-alimentary flour is digested by the animal. The fatty matter which
-is stored up in the oleaginous grain is digested at the moment of
-germination, just as the fat during a meal is digested in the animal’s
-intestine. As the beetroot begins to run to seed, the root gives up
-part of its store of sugar, and this reserve stuff is distributed
-throughout the stalk after having been digested, exactly as would have
-been the case in the digestive canal of man.
-
-Vegetables, then, really digest. The four classes of substances
-mentioned above are really digested in order to pass from their
-actual form, a form unsuitable for interstitial exchanges, to another
-form suitable for nutrition. As there are four kinds of foods, so
-there are four kinds of digestions, four kinds of ferment-producing
-agents—amylolytic,[14] proteolytic,[15] saccharine, and lipasic[16]
-diastases, identical in the animal and the plant. Identity of ferments
-implies identity of digestions. Going down to the very basis of things,
-the digestive act is nothing but the action of this ferment. This
-is the crux of the whole question. All else is only difference in
-scene, varying in the means of execution and in the accessories. The
-difference arises from the stage on which it takes place, but the piece
-which is being played is the same, and the actors are the same, and so
-is the action of the play.
-
- [14] Amylolytic ferments change starch and glycogen (_amyloses_) into
- sugar.—TR.
-
- [15] Proteolytic ferments change proteids into peptones and
- proteoses.—TR.
-
- [16] The enzyme known as lipase splits the fat or oil in germinating
- seeds into a fatty acid and glycerine.—TR.
-
-This identity between animal and vegetable life is found in the
-phenomena of respiration and of motility. The limits of this book do
-not allow of our entering into the details of facts. Besides, the facts
-are well known, and may be found in any treatise on general physiology.
-This science, therefore, enables us to perceive the imposing unity of
-life in its essential manifestations.
-
-The community of the phenomena of vitality in animals and plants being
-thus placed beyond a doubt, we must now discover the reason why. This
-reason is to be found in their anatomical and in their chemical unity.
-The fundamental phenomena are common because the composition is common,
-and because the universal anatomical basis, the cell, possesses in all
-cases a sum total of identical properties.
-
-If we appeal to physiology for the characteristics common to living
-beings, it will generally give us the following:—A structure or
-organization; a certain chemical composition which is that of _living
-matter_; a specific form; an evolution which in the earliest stage
-occasions the being to grow and develop until it is divided, and
-which in the highest stage includes one or more evolutive cycles
-with growth, the adult stage, senility, and death; a property of
-increase or nutrition, with its consequence—namely, a relation of
-material exchanges with the ambient medium;—and finally, a property of
-reproduction. It is important to pass them rapidly in review.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- MORPHOLOGICAL UNITY OF LIVING BEINGS.
-
- § 1. The cellular theory. First period: division of the organism—§
- 2. Second period: division of the cell—Cytoplasm—The nucleus—§ 3.
- Physical constitution of living matter—The micellar theory—§ 4.
- Individuality of complex beings—The law of the constitution of
- organisms.
-
-
-The first characteristic of the living beings is _organization_.
-By that we mean that they have a structure; that they are complex
-bodies formed of smaller aliquot parts and grouped according to a
-certain disposition. The most simple elementary being is not yet
-homogeneous. It is heterogeneous. It is organized. The least complex
-protoplasms, those of bacteria, for example, still possess a physical
-structure; Kunstler distinguishes in them two non-miscible substances,
-presenting an alveolar organization. Thus animals and plants present an
-organization, and it is sensibly constant from one end to the other of
-the scale of beings. There is a _morphological unity_.
-
-
- § 1. THE CELLULAR THEORY. FIRST PERIOD: DIVISION OF THE ORGANISM INTO
- CELLS.
-
-
-_Cellular Theory. First Period._—Morphological unity results from the
-existence of a universal anatomical basis, the _cell_. The cellular
-theory sums up the teaching of general anatomy or histology.
-
-At the beginning of the nineteenth century anatomy was following a
-routine dating from ancient times. It divided animal and vegetable
-machines into units in descending order, first into different forms
-of apparatus (circulatory, respiratory, digestive, etc.); then the
-apparatus into organs examined one by one, figuring and describing each
-of them from every point of view with scrupulous accuracy and untiring
-patience. If we think of the duration of these researches—the _Iliad_,
-as Malgaigne says, already containing the elements of a very fine
-regional anatomy—and especially of the powerful impulse they received
-in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, we shall understand the
-illusion of those who, in the days of X. Bichat, could fancy that the
-task of anatomy was almost ended.
-
-As a matter of fact this task was barely begun, for nothing was known
-of the intimate structure of the organs. X. Bichat accomplished a
-revolution when he decomposed the living body into tissues. His
-successors, advancing a step in the analysis, dissociated the
-tissues into elements. These elements, which one would have thought
-were infinitely varied, were reduced in their turn to one common
-_prototype_, the cell.
-
-The living body, disaggregated by the histologist, resolves under the
-microscope into a dust, every grain of which is a cell. A cell is an
-anatomical element the constitution of which is the same from one
-part to the other of the same being, and from one being to another;
-and its dimensions, which are sensibly constant throughout the whole
-of the living world, have an average diameter of several thousandths
-of a millimetre—_i.e._, of several _microns_. This element, the cell,
-is a real organ. It is smaller, no doubt, than those described by the
-ancient anatomists, but it is not less complex. Its complexity is only
-revealed later. It is an organic unit. Its form varies from one element
-to another. Its substance is a semi-fluid mass, a mixture of different
-albuminoids. In the mean value of its dimensions, so carefully
-measured—_exceptis excipiendis_—we have a condition the significance of
-which has not yet been discovered, but which may be of great value in
-the explanation of its peculiar activities.
-
-Such is the result to which have converged the researches of the
-biologists who have examined plants or the lower animals, as well as
-of the anatomists who have been more especially occupied with the
-vertebrates and with man. All their researches have brought them to the
-same conclusion—the cellular theory. Either living beings are composed
-of a single cell—as is the case with the microscopic animals called
-_protozoa_, and the microscopic vegetables called _protophytes_—or,
-they are cellular complexes, _metazoa_ or _metaphytes_—that is to say,
-associations of these microscopic organic units which are called cells.
-
-_The Law of the Composition of Organisms._—The law of the composition
-of organisms was discovered in 1838 by Schleiden and Schwann. From that
-time up to 1875 it may be said that micrographers have spent their
-time in examining every organ and every tissue, muscular, glandular,
-conjunctive, nervous, etc., and in showing that in spite of their
-varieties of aspect and form, of the complexity of structures due to
-cohesion and fusion, they all resolve into the common element, the
-cell. Contemporary anatomists, Koelliker, Max Schultze, and Ranvier,
-have thus established the generality of the cellular constitution,
-while zoologists and botanists confirm the same law for all animals and
-vegetables, and exhibit them all as either unicellular or multicellular.
-
-_The Cellular Origin of Complex Beings._—At the same time embryogenic
-researches showed that all beings spring from a corpuscle of the same
-type. Going back in the history of their development to the most remote
-period, we find a cell of very constant constitution—namely, the
-_ovule_. This truth may be expressed by changing a word in Harvey’s
-celebrated aphorism—_omne vivum ex ovo_; we now say omne _vivum e
-cellula_. The myriads of differentiated anatomical elements whose
-association forms complex beings are the posterity of a cell, of the
-_primordial ovule_, unless they are the posterity of another equivalent
-cell. The second task of histology in the latter half of the nineteenth
-century consisted in following up the filiation of each anatomical
-element from the cell-egg to its state of complete development.
-
-The whole cellular theory is contained in the two following statements,
-which establish the morphological unity of living beings:—_Everything
-is a cell, everything comes from an initial cell_; the cell being
-defined as a mass of substance, protoplasm or protoplasms, of an
-average diameter of a few microns.
-
-
- § 2. THE SECOND PERIOD: THE DIVISION OF THE CELL.
-
-
-_Second Period: Constitution of the Cell._—This was, however, only the
-first phase in the analytical study of the living being. A second
-period began in 1873 with the researches of Strassburger, Bütschli,
-Flemming, Kuppfer, Fromann, Heitzmann, Balbiani, Guignard, Kunstler,
-etc. These observers in their turn submitted this anatomical, this
-infinitely small cellular microcosm, to the same penetrating dissection
-their predecessors had applied to the whole organism. They brought
-us down one degree lower into the abyss of the infinitely small. And
-as Pascal, losing himself in these wonders of the imperceptible, saw
-in the body of the mite which is only a point, “parts incomparably
-smaller, legs with joints, veins in the legs, blood in the veins,
-humours in the blood, drops in the humours, vapours in these drops,” so
-contemporary biologists have shown in the epitome of organism called a
-cell, an edifice which itself is marvellously complex.
-
-_The Cytoplasm._—The observers named above revealed to us the extreme
-complexity of this organic unit. Their researches have shown us the
-structure of the two parts of which it is composed—the cellular
-protoplasm and the nucleus. They have determined the part played by
-each in genetic multiplication. They have shown that the protoplasm
-which forms the body of the cell is not homogeneous, as was at first
-supposed. The idea which was mooted later, that this protoplasm was
-formed, to use Sachs’ words, of a kind of “protoplasmic mud,”—_i.e._,
-of a dust consisting of grains and granules connected by a liquid,—is
-no longer accurate. There is a much simpler view of the case. According
-to Leydig and his pupils, we must compare the protoplasm to a sponge in
-the meshes of which is lodged a fluid, transparent, hyaline substance,
-a kind of cellular juice, hyaloplasm. From the chemical point of
-view this cellular juice is a mixture of very different materials,
-albumens, globulins, carbohydrates, and fats, elaborated by the cell
-itself. It is a product of vital activity; it is not yet the seat of
-this activity. The living matter has taken refuge in the spongy tissue
-itself, in the _spongioplasm_.
-
-According to other histologists, the comparison of protoplasm to a
-spongy mass does not give the most exact idea, and, in particular, it
-does not furnish the most general idea. It would be far better to say
-that the protoplasm possesses the structure of foam or lather. As was
-seen by Kunstler in 1880, a comparison with some familiar objects gives
-the best idea. Nothing could be more like protoplasm physically than
-the culinary preparation known as _sauce mayonnaise_, made with the aid
-of oil and a liquid with which oil does not mix. Emulsions of this kind
-were made artificially by Bütschli. He noted that these preparations
-mimicked all the aspects of cellular protoplasm. Thus, in the living
-cell there is a mixture of two liquids, non-miscible and of unequal
-fluidity. This mixture gives rise to the formation of little cells. The
-more consistent substance forms their supporting framework (Leydig’s
-spongioplasm), while the other, which is more fluid, fills its interior
-(hyaloplasm).
-
-However that may be, whether the primitive organization of the cellular
-protoplasm be that of a sponge, as is asserted by Leydig, or that of
-a _sauce mayonnaise_, as is claimed by Bütschli and Kunstler, the
-complexity does not rest there. Further recourse must be made to
-analysis. Just as the tissue of a sponge, when torn, shows the fibres
-which constitute it, so the spongioplasm, the parietal substance,
-is exhibited as formed of a tangle of fibrils, or better still, of
-filaments or ribbons (in Greek, _mitome_), which are called _chromatic
-filaments_, because they are deeply stained when the cell is plunged
-into aniline dye. In each of these filaments, the substance of which
-is called chromatin, the devices of microscopic examination enable
-us to discover a series of granulations like beads on a string, the
-_microsomes_ or bioblasts, connected one with the other by a sort of
-cement, Schwartz’s _linin_, which is a kind of nuclein.
-
-And let us add, to complete this summary of the constitution of
-cellular protoplasm, that it presents, at any rate at a certain moment,
-a remarkable organ, the _centrosome_, which plays an important part
-in cellular division. Its pre-existence is not certain. Some writers
-make it issue from the nucleus. At the moment of cellular division it
-appears like a compressed mass of granulations, which may be deeply
-stained. Around it is seen a clear unstainable zone, called the
-attraction-sphere; and finally, beyond this is a crown of striæ, which
-diverge like the rays of a halo—_i.e._, the _aster_. In conclusion,
-there are yet in the cellular body three kinds of non-essential bodies:
-the vacuoles, the leucites, and various inclusions. The _vacuoles_ are
-cavities, some inert, some contractile; the _leucites_ are organs for
-the manufacture of particular substances; the _inclusions_ are the
-manufactured products, or wastes.
-
-_The Nucleus_.—Every cell capable of living, growing, and multiplying,
-possesses a _nucleus_ of constitution very analogous to the cellular
-mass which surrounds it. The anatomical elements in which no nucleus
-is found, such as the red globules of blood in adult mammals, are
-bodies which are certain, sooner or later, to disappear. There is
-therefore no real cell without a nucleus, any more than there is a
-nucleus without a cell. The exceptions to this law are only apparent.
-Histologists have examined them one by one, and have shown their purely
-specious character. We may therefore lay aside, subject to possible
-appeal from this decision, organisms such as Haeckel’s _monera_ and
-the problem of finding out if bacteria really have a nucleus. The very
-great, if not the absolute generality of the nuclear body, must be
-admitted.
-
-It hence follows that there is a nuclear protoplasm and a nuclear
-juice, just as we have seen that there is a protoplasm and a cellular
-juice. What was just said of the one may now be repeated of the other,
-and perhaps with even more emphasis. The nuclear protoplasm is a
-filamentary mass sometimes formed of a single mitome or cord, folded
-over on itself and capable of being unrolled. The mitome in its turn
-is a string of microsomes united by the cement of the linin. These are
-the same constituent elements as before, and the language of science
-distinguishes them one from the other by a prefix to their name of
-the words _cyto_ or _karyo_, which in Greek signify cell and nucleus,
-according as they belong to one or the other of these organs. These
-are mere matters of nomenclature, but we know that in the descriptive
-sciences such matters are not of minor importance.
-
-We have just indicated that in a state of repose,—that is to say, under
-ordinary conditions,—the structure of a nucleus reproduces clearly the
-structure of the cellular protoplasm which surrounds it. The nuclear
-essence is best separated from the spongioplasm. It takes more clearly
-the form of a filamentary thread, and the filaments themselves
-(mitome) show very thick chromatic granulations, or microsomes,
-connected by the linin.
-
-At the moment of reproduction of the cell these granulations blend
-into a stainable sheath which surrounds the filaments, and the latter
-dispose themselves so as to form a single thread. This chromatic
-filament, which has now become a single thread, is shortened as
-it thickens (_spireme_); it is then cut into segments, twelve or
-twenty-four in the case of animals and a larger number in the case of
-plants. These are _chromosomes_, or _nuclear segments_, or _chromatic_
-loops. Their part is a very important one. They are constant in number
-and permanent during the whole of the life of the cell. Let us add that
-the nucleus still contains accessory elements (nucleoli).
-
-_The Rôle of the Nucleus_.—Experiment has shown that the nucleus
-presides over the nutrition, the growth, and the conservation of
-the cell. If, following the example of Balbiani, Gruber, Nussbaum,
-and W. Roux of Leipzig, we cut into two a cell without injuring the
-nucleus, the fragment which is denuded of the nucleus continues to
-perform its functions for some time in the ordinary manner, and in
-some measure in virtue of its former impulse. It then declines and
-dies. On the contrary, the fragment provided with the nucleus repairs
-its wound, is reconstituted and continues to live. Thus the nucleus
-takes a very remarkable part in the reproduction of the cell, but it
-is still a matter of uncertainty whether its rôle is here subordinated
-to that of the cellular body, or if it is pre-eminent. However that
-may be, it follows from this experiment that the nucleus presents all
-the characteristics of a vigorous vitality, and that it is in its
-protoplasm that the chemists should be able to find the compounds, the
-special albuminoids, which, _par excellence_, form living matter.
-
-
- § 3. THE PHYSICAL CONSTITUTION OF LIVING MATTER. THE MICELLAR THEORY.
-
-
-_Physical Constitution of Living Matter_.—Microscopic examination
-does not take us much farther. The microscope, with the strongest
-magnification of which it is capable at present, shows us nothing
-beyond these links of aligned microsomes forming the species of
-protoplasmic thread or mitome, whose cellular body is a confused
-tangle or a very tangled ball. It is not probable that direct sight
-can penetrate much farther than this. No doubt the microscope, which
-has been so vastly improved, is capable of still further improvement.
-But these improvements are not indefinite. We have already reached a
-linear magnification of 2000, and theory tells us that a magnification
-of 4000 is the limit which cannot be passed. The penetrating power of
-the instrument is therefore near its culminating point. It has already
-given almost all that we have a right to expect from it.
-
-We must, however, penetrate beyond this microscopic structure at which
-the sense of sight has been arrested. How is this to be done? When
-observation is arrested, hypothesis takes its place. Here there are two
-kinds of hypotheses, the one purely anatomical, the other physical.
-Anatomically, beyond the visible microsomes there have been imagined
-invisible hyper-microscopic corpuscles, the plastidules of Haeckel,
-the idioblasts of Hertwig, the pangenes of de Vries, the plasomes of
-Wiesner, the gemmules of Darwin, and the biophores of Weismann.
-
-Biologists who have not got all that they hoped from microscopic
-structure are therefore thrown back on hyper-microscopic structure.
-
-It is very remarkable that all this profound knowledge of structure has
-been so sterile from the point of view of the knowledge of cellular
-functional activity. All that is known of the life of the cell has
-been revealed by experiment. Nothing has resulted from microscopic
-observation but ideas as to configuration. When it is a question of
-giving or imagining an explanation of vital facts, of heredity, etc.,
-biologists unable to supply anything beyond the details of structure
-revealed by anatomy have had recourse to hypothetical elements,
-gemmules, pangenes, biophores, and different kinds of determinants.
-
-Anatomy never has explained and never will explain anything. “Happy
-physicists!” wrote Loeb, “in never having known the method of research
-by sections and stainings! What would have happened if by chance a
-steam engine had fallen into the hands of a histological physicist?
-How many thousands of sections differently stained and unstained, how
-many drawings, how many figures, would have been produced before they
-knew for certain that the machine is an engine, and that it is used for
-transforming heat into motion!”
-
-The study of physical properties, continued on rational hypotheses, has
-also thrown some light on the possible constitution of living matter.
-The gap between microscopical structure and molecular or chemical
-structure has thus been filled.
-
-The consideration of the properties of _turgescence_ and of _swelling_,
-which very generally belong to organized tissues, and therefore to the
-organic substance of protoplasm, has enabled us to obtain some idea of
-its ultra-microscopic constitution. If we wet a piece of sugar or a
-morsel of salt, before they are dissolved they absorb and imbibe the
-water without sensibly increasing their volume. It is quite otherwise
-with a tissue (_i.e._, with a protoplasm) when weakened in water as a
-preliminary. The tissue, plunged into the liquid, absorbs it, swells,
-and often grows considerably. And this water does not lodge in the
-gaps, in pre-existing lacunar spaces, for organic matter presents no
-gaps of this kind. It does not resemble a porous mass with capillary
-canals, such as sandstone, tempered mortar, clay, or refined sugar.
-The molecules of water interpose between and separate the organic
-molecules, thus increasing by a sort of intussusception the intervals
-separating the one from the other—molecular intervals escaping the
-senses, as do the molecules themselves because they are of the same
-order of magnitude.
-
-_Micellar Theory._—While pondering over this phenomenon, an eminent
-physiologist, Nägeli, was led in 1877 to propose his _micellar theory_.
-Micellæ are groups of molecules in the sense in which physicists
-and chemists use the word. They are molecular structures with a
-configuration. They rapidly absorb water and are capable of fixing a
-more or less thick and adherent layer of it to their surface. In a
-word, they are aggregates of organic matter and water.
-
-There is therefore every reason for believing that the _microsomes_ of
-spongy protoplasm, the physical support or basis of cellular life,
-are _groups of micellæ_ formed of albuminoid substances and water.
-These clustered forms, these micellæ, are not absolutely peculiar to
-organized matter. Pfeffer, the learned botanist, has pointed them
-out under another name, _tagmata_, in the membranes of chemical
-precipitates.
-
-Beyond this limit analysis finds nothing but the chemical molecule
-and the atom. So that if we wish to reconstruct the hierarchy of the
-materials of constitution of the protoplasm in order of ascending
-complexity, we shall find at the foundation the atom or atoms of simple
-bodies. They are principally carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, the
-elements of all organic compounds, to which may be added sulphur
-and phosphorus. At the head we have the albuminoid molecule, or the
-albuminoid molecules, aggregates of the preceding atoms. In the third
-stage the micellæ or tagmata, aggregates of albuminoids and water, are
-still too small to be observed by the senses. They unite in their turn
-to form the microsomes, the first elements visible to the microscope.
-The microsomes, cemented by linin, form the filaments or links which
-are called mitomes. The living protoplasm is therefore nothing but a
-chain, or tangled skein, or a spongy skeleton formed by its filaments.
-
-Such is the typical constitution of living matter according to
-microscopic observation, supplemented by a perfectly reasonable
-hypothesis, which is, so to speak, only a translation of one of its
-most evident physical properties. This relatively simple scheme has
-become a complex scheme in the hands of later biologists. On the
-micellar hypothesis, which seems almost inevitable in its character,
-new hypotheses have been grafted, merely for the sake of convenience.
-Hence, we are led farther and farther from the real truth, and this is
-why, in order to explain the phenomena of heredity, we find ourselves
-compelled to intercalate hypothetical elements between micellæ and the
-microsome in the higher hierarchy quoted above—gemmules, pangenes,
-plasomes, which are only mental pictures or simple images to represent
-them.
-
-
-§ 4. THE INDIVIDUALITY OF COMPLEX BEINGS. LAW OF THE CONSTITUTION OF
-ORGANISMS.
-
-
-_Individuality of Complex Beings._—From the cellular doctrine follows a
-remarkably suggestive conception of living beings. The metazoa and the
-metaphytes—that is to say, the multicellular living beings which may be
-seen with the eyes and do not require the microscope to reveal them—are
-an assemblage of anatomical elements and the posterity of a cell.
-The animal or the plant, instead of being an individual unity, is a
-“multitude,” a term which is used by Goëthe himself when pondering, in
-1807, over the doctrine taught by Bichat; or, according to the equally
-correct expression of Hegel, it is a “nation”; it springs from a common
-cellular ancestor, just as the Jewish people sprang from the loins of
-Abraham.
-
-We now picture to ourselves the complex living being, animal or plant,
-with its configuration which distinguishes it from every other being,
-just as a populous city is distinguished by a thousand characteristics
-from its neighbour. The elements of this city are independent and
-autonomous for the same reason as the anatomical elements of the
-organism. Both have in themselves the means of life, which they neither
-borrow nor take from their neighbours nor from the whole. All these
-inhabitants live in the same way, are nourished and breathe in the
-same manner, all possessing the same general faculties, those of man;
-but each has besides, his profession, his trade, his aptitudes, his
-talents, by which he contributes to social life, and by which in his
-turn he depends on it. Professional men, the mason, the baker, the
-butcher, the manufacturer, the artist, carry out different tasks and
-furnish different products, the more varied, the more numerous and the
-more differentiated, in proportion as the social state has reached a
-higher degree of perfection. The living being, animal or plant, is a
-city of this kind.
-
-_Law of the Constitution of Organisms._—Such is the complex animal.
-It is organized like the city. But the higher law of this city is
-that the conditions of the elementary or individual life of all the
-anatomical citizens are respected, the conditions being the same for
-all. Food, air, and light must be brought everywhere to each sedentary
-element; the waste must be carried off in discharges which will free
-the whole from the inconvenience or the danger of such debris; and that
-is why we have the different forms of apparatus in the circulatory,
-respiratory, and excretory economy. The organization of the whole
-is therefore dominated by the necessities of cellular life. This is
-expressed in _the law of the constitution of organisms_ formulated by
-Claude Bernard. The organic edifice is made up of apparatus and organs,
-which furnish to each anatomical element the necessary conditions and
-materials for the maintenance of life and the exercise of its activity.
-We now understand what is the life, and at the same time what is the
-death, of a complex being. The life of the complex animal, of the
-metazoon, is of two degrees; at the foundation, the activity proper
-to each cell, _elementary life_, cellular life; above, the forms of
-activity resulting from the association of the cells, _the life of the
-whole_, the sum or rather the complex of elementary partial lives.
-There is a solidarity between them produced by the nervous system,
-by the community of the general circulatory, respiratory apparatus,
-etc., and by the free communication and mixture of the liquids which
-constitute the media of culture for each cell. We shall have an
-opportunity of recurring to current ideas as to the morphological
-constitution of organisms.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- THE CHEMICAL UNITY OF LIVING BEINGS.
-
- The varieties and essential unity of the protoplasm—Its affinity for
- oxygen—The chemical composition of protoplasm—Its characteristic
- substances.—§ 1. The different categories of albuminoid
- substances—Nucleo-proteids—Albumins and histones—Nucleins.—§
- 2. Constitution of nucleins.—§ 3. Constitution of histones and
- albumins—Schultzenberger’s analysis of albumin—Kossol’s analysis—The
- hexonic nucleus.
-
-
-The chemical unity of living beings corresponds to their morphological
-unity.
-
-_The Varieties and Essential Unity of the Protoplasm._—One essential
-feature of the living being is that it is composed of matter peculiar
-to it, which is called _living matter_, or _protoplasm_. But this is
-a somewhat incorrect way of expressing the facts. There is no unique
-living matter, no single protoplasm; their number is infinite, there
-are as many as there are distinct individuals. However like one man may
-be to another, we are compelled to admit that they differ according to
-the substance of which they are constituted. That of the first offers
-a certain characteristic personal to the first, and found in all his
-anatomical elements; similarly for the second. With Le Dantec we shall
-say that the chemical substance of Primus is not only of the substance
-of man, but in all parts of his body and in all his constituent cells
-it is the exclusive substance of Primus; and, in the same way, the
-living matter of another individual Secundus will carry everywhere his
-personal impress, which differs from that of Primus.
-
-But it is none the less true that this absolute specificity is based
-with certainty only on differences which from the chemical point
-of view are exceedingly slight. All these protoplasms have a very
-analogous composition. And, if we regard as negligible the smallest
-individual, specific, generic, or ordinal variations we may then speak
-in a general manner of _protoplasm_ or _living matter_.
-
-Experiment shows us, in fact, that the real living substance—apart
-from the products it manufactures and can retain or reject—is in every
-cell tolerably similar to itself. The fundamental chemical resemblance
-of all protoplasms is certain, and thus we may speak of their typical
-composition. We may sum up the work of physiological chemistry for the
-last three quarters of a century by affirming that it has established
-the chemical unity of all living beings—that is to say, a very notable
-analogy in the composition of their protoplasm.
-
-This living matter is essentially a mixture of the proteid or
-albuminoid substances, to which may be added other categories of
-immediate principles, such as carbohydrates and fatty matters. But
-the latter are of secondary importance. The essential element is the
-proteid substance. The most skilful chemists have tried for more than
-half a century to discover its composition. Only during the last few
-years—thanks to the researches of Kossel, the German chemist, following
-on those of Schultzenberger and Miescher—we are beginning to know the
-outer walls or the framework of the albuminoid molecule; in other
-words, its chemical nucleus.
-
-_Physical Characters of Protoplasm._—About 1860 Ch. Robin thought
-that he had defined living matter sufficiently—or, at least, as
-perfectly as could be expected at that time—by attributing to it
-three physical characteristics. They were:—Absence of homogeneity,
-molecular symmetry, and the association of three orders of immediate
-principles—albuminoids, carbohydrates and fats. These characteristics
-assist, but do not suffice, to define the organization.
-
-No doubt the characteristics must be completed by the addition of a
-certain number of more subtle physical features.
-
-One of them refers to the structure of protoplasm as revealed by the
-microscope. Throughout the whole of the living kingdom, from the
-bacteria studied by Kunstler and Busquet to the most complicated
-protozoa, protoplasmic matter presents the same constitution, and in
-consequence, this structure of the protoplasm must be considered as
-one of its distinctive characters. It is not homogeneous; it is not
-the last term of the visible organization: it is itself organized.
-Experiment shows that it does not resist breaking up or crushing.
-Mutilations cause it to lose its properties. As for the kind of
-structure that it presents, it may be expressed by saying that it is
-that of a foamy emulsion.
-
-We saw above that our knowledge as to the physical condition of
-protoplasm has been completed by the theories of Bütschli’s micellæ or
-Pfeffer’s tagmata.
-
-_Properties of the Protoplasm. Its Affinity for Oxygen._—From the
-chemical point of view, living matter presents a very remarkable
-property—namely, a great affinity for oxygen. It absorbs it
-so greedily that the gas cannot remain in a free state in its
-neighbourhood. Living protoplasm, therefore, exercises a reducing
-power. But it does not absorb oxygen in this way for its own advantage;
-oxygen is not absorbed, as was supposed thirty years ago, to supply
-fuel wherewith to burn the protoplasm. The products are not those of
-its oxidation, of its own disintegration. They are the products of
-combustion of the reserve-stuff which is incorporated in it. These
-substances have been supplied to it from without, like the oxygen
-itself, with the blood. This was proved by G. Pflüger in 1872 to
-1876. The protoplasm is only the focus, the scene, or the factor of
-combustion. It is not its victim, it does not itself furnish the fuel.
-It works like the chemist, who obtains a reaction with the substances
-that are given to him.
-
-As for the reducing power of protoplasm, A. Gautier in 1881 and Ehrlich
-in 1890 have given fresh proofs. A. Gautier in particular has insisted
-that the phenomena of combustion take place, so to speak, outside the
-cell, and at the expense of the products which surround it; while on
-the contrary the really active and living parts of the nucleus and of
-the cellular body, work protected by the oxygen, as in the case of
-anaerobic microbes.
-
-This result is of great importance. Burdon Sanderson, the late
-learned professor of physiology at the University of Oxford, has not
-hesitated to compare it to the discovery of respiratory combustion
-by Lavoisier. There is no doubt some exaggeration in the comparison;
-but there is, on the other hand, no less exaggeration in supposing
-that it is not of great importance. We may no longer in these days
-speak without reservation of the vital vortex of Cuvier, and of the
-incessant twofold movement of assimilation and dissimilation which is
-ever destroying living matter and building it up again. In reality, the
-living protoplasm varies very little; it only undergoes oscillations of
-very slight extent; it is the materials, the reserve stuff on which it
-operates, which are subject to continual transformations.
-
-_Chemical Composition of Protoplasm._—One of the the three
-characters attributed by Ch. Robin to living matter was its chemical
-composition, of which little was known in his time. He insisted on
-the constant presence in the living elements of three orders of
-immediate principles—proteid substances, carbohydrates, and fatty
-bodies. In reality the proteid substances, or albuminoids, alone are
-characteristic. The two other groups, carbohydrates and fatty bodies,
-are rather the signs and the products of the vital activity, than
-constituents of the matter on which it is exercised.
-
-It is therefore on the knowledge of the proteid substances that all the
-sagacity of biological chemists has been exercised. Their efforts for
-thirty years, and particularly in the last few years, have not been
-barren; they enable us to give a first rough sketch of the constitution
-of these substances.
-
-
- § 1. THE CHARACTERISTIC SUBSTANCES OF THE PROTOPLASM. THE
- NUCLEO-PROTEIDS.
-
-
-_The Different Categories of Albuminoid Substances._—Albuminoid or
-proteid substances are extremely complex compounds, much more so than
-any of those which are being constantly studied by the chemist.
-They also are to be found in great variety. It has been difficult to
-separate them one from the other, to characterize them rigorously,
-or, in other words, to classify them. However, it has been done now,
-and we distinguish three classes which are differentiated at once
-from the physiological and from the chemical points of view. The
-first comprises the complete or typical albuminoids. They are the
-_proteids_ or _nucleo-albuminoids_. They are to be found in the most
-active and most living parts of the protoplasm, and therefore in the
-spongioplasm of the cell and around the nucleus. The second group
-is formed of _albumins_ and _globulins_, compounds already simpler,
-fragments derived from the destruction of the preceding, into which
-they enter as constituent elements. In the isolated state they do not
-belong to the really living protoplasm; they exist in the cellular
-juice, in the interstitial and circulating liquids in the blood
-and in the lymph. The third category comprises real but incomplete
-albuminoids. They are to be found in the portions of the economy which
-have a specialized or attenuated life, and are destined to serve as
-a support to the more active elements—_i.e._, they contribute to the
-building up of the bony, cartilaginous, conjunctive, elastic tissues.
-They are called _albumoids_. It is naturally the first group, that of
-the proteids—_i.e._, of the complete and characteristic compounds of
-the living substance—upon which the attention of the physiologists
-must be fixed. It is only quite recently that the clear definition of
-these substances has been given, and proteid compounds detected in the
-confused mass.
-
-_The Nucleo-proteids._—This progress in the characterization and
-specification of the proteids required in the first place a knowledge
-of two particular compounds, the _nucleins_ and the _histones_. This
-did not become possible until after the researches of Miescher and
-Kossel on the nucleins, which went on from 1874 to 1892, and those of
-Lilienfeld and d’Yvor Bang on the histones, from 1893 to 1899. The
-complete albuminoids are constituted by the combination of two kinds of
-substances—albumins or histones on the one hand, and nucleins on the
-other. By combining solutions of albumins or histones with solutions
-of nuclein, the synthesis of the proteid is effected. The study of
-the properties and characteristics of these nucleo-albumins and
-nucleo-histones is going on at the present moment. It is being carried
-out with much method and with wonderful patience by the German school.
-
-All the proteids contain phosphorus in addition to the five chemical
-elements, carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and sulphur, which are
-common to the other albuminoids. Another interesting feature in their
-history is that the action of the gastric juice divides them into
-their two constituents:—the nuclein, which is deposited and resists
-the destructive action of the digestive liquid, and the albumin or
-histone, which on the contrary experiences this action with the usual
-consequences. Thus the gastric juice furnishes a process which is very
-simple and very convenient in the analysis of the proteids.
-
-_Localization of the Nucleo-Proteids._—What we said before as to
-the important physiological rôle of the cellular nucleus may arouse
-the expectation that in it will be found the living matter which
-is chemically the most differentiated, the albuminoids of highest
-rank—_i.e._, the nucleo-proteids and their constituents. Not that they
-would not be found in the protoplasm of the rest of the cell, but there
-is certainly a risk that they would be less concentrated there and more
-blended with accessory products; they are there connected with much
-more secondary vital functions. This conclusion inspired the early
-researches of Professor Miescher, of Basle, in 1874, and, twenty years
-later, those of Professor Kossel, one of the most eminent physiological
-chemists in Germany.
-
-In fact, these compounds have been found in all tissues which are rich
-in cellular elements with well-developed nuclei. The white globules
-of the blood furnished to Lilienfeld the first nucleo-histone ever
-isolated. The red globules themselves, when they possess a nucleus,
-which is the case in birds and reptiles as well as in the embryo of
-mammals, contain a nucleo-proteid which was easily isolated by Plosz
-and Kossel. Hammarsten, the Swedish chemist, who has acquired a
-great reputation from his researches in other domains of biological
-chemistry, prepared the nucleo-proteids of the pancreas in 1893. They
-have been obtained from the liver, from the thyroid gland (Ostwald),
-from brewers’ yeast (Kossel), from mushrooms, and from barley (Petit).
-They have been detected in starchy bodies and in bacteria (Galeotti).
-
-
- § 2. CONSTITUTION OF NUCLEINS.
-
-
-_Constitution of Nucleins._—Our path is already marked out if we wish
-to penetrate farther into the constitution of these proteids, which are
-the immediate principles highest in complexity among those which form
-the living protoplasm. We must analyze the two components, the albumins
-and the histones on the one hand, and the nucleins on the other. As for
-the nucleins, this has already been done, or very nearly so.
-
-Kossel, in fact, decomposed the nuclein by a series of very carefully
-arranged operations, and has reduced it step by step to its
-crystallizable organic radicals. At each stage that we descend in the
-scale of simplification a body appears which is more acid and more rich
-in phosphorus. At the third stage we come to phosphoric acid itself.
-The first operation divides the nuclein into two substances: the new
-albumin and nucleinic acid. After separating these elements they can
-be reunited: a solution of albumin with a solution of nucleinic acid
-reconstitutes the nuclein. A second operation separates the nucleinic
-acid in its turn into three parts. One is a body of the nature of
-the sugars—_i.e._, a carbohydrate. The appearance of a sugar in this
-portion of the molecule of nucleinic acid is an interesting fact and
-fertile in results. The second part is constituted by a mixture of
-nitrogenous bodies, well known in organic chemistry under the name of
-_xanthic bases_ (xanthin, hypoxanthin, guanin, and adenin). The third
-part is a very acid body and full of phosphorus—thymic acid. If in a
-third and last operation the thymic acid is analyzed, it is finally
-separated into phosphoric acid and into thymene, a crystallizable base,
-and thus we are brought back to the physical world, for all these
-bodies incontestably belong to it.
-
-
- § 3. THE CONSTITUTION OF HISTONES AND ALBUMINS.
-
-
-_Constitution of Histones._—But we are only half-way through our task.
-We are acquainted in its origin with one of the genealogical branches
-of the proteid, the nucleinic branch. We must also learn something
-of the other branch, the albumin or histone branch. But on this side
-the problem assumes a character of difficulty and complexity which is
-admirably adapted to discourage the most untiring patience.
-
-The analysis of albumin for a long time baulked the chemist “Here,”
-said Danilewsky, “we come to a closed door which resists all our
-efforts.” We know how vastly interesting what is taking place on the
-other side must be, but we cannot get there. We get a mere glimpse
-through the cracks or chinks which we have been able to make.
-
-This analysis of albuminous matter at first requires great precautions.
-The chemist finds himself in the presence of architecture of a very
-subtle kind. The molecule of albumin is a complex edifice which has
-used up several thousand atoms. To perceive the plan and structure, it
-must be dismantled and separated into parts which are neither too large
-nor too small. Such careful demolition is difficult. Processes too
-rough or too violent will reduce the whole to the tiniest of fragments.
-It is a statue which may be reduced to dust, instead of being separated
-into recognizable fragments, easily fitted in place along their
-fractured faces.
-
-_Analysis of Albumin by Schützenberger._—Schützenberger, a chemist
-of great merit, attempted (about 1875) this thankless task. Others
-before him had experimented in various ways. Two Austrian scientists,
-Hlasitwetz and Habermann, in 1873, and a little later Drechsel in 1892,
-had used concentrated hydrochloric acid to break down albumin. They
-also employed bromine for the same purpose. More recently Fuerth had
-used nitric acid with a similar object. Schützenberger tried another
-way. The battering ram which he used against the edifice of albumin
-was a concentrated alkali, baryta. He warmed the white of an egg with
-barium hydrate in a closed vessel at a temperature of 200°. The albumin
-of egg then divides into a certain number of simpler groups. The
-difficulty is to isolate and to recognize each part in this mass of the
-materials of demolition. That can be done by the aid of the processes
-of direct analysis. By mentally combining these different fragments,
-the original building is reconstructed. This method of demolition is
-certainly too rough and violent. Schützenberger’s operation gives us
-very fine fragments—small molecules of free hydrogen, of ammonia, of
-carbonic, acetic, and oxalic, acids which reveal extreme pulverization.
-These products represent about a quarter of the total mass. The other
-three-quarters are formed of larger fragments, the examination of which
-is most instructive. They belong to four groups. The first comprises
-five or six bodies, amido-acids or _leucins_. It proves the existence
-in the molecule of albumin of compounds of the series of fats—_i.e._,
-arranged in an open chain. The second group is formed by tyrosin and
-kindred products—_i.e._, by the bodies of the aromatic series, which
-force us to acknowledge the presence in the molecule of albumin of a
-benzene nucleus. The third group forms around the nucleus known to
-chemists under the name of pyrrol. The fourth comprises bodies such as
-the glucoproteins, connected with the sugars, or carbohydrates.
-
-Does the fact that the molecule of albumin is destroyed in producing
-these compounds raise the question as to whether it implies the idea
-that in reality they pre-exist in it? Chemists are rather inclined to
-admit this. However, the conclusion does not appear to be permissible.
-Duclaux considers it doubtful. It is not certain that all these
-fragmentary bodies pre-exist in reality, and it is no more certain that
-a simple bringing of them together represents the primitive edifice.
-Materials of demolition from a house that has been pulled down give no
-idea of its natural architectural character. There is only one way of
-justifying the hypothesis, and that is to reconstitute the original
-molecule of albumin by bringing the fragments together. We have not got
-to that stage yet. The era of syntheses of such complexity is more or
-less near, but it has certainly not yet begun.
-
-Moreover, it is not correct to say that the simple juxtaposition of the
-surfaces of fracture will reproduce the initial body. The fragments, so
-far as analysis has obtained them, are not absolutely what they might
-have been in the original structure. There they adhered the one to the
-other, not only by the mere contact of their surfaces of fracture, as
-is supposed, but in a slightly more complex manner. The fragments of
-the molecule are joined by bonds. We can picture them to ourselves
-by supposing these bonds to be like hooks. The hooks, which could
-only be broken by violence, are called by the chemists _satisfied
-atomicities_. These atomicities, set free by the breaking up, cannot
-remain in this condition; they must be satisfied anew. The hook tries
-to attach itself. In Schützenberger’s experiment the addition of water
-provides for this necessity. A molecule of water (H⌄{2}O) splits
-into two, the hydrogen (H) on the one side and the hydroxyl (OH) on
-the other. These two elements cling to the liberated bonds of the
-fragments of the molecule of albumin, and thus the bodies were found
-complete. Schützenberger’s experiment was too violent, too radical,
-and it gave too large a number of fragments, with their free hooks and
-atomicities unsatisfied, for rather a large proportion of the water
-added disappeared during the experiment. In one case this quantity was
-as much as 17 grammes per 100 grammes of albumin. The molecules of this
-water were employed in the reparation of the incomplete fragmentary
-molecules of the albumin.
-
-It follows that Schützenberger’s experiment gave too large a number of
-very small pieces corresponding to far too great a pulverization. The
-very small fragments are the molecules of acids such as acetic acid,
-oxalic acid, carbonic acid, molecules of ammonia, and even of hydrogen,
-which we know we are setting free.
-
-But, apart from these products which represent a quarter of the
-molecule of albumin submitted to analysis, the other three quarters
-represent larger fragments which may be considered as the real
-constituents of the building. Thus we find four kinds of groups which
-may be accepted as natural. The first of these groups is that of the
-leucins or amido-acids. It proves the existence in the molecule of
-albumin of compounds of the fatty series. There is also an aromatic
-group—a pyridine group—and a group belonging to the category of sugars.
-Imagine a certain grouping of these four series. This would be the
-nucleus of the molecule of albumin. If we graft on to this nucleus, on
-to this framework as it were, so many annexes, or lateral chains, the
-building will be loaded with embellishments; it will have been made
-unstable and _ipso facto_ appropriate for the part that it plays in the
-incessant transformations of the organism.
-
-_Kossel’s Analysis. Hexonic Nucleus._—Kossel has approached the
-problem in another fashion. He did not attempt to attack the albumin
-of the egg. This body is, in fact, a heterogeneous mixture as complex
-as the needs of the embryo of which it forms the food. Kossel tried
-a physiologically simpler albuminoid. He got it from an anatomical
-element having no nutritive rôle, of a very elementary organization
-and physiological functional activity, and yet one of energetic
-vitality—the male generating cell. Instead of the hen’s egg he
-therefore analyzed the milt of fish, and, in the first place, of
-salmon. As was to be expected from what has been said of the proteids,
-this living matter gives a combination of the nuclein, already known,
-with an albumin. The latter is abundant, forming a quarter of the
-total mass. Its reaction is strongly alkaline, which is the general
-characteristic of the variety of albumin known by the name of histones.
-Miescher, the learned chemist of Basle, who had noticed this basic
-albumin when working on the Rhine salmon, gave it the name of protamin.
-This is the substance submitted by Kossel to analysis in preference
-to the albumin of egg, so dear to the chemists who had preceded him.
-The disintegration of this molecule, instead of giving the series of
-bodies obtained by Schützenberger, gave but one, a real chemical base,
-_arginin_. At the first trial the albumin examined was reduced to a
-simple crystallizable element. The conclusion was obvious. The protamin
-of salmon is the simplest of albumins. To form this elementary proteid
-substance a hexonic base with water is all that is required.
-
-Continuing on these lines other male generating cells were examined
-and a series of protamines constructed on the same type was found,
-and these albuminous bodies proved to be formed of a base or mixture
-of analogous hexonic bases: arginin, histidin, and lysin—all bodies
-closely akin in their properties and entirely belonging to the physical
-world.
-
-Once aware of the existence of this fundamental nucleus, chemists
-found it in the more complex albumins where it had been missed. It was
-found in the albumin of egg hidden under the mass of other groups.
-It was recognized in all animal or vegetable albumins. The nuclei
-of Schützenberger may be missing. Hexonic bases are the constant
-and universal element of all varieties of albumins. They prevail in
-the chemical nucleus of the albuminous molecule, and perhaps as is
-suggested by Kossel, they may form it exclusively. All the other
-elements are superadded and accessory. The essential type of this
-molecular edifice, sought for so long, is known at last.
-
-_Conclusion._—To sum up, the chemical unity of living beings is
-expressed by saying that living matter, protoplasm, is a mixture or a
-complex of proteid substances with an hexonic nucleus.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE TWOFOLD CONDITIONING OF VITAL PHENOMENA. IRRITABILITY.
-
- Appearance of internal activity of the living being—Vital phenomena
- regarded as a reaction of the ambient world.—§ 1. Extrinsic
- conditions—The optimum law.—§ 2. Intrinsic conditions—The structure
- of organs and apparatus—How experiment attacks the phenomena of life.
- Generalization of the law of inertia—Irritability.
-
-
-_Instability. Mutability. The Appearance of Internal Activity of the
-Living Being._—One of the most remarkable characteristics of the living
-being is its instability. It is in a state of continual change. The
-simplest of the elementary beings, the plastid, grows and goes on
-growing and becoming more complex, until it reaches a stage at which it
-divides, and thus rejuvenated it commences the upward march which leads
-it once again to the same segmentation. Its evolution is thus betrayed
-by its growth, by the variations of form which correspond to it, and by
-its division.
-
-If it be a question of beings higher in organization than the cellular
-element the evolutionary character of this mutability becomes more
-obvious. The being is formed, it grows; then in most cases, after
-having passed through the stages of youth and adult age, it grows old,
-declines and dies, and is disorganized after having gone through
-what we may call an ideal trajectory. This march in a fixed direction
-with its points of departure, its degrees, and its termination, is a
-repetition of the path that the ancestors of the living being have
-already followed.
-
-Here, then, is a characteristic fact of vitality, or rather there
-are two facts. The one consists in this morphological and organic
-evolution, the negation of immutability, the negation of the indefinite
-maintenance of a permanent state or form which is regarded, on the
-contrary, as the condition of inert, fixed stable bodies, eternally at
-rest. The other consists in the repetition, realized by this evolution,
-of the similar evolution of its ancestors; this is a fact of heredity.
-Finally, evolution is always in a cycle—that is to say, that it comes
-to an end which brings the course of things to their point of departure.
-
-This kind of internal activity of the living being is so striking, that
-not only does it serve us to differentiate the living being from the
-inert body, but it gives rise to the illusion of a kind of internal
-demon, vital force, manifested by the more or less apparent acts of the
-life of relation, of the motricity, of the displacement, or by the less
-obvious acts of vegetative life.
-
-_Vital Phenomena regarded as a Reaction of the Ambient World. Their
-Twofold Conditioning._—In reality, as the doctrine of energetics
-teaches us, the phenomena of vitality are not the effect of a purely
-internal activity. They are a reaction of the environment. “The idea
-of life,” says Auguste Comte, “constantly assumes the necessary
-correlation of two indispensable elements:—an appropriate organism and
-a suitable environment. It is from the reciprocal action of these two
-elements that all vital phenomena inevitably result.” The environment
-furnishes the living being with three things:—its matter, its energy,
-and the exciting forces of its vitality. All vital manifestation
-results from the conflict of two factors: the extrinsic factor which
-provokes its appearance; the intrinsic factor, the very organization
-of the living body, which determines its form. Bichat and Cuvier saw
-in the phenomena of life the exclusive intervention of a principle of
-action entirely internal, checked rather than aided by the universal
-forces of nature. The exact opposite is true. The protozoan finds the
-stimuli of its vitality in the aquatic medium which is its habitat.
-The really living particles of the metazoan—that is to say, its
-cells, its anatomical elements—meet these stimuli in the lymph, in
-the interstitial liquids which bathe them and which form their real
-external environment.
-
-Auguste Comte thoroughly understood this truth, and has clearly
-expressed it in the passage we have just quoted. Claude Bernard has
-fully developed it and given it its classical form.
-
-In order to manifest the phenomena of vitality, the elementary being,
-the protoplasmic being, requires from the external world certain
-favourable conditions; these it finds there, and they may be called the
-stimuli, or extrinsic conditions of vitality. This being possesses no
-initiative or spontaneity in itself, it has only a faculty of entering
-into action when an external stimulus provokes it. This subjection of
-the living matter is called _irritability_. The term expresses that
-life is not solely an internal attribute, but an internal principle of
-action.
-
-
- § 1. EXTRINSIC CONDITIONS.
-
-
-_Extrinsic Conditions._—By showing that every vital manifestation
-results from the conflict of two factors: the extrinsic or
-physico-chemical conditions which determine its appearance, and the
-intrinsic or organic conditions which regulate its form, Claude
-Bernard dealt a mortal blow at the old vitalist theories. For he has
-not only asserted the close dependence of the two kinds of factors,
-but he has shown them in action in most physiological phenomena. The
-study of the extrinsic or physico-chemical conditions necessary to
-vital manifestations teaches us our first truth—namely, that they
-are not infinitely varied as might be supposed. They present, on the
-contrary, a remarkable uniformity in their essential qualities. The
-fundamental conditions are the same for the animal or vegetable cells
-of every species. They are four in number:—_moisture_, the air, or
-rather _oxygen_, _heat_, and a certain _chemical constitution_ of the
-medium, and the last condition, the enunciation of which seems vague,
-becomes more precise if we look at it a little closer. The chemical
-constitution of media favourable to life, the media of culture, obeys
-three general laws. It is the knowledge of these laws which formerly
-enabled Pasteur, Raulin, Cohn, and Balbiani to provide the media
-appropriate to the existence of certain relatively simple organisms,
-and thus to create an infinitely valuable method for the study of
-nutrition, etc.,—namely, the _method of artificial cultures_, numerous
-developments of which have been shown us by microbiology and physiology.
-
-_The Optimum Law._—It has been said, and it is more than a play on
-words, that the conditions of the vital medium were the conditions
-of the _juste milieu_. Water is wanted, there must not be too much or
-too little. Oxygen is necessary, and also in certain proportions. Heat
-is required, and for that, too, there is an optimum degree. Certain
-chemical compounds are needed and, in this respect too, there must also
-be _optima_ proportions.
-
-Water is a constituent element of the organisms. They contain fixed
-proportions for the same tissue, proportions varying from one tissue to
-another (between 2∕3 and 9∕10). The cell of a living tissue requires
-around it an aqueous atmosphere, formed by the different juices of the
-organism, the interstitial liquids, the blood, and the lymph. We are
-deceived by appearances when we distinguish between aerial, aquatic,
-and land-dwelling animals, and when we speak of the air, the water,
-and the land as their natural environment. If we go to the bottom
-of things, and fix our attention on the real living unities, on the
-cells of which the organism is composed, we shall find around them
-the juices, rich in water, which are their real environment. If these
-juices are diluted or concentrated the least in the world, life stops.
-The cell, the whole animal, falls into a state of latent life, or
-dies. “All living beings are aquatic,” said Claude Bernard. “Beings
-that live in the air are in reality wandering aquariums,” said another
-physiologist. “No moisture, no life,” wrote Preyer. The environment
-must contain water, but it must contain it in certain proportions. In
-the higher animals there is a mechanism which works automatically to
-keep at a constant level the quantity of water in the blood. Researches
-on the lavage of the blood (A. Dastre and Loye) have clearly shown
-this.
-
-Oxygen is also necessary to life. It is the _pabulum vitæ_. But the
-discovery of the beings called by Pasteur _anaerobia_ appears to
-contradict this statement. Pfeffer, the illustrious botanist, was
-certain, in 1897, that the dogma of the necessity of oxygen no longer
-held good. This is no longer tenable. In 1898 Beijerinck carried out
-most careful researches on anaerobia said to have been cultivated in a
-vacuum, such as the _bacteria of tetanus_ and the _septic vibrion_; or
-on those to which oxygen seems to be a poison, such as the _butyric_
-and the _butylic ferments_, the anaerobia of putrefaction, the reducing
-spirilla of the sulphates. All use free oxygen. They consume very
-little it is true; they are micro-aerobia. The other organisms, on
-the contrary, need more. They are macro-aerobia or simply _aerobia_.
-Besides, if the so-called anaerobia take little or no free oxygen, it
-matters little. They take the oxygen in combination. It may be said
-with L. Errera that they have an affinity for oxygen, for they extract
-it from its combinations, and that “they are so well adapted to this
-mode of existence that life in the open air being too easy no longer
-suits them.” There are for the different animal species different
-optima of oxygen.
-
-Living beings require a certain amount of heat. Life, which could not
-have existed on the globe when it was incandescent, will not be able to
-exist when it is frozen. For each organism and each function there is a
-maximum and a minimum of temperature compatible with activity. There is
-also an optimum. For instance, the optimum is 29° C for the germination
-of corn.
-
-The condition of the optimum exists in the same way for the chemical
-composition of the vital medium—and for the other ambient physical
-conditions, such as atmospheric pressure.
-
-It is therefore a law of _universal_ scope, a regulating law, as it
-were, of life. Life is a function of extrinsic variables, water, air,
-heat, the chemical composition of the medium, and pressure. “Every
-vital phenomenon begins to be produced, starting from a certain
-stage of the variable (minimum), becomes more and more vigorous as
-it increases up to a determinate value (optimum), weakens if the
-variable continues to increase, and disappears when it has reached
-a certain limiting value (maximum).” This law, proved by Sachs, the
-German botanist, in 1860, apropos of the action of temperature on the
-germination of plants, by Paul Bert in 1875, apropos of the action of
-oxygen and of atmospheric pressure on animals, and already formulated
-at that time by Claude Bernard, was illustrated by Leo Errera in 1895.
-It is a law of moderation. It expresses La Fontaine’s “_rien de trop_”
-Terence’s “_ne quid nimis_,” the μηδὲν ἄγαν of Theognis, and the
-biblical phrase “_omnia in mensura et numero et pondere_.” L. Errera
-sees the profound cause of this optimum law in the properties of the
-living protoplasm, which are mean properties. It is semi-liquid. It is
-composed of albuminoid substances, which can stand no extremes either
-from the physical or from the chemical points of view.
-
-
- § 2. INTRINSIC CONDITIONS. THE LAW OF THE CONSTITUTION OF ORGANS AND
- APPARATUS.
-
-
-_Law of the Constitution of Organs and Apparatus._—If we consider
-more highly organized beings, the influence of the intrinsic
-conditions appears quite as clearly. As we have seen, this is so that
-the requisite fundamental materials may be spent by each element in
-suitable proportions,—water, chemical compounds, air, and heat,—that
-organs may be added to organs, and that apparatus may be set to work in
-complex structures. Why a digestive apparatus? To prepare and introduce
-into the internal medium liquid materials which are necessary to
-life. Why a respiratory apparatus? To impart the vital gas necessary
-to the cells, and to expel the gaseous excrement, the carbonic acid
-which they reject. Why a circulatory apparatus? To transport and renew
-this medium throughout. The apparatus, the functional wheels, the
-vessels, the digestive and respiratory mechanisms do not exist for
-themselves, like the random sketches of an artistic nature. They exist
-for the innumerable anatomical elements which people the economy.
-They are arranged to assist and more rigorously to regulate cellular
-life with respect to the extrinsic conditions which it demands. They
-are, in the living body, as in civilized society, the manufactories
-and the workshops which provide for the different members of society
-dress, warmth, and food. In a word, the _law of the construction of
-organisms_ or of the _bringing to perfection of an organism_ is the
-same as the law of cellular life. It is otherwise suggestive as the
-law of _division of physiological labour_ formerly enunciated by Henry
-Milne-Edwards; and in every case it has a more concrete significance.
-Finally, it brings the organic functional activity into relation with
-the conditions of the ambient medium.
-
-_How Experiment acts on the Phenomena of Life._— The two orders of
-conditions, the one provided by the being itself, the other by external
-agents, are equally indispensable—and therefore of equal importance or
-dignity. But they are not equally accessible to the experimentalist.
-It is not easy to exercise on the organization direct and measurable
-actions. On the contrary, the physical conditions are in the hands
-and at the discretion of the experimenter. By them he may reach the
-vital manifestations as they appear, stimulate or check them, defer
-or precipitate them. Thus, for instance, the physiologist suspends
-or re-establishes at his will full vital activity in a multitude of
-reviviscent or hibernating beings, such as grains, the infusoria
-capable of _encystment_, the vibrio, the tardigrade, the cold-blooded
-animals, and perennial plants.
-
-The ambient world therefore furnishes to the animal and to the
-vegetable, whole or fragmentary, those materials of its organization
-which are at the same time the stimuli of its vitality. That is to say,
-the vital mechanism would be a dormant and inert mechanism if nothing
-in the surrounding medium could provoke it to action or give it a
-check. It would be a kind of steam engine without coal and fire.
-
-Living matter, in other words, does not possess real spontaneity. As I
-have shown elsewhere, the law of inertia which it is supposed it obeys
-with inert bodies is not special to them. It is applied to the living
-bodies whose apparent spontaneity is only an illusion contradicted by
-physiology as a whole. All the vital manifestations are responses to a
-stimulus of acts provoked, and not of spontaneous acts.
-
-_Generalization of the Law of Inertia in Living Bodies.
-Irritability._—In fact, vulgar prejudice opposes this view. The
-opinion of the average man distrusts it. It applies the law of inertia
-only to inert matter. This is because the vital response does not
-always immediately succeed the external stimulus, and is not always
-proportional to it. But it is sufficient to have seen the flywheel of a
-steam engine to understand that the restitution of a mechanical force
-cannot be instantaneous. It is sufficient to have had a finger on the
-trigger of a firearm to know that there is no necessary proportion
-between the intensity of the stimulus and the magnitude of the force
-produced. Things happen in the living just as in the inert machine.
-
-The faculty of entering into action when provoked by an external
-stimulus has received, as we have said, the name of _irritability_.
-The word is not used of inert matter. However, the condition of the
-latter is the same. But there is no need to affirm its irritability,
-because no one denies it. We know perfectly well that brute matter
-is inert, that all the manifestations of activity of which it is the
-theatre are provoked. Inertia is for it the equivalent of irritability
-in living matter. But while it is not necessary to introduce this idea
-into the physical sciences, where it has reigned since the days of
-Galileo, it was, on the contrary, necessary to affirm it in biology,
-precisely because it was in biology that the opposing doctrine of vital
-spontaneity ruled supreme.
-
-Such was the view held by Claude Bernard. He never varied on this
-point. _Irritability_, said he, is the property possessed “by every
-anatomical element (that is to say, the protoplasm which enters into
-its constitution) of being stimulated into activity and of reacting
-in a certain manner under the influence of the external stimuli.” He
-could not claim that this was a distinguishing characteristic between
-living bodies and brute bodies, and that all the less because he always
-tried to efface on this point the distinctions which were current in
-his time, and which were established by Bichat and Cuvier. And so also
-Le Dantec does not seem to have thoroughly grasped the ideas of the
-celebrated physiologist on this point when he asserts, as if he were
-thereby contradicting the opinion of Claude Bernard and his school,
-that irritability is not something peculiar to living bodies.[17]
-
- [17] These ideas are clearly brought to light in a series of articles
- in the _Revue Philosophique_, published in 1879 under the title of “La
- problème physiologique de la vie,” and endorsed by A. Dastre in his
- commentary on the _Phénomènes communs aux animaux et aux plantes_.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- THE SPECIFIC FORM. ITS ACQUISITION. ITS REPARATION.
-
- § 1. Specific form not special to living beings—Connected with the
- whole of the material conditions of the body and the medium—Is it a
- property of chemical substance?—§ 2. Acquisition and re-establishment
- of the specific form—Normal regeneration—Accidental regeneration in
- the protozoa and the plastids—In the metazoa.
-
-
- § 1. THE SPECIFIC FORM.
-
-
-_The Specific Form is not Peculiar to Living Beings._—The position of
-a _specific form_—the acquisition of this typical form progressively
-realized—the re-establishment when some accident has altered it—these
-are the features which we consider distinctive of living beings, from
-the protophytes and the lowest protozoa to the highest animals. Nothing
-gives a better idea of the unity and the individuality of the living
-being than the existence of this typical form. We do not mean, however,
-that this characteristic belongs to the living being alone, and is by
-itself capable of defining it. We repeat that this is not a case with
-any characteristic. In particular the _typical form_ belongs to crystal
-as well as to living beings.
-
-_The Specific Form depends on the sum of Material Conditions of the
-Body and the Medium._—The consideration of mineral bodies shows us
-form dependent on the physico-chemical conditions of the body and the
-medium. The form depends mainly on physical conditions in the cases
-of a drop of water falling from a tap, of the liquid meniscus in a
-narrow tube, of a small navel-shaped mass of mercury on a marble slab,
-of a drop of oil “emulsioned” in a solution, and of the metal which
-is hardened by hammering or annealed. In the case of crystals the
-form depends more on chemical conditions. It is crystallization which
-has introduced into physics the idea that has now become a kind of
-postulate—namely, that the specific form is connected with the chemical
-composition. However, it is sufficient to instance the dimorphism
-of a simple body, such as sulphur, sometimes prismatic, sometimes
-octahedric, to realize that substance is only one of the factors of
-form, and that the physical conditions of the body and of the medium
-are other factors quite as influential.
-
-_Is the Specific Form a Property of the Chemical Substance?_—How much
-truer this restriction would be if we consider, instead of a given
-chemical compound, an astonishingly complex mixture, such as protoplasm
-or living matter, or the more complex organism still—the cell, the
-plastid.
-
-Are there not great differences between the substance of the cellular
-protoplasm, or cytoplasmic substance, and that of the nucleus? Should
-we not distinguish in the former the hyaloplasmic substance; the
-microsomic in the microsomes; the linin between its granulations; the
-centrosomic in the centrosome; the archoplasmic in the attraction
-sphere; not to mention the different leucins, the vacuolar juice, and
-the various inclusions? And in the nucleus must we not consider the
-nuclear juice, the substance of the chromosomes, and that of the
-nucleoles? And is not each of these probably a very complex mixture?
-
-However, it is to this mixture that we attribute the possession
-of a form, in virtue of and by extension of the principles of
-crystallization, which definitely teach us that these mixtures cannot
-have form; that form is the attribute of pure bodies, and is only
-obtained by the separation of the blended parts—_i.e._, by a return
-to homogeneity. There are therefore very good reasons for hesitating
-before we transfer the absolute principle of the dependence between
-chemical form and composition, as some philosophical biologists have
-done, from the physical sciences—where it is already subject to serious
-restrictions—to the biological sciences.
-
-Le Dantec, however, has made this principle the basis of his biological
-system. He therefore finds in the crystal the model of the living
-being. He thus gives a physical basis to life.
-
-Is it a question in this system of explaining this incomprehensible,
-this unfathomable mystery, which shows the egg cell attracting to
-itself materials from without and progressively building up that
-amazing structure which is the body of the animal, the body of a
-man, of any given man, of Primus, for example? It is said that the
-substance of Primus is specific. His living substance is his own,
-special to him; and that, too, from the beginning of the egg to the end
-of its metamorphosis. It only remains to apply to this substance the
-postulate, borrowed from crystallography, of the absolute dependence
-of the nature of substance on the form it assumes. The form of the
-body of the animal, of the man, of Primus, is the crystalline form of
-their living substance. It is the only form of equilibrium that this
-substance can assume under the given conditions, just as the cube is
-the crystallized form of sea salt, the only state of equilibrium of
-chloride of sodium in slowly evaporated sea water. Thus the problem
-of the living form is reduced to the problem of the living substance,
-which seems easier; and at the same time the biological mystery is
-reduced to a physical mystery. It is clear that this way of looking
-at things simplifies prodigiously—and, we must add, simplifies far
-too much—the obscure problem of the relation of form to substance,
-simultaneously in the two orders of science. This may be summed up in a
-single sentence: There is an established relation between the specific
-form and the chemical composition: the chemical composition _directs_
-and implies the specific form.
-
-We need not now examine the basis of this opinion. If it is nothing but
-a verbal simplification, a unification of the language applied to the
-two orders of phenomena, it implies an assimilation of the mechanisms
-which realize them. To the organogenic forces which direct the
-building up of the living organisms it brings into correspondence the
-crystallogenic forces which group, adjust, equilibrate, and harmonize
-the materials of the crystal.
-
-When it is a question of the application of a principle such as
-this, in order to test its legitimacy we must always return to the
-experimental foundations. Let us imagine, for example, a simple body,
-such as sulphur, heated and brought to a state of fusion—that is to
-say, homogeneous, isotropic, in an undisturbed medium the only change
-in which will be a very gradual cooling down. These are the typical
-crystallogenic conditions. The body would take a given crystalline
-form. It is from experiments such as this that we derive the idea of _a
-specific form connected with a chemical constitution_.
-
-But in drawing this conclusion our logic is at fault. The real
-interpretation suitable to this case, as in all others, is that the
-specific form is suitable to the substance, and also to the physical,
-chemical, and mechanical conditions in which it is placed. And the
-proof is that this same substance, sulphur, which takes the prismatic
-form immediately after fusion, will not retain that form, but will pass
-on to the quite different octahedral form.
-
-It is so with the specific form of the living being—that is to say,
-with the assemblage of its constituent materials co-ordinated in a
-given system—in a word, with its organization. This is suitable to its
-substance, and to all the material, physical, chemical, and mechanical
-conditions in which it is placed. This form is the condition of
-material equilibrium corresponding to a very complex situation, to a
-sum of given conditions. The chemical condition is only one of these.
-And further, it is hardly proper to speak of a “chemical substance”
-when we refer to an astonishingly complex mixture which is in addition
-variable from one point to the other of the living body. When we thus
-reduce phenomena to their original signification, false analogies
-disappear. To say with Le Dantec that the form of the greyhound is
-the condition of equilibrium of the “greyhound chemical substance” is
-saying much; and too much, if it means that the body of the greyhound
-has a substance which behaves in the same way as homogeneous, isotropic
-masses like melted sulphur and dissolved salt. It were better to say
-much less, if it means, as it will in the minds of the physiologists,
-that the body of the greyhound is the condition of equilibrium of a
-heterogeneous, anisotropic, material system, subjected to an infinite
-number of physical and chemical conditions.
-
-The idea of connecting form, and by that we mean organization, with
-chemical composition did not arise in the minds of chemists or
-physiologists. Both have expressed themselves very clearly on this
-point.
-
-“We must distinguish,” said Berthelot, “between the formation of the
-chemical substances, the assemblage of which constitutes organized
-beings, and the formation of the organs themselves. This last problem
-does not come into the domain of chemistry. No chemist will ever
-claim to have formed in his laboratory a leaf, a fruit, a muscle, or
-an organ.... But chemistry has a right to claim that it forms direct
-principles—that is to say, the chemical materials which constitute the
-organs.” And Claude Bernard in the same way writes:—“In a word, the
-chemist in his laboratory, and the living organism in its apparatus,
-work in the same way, but each with its own tools. The chemist can make
-the products of the living being, but he will never make the tools,
-because they are the result of organic morphology.”
-
-
- § 2. THE ACQUISITION AND RE-ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SPECIFIC FORM.
-
-
-_Acquisition of the Typical Form._—The acquisition of the typical
-form in the living being is the result of ontogenic work which cannot
-be examined here. In the elementary being, the plastid, this work is
-blended with the work of nutrition. It is _directed nutrition_. It
-consists of a simple increase from the moment the element is born by
-the division of an anterior element, and of a necessarily restricted
-differentiation. It is a rudimentary embryogeny. In the complex being,
-metazoan or metaphyte, the organism is constituted, starting from the
-egg, by the growth, by the bipartition of the elements, and their
-differentiation, accomplished in a certain direction and in conformity
-with a given plan. This, again, is directed nutrition, but here the
-embryogeny is complex. The directing plan of operations is no doubt
-the consequence of the material conditions realized each moment in the
-organism.
-
-_Normal Regeneration._—Not only do living beings themselves
-construct their typical architecture, but they re-establish it
-and continually reconstitute it, according as accidents, or even
-ordinary circumstances, tend to destroy it; in a word, they become
-rejuvenescent. This regeneration consists in the reformation of the
-parts that are altered or carried away in the normal play of life, or
-by the accidents which disturb its course.
-
-Thus there is a _normal physiological regeneration_, which is, so to
-speak, the prolongation of the ontogenesis—_i.e._, of the work of
-formation of the individual. We have examples in the reconstitution
-of the skin of mammals—in the throwing off of the epidermic products
-constantly used up in their superficial and distal parts and
-regenerated in their deeply-seated parts; in the loss and the renewal
-of teeth at the first dentition and in certain fish in the fact of
-successive dentitions; in the periodical renewal of the integument
-in the larvæ of insects, and in the crustaceæ; and finally in the
-destruction and the neo-formation of the globules of the blood of
-vertebrates, of the glandular cells, and of the epithelial cells of the
-intestine.
-
-_Accidental Regeneration in Protozoa and Plastids._—There is also an
-_accidental regeneration_ which more or less perfectly renews the parts
-that are lost. This regeneration has its degrees, from the simple
-cicatrization of a wound to the complete reproduction of the part cut
-off. It is very unequally developed in zoological groups even when they
-are connected. In the elementary monocellular beings—_i.e._, in the
-anatomical elements and in the protozoa,—the experiments in merotomy,
-_i.e._, in _partial section_, enable us to appreciate the extent of
-this faculty of regeneration. These experiments, inaugurated by the
-researches of Augustus Waller in 1851, were repeated by Gruber in 1885,
-continued by Nussbaum in 1886, Balbiani in 1889, Verworn in 1891, and
-have been reproduced by a large number of observers. They have shown
-that the two fragments cicatrize, and are repaired, building up an
-organism externally similar to the primitive organism, but smaller.
-The two new organic units do not, however, behave in the same way.
-That which retains the nucleus possesses the faculty of regeneration,
-and of living as the primitive being lived. The protoplasmic fragment,
-which does not contain the nucleus, cannot rebuild this absent organ;
-and though it has functional activity in most respects, just as the
-nucleated fragment, yet it is distinguished from it in others of great
-importance. The anucleated fragment of an infusorian behaves as the
-nucleated, and as the whole animal so far as the movements of the body,
-the cilia, prehension of food, evacuation of fæces, and the rhythmical
-contraction of the pulsatile vesicules are concerned. But Balbiani’s
-researches in 1892 have shown us that secretion, complete regeneration,
-and the faculty of reproduction by fission can take place only in the
-nucleated fragment—_i.e._, in the nucleus.
-
-_Accidental Reproduction in the Metazoa._—Among multicellular beings
-the faculty of reproduction is met with in the highest degree in
-plants, where we find it in the process of propagation by slips. In
-animals it is the most marked in Cœlenterata. Trembley’s experiments
-are a striking instance. We know that when the hydra is cut into
-tiny pieces it reproduces exactly as many complete beings. Among the
-worms, Planaria afford a similar example. Every fragment, provided its
-volume is not less than a tenth of that of the whole, can reproduce
-a complete, entire being. The snail can produce a large part of its
-head, including the tentacles and the mouth. Among the Tritons and
-the Salamanders the faculty of regeneration reproduces the limbs, the
-tail, and the eye. In the Frog family, on the contrary, the work of
-regeneration does not go beyond cicatrization, and it is the same with
-Birds and Insects.
-
-It is really startling to see in a vertebrate like the Triton the stump
-of an arm with its fragment of humerus reproducing the forearm and
-the hand in all their complexity, with their skeleton, blood vessels,
-nerves, and teguments. We say that the limb has _budded_, as if there
-were a germ of it which develops like the seed of a plant, or as if
-each transverse portion of the limb, each slice, so to speak, could
-re-form the slice that follows.
-
-The mechanism of generation and that of regeneration alike raise
-problems of the highest importance. Does the part become regenerated
-just as it was formed at first? Does the regeneration repeat the
-ontogeny? Is it true that a lost organ is never regenerated (the
-kidney for instance)? Does the symmetrical organ enjoy a compensating
-and hypertrophic development, as Ribbert has asserted? And further,
-if the organ be removed and transplanted to another position, can it
-be grafted there, as Y. Delage maintains? These are very important
-questions; but if we dwell upon them, we shall be diverted from our
-immediate object. Our task is to look at these facts from the point
-of view of their significant and characteristic meaning in vitality.
-Flourens invoked on their behalf the intervention of vital forces,
-_plastic_ and _morphoplastic_. But, as we shall see later, these
-phenomena of cicatrization, of reparation, of regeneration, these more
-or less complete efforts for the re-establishment of the specific form,
-although they are found in all living beings in different degrees,
-are not exclusively confined to them. We find them again in some
-representatives of the mineral world—in crystals, for instance.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- NUTRITION.
-
- FUNCTIONAL ASSIMILATION. FUNCTIONAL DESTRUCTION. ORGANIC DESTRUCTION.
- ASSIMILATING SYNTHESIS.
-
- The extreme importance of nutrition—§ 1. Effect of vital
- activity—Destruction or growth—Distinction between the living
- substance and the reserve-stuff mingled with it—Organic
- destruction—Destruction of reserve-stuff—Destruction of living
- matter—Growth of living matter—§ 2. The two categories of vital
- phenomena—Foundations of the idea of functional destruction—The two
- kinds of phenomena of vitality—Criticism of Claude Bernard—Current
- views—Criticism of Le Dantec’s new theory of life.—§ 3. Correlation of
- the two kinds of vital facts—Law of connection—Contradictions in the
- new theory.—§ 4. The characteristics of nutrition—Its definition—Its
- permanence—Erroneous idea of the vital vortex—Formative assimilation
- of reserve-stuff—Formative assimilation of protoplasm—Death, real and
- apparent.
-
-
-_The Immense Importance of Nutrition._—We now come to the important
-feature of vitality. All other characteristics of living matter, its
-unstable equilibrium, its chemical and anatomical organization, the
-acquisition and the maintenance of a typical form, are only secondary
-properties, so to speak, subordinate with reference to _nutrition_.
-Generation itself is only a mode. _Nutrition_ is the essential
-attribute of life. It is life itself.
-
-Before we define it a few preliminary explanations are necessary.
-
-The most striking thing in living matter is its _growth_. An animal, a
-vegetable, is something which is first more or less minute, and which
-grows. Its characteristic is to expand—from the spore, the seed, the
-slip, the egg—it grows.
-
-Whether we are dealing with a cellular element, a plastid, or a complex
-being, their condition is the same in this respect. No doubt when the
-animal or plant has reached a certain stage of development its growth
-is stopped, and for a more or less lengthy period it remains in the
-adult stage, in what seems to be equilibrium. But even then there is no
-check in the manufacture of living matter; there is only a compensation
-between its production and its destruction.
-
-It is important to reduce to order the ideas on this important subject,
-which at present are confused, inconsistent, and contradictory. In
-biology grievous confusion reigns.
-
-
- § 1. EFFECT OF THE VITAL ACTIVITY. DESTRUCTION OR GROWTH?
-
-
-_Distinction between the Living Substance and the Reserve-stuff mingled
-with it._—The physiology of nutrition has given rise to a vast body
-of research during the last half-century. Physiological schools,
-masters and pupils, such as the school at Munich under Voit and
-Pettenkofer, Pflüger’s at Bonn, Rubner’s, and those of Zuntz and von
-Noorden at Berlin, and a large number of zootechnical and agricultural
-laboratories through the whole world have for years past been engaged
-in analyzing ingesta and egesta, in drawing up schedules of nutrition,
-in order to determine the course of decomposition and reconstitution of
-the living material.
-
-If I were asked what, in my opinion, is the most general result of
-all this labour, I would reply that it has affirmed and corroborated
-the important distinction which must be drawn between _living
-substance, properly so called_, and _reserve-stuff_. The latter,
-the _reserve-stuff_ of albuminoids, carbohydrates, and fats, are so
-intimately intermingled with the living substance that they are in most
-cases very difficult to distinguish from it.
-
-_Organic Destruction._—A second point, which is placed equally
-beyond doubt, is that the vital functional activity is accompanied
-by a destruction of the immediate principles of the organism, in the
-direction of their simplification. This functional destruction cannot
-be doubted in the case of differentiated organs in which the functional
-activity is evident, intermittent, and in some measure distinct from
-the other vital phenomena which take place in them. For example, in the
-case of contracting muscles the respiratory carbonic acid and urinary
-carbon are the irrefutable proofs of this destruction: weak in repose,
-abundant during activity, and in proportion to it. There can be no
-doubt on this point. The truth laid down by Claude Bernard under the
-name of the _law of functional destruction_ has been doubly consecrated
-by experiment and theory. According to the energetic theory, in fact,
-mechanical and thermal energies manifested in the vital functional
-activity can only have their source in the chemical energy set free by
-the destruction of the immediate principles of the organism, reduced
-to a lower degree of complexity.
-
-_Destruction of Reserve-stuff._—But now the disagreement begins. What
-are these decomposed, destroyed principles? Do they belong to the
-cellular reserve-stuff or to the living matter properly so called?
-There is no doubt that most of them belong to the reserve-stuff.
-For example, this is especially true of glycogen, which is consumed
-in muscular contraction just as coal is consumed in the furnace of
-the locomotive; and glycogen is a reserve-stuff of muscle. These
-reserve-stuffs destroyed in the functional activity can be built up
-again only during repose.
-
-But it is not yet certain whether the living matter itself, the
-active protoplasm, the muscular protoplasm, takes part in this
-destruction, whether it provides it with elements. Experiments have
-proved contradictory. Experimenters have isolated the nitrogenous
-wastes (urea) after muscular labour, and they have compared them with
-the wastes of the period of repose. These nitrogenous wastes bear
-witness to the destruction of albuminoid substances, and the latter are
-the constituent principles of living matter. If—under conditions of
-sufficient alimentation—the muscular functional activity involves more
-nitrogenous waste, _i.e._, a greater destruction of albuminoids, it
-might be supposed that the living material properly so called has been
-used up and destroyed for its own purposes. (And here again there might
-be a reserve-stuff of albuminoids, distinct from the living protoplasm
-itself, and more or less incorporated with it.)
-
-But experiment so far has not given decisive results. The latest
-experimental researches, such as those of Igo Kaup, of Vienna, which
-date from 1902, tell us as uncertain a tale as their predecessors.
-The increase in the destruction of albumen has not been constant; the
-conditions of the observations do not justify our making an assertion
-either _pro_ or _con_.
-
-_Destruction of Living Matter._—As no certain answer is supplied by
-experiment, theory intervenes and gives two conflicting answers. The
-majority of physiologists are inclined to believe in _the destruction
-of the living substance as the result of its own functional activity_.
-The functional activity would therefore destroy not only the
-reserve-stuff, but also the protoplasmic material. This is the current
-view. Only this opinion is strongly challenged by the positive teaching
-of science. It is certain that this material, in the muscle, is but
-little attacked, if it is attacked at all. We have seen above that the
-physiologists, with Pflüger and Chauveau, are agreed on this point.
-The vital functional activity in particular is destructive to the
-reserve-stuffs. It does not destroy them much; it destroys the organic
-material still less. Both would be repaired in functional repose.
-
-_Growth of Living Matter._—The second assertion is diametrically
-opposed to this. Not only, says Le Dantec, is the muscle not destroyed
-in the functional activity, but it grows. Contrary to universal
-opinion, the protoplasmic material increases by activity, and it is
-destroyed in repose. There would thus be a general law—_the law of
-functional assimilation_. “A cell of brewers’ yeast when introduced
-into a sugared must makes this must ferment, and at the same time, so
-far from destroying it, it increases it. Now, the fermentation of the
-must is exactly the same as the functional activity of the yeast.” It
-is, says the same author, a mistake to believe that the phenomena of
-functional activity, of _vital activity_, only takes place at the price
-of organic destruction. Here, then, are these two competing views.
-They are not so very far apart as a matter of fact, since the question
-at issue is one of deciding between a slight destruction and a slight
-growth, but theoretically they are strongly opposed. Moreover, they are
-arbitrary, and _experiment_ has not decided between them.
-
-
- § 2. THE TWO CATEGORIES OF VITAL PHENOMENA.
-
-
-_Foundation of the Idea of Functional Destruction. Claude Bernard._—The
-doctrine of functional destruction has been laid down with remarkable
-power by Claude Bernard. But the terms in which he has expressed it
-in a measure betray the thoughts of the great physiologist, or, at
-any rate, overstep the immediate fact he had in view. “The phenomena
-of destruction are very obvious. When movement is produced, when the
-muscle contracts, when volition and sensibility are manifested, when
-thought is exercised, when the gland secretes, then the substance
-of the muscles, of the nerves, of the brain, of the glandular
-tissue, becomes disorganized, destroyed, and consumed. So that every
-manifestation of a phenomenon in the living being is necessarily
-connected with an organic destruction.” To Claude Bernard organic
-destruction is a truth. To Le Dantec it is an error. Which is right?
-Clearly Claude Bernard. He bases his conviction on the analyses of
-the materials excreted in the process of physiological work. The
-excreta bear witness to a certain organic demolition. Generalizing
-this teaching of experiment the illustrious biologist divined the
-fundamental law of energetics before the idea of energetics had made
-much way in France. Every act which expends energy, which produces heat
-or motion, any manifestation whatever that may be looked upon as an
-energetic transformation, necessarily expends energy, and that energy
-is borrowed from the substance of the organism. These substances are
-simplified, broken up, and destroyed. Now the functional activity of
-the muscle produces heat and movement in warm-blooded as well as in
-cold-blooded animals. The functional activity of the glands produces
-heat, as has been shown by the celebrated experiments of C. Ludwig on
-the salivary secretion, and as is also shown by the study of thermal
-topography in the vertebrates. The functional activity of the nerves
-and the brain produces a slight quantity of electricity and heat, as
-most observers have agreed. The functional activity of the electrical
-and of the photic apparatus also expends energy. Finally, the eye
-which receives the photic impression destroys the purple matter of the
-retina, and that purple matter, as we well know, is recuperated in
-the dark during the repose of the organ. Everything that is expressed
-objectively, everything that is a phenomenon in the living being—with
-the exception of growth and formation, which are generally slow
-phenomena, and of which we can only get an idea by the comparison
-of successive states—all these energetic manifestations suppose a
-destruction of organic matter, a chemical simplification, the source
-of the energy manifested. And that is why material destruction does
-not merely coincide with functional activity, but is its measure and
-expression.
-
-_The Two Kinds of Phenomena of Vitality._—Another point on which
-Claude Bernard is right and his opponent is wrong is not less
-fundamental. What are we to understand by functional phenomena?
-This is the very point at issue. Now, in the mind of physiologists,
-this expression has a perfectly definite meaning. It is not so with
-Le Dantec. Physiologists who have studied animals rather high in
-organization—in which the differentiation of phenomena enables us to
-grasp the fundamental distinction—have readily recognized that the
-phenomena of living beings are divided into two categories. There are
-some which are intermittent, alternative, which take place, or grow
-stronger at certain moments, but which cannot be continuous—they are
-the _functional acts_; there are others in which this characteristic of
-explosives, energetic expenditure and intermittence, do not appear—they
-are, in general, the _nutritive acts_. The muscle which contracts shows
-functional activity. It has an activity and a repose. During this
-apparent repose we must not say that it is dead; it has a life, but
-that life is obscure as far as the salient fact of functional movement
-is concerned. The salivary gland which throws up waves of saliva when
-the food is introduced and masticated in the mouth, or when the chord
-of the tympanum is at work, is in a state of functional activity; this
-is the salient phenomenon. But before, though nothing, absolutely
-nothing, was flowing through the glandular canal, yet the gland was
-not reduced to the condition of a dead organ: it was living a more
-obscure, a less evident life. The microscopical researches of Kühne,
-Lea, and Langley, now universally verified, show us that during this
-time of apparent repose the cells were loading up their granulations
-and getting ready the materials of secretion, as just now the muscle
-at rest was accumulating glycogen and the reserve-stuff which are to
-be expended and destroyed in contraction. Similarly, with regard to
-the functional activity of the other glands, of the brain, etc. Claude
-Bernard was, therefore, perfectly right, when he took as his model
-the chemists who distinguished between exothermic and endothermic
-reactions, and who classed the phenomena of life into two great
-divisions: those of functional activity, and those of functional repose.
-
-1st. _The phenomena of functional activity_ “are those which ‘leap to
-the eyes,’ and by which we are inclined to characterize life. They are
-conditioned by the effects of wear and tear, of chemical simplication,
-and of the organic destruction which liberates energy.” And it must
-be so, because these functional manifestations expend energy. These
-phenomena, which are the most obvious, are also the least specific
-phenomena of vitality. They form part of the general phenomenality.
-
-2nd. The _phenomena_ which accompany _functional repose_ correspond to
-the building up of the reserve-stuff destroyed in the preceding period,
-to the organizing synthesis. The latter remains “internal, silent,
-concealed in its phenomenal expression, noiselessly gathering together
-the materials which will be expended. We do not see these phenomena
-of organization directly. The histologist and the embryogenist alone,
-following the development of the element or of the living being, sees
-the changes and the phases which reveal this silent effort. Here is a
-store of substance; there, the formation of an envelope or a nucleus;
-there, a division or multiplication, a renewal.” This type of phenomena
-is the only type which has no direct analogues: it is peculiar, special
-to the living being: what is really vital is this evolutive synthesis.
-Life is creation.
-
-_Criticism of Claude Bernard._—All this is perfectly true. Thirty years
-of the most intensive scientific development have run by since these
-lines were written, and have not essentially changed the ideas therein
-expressed. His work in its broad lines remains intact. Does that imply,
-however, that everything is perfect in detail and expression, and that
-there is no reason for making it more precise or for giving it fresh
-form? No doubt this is not so. Although Claude Bernard contributed to
-establish the essential distinction between the real living protoplasm
-and the materials of reserve-stuff which it contains, he has not drawn
-a sufficiently clear distinction between what belongs to each of the
-categories. He has not specified, in relation to organic destruction,
-what bearing it has on the organic materials of reserve-stuff.
-Sometimes he uses the term “organic destruction,” which is correct, and
-sometimes “vital destruction,” which is of doubtful import. Further, he
-employs an obscure and paradoxical formula to characterize the obvious
-but nevertheless not specific phenomena of organic destruction, and he
-says: “life is death.”
-
-_Current Views._—Nowadays, if I may express a personal opinion on
-this important distinction between functional activity and functional
-repose, I should say that after having distinguished between the
-two categories of phenomena we must try to correlate them. We must
-try to discover, for instance, what there is in common between the
-muscle in repose and the muscle in contraction, and to perceive in the
-_muscular tonus_ a kind of bridge thrown between these two conditions.
-The functional activity would be uninterrupted, but it would have
-its degrees of activity. The muscular tonus would be the permanent
-condition of an activity which is capable only of being considerably
-raised or lowered. Similarly for the glandular functional activity;
-the periods of charge must be connected with the periods of discharge.
-In a word, following the constant path of the human mind in scientific
-knowledge, after having drawn the distinctions that are necessary to
-our understanding of things, we must obliterate them. After having
-dug our ditches we must fill them up again. After having analyzed we
-must synthesize. The distinction between the phenomena of _functional
-activity_ and the phenomena of _functional repose_ or _purely
-vegetative_ and nutritive _activity_, though only valid in the case of
-a provisional and approximate truth, none the less throws light on the
-obscure regions of biology.
-
-The succession of energy and repose, of sleep and awakening, is a
-universal law, or at least a very general law, connected with the laws
-of energetics. The heart, the lungs, the muscles, the glands, the brain
-obey in the most obvious manner this obligation of rhythmical activity.
-The reason is clear. It is because the functional activity involves
-what is generally a sudden expenditure of energy, and this has to be
-replaced by what is generally a slow process of reparation. Functional
-activity is an explosive destruction of a chemical reserve which is
-built up again more or less slowly.
-
-_Criticism of Le Dantec’s “New Theory of Life.”_—Let us now examine the
-antithesis of Claude Bernard’s views. There are evidently rudimentary
-organisms in which the differentiation of the two categories of
-phenomena is but little marked; in which, apart from the movement,
-it is impossible to recognize intermittent, functional activities
-clearly distinct from morphogenic activity. It is not in this domain
-of the indistinct that we must seek the touchstone of physiological
-distinctions. Clearly, we must not choose these elementary plastids
-to test the doctrine of functional assimilation and functional
-destruction. But is not this exactly what Le Dantec did when he began
-his researches on brewers’ yeast? When we try to examine things,
-we must choose the conditions under which they are differentiated,
-and not those in which they are confused. And this is why, in the
-significant words of Auguste Comte, “the more complex living beings
-are, the better known they are to us.” The philosopher goes still
-farther in this direction, and adds “directly it is a question of the
-characteristics of animality we must start from the man, and see how
-those characteristics are little by little degraded, rather than start
-from the sponge and endeavour to discover how these characteristics are
-developed. The animal life of the man assists us to understand the life
-of the sponge, but the converse is not true.”
-
-When, moreover, we consider a vegetable organism such as yeast, which
-derives its energy, not from itself, not from the potential chemical
-energy of its reserve-stuff, but directly from the medium—that is to
-say, from the potential chemical energy of the compounds which form
-its medium of culture,—we then find ourselves in the worst possible
-situation for the recognition of organic destruction. Further, it is
-doubly wrong to assert that in so ill-chosen a type the functional
-phenomena do not result from an organic destruction—for at first there
-are no very distinct functional phenomena here—and, in the second
-place, there certainly is organic destruction. The phenomena of the
-morphogenic vitality detected in the yeast are the exact concomitants,
-or the results, of the destruction of an organic compound, which in
-this case is sugar. The yeast destroys an immediate principle, and
-this is the point of departure of its vital manifestations; only, it
-has not, as a preliminary, clearly incorporated and assimilated this
-principle. When, therefore, the functional phenomena are effaced and
-disappear, we none the less find phenomena of destruction of organic
-compounds which are in a measure, a preface to the phenomena of growth.
-This is what happens in the case of brewers’ yeast: and here, again,
-the two categories of facts exist. Once more, we find, in the first
-place, the phenomena of destruction (destruction of sugar, reduced
-by simplification to alcohol and carbonic acid)—phenomena which this
-time no longer respond to obvious functional manifestations; and, in
-the second place, the phenomena of chemical and organogenic synthesis,
-corresponding to the growth of the yeast and the multiplication of its
-protoplasm. The former are no longer detected, as we have just said, by
-striking manifestations. However, it is not true that everything which
-is visible and which may be isolated outside the activity of the yeast
-is part of those phenomena. The boiling of the juice or the mash,
-the heat given off by the copper, all this phenomenal apparatus is
-but the consequence of the production of the carbonic acid and of its
-liberations—_i.e._, the consequence of the act of destruction of the
-sugar. Here is organic destruction with its energetic manifestations!
-
-This example of the life of brewers’ yeast, of the saccharomyces,
-specially chosen by Le Dantec as being absolutely clear and giving the
-best illustration of his argument, contradicts him at every point. The
-general thesis of this vigorous thinker is that we cannot distinguish
-between the two parts of the vital act, organic destruction, and
-assimilating synthesis; that these two acts are not successive; that
-they give rise to phenomenal manifestations equally evident, apparent,
-or striking. Now, in the case of yeast, the phenomenon of destruction
-is clearly distinct from that of the assimilating synthesis which
-multiplies the substance of the saccharomyces. In fact, the action is
-realized by means of an alcoholic diastase manufactured by the cell;
-and Büchner succeeded in isolating this alcoholic ferment which splits
-up the sugar into alcohol and carbonic acid, and also _in vitro_ and
-_in vivo_, makes the vat boil and heats the liquid. All the yeast is at
-work at once, says M. Dantec. No, and this is the proof.
-
-And, further, Pasteur himself, who had shown the relation of the
-decomposition of the sugar to the fact of the growth of the yeast and
-of the production of accessory substances such as succinic acid and
-glycerine, always referred to _correlation_ between these phenomena.
-The destruction of the sugar is the _correlative_ of the life of the
-yeast. This was his favourite formula. It never entered his head
-that there could be a confusion instead of a correlation, and that
-there might be only one and the same act, the phases of which would
-be indistinguishable. This unfortunate idea, which was fated to be so
-rapidly contradicted, is due to Le Dantec. Far from it being the case,
-Pasteur had distinguished the _ferment function_ from the life of the
-yeast. According to him, the yeast may exist sometimes as a ferment and
-sometimes otherwise.
-
-
- § 3. CORRELATION OF TWO ORDERS OF VITAL FACTS.
-
-
-It is this correlation between acts _distinct in themselves_ but
-_usually connected_ that was announced by Claude Bernard. And,
-_mirabile dictu_—and this is the natural outcome of the perfect sanity
-of mind of this great physiologist—it happens that not only Pasteur’s
-researches, but the development of a new science, Energetics, and
-Büchner’s discovery lend support to his views, and that, too, in a
-field where one would have thought they had no application. Le Dantec
-is wrong when he declares that these ideas only apply to vertebrates.
-“It is clear,” he says on several occasions, “that the author has
-in view the metazoa and even the vertebrates.” Well! no. All that
-is general, universally applicable, and universally true. So that
-there are two orders of distinct phenomena energetically opposed and
-certainly connected. We need only repeat Claude Bernard’s own words
-quoted by Le Dantec in order to confute them.
-
-_Law of Connection of Two Orders of Vital Facts._—“These phenomena [of
-organic destruction and of assimilating synthesis] are simultaneously
-produced in every living being, in a connection which cannot be broken.
-The disorganization or dissimilation uses up living matter [by this
-we must understand the reserve-stuff, as will be seen later on in the
-quotation] in the organs _in function_: the assimilating synthesis
-regenerates the tissues; it gathers together the reserve-stuff which
-the vital activity must expend. These two operations of destruction
-and renovation, inverse the one to the other, are absolutely connected
-and inseparable, in this sense at any rate, that destruction is
-the necessary condition of renovation. The phenomena of functional
-destruction are themselves the precursors and the instigators of
-material regeneration, of the formative process which is silently going
-on in the intimacy of the tissues. The losses are repaired as they take
-place; and equilibrium being re-established as soon as it tends to be
-broken, the body is maintained in its composition.”
-
-It is perfectly right and wise to say with Claude Bernard that the two
-orders of facts are successive, and that one is normally the inciting
-condition of the other. The possibility of the development of the yeast
-when fermentation fails, and the weakness of this development on the
-other hand under these conditions, are an excellent proof of this. The
-one proves the essential independence of the two orders of facts, the
-other the inciting and provoking virtue of the first relatively to the
-second. The experimental truth is thus expressed with a minimum of
-uncertainty. We know the facts which led Le Dantec to formulate his
-law of functional assimilation—namely, that the functional activity is
-useful or indispensable to the growth of the organ; that the organs
-which are functionally active grow, and those which do not act
-become atrophied. We are only expressing the facts when we say that
-the organic destructions that go on in the living being (whether at
-the expense of its reserve-stuff or at the expense of its medium, or
-whether it be even slightly at the expense of the plastic substance
-itself) are the antecedent, the inciting agent or the normal condition
-of the chemical and organogenic syntheses which create the new
-protoplasm.
-
-On the other hand, we are wrong if we hold with Le Dantec that
-instead of two chemical operations there is only one, that which
-creates the new protoplasm. The obvious destruction is neglected; it
-is deliberately passed over. He does not see that it is necessary to
-liberate the energy employed in the construction, by complication, of
-this highly complex substance which is the new protoplasm. He really
-seems to have made up his mind not to analyze the phenomenon. If we
-decline to admit that to the first act of functional destruction
-succeeds a second, assimilation or organogenic synthesis, we are
-looking at elementary beings, in which the succession cannot be
-grasped, as we look on brewers’ yeast. We not only mean that the
-morphogenic assimilation results from the functional activity; we
-mean that it results from it directly, immediately, that it is the
-functional activity itself. Experiment tells us nothing of all this.
-It shows us the real facts, the facts of the destruction of an organic
-immediate principle, the sugar, and the fact that an assimilating
-synthesis is the correlative of this destruction. Besides, if it is
-impossible in examples of this kind to exhibit the succession, it is
-perfectly easy in beings of a higher order. It is, then, clearly seen
-that the preliminary destruction of a reserve-stuff (and perhaps of
-a small quantity of the living substance) precedes and conditions the
-formation of a greater quantity of this living matter—in other words,
-the growth of the protoplasm of the organ.
-
-_Contradictions in the New Theory._—Moreover, these mistakes involve
-those who make them in a series of inextricable contradictions. Here,
-for example, is life; it is found, they say, in three forms:—Life
-manifested, or condition 1º; latent life, or condition 3º. So far
-this is the classical theory; but they add a condition 2º, which
-is what might be called _pathological or incomplete life_. This
-is defined by the following characteristic:—That its functional
-phenomena are identical with those in the first form, but that they
-are not accompanied by assimilation and by protoplasmic growth, But
-since, they say, growth is the chemical consequence of the functional
-activity, since it is so to speak its metabolic aspect, since it is
-confused with it, and inseparable from it, by the argument—then it is
-contradictory and logically absurd to speak of condition 2º. It would
-be acknowledging in the case of the anucleated merozoite, for example,
-a functional activity unaccompanied by assimilation, yet identical
-with the functional activity which is accompanied by assimilation in
-the nucleated merozoite. The general movement, that of the cilia, the
-taking of food, the evacuation of the fæces, the contraction of the
-pulsatile vacuoles, are the same. And this fact is the best proof that
-this vital functional activity (with the organic destruction which is
-its energetic source) must be distinguished from the assimilation which
-usually follows it, and which in exceptional cases may not follow it.
-
-We shall carry this discussion no farther. We have examined at some
-length Le Dantec’s views, and we have contrasted them with the doctrine
-which has been current in general physiology since the time of
-Claude Bernard, and this comparison does not turn out quite to their
-advantage. It was inevitable that the experimental and realistic spirit
-which inspired the doctrine of the celebrated physiologist made his
-work really too systematic. His formula, “life is death,” and the form
-he gave his ideas, are not always irreproachably correct. They lend
-themselves at times to criticism. Sometimes they require commentary.
-These are errors of detail which Le Dantec has summarized somewhat
-roughly. There is no necessity to do this in his own case. We pay our
-tribute to the clearness of his language, although we believe the
-foundations of his system are false and ill-founded. Their rigour is
-purely verbal. Their external qualities, their careful arrangement
-are well adapted to the seduction of the systematic mind prepared
-by mathematical teaching. This new theory of life is presented with
-pedagogic talent of the highest order. We think we have shown that the
-foundations are entirely fallacious, in particular the following:—Vital
-condition No. 2º; the confusion between functional activity and
-assimilating synthesis; the so-called absolute connection between
-morphogeny and chemical composition; the fundamental distinction
-between elementary life and individual life.
-
-
- § 4. CHARACTERISTICS OF NUTRITION.
-
-
-_Definition of Nutrition._—As we have just seen, the organism is the
-scene of chemical reactions of two kinds, the one destructive and
-simplifying, the other synthetic, constructive, or assimilating. This
-totality of reactions constitutes nutrition. Hence the two phases
-that it is convenient to consider in this function—_assimilation_ and
-_disassimilation_. This twofold chemical movement or _metabolism_
-corresponding to the two categories of vital phenomena, of destruction
-(catabolism) and of synthesis (anabolism) is therefore the chemical
-sign of vitality in all its forms. But it is clear that disassimilation
-or organic destruction, which is destined to furnish energy to the
-organism for its different operations, reappears in the plan of the
-general phenomena of nature. It is not specifically vital in its
-principle. Assimilation, on the other hand, is in this respect much
-more characteristic.
-
-To some physiologists nutrition is only assimilation. Of the two
-aspects of metabolism they consider only one, the most typical,
-_Ad-similare_, to assimilate, to restore the substance borrowed
-from the ambient medium, the alimentary substances, _similar_ to
-living matter, to make living matter of them, to increase active
-protoplasm—this is indeed the most striking phenomenon of vitality.
-To grow, to increase, to expand, to invade, is the law of living
-matter. Assimilation, nutrition in its essentials, is, according to
-the definition of Ch. Robin, “the production by the living being of a
-substance identical with its own.” It is the act by which the living
-matter, the protoplasm of a given being, is created.
-
-_Permanence in Nutrition._—Nutrition presents one quite remarkable
-character—permanence. It is a vital manifestation, a property if
-we look at it in the cell, in the living substance, a function if
-we consider it in the animal or in the plant as a whole, which is
-never arrested. Its suspension involves _ipso facto_ the suspension
-of life itself. It is, in the words of Claude Bernard, that property
-of nutrition “which, as long as it exists in an element, compels us
-to believe that this element is alive, and which, when it is absent,
-compels us to believe that it is dead. It dominates all others by its
-generality and its importance. In a word, it is the absolute test of
-vitality.”
-
-_Biological Energetics shows the Importance of Nutrition._—We have
-indicated in advance the reason of its importance, showing that its two
-phases, disassimilation and assimilation, are the energetic condition
-of the two kinds of vital phenomena which we can distinguish.
-
-Nutrition is a manufacture of protoplasm at the expense of the
-materials of the cellular ambient medium, which are assimilated—_i.e._,
-made chemically and physically similar to living matter and to the
-reserves it stores up. This operation, which is peculiarly chemical,
-is therefore indicated by the borrowing of materials from the external
-world, a borrowing which is always going on, because the operation is
-permanent, and, let me add, because of the continual rejection of the
-waste products of this manufacture. Our formula is:—Nutrition is a
-chemistry which persists.
-
-_The Idea of the Vital Vortex is Erroneous._—Here the effect has hidden
-the cause from the eyes of the biologists. They have been struck by
-the incessant entry and exit, by the never-ceasing passage, by the
-_cycle_ of matter through the living being without guessing its why
-and wherefore; and they have taken as a picture of the living being a
-vortex in which the essential form is maintained while the matter,
-which is accessory, flows on without a check. This is Cuvier’s _vital
-vortex_. But for what purpose is this circulating matter used? They
-thought that it was employed entirely for the reconstitution of the
-living substance, continually and inevitably destroyed by the vital
-Minotaur.
-
-_Destruction of Reserve-stuff_.—Here again there is a mistake. Really
-living substance is but little destroyed, and consequently requires
-very little renewal by the functional activity of the animal machine.
-Its metabolism—destruction and renewal—is in every case infinitely less
-than is supposed in the classical image of the vital vortex. It is
-the merit of physiologists, and particularly of Pflüger and Chauveau,
-to have worked for nearly forty years to establish this truth. They
-have proved it, at least as far as the muscular tissue is concerned.
-Protoplasm, properly so-called, is only destroyed as the organs of a
-steam engine are destroyed—its tubes, its boiler, its furnace. And
-it matters little. We know that such an engine uses much coal, and
-we know very little of its machinery and its metallic frame. And so
-it is with the cell, the living machine. A very small portion of the
-food introduced will be assimilated in the living substance. By far
-the greater part of it is destined to be worked up by the protoplasm
-and placed in reserve under the form of glycogen, albumen, and fat,
-etc.—_i.e._, compounds which are not the really living substance, the
-hereditary protoplasm, but the products of its industry, just as they
-are or may be the products of the industry of the chemist working in
-his laboratory. They will be expended for the purpose of furnishing
-the necessary energy to the vital functional activity, muscular
-contraction, secretion, heat, etc., just as coal is expended to set
-the steam engine going. The proof as far as the muscle is concerned
-does not stand alone. There are other examples. In particular,
-micrographic physiologists who have studied nervous phenomena say
-that the anatomical elements of the brain last indefinitely, and that
-they continue as they are, without renewal from birth to death. The
-permanence of the consciousness, be it said in passing, is connected by
-them with the permanence of the cerebral element (Marinesco).
-
-Thus destruction is very restricted. There is only a very slight
-disassimilation of the living matter, properly so-called, in the course
-of the vital functional activity. We may even go farther than this
-experimental fact. This is what Le Dantec has done when he claims that
-there is even an assimilation, an increase of the protoplasm. Strictly
-speaking, this is possible, but there is no certain proof of it; and
-in any case we cannot agree with him when he affirms that the increase
-is the _direct result_ of the functional activity and blends with
-it in one single, unique operation. We must, on the contrary, agree
-with Claude Bernard that it is only a _consequence_ of it, that it
-is produced in consequence of the existence of a bond of correlation
-between organic destruction and assimilating synthesis.
-
-Why is there this bond? That is easily understood if we reflect that
-the assimilating synthesis, an operation of endothermic, chemical
-complexity, naturally requires an exothermic counterpart, the organic
-destruction which will set free this necessary energy.
-
-_Formative Assimilation of Reserve-stuff. Formative Assimilation of
-Protoplasm._—It follows that there are in nutritive assimilation
-itself two distinct acts. The one consisting of the manufacture
-of reserve-stuff is the more obvious but the less specific; the
-other, really essential, is assimilation properly so-called, the
-reconstitution of the protoplasm. The former is indispensable to the
-production of the most prominent acts of vitality—movement, secretion,
-production of heat. If it is suspended, functional activity is
-arrested. We get _apparent death_, or _latent life_. But if the real
-assimilation is arrested, we have _real death_.
-
-According to this there would be a fundamental distinction between real
-and apparent death. The former would be characterized by an _arrest
-of the protoplasmic assimilation_ which is externally indicated by
-no sign. On the other hand, apparent death would be characterized
-by _the arrest of the formation and destruction of reserve-stuff_.
-It would be externally manifested by two signs:—The suppression of
-material exchanges with the medium (respiration, alimentation) and the
-suppression of the functional acts (production of movement, of heat, of
-electricity, of glandular excretion).
-
-Such would be the most expedient test for apparent or real death. The
-question occurs in the case of grains of corn in Egyptian tombs, and
-also of hibernating animals and reviviscent beings, and, in general, in
-the case of what has been called the state of _latent life_. But from
-the practical point of view it is extremely difficult to apply this
-test and to decide if the phenomena which are arrested in the grain
-at maturity, in Leeuwenhoek’s tardigrada,[18] and in the dried-up
-Anguillulidæ[19] of Baker and Spallanzani, in the encysted colpoda[20]
-that a drop of warm water will revive, in the animals exposed by E.
-Yung and Pictet to a cold of more than a 100° C. below zero, are due
-to the general arrest of the two forms of assimilation, or to the
-arrest of the manufacture and utilization of reserve-stuff alone, or
-finally, to the arrest of protoplasmic assimilation alone. The latter,
-which is already very restricted in beings in a normal condition whose
-growth is terminated, may fall to the lowest degree in the being which,
-having no functional activity, is assimilating nothing. So that, to
-cut the question short, the experimenter who measures the value of
-the exchanges between the being and the medium has seldom to do more
-than decide between little and nothing. Hence his perplexity. But if
-experiment hesitates, theory affirms: it admits _a priori_ that the
-movement of protoplasmic assimilation, an essential sign of vitality,
-is neither checked nor renewed, but proceeds continuously.
-
- [18] Bear-animalcules, Sloth-animalcules. An order of Arachnida.—TR.
-
- [19] Minute thread worms, known as paste-eels and vinegar-eels.—TR.
-
- [20] Genus of Infusoria. Colpodea cucullus is found in infusions of
- hay.—TR.
-
-
-_Is Nutrition, the Assimilating Synthesis, interrupted?_—Nevertheless,
-there are many reasons for suspending all judgment as to this
-interpretation. It is questioned by most biologists. According to A.
-Gautier, the preserved grain of corn and the dried up rotifera are not
-really alive; they are like clocks in working order, ready to tell the
-time, but awaiting in absolute repose the first vibration which will
-set them going. As for the grain, it is the air, heat, and moisture
-which supply the first impulse. In other words, the organization
-proper to the manifestation of life remains, but there is no life. The
-so-called arrested life is not a life.
-
-It must be said, however, that the majority of physiologists refuse
-to accept this interpretation. They believe in an attenuation of the
-nutritive synthesis and not in its complete destruction. They think
-that this total suppression would be contrary to current ideas relative
-to the perpetuity of the protoplasm and the limited duration of the
-living element. The natural medium is variable, and even the mineral
-cannot remain eternally fixed. Still less is perennity a property of
-the living being. If ordinary life is for each individual of limited
-duration, the arrested life must also be of limited duration. We cannot
-believe that after an indefinitely prolonged sleep the grain of corn,
-or the paste-eel, or the colpoda, emerging from their torpor can resume
-their existence, like the Sleeping Beauty, at the point at which it
-was interrupted, and thus pass with a bound, as it were, through the
-centuries.
-
-In fact the maintenance of the vitality of grains of corn from the
-Egyptian tombs and their aptitude to germinate after thousands of
-years are only fables or the result of imposture. Maspero, in a letter
-addressed to M. E. Griffon on the 15th July 1901, has clearly summed up
-the situation by saying that the grains of corn bought from the fellahs
-almost always germinate, but that this is never the case with those
-that the experimenter himself takes from the tombs.
-
-To sum up, we must use the same language of nutrition and of life,
-of their uninterrupted progress, of their continuity, of their
-permanence, of their activity, and of their slackening. Living
-matter is always growing, much or little, slowly or quickly, in its
-reserve-stuff or in its protoplasm, for expenditure or accumulation.
-This inevitability of growth defines it, characterizes it, and sums up
-its activity. Development and the evolution of growth are consequences
-or aspects of nutrition.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK IV.
-
-THE LIFE OF MATTER.
-
- Summary: Chap. I. Universal life—Opinions of philosophers and
- poets—Continuity between brute and living bodies—Origin of this
- principle.—Chap. II. Origin of brute matter in living matter.—Chap.
- III. Organization and chemical composition of brute and living
- bodies.—Chap. IV. Evolution and transformation of brute and living
- bodies.—Chap. V. Possession of a specific form—Living bodies and
- crystals—Cicatrization.—Chap. VI. Nutrition in the living body
- and in the crystal.—Chap. VII. Generation in brute and in living
- bodies—Spontaneous generation.
-
-
-_Apparent Differences between Living and Brute Bodies. The Two
-Kingdoms._—It seems at first impossible that there should be any
-essential similarity between an inanimate object and a living being.
-What resemblance can be discovered between a stone, a lion, and an
-oak? A comparison of the inert and immovable pebble with the leaping
-animal, and with the plant extending its foliage gives an impression
-of vivid contrast. Between the organic and the inorganic worlds there
-seems to be an abyss. The first impressions we receive confirm this
-view; superficial investigation furnishes arguments for it. There is
-thus aroused in the mind of the child, and later in that of the man, a
-sharply marked distinction between the natural objects of the mineral
-kingdom on the one hand, and those of the two kingdoms of living beings
-on the other.
-
-But a more intimate knowledge daily tends to throw doubt upon the
-rigour or the absolute character of such a distinction. It shows that
-brute matter can no longer be placed on one side and living beings on
-the other. Scientists deliberately speak of “the life of matter,” which
-seems to the average man a contradiction in terms. They discover in
-certain classes of mineral bodies almost all the attributes of life.
-They find in others fainter, but still recognizable indications of an
-undeniable relationship.
-
-We propose to pass in review these analogies and resemblances, as has
-already been done in a fairly complete manner by Leo Errera, C. E.
-Guillaume, L. Bourdeau, Ed. Griffon, and others. We will consider the
-fine researches of Rauber, of Ostwald, and of Tammann upon crystals
-and crystalline germs—researches which are merely a continuation of
-those of Pasteur and of Gernez. These show that crystalline bodies
-are endowed with the principal attributes of living beings—_i.e._,
-a rigorously defined form; an aptitude for acquiring it, and for
-re-establishing it by repairing any mutilations that may be inflicted
-upon it; nutritive growth at the expense of the mother liquor which
-constitutes its culture medium; and, finally—a still more incredible
-property—all the characteristics of reproduction by generation. Other
-curious facts observed by skilful physicists—W. Roberts-Austen, W.
-Spring, Stead, Osmond, Guillemin, Charpy, C. E. Guillaume—show that
-the immutability even of bodies supposed to be the most rigid of all,
-such as glass, the metals, steel, and brass, is apparent rather than
-real. Beneath the surface of the metal that seems to us inert there
-is a swarming population of molecules, displacing each other, moving
-about, and arranging themselves so as to form definite figures, and
-assuming forms adapted to the conditions of the environment. Sometimes
-it is years before they arrive at the state of ultimate and final
-equilibrium—which is that of eternal rest.
-
-However, in order to understand these facts and their interpretations,
-it is necessary to pass in review the fundamental characteristics of
-living beings. It will be shown that these very characteristics are
-found in inanimate matter.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- UNIVERSAL LIFE. OPINIONS OF PHILOSOPHERS AND POETS.
-
- § 1. Primitive beliefs; the ideas of poets.—§ 2. Opinions of
- philosophers—Transition from brute to living bodies—The principle of
- continuity: continuity by transition: continuity by summation—Ideas of
- philosophers as to sensibility and consciousness in brute bodies—The
- general principle of homogeneity—The principle of continuity as a
- consequence of the principle of homogeneity.
-
-
- § 1. PRIMITIVE BELIEFS. IDEAS OF THE POETS.
-
-
-The teaching of science as to the analogies between brute bodies and
-living bodies accords with the conceptions of the philosophers and
-the fancies of the poets. The ancients held that all bodies in nature
-were the constituent parts of a universal organism, the macrocosm,
-which they compared to the human microcosm. They attributed to it a
-principle of action, the _psyche_, analogous to the vital principle,
-and this psyche directed phenomena; and also an intelligent principle,
-the _nous_, analogous to the soul, and the _nous_ served for the
-comprehension of phenomena. This universal life and this universal soul
-played an important part in their metaphysical systems.
-
-It was the same with the poets. Their tendency has always been to
-attribute life to Nature, so as to bring her into harmony with our
-thoughts and feelings. They seek to discover the life or soul hidden in
-the background of things.
-
- “Hark to the voices. Nothing is silent.
-
- Winds, waves, and flames, trees, reeds, and rocks
- All live; all are instinct with soul.”
-
-After making proper allowance for emotional exaggeration, ought we
-to consider these ideas as the prophetic divination of a truth which
-science is only just beginning to dimly perceive? By no means. As
-Renan has said, this universal animism, instead of being a product
-of refined reflection, is merely a legacy from the most primitive of
-mental processes, a residue of conceptions belonging to the childhood
-of humanity. It recalls the time when men conceived of external things
-only in terms of themselves; when they pictured each object of nature
-as a living being. Thus, they personified the sky, the earth, the sea,
-the mountains, the rivers, the fountains, and the fields. They likened
-to animate voices the murmur of the forest:—
-
- “ ... The oak chides and the birch
- Is whispering....
- And the beech murmurs....
- The willow’s shiver, soft and faint, sounds like a word.
- The pine-tree utters mysterious moans.”
-
-For primitive man, as for the poet of all times, everything is alive,
-and every sound is due to a being with feelings similar to our own.
-The sighing of the breeze, the moan of the wave upon the shore, the
-babbling of the brook, the roaring of the sea, and the pealing of the
-thunder are nothing less than sad, joyous, or angry living voices.
-
-These impressions were embodied in ancient mythology, the graceful
-beauty of which does not conceal its inadequacy. Then they passed
-into philosophy and approached the realm of science. Thales believed
-that all bodies in nature were animate and living. Origen considered
-the stars as actual beings. Even Kepler himself attributed to the
-celestial bodies an internal principle of action, which, it may be
-said in passing, is contrary to the law of the inertia of matter,
-which has been wrongly ascribed to him instead of to Galileo. The
-terrestrial globe was, according to him, a huge animal, sensitive to
-astral influences, frightened at the approach of the other planets, and
-manifesting its terror by tempests, hurricanes, and earthquakes. The
-wonderful flux and reflux of the ocean was its breathing. The earth had
-its blood, its perspiration, its excretions; it also had its foods,
-among which was the sea water which it absorbs by numerous channels.
-It is only fair to add that at the end of his life Kepler retracted
-these vague dreams, ascribing them to the influence of J. C. Scaliger.
-He explained that by the soul of the celestial bodies he meant nothing
-more than their motive force.
-
-
- § 2. OPINION OF THE PHILOSOPHERS.
-
-
-_Transition from Brute to Living Bodies._—The lowering of the barrier
-between brute bodies and living bodies began with those philosophers
-who introduced into the world the great principles of continuity and
-evolution.
-
-_The Principle of Continuity._—First and foremost we must mention
-Leibniz. According to the teaching of that illustrious philosopher,
-as interpreted by M. Fouillée, “there is no inorganic kingdom, only
-a great organic kingdom, of which mineral, vegetable, and animal
-forms are the various developments.... Continuity exists everywhere
-throughout the world; everywhere is life and organization. Nothing is
-dead; life is universal.” It follows that there is no interruption
-or break in the succession of natural phenomena; that everything is
-gradually developed; and finally, that the origin of the organic being
-must be sought in the inorganic. Life, properly so called, has not,
-in fact, always existed on the surface of the globe. It appeared at a
-certain geological epoch, in a purely inorganic medium, by reason of
-favourable conditions. The doctrine of continuity compels us, however,
-to admit that it pre-existed on the globe under some rudimentary form.
-
-The modern philosophers who are imbued with these principles, MM.
-Fouillée, L. Bourdeau, and A. Sabatier, express themselves in similar
-language. “Dead matter and living matter are not two absolutely
-different entities, but represent two forms of the same matter,
-differing only in degree, sometimes but slightly.” When it is only
-a matter of degree, it cannot be held that these views are opposed.
-Inequalities must not be interpreted as contrary attributes, as when
-the untrained mind considers heat and cold as objective states,
-qualitatively opposed to each other.
-
-_Continuity by Transition._—The argument which leads us to remove the
-barrier between the two kingdoms, and to consider minerals as endowed
-with a sort of rudimentary life, is the same as that which compels
-us to admit that there is no fundamental difference between natural
-phenomena. There are transitions between what lives and what does not,
-between the animate being and the brute body. And in the same way there
-are transitions between what thinks and what does not think, between
-what is thought and what is not thought, between the conscious and
-the unconscious. This idea of insensible transition, of a continuous
-path between apparent antitheses, at first arouses an insuperable
-opposition in minds not prepared for it by a long comparison of facts.
-It is slowly realized, and finally is accepted by those who, in the
-world of things, follow the infinity of gradations presented by natural
-phenomena. The principle of continuity comes at last to constitute,
-as one may say, a mental habit. Thus the man of science may be led,
-like the philosopher, to entertain the idea of a rudimentary form of
-life animating matter. He may, like the philosopher, be guided by
-this idea; he may attribute _a priori_ to brute matter all the really
-essential qualities of living beings. But this must be on the condition
-that, assuming these properties to be common, he must afterwards
-demonstrate them by means of observation and experiment. He must show
-that molecules and atoms, far from being inert and dead masses, are in
-reality active elements, endowed with a kind of inferior life, which
-is manifested by all the transformations observed in brute matter,
-by attractions and repulsions, by movements in response to external
-stimuli, by variations of state and of equilibrium; and finally, by the
-systematic methods according to which these elements group themselves,
-conforming to those definite types of structure by means of which they
-produce different species of chemical compounds.
-
-_Continuity by Summation._—The idea of summation leads by another path
-to the same result. It is another form of the principle of continuity.
-A sum total of effects, obscure and indistinct in themselves, produces
-a phenomenon appreciable, perceptible, and distinct, apparently,
-but not really, heterogeneous in its components. The manifestations
-of atomic or molecular activity thus become manifestations of vital
-activity.
-
-This is another consequence of the teaching of Leibniz. For, according
-to his philosophical theory, individual consciousness, like individual
-life, is the collective expression of a multitude of elementary lives
-or consciousnesses. These elements are inappreciable because of their
-low degree, and the real phenomenon is found in the sum, or rather
-the _integral_, of all these insensible effects. The elementary
-consciousnesses are harmonized, unified, integrated into a result that
-becomes manifest, just as “the sounds of the waves, not one of which
-would be heard if by itself, yet, when united together and perceived at
-the same instant, become the resounding voice of the ocean.”
-
-_Ideas of the Philosophers as to Sensibility and Consciousness in
-Brute Bodies._—The philosophers have gone still further in the way
-of analogies, and have recognized in the play of the forces of brute
-matter, particularly in the play of chemical forces, a mere rudiment
-of the appetitions and tendencies that regulate, as they believe, the
-functional activity of living beings—a trace, as it were, of their
-sensibility. To them reactions of matter indicate the existence of a
-kind of _hedonic consciousness_—_i.e._, a consciousness reduced simply
-to a distinction between comfort and discomfort, a desire for good and
-repulsion from evil, which they suppose to be the universal principle
-of all activity. This was the view held by Empedocles in antiquity;
-it was that of Diderot, of Cabanis, and, in general, of the modern
-materialistic school, eager to find, even in the lowest representatives
-of the inorganic world, the first traces of the vitality and
-intellectual life which blossom out at the top of the scale in the
-living world.
-
-Similar ideas are clearly seen in the early history of all natural
-sciences. It was this same principle of appetition, or of love and of
-repulsion or hate that, under the names of affinity, selection, and
-incompatibility, was thought to direct the transformations of bodies
-when chemistry first began; when Boerhaave, for example, compared
-chemical combinations to voluntary and conscious alliances, in which
-the respective elements, drawn together by sympathy, contracted
-appropriate marriages.
-
-_General Principle of the Homogeneity of the Complex and its
-Components._—The assimilation of brute bodies to living bodies, and
-of the inorganic kingdom to the organic, was, in the mind of these
-philosophers, the natural consequence of positing _a priori_ the
-principles of continuity and evolution. There is, however, a principle
-underlying these principles. This principle is not expressed explicitly
-by the philosophers; it is not formulated in precise terms, but is more
-or less unconsciously implied; it is everywhere applied. It, however,
-may be clearly seen behind the apparatus of philosophical argument It
-is the assertion that no arrangement or combination of elements can
-put forth any new activity essentially different from the activities
-of the elements of which it is composed. Man is living clay, say
-Diderot and Cabanis; and, on the other hand, he is a thinking being.
-_As it is impossible to produce that which thinks from that which
-does not think_, the clay must possess a rudiment of thought. But is
-there not another alternative? May not the new phenomenon, thought,
-be the effect of the arrangement of this clay? If we exclude this
-alternative, we must then consider arrangement and organization as
-incapable of producing in arranged and organized matter a new property
-different from that which it presented before such arrangement. Living
-protoplasm, says another, is merely an assemblage of brute elements;
-“these brute elements must therefore possess a rudiment of life.” This
-is the same implied supposition which we have just considered; if life
-is not the basis of each element, it cannot result from their simple
-assemblage.
-
-Man and animals are combinations of atoms, says M. le Dantec. It is
-more natural to admit that human consciousness is the result of the
-elementary consciousness of the constituent atoms than to consider
-it as resulting from construction by means of elements with no
-consciousness. “Life,” says Haeckel, “is universal; we could not
-conceive of its existence in certain aggregates of matter if it did not
-belong to their constituent elements.” Here the postulate is almost
-expressed.
-
-The argument is always the same; even the same words are used:
-the fundamental hypothesis is the same; only it remains more or
-less unexpressed, more or less unperceived. It may be stated as
-follows:—Arrangement, assemblage, construction, and aggregation are
-powerless to bring to light in the complex anything new and essentially
-heterogeneous to what already exists in the elements. Reciprocally,
-grouping reveals in a complex a property and character which is the
-gradual development of an analogous property and character in the
-elements. It is in this sense that there exists a collective soul in
-crowds, the psychology of which has been discussed by M. G. Le Bon. In
-the same way, many sociologists, adopting the views advanced by P. de
-Lilienfeld in 1865, attribute to nations a formal individuality, after
-the type of that possessed by each of their constituent members. M.
-Izolet considers society as an organism, which he calls a “hyperzoan.”
-Herbert Spencer has developed the comparison of the collective organism
-with the individual organism, insisting on their resemblances and
-differences. Th. Ribot has dwelt, in particular, on the resemblances.
-
-The postulate that we have clearly stated here is accepted by many as
-an axiom. But it is not an axiom. When we say that there is nothing
-in the complex that cannot be found in the parts, we think we are
-expressing a self-evident truth; but we are, in fact, merely stating
-an hypothesis. It is assumed that arrangement, aggregation, and
-complicated and skilful grouping of elements can produce nothing really
-new in the order of phenomena. And this is an assertion that requires
-verification in each particular case.
-
-_The Principle of Continuity, a Consequence of the Preceding._—Let us
-apply this principle to the beings in nature. All beings in nature are,
-according to current ideas, arrangements, aggregates, or groupings of
-the same universal matter, that is to say, of the same simple chemical
-bodies. It results from the preceding postulate that their activities
-can only differ in degree and form, and not fundamentally. There is
-no essential difference of nature between the activities of various
-categories of beings, no heterogeneity, no discontinuity. We may pass
-from one to another without coming to an hiatus or impassable gulf.
-The law of continuity thus appears as a simple consequence of the
-fundamental postulate. And so it is with the law of evolution, for
-evolution is merely continuity of action.
-
-Such are the origins of the philosophical doctrine which universalizes
-life and extends it to all bodies in nature.
-
-It may be remarked that this doctrine is not confined to any particular
-school or sect. Leibniz was by no means a materialist, and he endowed
-his mundane elements, his _monads_, not only with a sort of life, but
-even with a sort of soul. Father Boscovitch, Jesuit as he was, and
-professor in the college of Rome, did not deny to his _indivisible
-points_ a kind of inferior vitality. St. Thomas, too, the angelical
-doctor, attributed, according to M. Gardair, to inanimate substances a
-certain kind of activity, inborn inclinations, and a real appetition
-towards certain acts.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-ORIGIN OF BRUTE MATTER IN LIVING MATTER.
-
- Spontaneous generation: an episode in the history of the
- globe—Verification of the identity between brute and living
- matter—Slow identification—Rapid identification—Contrary
- opinion—Hypothesis of cosmozoa; cosmic panspermia—Hypothesis of
- pyrozoa.
-
-
-There should be two ways of testing the doctrine of the essential
-identity of brute and living matter—one slow and more laborious, the
-other more rapid and decisive.
-
-_Identification of the Two Matters, Brute and Living._—The laborious
-method, which we will be obliged to follow, consists in the attentive
-examination of the various activities by which life is manifested, and
-in finding more or less crude equivalents for them in all brute beings,
-or in certain of them.
-
-_Rapid Verification. Spontaneous Generation._—The rapid and decisive
-method, which, unhappily, is beyond our resources, would consist in
-showing unquestionable, clearly marked life, the superior life, arising
-from the kind of inferior life that is attributed to matter in general.
-It would be necessary completely to construct in all its parts, by a
-suitable combination of inorganic materials, a single living being,
-even the humblest plant or the most rudimentary animal. This would
-indeed be an irrefutable proof that the germs of all vital activity are
-contained in the molecular activity of brute bodies, and that there is
-nothing essential to the latter that is not found in the former.
-
-Unhappily this demonstration cannot be given. Science furnishes no
-example of it, and we are forced to have recourse to the slow method.
-
-The question here involved is that of spontaneous generation. It is
-well known that the ancients believed in spontaneous generation,
-even for animals high in the scale of organization. According to Van
-Helmont, mice could be born by some incomprehensible fermentation in
-dirty linen mixed with wheat. Diodorus speaks of animal forms which
-were seen to emerge, partly developed, from the mud of the Nile.
-Aristotle believed in the spontaneous birth of certain fishes. This
-belief, though rejected as to the higher forms, was for a long time
-held with regard to the lower forms of animals, and to insects—such as
-the bees which the shepherd of Virgil saw coming out from the flanks
-of the dead bullock—flies engendered in putrefying meat, fruit worms
-and intestinal worms; finally, with regard to infusoria and the most
-rudimentary vegetables. The hypothesis of the spontaneous generation of
-the living being at the expense of the materials of the ambient medium
-has been successively driven from one classificatory group to another.
-The history of the sciences of observation is also a history of the
-confutation of this theory. Pasteur gave it the finishing stroke, when
-he showed that the simplest microorganisms obeyed the general law which
-declares that the living being is formed only by _filiation_—that is
-to say, by the intervention of a pre-existing living organism.
-
-_Spontaneous Generation an Episode in the History of the Globe._—Though
-we have been unable to effect spontaneous generation up to the present,
-it has been referred by Haeckel to a more or less distant past, to
-the time when the cooling of the globe, the solidification of its
-crust, and the condensation of aqueous vapour upon its surface created
-conditions compatible with the existence of living beings similar
-to those with which we are acquainted. Lord Kelvin has fixed these
-geological events as occurring from twenty to forty million years ago.
-Then circumstances became propitious for the appearance of the first
-organisms, whence were successively derived those which now people the
-earth and the waters.
-
-Circumstances favourable to the appearance of the first beings
-apparently occurred only in a far distant past; but most physiologists
-admit that if we knew exactly these circumstances, and could reproduce
-them, we might also expect to produce their effect—namely, the creation
-of a living being, formed in all its parts, developed from the
-inorganic kingdom. To all those who held this view the impotence of
-experiment at the present time is purely temporary. It is comparable to
-that of primitive men before the time of Prometheus; they, not knowing
-how to produce fire, could only get it by transmitting it from one to
-another. It is due to the inadequacy of our knowledge and the weakness
-of our means; it does not contradict the possibility of the fact.
-
-_Contrary Opinion. Life did not Originate on our Globe._—But all
-biologists do not share this opinion. Some, and not the least eminent,
-hold it to be an established fact that it is impossible for life to
-arise from a concurrence of inorganic materials and forces. This was
-the opinion of Ferdinand Cohn, the great botanist; of H. Richter, the
-Saxon physician, and of W. Preyer, a physiologist well known from his
-remarkable researches in biological chemistry. According to these
-scientists, life on the surface of the globe cannot have appeared as a
-result of the reactions of brute matter and the forces that continue to
-control it.
-
-According to F. Cohn and PI. Richter, life had no beginning on our
-planet. It was transported to the earth from another world, from the
-cosmic medium, under the form of cosmic germs, or _cosmozoa_, more
-or less comparable to the living cells with which we are acquainted.
-They may have made the journey either enclosed in meteorites, or
-floating in space in the form of cosmic dust. The theory in question
-has been presented in two forms:—_The Hypothesis of Meteoric Cosmozoa_,
-by a French writer, the Count de Salles-Guyon; and that of _cosmic
-panspermia_ brought forward in 1865 and 1872 by F. Cohn and H. Richter.
-
-_Hypothesis of the Cosmozoa._—The hypothesis of the cosmozoa, living
-particles, protoplasmic germs emanating from other worlds and reaching
-the earth by means of aerolites, is not so destitute of probability
-as one might at first suppose. Lord Kelvin and Helmholtz gave it the
-support of their high authority. Spectrum analysis shows in cometary
-nebulæ the four or five lines characteristic of hydro-carbons. Cosmic
-matter, therefore, contains compounds of carbon, substances that are
-especially typical of organic chemistry. Besides, carbon and a sort
-of humus have been found in several meteorites. To the objection
-that these aerolites are heated while passing through our atmosphere,
-Helmholtz replies that this elevation of temperature may be quite
-superficial and may allow micro-organisms to subsist in their interior.
-But other objections retain their force:—First, that of M. Verworn, who
-considers the hypothesis of cosmic germs as inconsistent with the laws
-of evolution; and that of L. Errera, who denies that the conditions
-necessary for life exist in interplanetary bodies.
-
-_Hypothesis of Cosmic Panspermia._—Du Bois-Reymond has given the name
-of _cosmic panspermia_ to a theory very similar to the preceding,
-formulated by F. Cohn in 1872. The first living germs arrived on our
-globe mingled with the cosmic dust that floats in space and falls
-slowly to the surface of the earth. L. Errera observes that if they
-escape by this gentle fall the dangerous heating of meteorites, they
-still remain exposed to the action of the photic rays, which is
-generally destructive to germs.
-
-_Hypothesis of Pyrozoa._—W. Preyer declined to accept this cosmic
-transmigration of the simplest living beings, nor would he allow
-the intervention of other worlds into the history of our own. Life,
-according to him, must have existed from all time, even when the globe
-was an incandescent mass. But it was not the same life as at present.
-Vitality must have undergone many profound changes in the course of
-ages. The _pyrozoa_, the first living beings, vulcanians, were very
-different from the beings of the present day that are destroyed by
-a slight elevation of temperature. No doubt this theory of pyrozoa,
-proposed by W. Preyer in 1872, seems quite chimerical, and akin
-to Kepler’s dreamy visions. But in a certain way it accords with
-contemporary ideas concerning the life of _matter_. It is related
-to them by the evolution which it implies in the materials of the
-terrestrial globe.
-
-According to Preyer, primitive life existed in fire. Being igneous
-masses in fusion, the pyrozoa lived after their own manner; their
-vitality, slowly modified, assumed the form which it presents to-day.
-Yet, in this profound transformation their number has not varied, and
-the total quantity of life in the universe has remained unchanged.
-
-Here we recognize the ideas of Buffon. These cosmozoa, these pyrozoa,
-have a singular resemblance to the _organic molecules_ of “live matter”
-of the illustrious naturalist—distributed everywhere, indestructible,
-and forming living structures by their concentration.
-
-But we must leave these scientific or philosophical theories, and come
-to arguments based upon facts.
-
-It is in a spirit quite different from that of the poets, the
-metaphysicians, and the more or less philosophical scientists that
-the science of our days looks at the more or less obscure vitality of
-inanimate bodies. It claims that we may recognize in them, in a more or
-less rudimentary state, the action of the factors which intervene in
-the case of living beings, the manifestation of the same fundamental
-properties.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-ORGANIZATION AND CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF LIVING AND BRUTE MATTER.
-
- Laws of the organization and of the chemical composition of living
- beings—Relative value of these laws; vital phenomena in crushed
- protoplasm—Vital phenomena in brute bodies.
-
-
-_Enumeration of the Principal Characters of Living Beings._—The
-programme which we have just sketched compels us to look in the brute
-being for the properties of living beings. What, then, are, in fact,
-the characteristics of an authentic, complete, living being? What are
-its fundamental properties? We have enumerated them above as follows:—A
-certain chemical composition, which is that of living matter; a
-structure or organization; a specific form; an evolution which has a
-duration, that of life, and an end, death; a property of growth or
-nutrition; a property of reproduction. Which of these characters counts
-for most in the definition of life? Are they all equally necessary? If
-some of them were wanting, would that justify the transference of a
-being, who might possess the rest, from the animate world to that of
-minerals? This is precisely the question that is under consideration.
-
-_Organization and Chemical Composition of Living Beings._—All that we
-know concerning the constitution of living matter and its organization
-is summed up in the laws of the _chemical unity_ and the _morphological
-unity of living beings_ (v. Book III.). These laws seem to be a
-legitimate generalization from all the facts observed. The first
-states that the phenomena of life are manifested only in and through
-living matter, protoplasm—_i.e._, in and through a substance which
-has a certain chemical and physical composition. Chemically it is a
-proteid complexus with a hexonic nucleus. Physically it shows a frothy
-structure analogous to that resulting from the mixture of two granular,
-immiscible liquids, of different viscosities. The second law states
-that the phenomena of life can only be maintained in a protoplasm which
-has the organization of the complete cell, with its cellular body and
-nucleus.
-
-_Relative Value of these Laws. Exceptions._—What is the signification
-of these laws of the chemical composition and organization of living
-beings? Evidently that life in all its plenitude can only exist and be
-perpetuated under their protection. If these laws were absolute, if
-it were true that no life were possible but in and through albuminous
-protoplasm, but in and through the cell, the problem of “the life of
-matter” would be decided in the negative.
-
-May it not happen, however, that fragmentary and incomplete vital
-manifestations, progressive traces of a true life, may occur under
-different conditions; for example, in matter which is not protoplasm,
-and in a body which has a structure differing from that of a cell—that
-is to say, in a being which would be neither animal nor plant? We must
-seek the answer to this question by an appeal to experiment.
-
-Without leaving the animal and vegetable kingdoms—_i.e._, real living
-beings—we already see less rigour in the laws governing chemical
-constitution and cellular organization.
-
-Experiments in merotomy—_i.e._, in amputation—carried out on the
-nervous element by Waller, on infusoria by Brandt, Gruber, Balbiani,
-Nussbaum, and Verworn, show us the necessity of the presence of the
-cellular body and the nucleus—_i.e._, of the integrity of the cell. But
-they also teach us that when that integrity no longer exists death does
-not immediately follow. A part of the vital functions continues to be
-performed in denucleated protoplasm, in a cell which is mutilated and
-incomplete.
-
-_Vital Phenomena in Crushed Protoplasm._—It is true also that grinding
-and crushing suppress the greater part of the functions of the cell.
-But tests with pulps of various organs and with those of certain
-yeasts also show that protoplasm, even though ground and disorganized,
-cannot be considered as inert, and that it still exhibits many of its
-characteristic phenomena; for example, the production of diastases,
-the specific agents of vital chemistry. Finally, while we do not
-know enough about the actions of which the secondary elements of
-protoplasm—its granulations, its filaments—are capable, which this or
-that method of destruction may bring to light, at least we know that
-actions of this kind exist.
-
-To sum up, we are far from being able to deny that rudimentary,
-isolated vital acts may be produced by the various bodies that result
-from the dismemberment of protoplasm. The integrity of the cellular
-organization, even the integrity of protoplasm itself, are therefore
-not indispensable for these partial manifestations of vitality.
-
-Besides, biologists admit that there exist within the protoplasm
-aliquot parts, elements of an inferior order, which possess special
-activities. These secondary elements must have the principle of their
-activity within themselves. Such are the _biophors_ to which Weismann
-attributes the vital functions of the cell, nutrition, growth, and
-multiplication. If there are biophors within the cell, we may imagine
-them outside the cell, and since they carry within themselves the
-principle of their activity they may exercise it in an independent
-manner. Unhappily the biophors, and other constituent elements of
-that kind, are purely hypothetical. They are like Darwin’s gemmules,
-Altmann’s bioblasts, and the pangens of De Vries. They have no relation
-to facts of observation and to real existence.
-
-_Vital Phenomena in Brute Bodies._—There is no doubt that certain
-phenomena of vitality may occur outside of the cellular atmosphere.
-And carrying this further, we may admit that they may be produced in
-certain slightly organized bodies (crushed cells), and then in certain
-unorganized bodies in certain brute beings. In every case it is certain
-that effects are produced at any rate similar to those which are
-characteristic of living matter. It is for observation and experiment
-to decide as to the degree of similarity, and their verdict is that the
-similarity is complete. The crystals and the crystalline germs studied
-by Ostwald and Tammann are the seat of phenomena which are quite
-comparable to those of vitality.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- EVOLUTION AND MUTABILITY OF LIVING MATTER AND BRUTE MATTER.
-
- Supposed immobility of brute bodies—Mobility and mutability of the
- sidereal world.—§ 1. The movement of particles and molecules in brute
- bodies—The internal movements of brute bodies—Kinetic conception of
- molecular motion—Reality of the motion of particles—Comparison of the
- activity of particles with vital activity.—§ 2. Brownian movement—Its
- existence—Its character—Its independence of the nature of the bodies
- and of the nature of the environment—Its indefinite duration—Its
- independence of external conditions—The Brownian movement must be the
- first stage of molecular motion.—§ 3. Motion of particles—Migration of
- material particles—Migration under the action of weight; of diffusion;
- of electrolysis; of mechanical pressure.—§ 4. Internal activity of
- alloys—Their structure—Changes produced by deforming agencies—Slow
- return to equilibrium—Residual effect—Effect of annealing; effect of
- stretching—Nickel steel—Colour photography—Conclusion—Relations of the
- environment to the living or brute matter.
-
-
-One of the most remarkable characteristics of a living being is its
-evolution. It undergoes a continuous change. It starts from something
-very small; it assumes a configuration and grows; in most cases
-it declines and disappears, having followed a course which may be
-predicted—a sort of ideal trajectory.
-
-_Supposed Immobility of Brute Bodies._—It may be asked whether this
-evolution, this directed mobility, is so exclusively a feature of the
-living being as it appears, and if many brute bodies do not present
-something analogous to it. We may answer in no uncertain tones.
-
-Bichat was wrong when he contrasted in this respect brute bodies with
-living bodies. Vital properties, he said, are temporary; it is their
-nature to be exhausted; in time they are used up in the same body.
-Physical properties, on the contrary, are eternal. Brute bodies have
-neither a beginning nor an inevitable end, neither age, nor evolution;
-they remain as immutable as death, of which they are the image.
-
-_Mobility and Mutability of the Sidereal World._—This is not true,
-in the first place, of the sidereal bodies. The ancients held the
-sidereal world to be immutable and incorruptible. The doctrine of
-the incorruptibility of the heavens prevailed up to the seventeenth
-century. The observers who at that epoch directed towards the heavens
-the first telescope, which Galileo had just invented, were struck with
-astonishment at discovering a change in that celestial firmament which
-they had hitherto believed incorruptible, and at perceiving a new star
-that appeared in the constellation Ophiuchus. Such changes no longer
-surprise us. The cosmogonic system of Laplace has become familiar to
-all cultivated minds, and every one is accustomed to the idea of the
-continual mobility and evolution of the celestial world. “The stars
-have not always existed,” writes M. Faye; “they have had a period of
-formation; they will likewise have a period of decline, followed by
-final extinction.”
-
-Thus all the bodies of inanimate nature are not eternal and immutable;
-the celestial bodies are eminently susceptible of evolution, slow
-indeed with that we observe on the surface of our globe; but this
-disproportion, corresponding to the immensity of time and of cosmic
-spaces as compared with terrestrial measurements, should not mislead us
-as to the fundamental analogy of the phenomena.
-
-
- § 1. THE MOVEMENT OF PARTICLES AND MOLECULES IN BRUTE BODIES.
-
-
-It is not only in celestial spaces that we must search for that
-mobility of brute matter which imitates the mobility of living matter.
-In order to find it we have only to look about us, or to inquire from
-physicists and chemists.
-
-As far as geologists are concerned, M. le Dantec tells us somewhere of
-one who divided minerals into _living rocks_—rocks capable of change
-of structure, of evolution under the influence of atmospheric causes;
-and _dead rocks_—rocks which, like clay, have found at the end of all
-their changes a final state of repose. Jerome Cardan, a celebrated
-scientist of the sixteenth century, at once mathematician, naturalist,
-and physician, declared not only that stones live, but that they suffer
-from disease, grow old, and die. The jewellers of the present day use
-similar language of certain precious stones; the torquoise, for example.
-
-The alchemists carried these ideas to an extreme. It is not necessary
-here to recall the past, to evoke the hermetic beliefs and the dreams
-of the alchemists, who held that the different kinds of matter lived,
-developed, and were transmuted into each other.
-
-I refer to precise and recent data, established by the most expert
-investigators, and related by one of them, Charles Edward Guillaume,
-some years ago, before the _Société helvétique des Sciences
-naturelles_. These data show that determinate forms of matter may
-live and die, in the sense that they may be slowly and continuously
-modified, always in the same direction, until they have attained an
-ultimate and definitive state of eternal repose.
-
-_The Internal Movements of Bodies._—Swift’s reply to an idle fellow who
-spoke slightingly of work is well known. “In England,” said the author
-of _Gulliver’s Travels_, “men work, women work, horses work, oxen work,
-water works, fire works, and beer works; it is only the pig who does
-nothing at all; he must, therefore, be the only gentleman in England.”
-We know very well that English gentlemen also work. Indeed, everybody
-and everything works. And the great wit was nearer right than he
-supposed in comparing men and things in this respect. Everything is at
-work; everything in nature strives and toils, at every stage, in every
-degree. Immobility and repose in the case of natural things are usually
-deceptive; the seeming quietude of matter is caused by our inability
-to appreciate its internal movements. Because of their minuteness we
-do not perceive the swarming particles that compose it, and which,
-under the impassible surface of the bodies, oscillate, displace each
-other, move to and fro, and group themselves into forms and positions
-adapted to the conditions of the environment. In comparison with these
-microscopic elements we are like Swift’s giant among the Lilliputians;
-and this is far from being a sufficiently forcible comparison.
-
-_Kinetic Conception of Molecular Motion._—The idea of this peculiar
-form of motion is by no means new to us. We were familiarized with
-it in scientific theories during our school days. The atomic theory
-teaches us that matter behaves, from a chemical point of view, as if it
-were divided into molecules and atoms. The kinetic theory explains the
-constitution of gases and the effects of heat by supposing that these
-particles are endowed with movements of rotation and displacement.
-The wave theory explains photic phenomena by supposing peculiar
-vibratory movements in a special medium—the ether. But these are merely
-hypotheses which are not at all necessary; they are the images of
-things, not the things themselves.
-
-_Reality of the Motion of Particles._—Here there is no question of
-hypotheses. This internal agitation, this interior labour, this
-incessant activity of matter are positive facts, an objective reality.
-It is true that when the chemical or mechanical equilibrium of bodies
-is disturbed it is only restored more or less slowly. Sometimes days
-and years are required before it is regained. Scarcely do they attain
-this relative repose when they are again disturbed, for the environment
-itself is not fixed; it experiences variations which react in their
-turn upon the body under consideration; and it is only at the end of
-these variations, at the end of their respective periods, that they
-will attain together, in a universal uniformity, an eternal repose.
-
-We shall see that metallic alloys undergo continual physical and
-chemical changes. They are always seeking a more or less elusive
-equilibrium. Physicists in modern times have given their attention to
-this internal activity of material bodies, to the pursuit of stability.
-Wiedemann, Warburg, Tomlinson, MM. Duguet, Brillouin, Duhem, and
-Bouasse have revived the old experimental researches of Coulomb and
-Wertheim on the elasticity of bodies, the effects of pressures and
-thrusts, the hammering, tempering, and annealing of metals.
-
-The internal activity manifested under these circumstances presents
-quite remarkable characteristics which cannot but be compared to the
-analogous phenomena presented by living bodies. Thus have arisen even
-in physics, a figurative terminology, and metaphorical expressions
-borrowed from biology.
-
-_Comparison of the Activity of Particles with Vital Activity._—Since
-Lord Kelvin first spoke of the _fatigue_ of metals, or the _fatigue_
-of elasticity, Bose has shown in these same bodies the fatigue of
-electrical contact. The term _accommodation_ has been employed in the
-study of torsion, and according to Tomlinson for the very phenomena
-which are the inverse of those of fatigue. The phenomena presented by
-glass when acted on by an external force which slowly bends it, have
-been called facts of adaptation. The manner in which a bar of steel
-resists wire-drawing has been compared to _defensive_ processes against
-threatened rupture. And M. C. E. Guillaume speaks somewhere of “the
-heroic resistance of the bar of nickel-steel.” The term “defence” has
-also been applied to the behaviour of chloride or iodide of silver when
-exposed to light.
-
-There has been no hesitation in using the term “memory” concurrently
-with that of hysteresis to designate the behaviour of bodies acted
-on by magnetism or by certain mechanical forces. It is true that
-M. H. Bouasse protests in the name of the physico-mathematicians
-against the employment of these figurative expressions. But has he not
-himself written “a twisted wire is a wound-up watch,” and elsewhere,
-“the properties of bodies depend at every moment upon all anterior
-modifications”? Does not this imply that they retain in some manner the
-impression of their past evolution? Powerful deformative agencies leave
-a trace of their action; they modify the body’s condition of molecular
-aggregation, and some physicists go so far as to say that they even
-modify its chemical constitution. With the exception of M. Duhem, the
-disciples of the mechanical school who have studied elasticity admit
-that the effect of an external force upon a body depends upon the
-forces which have been previously acting on it, and not merely upon
-those which are acting on it at the present moment. Its present state
-cannot be anticipated, it is the recapitulation of preceding states.
-The effect of a torsional force upon a new wire will be different from
-that of the same force upon a wire previously subjected to torsions
-and detorsions. It was with reference to actions of this kind that
-Boltzmann, in 1876, declared that “a wire that has been twisted or
-drawn out remembers for a certain time the deformations which it has
-undergone.” This memory is obliterated and disappears after a certain
-definite period. Here then, in a problem of static equilibrium, we find
-introduced an unexpected factor—time.
-
-To sum up, it is the physicists themselves who have indicated the
-correspondence between the condition of existence in many brute bodies
-and that in many living bodies. It cannot be expected that these
-analogies will in any way serve as explanations. We should rather
-seek to derive the vital from the physical phenomenon. This is the
-sole ambition of the physiologist. To derive the physical from the
-vital phenomenon would be unreasonable. We do not attempt to do this
-here. It is nevertheless true that analogies are of service, were it
-only to shake the support which, from the time of Aristotle, has been
-accorded to the division of the bodies of nature into _psuchia_ and
-_apsuchia_—_i.e._, into living and brute bodies.
-
-
- § 2. THE BROWNIAN MOVEMENT.
-
-
-_The Existence of the Brownian Movement._—The simplest way of judging
-of the working activity of matter is to observe it when the liberty of
-the particles is not interfered with by the action of the neighbouring
-particles. We approximate to this condition when we watch, through the
-microscope, grains of dust suspended in a liquid, or globules of oil
-suspended in water. Now what we see is well known to all microscopists.
-If the granulations are sufficiently small, they seem to be never at
-rest. They are animated by a kind of incessant tremor; we see the
-phenomena called the “Brownian movement.” This movement has struck
-all observers since the invention of the magnifying glass or simple
-microscope. But the English botanist, Brown, in 1827, made it the
-object of special research and gave it his name. The exact explanation
-of it remained for a long time obscure. It was given in 1894 by M.
-Gouy, the learned physicist of the Faculty of Lyons.
-
-The observer who for the first time looks through the microscope at
-a drop of water from the river, from the sea, or from any ordinary
-source—that is to say, water not specially purified—is struck with
-surprise and admiration at the motion revealed to him. Infusoria,
-microscopic articulata, and various micro-organisms people the
-microscopic field, and animate it by their movements; but at the same
-time all sorts of particles are also agitated, particles which cannot
-be considered as living beings, and which are, in fact, nothing but
-organic detritus, mineral dust, and debris of every description. Very
-often the singular movements of these granulations, which simulate up
-to a certain point those of living beings, have perplexed the observer
-or led him to erroneous conclusions, and the bodies have been taken for
-animalcules or for bacteria.
-
-_Characters of this Movement._—But it is as a rule quite easy to avoid
-this confusion. The Brownian movement is a kind of oscillation, a
-stationary, dancing to-and-fro movement. It is a Saint Vitus’s dance
-on one and the same spot, and is thus distinguished from the movements
-of displacement customary with animate beings. Each particle has its
-own special dance. Each one acts on its own account, independently of
-its neighbour. There is, however, in the execution of these individual
-oscillations a kind of common and regular character which arises from
-the fact that their amplitudes differ little from each other. The
-largest particles are the slowest; when above four thousandths of a
-millimetre in diameter, they almost cease to be mobile. The smallest
-are the most active. When so small as to be barely visible in the
-microscope, the movement is extremely rapid, and can only occasionally
-be perceived. It is probable that it would be still more accelerated in
-smaller objects; but the latter will always escape our observation.
-
-_Its Independence of the Nature of the Bodies and of the
-Environment._—M. Gouy remarked that the movement depends neither on the
-nature nor on the form of the particles. Even the nature of the liquid
-has but little effect. Its degree of viscosity alone comes into play.
-The movements are, indeed, more lively in alcohol or ether, which are
-very mobile liquids; they are slow in sulphuric acid and in glycerine.
-In water, a grain one two-thousandth of a millimetre in diameter
-traverses, in a second, ten or twelve times its own length.
-
-The fact that the Brownian movement is seen in liquors which have been
-boiled, in acids and in concentrated alkalies, in toxic solutions of
-all degrees of temperature, shows conclusively that the phenomenon
-has no vital significance; that it is in no way connected with vital
-activity so called.
-
-_Its Indefinite Duration._—The most remarkable character of this
-phenomenon is its permanence, its indefinite duration. The movement
-never ceases, the particles never attain repose and equilibrium.
-Granitic rocks contain quartz crystals which, at the moment of their
-formation, include within a closed cavity a drop of water containing
-a bubble of gas. These bubbles, contemporary with the Plutonian age
-of the globe, have never since their formation ceased to manifest the
-Brownian movement.
-
-_Its Independence of External Conditions._—What is the cause of this
-eternal oscillation? Is it a tremor of the earth? No! M. Gouy saw the
-Brownian movement far away from cities, where the mercurial mirror of
-a seismoscope showed no subterranean vibration. It does not increase
-when the vibrations occur and become quite appreciable. Neither is
-it changed by variation in light, magnetism, or electric influences;
-in a word, by any external occurrences. The result of observation
-is to place before us the paradox of a phenomenon which is kept up
-and indefinitely perpetuated in the interior of a body without known
-external cause.
-
-_The Brownian Movement must be the First Stage of Molecular
-Motion._—When we take in our hands a sheet of quartz containing a
-gaseous inclusion, we seem to be holding a perfectly inert object. When
-we have placed it upon the stage of the microscope, and have seen the
-agitation of the bubble, we are convinced that this seeming inertia is
-merely an illusion.
-
-Repose exists only because of our limited vision. We see the objects as
-we see from afar a crowd of people. We perceive them only as a whole,
-without being able to discern the individuals or their movements.
-A visible object is, in the same way, a mass of particles. It is a
-molecular crowd. It gives us the impression of an indivisible mass, of
-a block in repose.
-
-But as soon as the lens brings us near to this crowd, as soon as the
-microscope enlarges for us the minute elements of the brute body,
-then they appear to us, and we perceive the continual agitation of
-those elements which are less than four thousandths of a millimetre
-in diameter. The smaller the particles under consideration, the more
-lively are their movements. From this we infer that if we could
-perceive molecules, whose probable dimensions are about one thousand
-times less, their probable velocity would be, as required by the
-kinetic theory, some hundreds of metres per second. In the case of
-objects we can only just see, the Brownian velocity is only a few
-thousandths of a millimetre per second. No doubt, concludes M. Gouy,
-the particles that show this velocity are really enormous when compared
-with true molecules. From this point of view the Brownian movement
-is but the first degree, and a magnified picture of the molecular
-vibrations assumed in the kinetic theory.
-
-
- § 3. THE INTERNAL ACTIVITY OF BODIES.
-
-
-_Migration of Material Particles._—In the Brownian movement we
-take into account only very small, isolated masses, small free
-fragments—_i.e._, material particles which are not hampered by their
-relations to neighbouring particles. Any one but a physicist might
-believe that in true solids endowed with cohesion and tenacity, in
-which the molecules were bound one to the other, in which form and
-volume are fixed, there could be no longer movements or changes. This
-is a mistake. Physics teaches us the contrary, and, in late years
-especially, has furnished us characteristic examples. There are real
-migrations of material particles throughout solid bodies—migrations
-of considerable extent. They are accomplished through the agency
-of diverse forces acting externally—pressures, thrusts, torsions;
-sometimes under the action of light, sometimes under the action of
-electricity, sometimes under the influence of forces of diffusion.
-The microscopic observation of alloys by H. and A. Lechatelier, J.
-Hopkinson, Osmond, Charpy, J. R. Benoit; researches into their physical
-and chemical properties by Calvert, Matthiessen, Riche, Roberts Austen,
-Lodge, Laurie, and C. E. Guillaume; experiments on the electrolysis
-of glass, and the curious results of Bose upon electrical contact of
-metals, show in a striking manner the chemical and kinetic evolutions
-which occur in the interior of bodies.
-
-_Migration under the Action of Weight._—An experiment by Obermeyer,
-dating from 1877, furnishes a good example of the motions of solid
-bodies through a hardened viscid mass, taking place under the influence
-of weight. The black wax that shoemakers and boatbuilders use, is a
-kind of resin extracted from the pine and other resinous trees, melted
-in water, and separated from the more fluid part which rises from it.
-Its colour is due to the lampblack produced by the combustion of straw
-and fragments of bark. At an ordinary temperature it is a mass so hard
-that it cannot always be easily scratched by the finger-nail; but if it
-is left to itself in a receptacle, it finally yields, spreads out as
-if it were a liquid, and conforms to the shape of the vessel. Suppose
-we place within a cavity hollowed out of a piece of wood a portion of
-this substance, and keep it there by means of a few pebbles, having
-previously placed at the bottom of the cavity a few fragments of some
-light substance, such as cork. The piece of wax is thus between a light
-body below and a heavy body above. If we wait a few days, this order
-is reversed—the wax has filled the cavity by conforming to it; the
-cork has passed through the wax and appears on the surface, while the
-stones are at the bottom. We have here the celebrated experiment of the
-flask with the three elements, in which are seen the liquids mercury,
-oil, and water superposed in the order of their density, but in this
-case demonstrated with solid bodies.
-
-_Influence of Diffusion._—Diffusion, which disseminates liquids
-throughout each other, may also cause solids to pass through other
-solids. Of this W. Roberts Austen gave a convincing proof. This
-ingenious physicist placed a little cylinder of lead upon a disc of
-gold, and kept the whole at the temperature of boiling water. At this
-temperature both metals are perfectly solid, for the melting point of
-gold is 1,200° C., and of lead is 330°. Still, after this contact has
-been prolonged for a month and a half, analysis shows that the gold has
-become diffused through the top of the cylinder of lead.
-
-_Influence of Electrolysis._—Electrolysis offers another no less
-remarkable means of transportation. By its means we may force metals,
-such as sodium or lithium, through glass walls. The experiment may be
-performed as indicated by M. Charles Guillaume. A glass bulb containing
-mercury is placed in a bath of sodium amalgam, and a current is then
-made to pass from within outward. After some time it can be shown that
-the metal has penetrated the wall of the bulb, and has become dissolved
-within it.
-
-_Influence of Mechanical Pressure._—Mechanical pressure is also capable
-of causing one metal to pass into another. We need not recall the
-well-known experiment of Cailletet, who, by employing considerable
-pressure, caused mercury to sweat through a block of iron. In a more
-simple manner W. Spring showed that a disc of copper could be welded
-to a disc of tin by pressing them strongly one against the other. Up to
-a certain distance from the surfaces of contact a real alloy is formed;
-a layer of bronze of a certain thickness unites the two metals, and
-this could not take place did not the particles of both metals mutually
-interpenetrate.
-
-
- § 4. INTERNAL ACTIVITY OF ALLOYS.
-
-
-_Structure of Alloys._—Metallic alloys have a remarkable structure,
-which is essentially mobile, and which we have only now begun to
-understand by the aid of the microscope. Microscopical examination
-justifies to a certain degree Coulomb’s conjecture. That illustrious
-physicist explained the physical properties of metals by imagining them
-to be formed of two kinds of elements—integral particles, to which
-the metal owes its elastic properties, and a _cement_ which binds the
-particles, and to which it owes its coherence. M. Brillouin has also
-taken up this hypothesis of duality of structure. The metal is supposed
-to be formed of very small, isolated, crystalline grains, embedded in
-an almost continuous network of viscous matter. A more or less compact
-mass surrounding more or less distinct crystals is the conception which
-may be formed of an alloy.
-
-_Changes of Structure produced by Deforming Agencies._—It has been
-shown that profound changes of crystalline structure can be produced
-by various mechanical means, such as hammering, and the stretching
-of metallic bars carried to the point of rupture. Some of these
-changes are very slow, and it is only after months and years that
-they are completed, and the metal attains the definite equilibrium
-corresponding to the conditions to which it is exposed. Though there
-may be discussions concerning the extent of the transformations to
-which it is subjected, though some believe they affect the chemical
-condition of the alloy, while others limit its power to physical
-effects, it is nevertheless true—and this brings us back to our
-subject—that the mass of these metals is at work, and that it only
-slowly attains the phase of complete repose.
-
-_The Slow Re-establishment of Equilibrium. Residual Effect._—These
-operations by which the physical characters of metals are changed, and
-by which they are adapted to a variety of industrial needs—compression,
-hammering, rolling, stretching, and torsion—have an immediate, very
-apparent effect; but they have also a consecutive effect, slowly
-produced, much less marked and less evident. This is the “residual
-effect,” or “Nachwirkung” of the Germans. It is not without importance,
-even in practical applications.
-
-Heat also creates a kind of _forced equilibrium_. This becomes but
-slowly modified, so that a body may remain for a long time in a state
-which is, however, not the most stable for the conditions under which
-it is considered. The number of these bodies _not in equilibrium_ is as
-great as that of the substances which have been exposed to fusion. All
-the Plutonic rocks are in this condition. Glass presents a condition of
-the same kind. Thermometers placed in melting ice do not always mark
-the zero Centigrade. This displacement of the zero point falsifies all
-records if care is not taken to correct it. The correction usually
-requires prolonged observation. The theory of the displacement of the
-thermometric zero is not entirely established; but we may suppose,
-with the author of the _Traité de Thermométrie_, that in glass, as
-in alloys, are to be found compounds which vary according to the
-temperature. At each temperature glass tends to assume a determinate
-composition and a corresponding state of equilibrium; but the previous
-temperature to which it has been subjected clearly has an influence
-on the rapidity with which it attains its state of repose. The effect
-of variation is more marked when we observe glass of more complicated
-composition. We can understand that those which contain comparable
-quantities of the two alkalies, soda and potash, may be more subject to
-these modifications than those having a more simple composition based
-on a single alkali.
-
-_Effects of Annealing._—A piece of brass wire that has been drawn and
-then heated is the scene of certain very remarkable internal changes,
-and these have been only recently recognized. The violent treatment
-of the metallic thread in forcing it through the hole in the die has
-crushed the crystalline particles; the interior state of the wire is
-that of broken crystals embedded in a granular mass. Heating changes
-all that. The crystals separate, repair themselves, and are built
-up again; they are then hard, geometrical bodies, in an amorphous,
-relatively soft and plastic mass; their number keeps on increasing;
-equilibrium is not established until the entire mass is crystallized.
-We may imagine how many displacements, enormous when compared with
-their dimensions, the molecules have to undergo when passing through
-the resisting mass, and arranging themselves in definite places in the
-crystalline structures.
-
-In the same way, too, in the manufacture of steel, the particles of
-coal at first applied to the surface pass through the iron.
-
-This _faculty of molecular displacement_ enables the metal in some
-cases to modify its state at one point or another. The use made of this
-faculty under certain circumstances is very curious, greatly resembling
-the adaptation of an animal to its environment, or the methods of
-defence against agents that might destroy it.
-
-_Effect of Stretching. Hartmann’s Experiment._—When a cylindrical
-rod of metal, held firmly at either end—a test-piece, as it is
-called in metallurgy—is pulled sufficiently hard, it often elongates
-considerably, part of the elongation disappearing as soon as the strain
-ceases, and the other part remaining. The total elongation is thus the
-sum of an “elastic elongation,” which is temporary, and a “permanent
-elongation.” If we continue the stretching, there appears at some point
-of the rod a local extension with contraction of sectional area. It is
-here that the rod will break.
-
-But in place of continuing the stretching, Mr. Hartmann suspends it.
-He stops, as if to give the “metal-being” time to rally. During this
-delay it would seem that the molecules hasten to the menaced point
-to reinforce and harden the weak part. In fact the metal, which was
-soft at other points, at this spot looks like tempered metal. It is no
-longer extensible.
-
-When the experimenter begins the stretching again after this rest, and
-after the narrowed bar has been rolled and become cylindrical again,
-the local extension and sectional contraction is forced to occur at
-another point. If another rest is given at this point the metal will
-also become hardened.
-
-If we repeat the experiment a sufficient number of times, we shall find
-a total transformation of the rod, which becomes hardened throughout
-its entire extent. It will break rather than elongate if the stretching
-is sufficiently severe.
-
-_Nickel Steels—their “Heroic” Resistance._—Nickel steels present this
-phenomena in an exaggerated degree. The alternation of operations which
-we have just described, bringing the various parts of an ordinary
-steel rod into a tempered state, is not necessary with nickel steel.
-The effect is produced in the course of a single trial. As soon as
-there is any tendency to contraction the alloy hardens at that precise
-place; the contraction is hardly noticeable; the movement is stopped at
-this point to attack another weak point, stops there again and attacks
-a third, and so on; and, finally, the paradoxical fact appears that
-a rod of metal which was in a soft state and could be considerably
-elongated has now become throughout its whole extent as hard, brittle,
-and inextensible as tempered steel. It is in connection with this point
-that M. C. E. Guillaume spoke of “heroic resistance to rupture.” It
-would seem, in fact, as if the ferro-nickel bar had reinforced each
-weak point as it was threatened. It is only at the end of these efforts
-that the inevitable catastrophe occurs.
-
-_Effect of Temperature._—When the temperature changes, it is seen that
-these ferro-nickel bars elongate or retract, modifying at the same time
-their chemical constitution. But these effects, like those which occur
-in the glass bulb of a thermometer, do not occur at once. They are
-produced rapidly for one part, and more slowly for a small remaining
-portion. Bars of ferro-nickel which have been kept at the same
-temperature change gradually in length in the course of a year. Can
-we find a better proof of internal activity occurring in a substance
-differing so greatly from living matter?
-
-_Nature of the Activity of Particles._—These are examples of the
-internal activity that occurs in brute bodies. Besides, these facts
-that we are quoting merely to refute Bichat’s assertion relative to
-the immutability of brute bodies, and to show us their activity, also
-afford us another proof. They show that this activity, like that of
-animals, wards off foreign intervention, and that this parrying of
-the attack, again like that of animals, is adapted for the defence
-and preservation of the brute mass. So that if we consider of special
-importance the adaptative, teleological characteristic of vital
-phenomena, a characteristic which is so easily made too much of in
-biological interpretations, we may also find it again in the inanimate
-world. To this end we may add to the preceding examples one more which
-is no less remarkable. This is the famous case of Becquerel’s process
-for colour-photography.
-
-_Colour-Photography._—A greyish plate, treated with chloride or iodide
-of silver and exposed to a red light, rapidly becomes red. It is then
-exposed to green light, and after passing through dull and obscure
-tints it becomes green. To explain this remarkable phenomenon, we
-cannot improve on the following statement:—The silver salt protects
-itself against the light that threatens its existence; that light
-causes it to pass through all kinds of stages of coloration before
-reducing it; the salt stops at the stage which protects it best. It
-stops at red, if it is red light that assails it, because in becoming
-red by reflection it best repels that light—_i.e._, it absorbs it the
-least.
-
-It may then be advantageous, for the comprehension of natural
-phenomena, to regard the transformation of inanimate matter as
-manifestations of a kind of internal life.
-
-_Conclusion. Relations of the Surrounding Medium to the Living Being
-and the Brute Body._—Brute bodies, then, are not immutable any more
-than are living bodies. Both depend on the medium that surrounds them,
-and they depend upon it in the same way. Life brings together, brings
-into conflict, an appropriate organism and a suitable environment.
-Auguste Comte and Claude Bernard have taught us that vital phenomena
-result from the reciprocal action of these two factors which are
-in close correlation. It is also from the reciprocal action of the
-environment and the brute body that inevitably result the phenomena
-which that body presents. The living body is sometimes more sensitive
-to variations of the ambient medium than is the brute body, but at
-other times the reverse is the case. For example, there is no living
-organism as impressionable to any kind of stimulus whatever as the
-bolometer is to the slightest variations of temperature.
-
-There can only be, then, one chemically immutable body—namely, the atom
-of a simple body, since, by its very definition, it remains unaltered
-and intangible in combinations. This notion of an unalterable atom
-has, however, itself been attacked by the doctrine of the ionization
-of particles due to Sir J. J. Thomson; and besides, with very few
-exceptions—those of cadmium, mercury, and the gases of the argon
-series—the atoms of simple bodies cannot exist in a free state.
-
-Thus, as in the vital struggle, the ambient medium by means of
-alimentation furnishes to the living being, whether whole or
-fragmentary, the materials of its organization and the energies which
-it brings into play. It also furnishes to brute bodies their materials
-and their energies.
-
-It is also said that the ambient medium furnishes to the living being
-a third class of things, the _stimuli_ of its activities—_i.e._, its
-“provocation to action.” The protozoon finds in the aquatic environment
-which is its habitat the stimuli which provoke it to move and to absorb
-its food. The cells of the metazoon encounter in the same way in the
-lymph, the blood, and the interstitial liquids which bathe them, the
-shock, the stimulus which brings their energies into play. They do not
-derive from themselves, by a mysterious spontaneity without parallel in
-the rest of nature, the capricious principle which sets them in motion.
-
-Vital spontaneity, so readily accepted by persons ignorant of biology,
-is disproved by the whole history of the science. Every vital
-manifestation is a response to a stimulus, a provoked phenomenon. It
-is unnecessary to say this is also the case with brute bodies, since
-that is precisely the foundation of the great principle of the inertia
-of matter. It is plain that it is also as applicable to living as to
-inanimate matter.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- SPECIFIC FORM. LIVING BODIES AND CRYSTALS.
-
- § 1. Specific form and chemical constitution—The wide distribution
- of crystalline forms—Organization of crystals—Law of relation
- between specific form and chemical constitution—Value of form as a
- characteristic of brute and living beings—Parentage, living beings and
- mineral parentage—Iso-morphism and the faculty of cross-breeding—Other
- analogies. § 2. Acquisition and re-establishment of the specific
- form—Mutilation and regeneration of crystals—Mechanism of reparation.
-
-
-§ 1. _Specific Form and Chemical Constitution._—In the enumeration
-which we have made of the essential features of vitality there are
-three that are, so to speak, of the highest value. They are, in
-the order of their importance:—The possession of a specific form;
-the faculty of growth or nutrition; and finally, the faculty of
-reproduction by generation. By restricting our comparison between
-brute bodies and living bodies to these truly fundamental characters
-we sensibly restrict the field, but we shall see that it does not
-disappear.
-
-_Wide Distribution of Crystalline Forms._—The consideration of specific
-forms shows us that in the mineral world we need only consider
-crystallized bodies, as they are almost the only ones that possess
-definite form. In restricting ourselves to this category we do not
-limit our field as much as might be supposed. Crystalline forms are
-very widely distributed. They are, in a measure, universal. Matter
-has a decided tendency to assume these forms whenever the physical
-forces which it obeys act with order and regularity, and when their
-action is undisturbed by accidental occurrences. In the same way, too,
-living forms are only possible in regulated environments, under normal
-conditions, protected from cataclysms and convulsions of nature.
-
-The possession of a specific form is the most significant feature of
-an organized being. Its tendency, from the time it begins to develop
-from the germ, is toward the acquirement of that form. The progressive
-manner in which it seeks to realize its architectural plan in spite of
-the obstacles and difficulties that arise—healing its wounds, repairing
-its mutilations—all this, in the eyes of the philosophical biologist,
-forms what is perhaps the most striking characteristic of a living
-being, that which best shows its unity and its individuality. This
-property of organogenesis seems pre-eminently the vital property. It is
-not so, however, for crystalline bodies possess it in an almost equal
-degree.
-
-The parallel between the crystal and a living being has been often
-drawn. I will not reproduce it here in detail. My sole desire, after
-sketching its principal features, is to call attention to the new
-information that has been brought out by recent investigations.
-
-_Organization of Crystals. Views of Haüy, Delafosse, Bravais, and of
-Wallerant._—In botany, zoology, and crystallography we understand by
-form an assemblage of material constituents co-ordinated in a definite
-system—_i.e._, the organization itself. The body of man, for example,
-is an edifice in which sixty trillion cells ought each to find its own
-predetermined place.
-
-In crystallography also we understand by form the organization which
-crystals present. The grouping of the elements of crystals is, perhaps,
-more simple. They are none the less organized, in the same sense that
-living bodies are.
-
-Their organization, while more uniform than that of living bodies,
-still shows a considerable amount of variation. It should not be
-assumed that the area of a crystal is completely filled, with
-contiguous parts applied one to the other by plane faces, as might
-be supposed from the phenomenon of cleavage which dissociates the
-parts of the crystalline body into solids of this kind. In reality,
-the constituent parts are separated from each other by spaces. They
-are arranged in a quincunx, as Haüy put it, or along the lines of a
-network, to use the terms of Delafosse and Bravais. The intervals left
-between them are incomparably larger than their diameters. So that in
-the organization of a crystal it is necessary to take into account two
-quite different things:—An element, the crystalline particle, which
-is a certain aggregate of chemical molecules having a determinate
-geometrical form; and a more or less regular, parallelopipedic network,
-along the edges of which are arranged in a constant and definite manner
-the aforesaid particles. The external form of the crystal indicates the
-existence of the network. Its optical properties depend upon the action
-of the particles, as Wallerant has shown: Thus we must distinguish in
-a crystal between two kinds of geometrical figures—that of the network
-and that of the particle—and their characters of symmetry may be either
-concordant or discordant.
-
-The crystalline particle, the element of the crystal, is therefore
-a certain molecular complex that repeats itself identically and is
-identically placed at the nodes of the parallelopipedic network. It has
-been given different names well calculated to produce confusion-the
-crystallographic molecule of Mallard, the complex particle of other
-authors. Some have separated this element into subordinate elements
-(the fundamental particles of Wallerant and of Lapparent).
-
-These very general outlines will suffice to show how complex and
-adjustable is the organization of the crystalline individual, which in
-spite of its geometric regularity and its rigidity, may be compared
-with the still more flexible organization of the living element. The
-mineral individual is more stable, more labile—_i.e._, less prone
-to undergo change than is the living individual. We may say with
-M. Lapparent that “crystallized matter presents the most perfect
-and stable orderly arrangement of which the particles of bodies are
-susceptible.”
-
-_Law of Relation of Specific Form to Chemical
-Constitution._—Crystallization is a method of acquiring specific form.
-The geometrical architecture of the mineral individual is but little
-less wonderful or characteristic than that of the living individual.
-Its form is the result of the mutual reactions of its substances and
-of the medium in which it is produced; it is the condition of material
-equilibrium corresponding to a given situation. This idea of a specific
-form belonging to a given substance under given conditions must be
-borne in mind. We may consider it as a kind of principle of nature,
-an elementary law, which may serve as a point of departure for the
-explanation of phenomena. A particular substance under identical
-conditions of environment, must always assume a certain form.
-
-This close linking of substance and form, admitted as a postulate in
-physical sciences, has been carried into biology by some philosophical
-naturalists, by M. Le Dantec, for instance.
-
-Let us imitate them for a moment. Let us cease to seek in the living
-being for the prototype of the crystal; let us, on the contrary, seek
-in the crystal the prototype of the living being. If we succeed in
-this, we shall then have found the physical basis of life.
-
-Let us say, then, with the biologists we have mentioned, that the
-substance of each living being is peculiar to it; that it is specific,
-and that its form—that is to say its organization—follows from it.
-The morpholpgy of any being whatever, of an animal—of a setter, for
-example—or even of a determinate being—of Peter, of Paul—is the
-“crystalline form of their living matter.” It is the only form of
-equilibrium that can be assumed under the given conditions by the
-substance of the setter, of Peter, or of Paul, just as the cube is the
-crystalline form of sea-salt. In this manner these biologists have
-supposed that they could carry back the problem of living form to the
-problem of living substance, and at the same time reduce the biological
-mystery to the physical mystery. I have shown above (Chap. V. pp.
-199-204) how far this idea is legitimate, and how far and with what
-restrictions it may be welcomed and adopted.
-
-_Value of Form as a Characteristic of Living and Brute Beings._—However
-this may be, we may say, without fear of exaggeration, that the
-crystalline form characterizes the mineral with no less precision than
-the anatomical form characterizes the animal and the plant. In both
-cases, form—regarded as a method of distribution of the parts—indicates
-the individual and allows us to diagnose it with more or less facility.
-
-_Parentage of Living Beings and Mineral Parentage._—Still another
-analogy has been noted. In animals and plants similarity in form
-indicates similarity in descent, community of origin, and proximity in
-any scheme of classification. In the same way identity of crystalline
-form indicates mineral relationship. Substances chemically analogous
-show identical, geometrically superposable forms, and are thus arranged
-in family or generic groups recognizable at a glance.
-
-_Isomorphism and the Faculty of Cross-breeding._—And further, the
-possibility in the case of isomorphous bodies, of their replacing each
-other in the same crystal during the process of formation and of thus
-mingling, so to speak, their congenital elements, may be compared
-with the possibility of inter-breeding with living beings of the same
-species. Isomorphism is thus a kind of faculty of crossing. And as the
-impossibility of crossing is the touchstone of taxonomic relationship,
-testing it, and separating stocks that ought to be separated, so the
-operation of crystallization is also a means of separating from an
-accidental mixture of mineral species the pure forms which are blended
-therein. Crystallization is the touchstone of the specific purity of
-minerals; it is the great process in chemical purification.
-
-_Other Analogies._—The analogies between crystalline and living forms
-have been pushed still further even to the verge of exaggeration.
-
-The internal and external symmetry of animals and plants has been
-compared to that of crystals. Transitions or intergradations have been
-sought between the rigid and faceted architecture of the latter and the
-flexible structure and curved surface of the former; the utricular form
-of flowers of sulphur on the one hand, and the geometrical structure
-of the shells of radiolarians on the other, have shown an exchange of
-typical forms between the two systems. An effort has even been made
-to draw a parallel between six of the principal types of the animal
-kingdom and the six crystalline systems. If carried as far as this, our
-thesis becomes puerile. Real analogies will suffice. Among these the
-curious facts of crystalline renewal come first.
-
-
- § 2. CICATRIZATION IN LIVING BEINGS AND IN CRYSTALS.
-
-
-We know that living beings not only possess a typical architecture
-which they have themselves constructed, but that they defend it against
-destructive agencies, and that if need arise they repair it. The
-living organism cicatrizes its wounds, repairs losses of substance,
-regenerates more or less perfectly the parts that have been removed;
-in other terms, when it has been mutilated it tends to reconstruct
-itself according to the laws of its own morphology. This phenomenon of
-reconstitution or reintegration, these more or less successful efforts
-to re-establish its form and its integrity, at first appear to be a
-characteristic feature of living beings. This is not the case.
-
-_Mutilation and Re-integration of Crystals._—Crystals—let us say
-crystalline individuals—show a similar aptitude for repairing their
-mutilations. Pasteur, in an early work, discussed these curious facts.
-Other experimenters, Gernez a little later and Rauber more recently,
-took up the same subject, but could do no more than extend and confirm
-his observations. Crystals are formed from a primitive nucleus, as the
-animal is formed from an egg; their integral particles are disposed
-according to efficient geometrical laws, so as to produce the typical
-form by a constructive process that may be compared to the embryogenic
-process which builds up the body of an animal. Now this operation
-may be disturbed by accidents in the surrounding medium or by the
-deliberate intervention of the experimenter. The crystal is then
-mutilated. Pasteur saw that these mutilations repaired themselves.
-“When,” said he, “a crystal from which a piece has been broken off
-is replaced in the mother liquor, we see that while it increases in
-every direction by a deposit of crystalline particles, activity occurs
-at the place where it was broken off or deformed; and in a few hours
-this suffices not only to build up the regular amount required for the
-increase of all parts of the crystal, but to re-establish regularity
-of form in the mutilated part.” In other words, the work of formation
-of the crystal is carried on much more actively at the point of lesion
-than it would have been had there been no lesion. The same thing would
-have occurred with a living being.
-
-_Mechanism of Reparation._—Gernez some years later made known the
-mechanism of this reparation, or, at least, its immediate cause. He
-showed that on the injured surface the crystal becomes less soluble
-than on the other facets. This is not, however, an exceptional
-phenomenon. It is, on the contrary, quite frequently observed that the
-different faces of a crystal show marked differences in solubility.
-This is what happens in every case for the mutilated face in comparison
-with the others; the matter is less soluble there. The consequence
-of this is clear; the growth must preponderate on that face, since
-there the mother liquor will become super-saturated before being
-super-saturated for the others. We may explain this result in another
-way. Each face of the crystal in contact with the mother liquor is
-exposed to two antagonistic actions: The matter deposited upon a
-surface may be taken away and redissolved if, for any reason whatever,
-such matter becomes more soluble than that of the liquid stratum in
-contact with it; in the second place, the matter of this liquid stratum
-may, under contrary conditions, be deposited, and thus increase the
-body of the crystal. There is, then, for each point of the crystalline
-facet, a positive operation of deposit which results in a gain, and a
-negative operation of redissolution which results in a loss. One or
-the other effect predominates according as the relative solubility is
-greater or less for the matter of the facet under consideration. On the
-mutilated surface it is diminished, deposition then prevails.
-
-But this is only the immediate cause of the phenomenon; and if we wish
-to know why the solubility has diminished on the mutilated surface
-Ostwald explains it to us by showing that crystallization tends to form
-a polyhedron in which the surface energy is a relative minimum.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-NUTRITION IN THE LIVING BEING AND IN THE CRYSTAL.
-
- Assimilation and growth in the crystal.—Methods of growth
- in the crystal and in the living being; intussusception;
- apposition.—Secondary and unimportant character of the process of
- intussusception.
-
-
-I have already stated (Chap. VI. p. 209) that nutrition may be
-considered as the most characteristic and essential property of living
-beings. Such beings are in a state of continual exchange with the
-surrounding medium. They assimilate and dissimilate. By assimilation
-the substance of their being increases at the expense of the
-surrounding alimentary material, which is rendered similar to that of
-the being itself.
-
-_Assimilation and Growth in the Crystal._—There exists in the crystal
-a property analogous to nutrition, a kind of nutrility, which is
-the rudiment of this fundamental property of living beings. The
-development of a crystal starts from a primitive nucleus, the germ
-of the crystalline individual that we will presently compare to
-the ovum or embryo of a plant or an animal. Placed in a suitable
-culture-medium—_i.e._, in a solution of the substance—this germ
-develops. It assimilates the matter in solution, incorporates the
-particles of it, and increases, preserving at the same time its form,
-reproducing its specific type or a variety of it. Its growth proceeds
-without interruption. The crystalline individual may attain quite a
-large size if we know how to nourish it properly—we might say, to
-fatten it. Very frequently, at a given time, a new particle of the
-crystal serves in its turn as a primitive nucleus, and becomes the
-point of departure for a new crystal engrafted upon the first.
-
-Taken from its mother liquor, placed where it cannot be nourished,
-the crystal, arrested in its growth, falls into a condition of rest
-not without analogy to that of a seed or of a reviviscent animal. Its
-evolution is resumed with the return of favourable conditions—the bath
-of soluble matter.
-
-The crystal is in a relation of continual exchange with the surrounding
-medium which feeds it. These exchanges are regulated by the state of
-this medium, or, more exactly, by the state of the liquid stratum
-which is in immediate contact with the crystals. It loses or it gains
-in substance if, for example, this layer becomes heated or cooled
-more rapidly than the crystal. In a general way, it assimilates or
-dissimilates according as its immediate environment is saturated or
-diluted. Here, then, we have a kind of mobile equilibrium, comparable,
-in some measure, to that of the living being.
-
-_Methods of Growth of the Crystal and of the Living Being.
-Intussusception. Apposition._—In truth, there seems to be a complete
-opposition between the crystal and the living being as regards
-their manner of nutrition and growth. In the one case the method
-is intussusception; in the other it is apposition. The crystalline
-individual is all surface. Its mass is impenetrable to the nutritive
-materials. Since only the surface is accessible, the incorporation of
-similar particles is possible only by external juxtaposition, and the
-edifice increases only because a new layer of stones has been added to
-those which were there before. On the contrary, the body of an animal
-is a mass essentially penetrable. The cellular elements that compose
-it have more or less rounded and flexible forms. Their contact is by
-no means perfect. They have neither the stiffness nor the precision
-of adjustment that the crystalline particles have. Liquids and gases
-can insinuate themselves from without and circulate within the meshes
-of this loose construction. Assimilation can therefore take place
-throughout its whole depth, and the edifice increases because each
-stone is itself increasing.
-
-_The Secondary and Commonplace Character of the Process of
-Intussusception._—The apparent opposition of these two processes is
-doubtless diminished if we compare the simple mineral individual
-with the elementary living unit, the crystalline particle with the
-protoplasmic mass of a cell. Without carrying analysis so far as
-this, it is yet easy to see that apposition and intussusception are
-mechanical means that living beings employ at one and the same time and
-combine according to their necessities. The hard parts of the internal
-and external skeleton increase both by interposition and superposition,
-at once. It is by the last method that bones increase in diameter,
-and the shells of molluscs, the scales of reptiles and fishes, and
-the testae of many radiate animals are formed. In these organs, as in
-crystals, life and nutrition occur at the surface.
-
-Apposition and intussusception are then secondary, mechanical
-arrangements having relation to the physical characters of the
-body—solidity in the crystal, semi-fluidity in the cellular protoplasm.
-If we compare the inorganic liquid matter with the semi-fluid organized
-matter, we recognize that the addition of substance takes place in
-the same manner in each—_i.e._, by interposition. If we add a soluble
-salt to a fluid, the molecules of the salt separate themselves and
-interpose themselves between those of the fluid. There is, therefore,
-nothing especially mysterious or particularly vital about the process
-of intussusception. Applied to fluid protoplasm, it is merely the
-diffusion that ordinarily occurs in mixed liquids.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-GENERATION IN BRUTE BODIES AND LIVING BODIES. SPONTANEOUS GENERATION.
-
- Protoplasm a substance which continues—Case of the
- crystal—Characteristics of generation in the living being—Property of
- growth—Supposed to be confined to the living being—Fertilization of
- micro-organisms—Fertilization of crystals—Sterilization of crystalline
- and living media—Spontaneous generation of crystals—Metastable and
- labile zones—Glycerine crystals—Possible extinction of a crystalline
- species—Conclusion.
-
-
-We have not yet exhausted the analogies between a crystal and the
-living being. The possession of a specific form, the tendency to
-re-establish it by redisintegration and the existence of a kind of
-nutrition are not sufficient to constitute complete similarity. It
-still lacks a fundamental character, that of generation. Chauffard
-some time ago, in an attack which he made upon the physiological ideas
-of his day, aptly exhibited this weak point. “Let us disregard,”
-he said, “those interesting facts relative to the acquisition of a
-typical form—facts that are common to the mineral world as well as
-to living beings. It is none the less true that the crystalline type
-is in no way derived from other pre-existing types, and that nothing
-in crystallization recalls the actions of ascendants and the laws of
-heredity.”
-
-This gap has since been filled. The work of Gernez, of Violette, of
-Lecoq de Boisbaudran, the experiments of Ostwald and of Tammann, the
-observations of Crookes and of Armstrong—all this series of researches,
-so lucidly summarized by M. Leo Errera in his essays in botanical
-philosophy, had for their result the establishment of an unsuspected
-relation between the processes of crystallization and those of
-generation in animals and plants.
-
-_Protoplasm is a Substance which Continues. The Case of the
-Crystal._—Under present conditions a living being of any kind springs
-from another living being similar to itself.
-
-Its protoplasm is always a continuation of the protoplasm of an
-ancestor. It is an atavic substance of which we do not see the
-beginning; we only see it continue. The anatomical element comes from a
-preceding anatomical element, and the higher animal itself comes from
-a pre-existing cell of the material organism, the ovum. The ladder of
-filiation reaches back indefinitely into the past.
-
-We shall see that there is something analogous to this in certain
-crystals. They are born of a preceding individual; they may be
-considered as the posterity of the antecedent crystal. If we speak of
-the matter of a crystal as the matter of a living being is spoken of,
-in cases of this kind we would say that the crystalline substance is an
-atavic substance of which we see only the continuation, as in the case
-of protoplasm.
-
-_Characters of Generation in the Living Being._—Growth of the living
-substance, and consequently of the being itself, is the fundamental
-law of vitality. Generation is the necessary consequence of growth (p.
-210).
-
-Living elements or cells cannot subsist indefinitely without increasing
-and multiplying. The time must come when the cell divides, either
-directly or indirectly; and then, instead of one cell, there are
-two. This is the method of generation for the anatomical element.
-In a complex individual it is a more or less restricted part of the
-organism, usually a simple sexual cell, that takes on the formation
-of the new being, and assures the perpetuity of the protoplasm, and
-therefore of the species.
-
-_Property of Growth. Its Supposed Restriction to Living Beings._—At
-first it would appear that nothing like this occurs in inanimate
-nature. The physical machine, if we furnish it matter and energy, could
-go on working indefinitely, without being compelled to increase and
-reproduce. Here, then, there is an entirely new condition peculiar to
-the organized being, a property well adapted, it would seem—and this
-time without any possible doubt—for separating living matter from brute
-matter. It is not so.
-
-It would not be impossible to imagine a system of chemical bodies
-organized like the animal or vegetable economy, so that a destruction
-would be compensated for by a growth. The only thing impossible is to
-suppose, with M. le Dantec, a destruction that would at the same time
-be an analysis. And an additional perplexity occurs when he supposes
-that in the successive acts exchanges of material may occur.
-
-There is no necessity for making this impossible chemistry a
-characteristic of the living being. The chemistry of the living being
-is general chemistry. Lavoisier and Berthelot enforced this view. We
-should not lose sight of the teachings of the masters.
-
-Let us return to generation, properly so called, and find in it the
-characteristics of brute bodies and of crystals.
-
-_The Sowing of Micro-organisms._—When a microbiologist wishes to
-propagate a species of micro-organisms, he places in a culture medium
-a few individuals (one is all that is actually necessary), and soon
-observes their rapid multiplication. Usually, if only the ordinary
-microbes in atmospheric dust are wanted, the operator need not trouble
-to charge the culture; if the culture tube remains open and the medium
-is suitably chosen, some germ of a common species will fall in and the
-liquid will become colonized. This has the appearance of spontaneous
-generation.
-
-_The Sowing of Crystals._—Concentrated solutions of various substances,
-supersaturated solutions of sodium magnesium sulphate, and sodium
-chlorate are also wonderful culture media for certain mineral organic
-units—certain crystalline germs. Ch. Dufour, experimenting with water
-cooled below 0° C., its point of solidification; Ostwald, with salol
-kept below 39°.5, its point of fusion; Tammann, with betol, which
-melts at 96°; and, before them, Gernez, with melted phosphorus and
-sulphur—all these physicists have shown that liquids in superfusion are
-also media specially appropriate for the culture and propagation of
-certain kinds of crystalline individuals.
-
-Some of these facts have become classic. Lowitz showed in 1785 that a
-solution of sodium sulphate could be concentrated by evaporation so
-as to contain more salt than was conformable with the temperature,
-without, however, depositing the excess. But if a solid fragment, a
-crystal of salt, is thrown into the liquor, the whole of the excess
-immediately passes into the state of a crystallized mass. The first
-crystal has engendered a second similar to itself; the latter has
-engendered a third, and so on from one to the other. If we compare
-this phenomenon with that of the rapid multiplication of a species of
-microbes in a suitable culture medium, no difference will be perceived.
-Or perhaps we may note one unimportant difference—the rapidity of
-the propagation of the crystalline germs as opposed to the relative
-slowness of the generation of the micro-organisms.
-
-Again, the propagation of crystallization in a supersaturated
-or superfused liquid may be delayed by appropriate devices. The
-crystalline individual gives birth, then, to another individual that
-conforms to its own type, or even to varieties of that type when such
-exist. Into the right branch of a U tube filled with sulphur in a state
-of superfusion Gernez dropped octahedric crystals of sulphur, and into
-the left branch prismatic crystals. On either side were produced new
-crystals conforming to the type that had been sown.
-
-_Sterilization of Crystalline Media and Living Media._—Ostwald varied
-these experiments by using salol. He melted the substance by heating
-it above 39∙5°C.; then, protecting it from crystals of any kind, he
-let the solution stand in a closed tube. The salol remained liquid
-indefinitely—until it was touched with a platinum wire that had been
-in contact with solid salol—_i.e._, until a crystalline germ was
-introduced. But if the platinum wire has been previously sterilized by
-passing it, as the bacteriologists do, through a flame, it can then be
-introduced into the liquor with impunity.
-
-_The Dimensions of Crystalline Germs Comparable to those of
-Microbes._—We may dilute the solid salol with inert powder—lactin,
-for example—dilute the first mixture with a second, the second with a
-third, and so on; then, throwing into the solution of surfused salol
-a tenth of a milligram from one of these various mixtures, we find
-that the production of crystals will not take place if the fragment
-thrown in weighs less than a millionth of a milligram, or measures
-less than ten thousandths of a millimetre in length. It would seem,
-then, that these are the dimensions of the crystalline particle or
-crystallographic molecule of salol. In the same way Ostwald satisfied
-himself that the crystalline germ of hyposulphite of soda weighs
-about a thousand-millionth of a milligram, and measures a thousandth
-of a millimetre; that of chlorate of soda weighs a ten-millionth of
-a milligram. These dimensions are entirely comparable with those of
-microbes.
-
-All these phenomena have been studied with a detail into which it
-is impossible to enter here, and which clearly shows more and more
-intimate analogies between the formation of crystals and the generation
-of micro-organisms.
-
-_Extension and Propagation of Crystallization. Optimum Temperature
-of Incubation._—Crystallization which has commenced around a germ is
-propagated more or less rapidly, and ends by invading the whole of the
-liquor.
-
-The rapidity of this movement of extension depends upon the conditions
-of the medium, especially upon its temperature. This is shown very
-well by Tammann’s experiments with betol. This body, the salicylic
-ester of naphthol, fuses at 96° C. If it is melted in tubes sealed
-at a temperature of 100° C., it may be cooled to lower and lower
-temperatures—to + 70°, to + 25°, to + 10°, to-5° without solidifying.
-Let us suppose that by some combination of circumstances a few centres
-of crystallization—that is to say, of crystalline germs—have appeared
-in the solution. Solidification will extend slowly at the ordinary
-temperature, at 20° to 25° and thereabouts. On the other hand, it will
-be propagated with great rapidity if the liquor is kept at about 70°.
-This point—70°—is the thermal optimum for the propagation of germs.
-It is the most favourable temperature for what may be called their
-incubation. As soon as the germs find themselves in a liquor at 70°
-they increase, multiply, and show that they are in the best conditions
-for growth.
-
-_Spontaneous Generation of Crystals. Optimum Temperature for the
-Appearance of Germs._—If we consider various supersaturated solutions
-or liquids in superfusion, we shall soon discover that they can be
-arranged in two categories. Some remain indefinitely liquid under
-given conditions unless a crystalline germ is introduced into them.
-Others solidify spontaneously without artificial intervention, and such
-crystallization may even be propagated very rapidly under determinate
-conditions. This implies that these are conditions favouring the
-spontaneous appearance of germs.
-
-This distinction between substances of crystalline generation by
-filiation and substances of spontaneous crystalline generation is not
-specific. The same substance may present the two methods of generation
-according to the conditions in which it is placed. Betol furnishes a
-good example of this. Liquefy it at 100° in a sealed tube and keep
-it by means of a stove above 30°, and it will remain liquid almost
-indefinitely. On the other hand, lower its temperature and leave it
-for one or two minutes at 10°, and germs will appear in the liquor;
-prolong the exposure to this degree of heat and the number of these
-spontaneously appearing germs, appearing in isolation, will rapidly
-increase. On the other hand, you will observe that propagation by
-filiation—that is to say, by extension from one to another—is almost
-absent. The temperature of 10° is not favourable to that method of
-generation; and we have just seen, in fact, that it is at a temperature
-of about 70° that extension of crystallization from one to another
-is best accomplished. The temperature of 70° was the optimum for
-propagation by filiation. Inversely, the temperature of 10° is the
-optimum for spontaneous generation. Above and below this optimum the
-action is slower. We may count the centres of crystallization, which
-slowly extend further and further, as in a microbic culture one counts
-the colonies corresponding to the germs primitively formed. To sum
-up, if there is an optimum for the formation of crystals, there is a
-different optimum for their rapid extension.
-
-_The Metastable and Labile Zones._—This phenomena is general. There
-is for each substance a set of conditions (temperature, degree of
-concentration, volume of the solution) in which the crystalline
-individuals can be produced only by germs or by filiation. This is what
-occurs for betol above the temperature of 30°. The body is then in what
-Ostwald has called a _metastable_ zone. There is, however, for the same
-body another set of circumstances more or less complete, in which its
-gems appear simultaneously. This is what happens for betol at about the
-temperature of 10°. These circumstances are those of the _labile zone_
-or zone of spontaneous generation.
-
-_Crystals of Glycerine._—We may go a step further. Let us suppose, with
-L. Errera, that we have a liquid in a state of metastable equilibrium,
-whose labile equilibrium is as yet unknown. This is what actually
-occurs for a very widely known body, glycerine. We do not know under
-what conditions glycerine crystallizes spontaneously. If we cool it,
-it becomes viscous; we cannot obtain its crystals in that way. It was
-not found in crystals until 1867. In that year, in a cask sent from
-Vienna to London during winter, crystallised glycerine was found,
-and Crookes showed these crystals to the Chemical Society of London.
-What circumstances had determined their formation? We knew not then,
-and we know not now. It may be observed that this case of spontaneous
-generation of the crystals of glycerine has not remained the solitary
-instance. M. Henninger has noted the accidental formation of glycerine
-crystals in a manufactory in St. Denis.
-
-It may be remarked that this crystalline species appeared, as living
-species may have done, at a given moment in an environment in which a
-favourable chance combined the necessary conditions for its production.
-It is also quite comparable to the creation of a living species;
-for having once appeared we have been able to perpetuate it. The
-crystalline individuals of 1867 have had a posterity. They have been
-sown in glycerine in a state of superfusion, and there they reproduced
-themselves. These generations have been sufficiently numerous to
-spread the species throughout a great part of Europe. M. Hoogewerf
-showed a great flask full to the Dutch biologists who met at Utrecht
-in 1891. M. L. Errera presented others in June 1899, to the Society of
-Medical and Natural Sciences at Brussels. To-day the great manufactory
-of Sarg & Co., of Vienna, is engaged in their production on a large
-scale for industrial purposes.
-
-Thus we are able to study this crystalline species of glycerine and to
-determine with precision the conditions of its continued existence. It
-has been shown that it does not resist a temperature of 18°, so that
-if precautions were not taken to preserve it, a single summer would
-suffice to annihilate all the crystalline individuals existing on the
-surface of the globe, and thus the species would be extinguished.
-
-_Possible Extinction of a Crystalline Species._—As these crystals
-melt at 18°, this temperature represents the point of fusion of solid
-glycerine or the point of solidification of liquid glycerine. But the
-liquor does not solidify at all if its temperature falls below 18° C.,
-as we well know, for it is at that temperature we use it. Nor does it
-solidify at zero, nor even at 18° below zero; at 20°, for instance, it
-merely thickens and becomes pasty. We only know glycerine, then, in a
-state of superfusion, a fact which chemists have not learned without
-amazement. Under these conditions, so analogous to the appearance of
-a living species, to its unlimited propagation and to its extinction,
-the mineral world offers a quite faithful counterpart to the animal
-world. The living body illustrates here the history of the brute body
-and facilitates its exposition. Inversely, the brute body in its
-turn throws remarkable light on the subject of the living body, and
-on one of the most serious problems relative to its origin, that of
-spontaneous generation.
-
-_Conclusion._—These facts lead to one conclusion. Until the concourse
-of propitious circumstances favourable to their spontaneous generation
-was brought about, crystals were obtained only by filiation. Until the
-discovery of electro-magnetism, magnets were made only by filiation,
-by means of the simple or double application of a pre-existing magnet.
-Before the discovery which fable attributes to Prometheus, every new
-fire was produced only by means of a spark from a pre-existing fire.
-We are at the same historical stage as regards the living world,
-and that is why, up to the present, there has never been formed a
-single particle of living matter except by filiation, except by the
-intervention of a pre-existing living organism.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK V.
-
-SENESCENCE AND DEATH.
-
- Chap. I. The different points of view from which death may
- be regarded.—Chap. II. Constitution of the organisms—Partial
- death—Collective death.—Chap. III. Physical and chemical
- characteristics of cellular death—Necrobiosis.— Chap. IV. Apparent
- perennity of complex individuals.—Chap. V. Immortality of the protozoa
- and of slightly differentiated cells.
-
-
-We grow old and we die. We see the beings which surround us grow old
-and disappear. At first we see no exceptions to this inexorable law,
-and we consider it as a universal and inevitable law of nature. But
-is this generalization well founded? Is it true that no being can
-escape the cruel fate of old age and death, to which we and all the
-representatives of the higher animality are exposed? Or, on the other
-hand, are any beings immortal? Biology answers that, in fact, some
-beings are immortal. There are beings to whose life no law assigns a
-limit, and they are the simplest, the least differentiated and the
-least perfect. Death thus appears to be a singular privilege attached
-to organic superiority, the ransom paid for a masterly complexity.
-Above these elementary, monocellular, undifferentiated beings,
-which are protected from mortality, we find others, higher in their
-organization, which are exposed to it, but with whom death seems but
-an accident, avoidable in principle if not in fact. The anatomical
-elements of this higher animal are a case in point. Flourens once tried
-to persuade us that the threshold of old age might be made to recede
-considerably, and there are biologists in the present day who give us
-some glimpse of a kind of vague immortality. We may, therefore, ask our
-readers to follow us in our examination of these re-opened if not novel
-questions, and we shall explain the views of contemporary physiology as
-to the nature of death, its causes, its mechanisms, and its signs.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-VARIOUS WAYS OF REGARDING DEATH.
-
- Different meanings of the word death—Physiological distinction between
- elementary and general death—Non-scientific opinions—The ordinary
- point of view—Medical point of view.—The signs of death are prognostic
- signs.
-
-
-_Different Meanings of the Word Death._—An English philosopher has
-asserted that the word we translate by “cause” has no less than
-sixty-four different meanings in Plato and forty-eight in Aristotle.
-The word “death” has not so many meanings in modern languages, but
-still it has many. Sometimes it indicates an action which is taking
-place, the action of dying, and sometimes a state, the state which
-succeeds the action of dying. The phenomena it connotes are in the eyes
-of many biologists quite different, according as we watch them in an
-animal of complex organization, or on the other hand, in monocellular
-beings, protozoa and protophytes.
-
-_Physiological Distinction between Elementary Death and General
-Death._—We distinguish the death of the anatomical elements,
-_elementary death_, from the death of the individual regarded as
-a whole, _general death_. Hence we recognize an _apparent death_,
-which is an incomplete and temporary suspension of the phenomena of
-vitality, and a _real death_, which is a final and total arrest of
-these phenomena. When we consider it in its essential nature (assumed,
-but not known) we look on it as the _contrary of life_, as did the
-Encyclopædia, Cuvier, and Bichat; or we regard it with others either as
-the consequence of life, or simply as the end of life.
-
-_Non-scientific Opinions._—What is death to those outside the realm of
-science? First of all we find the consoling solution given by those
-who believe death to be the commencement of another life. We next find
-ourselves involved in a confused medley, an infinite diversity of
-philosophical doubt and superstition. “A leap into the unknown,” says
-one. “Dreamless and unconscious night,” says another. And again, “A
-sleep which knows no waking.” Or, with Horace, “the eternal exile,” or
-with Seneca, annihilation. _Post mortem nihil; ipsaque mors nihil._
-
-The idea which is constantly supervening in the midst of this conflict
-of opinion is that of the _breaking up_ of the elements, the union
-of which forms the living being. It has, as we shall see, a real
-foundation which may perhaps receive the support of science. We shall
-not find that the best way of defining death is to say that it consists
-of the “dissolution of the society formed by the anatomical elements,
-or again, in the dissolution of the consciousness that the individual
-possesses of himself—_i.e._, of the existence of this society.” It is
-the rupture of the social bond. The old idea of dispersion is a variant
-of the same notion. But the ancients evidently could not understand,
-as we do, the nature of these elements which are associated to form
-the living being, and which are liberated or dispersed by death.
-We, as biologists, can see microscopical organic unity with a real
-objective existence. The ancients were thinking of spiritual elements,
-of principles, of entities. To the Romans, who may be said to have held
-that there are three souls, death was produced by their separation
-from the body. The first, the breath, the _spiritus_, mounting towards
-celestial regions (_astra petit_); the second, the _shade_, regaining
-on the surface of the earth and wandering around the tombs; the third,
-the _manes_, descending to the lower regions. The belief of the Hindoos
-was slightly different. The body returned to the earth, the breath to
-the winds, the fire of the glance to the sun, and the ethereal soul to
-the world of the pure. Such were the ideas of mortal dispersion formed
-by ancient humanity.
-
-Modern science takes a more objective point of view. It asks by
-what facts, by what observable events death is indicated. Generally
-speaking, we may say that these facts interrupt an interior state of
-things which was life and to which they put an end. Thus death is
-defined by life. It is the cessation of the events and of the phenomena
-which characterize life. We must, therefore, know what life is to
-understand the meaning of death. How wise was Confucius when he said to
-his disciple, Li-Kou:—“If we do not know life, how can we know death?”
-According to biology there are two kinds of death because there are two
-kinds of life; elementary life and death correspond just as general
-life and death do, and this is where scientific opinion diverges from
-commonly received opinion.
-
-What cares the man who reasons as most human beings do, about this life
-of the anatomical elements of his body, the existence and the silent
-activity of which are in no way revealed to him. What does their death
-matter to him? To him there is but one poignant question, that of being
-separated or not being separated from the society of his fellows. Death
-is no longer to feel, no longer to think; it is the assurance that one
-will never feel, one will never think again. Sleep, dreamless sleep,
-is already in our eyes a kind of transient death; but, when we fall
-asleep we are sure of waking again. There is no awaking from the sleep
-of death. But that is not all. Man knows that death, this dreamless
-sleep that knows no waking, will be followed by the dissolution of his
-body. And what a dissolution will there be for the body, the object
-of his continual care! Remember the description of Cuvier—the flesh
-that passes from green to blue and from blue to black, the part which
-flows away in putrid venom, the other part which evaporates in foul
-emanations, and finally, the few ashes that remain, the tiny pinch of
-minerals, saline or earthy, which are all that is left of that once
-animated masterpiece.
-
-_The Popular View._—To the man afraid of death it seems, in the
-presence of so great a catastrophe, that the patient analysis of the
-physiologist scrupulously noting the succession of phenomena and
-explaining their sequence is uninteresting. He will only attach the
-slightest importance to knowing that vestiges of vitality remain in
-this or that part of his body, if they do not re-establish in every
-part the _status quo ante_. He cares not to hear that a certain time
-after the formal declaration of his death his nails and his hair will
-continue to grow, that his muscles will still have the useless faculty
-of contraction, that every organ, every tissue, every element, will
-oppose a more or less prolonged resistance to the invasion of death.
-
-_Medical View._—It is, however, these very facts and details, this
-why and wherefore, which interest the physiologist. The state of
-mind of the doctor in this respect, again, is different. When, for
-instance, the doctor declares that such and such a person is dead,
-he is really making not so much a statement of fact as a prediction.
-How many elements are still living and will be capable of new birth
-in this corpse that he has before his eyes? That is not what he asks
-himself, nor is it what we should ask of him. He knows, besides, that
-all these partial survivals will be extinguished and will never find
-the conditions necessary to reviviscence, and that the organization
-will never be restored to its primal activity; and this is what he
-affirms. The fear of premature burial which haunts so many imaginations
-is the fear of an error in the prediction. It is to avoid this that
-practical medicine has devoted so much of its attention to the
-discovery of a _certain_—and early—sign of death. By this we understand
-the discovery of a _certain prognostic sign of general death_. We want
-a prognostic sign enabling us to assert that the life of the brain is
-now extinguished and will never be reanimated. And yet there are in
-that organism many elements which are still alive. Many others even
-may be born anew if we could give them suitable conditions which they
-no longer meet with in the animal machine now thrown out of gear.
-What finer example could we give than the experiment of Kuliabko, the
-Russian physiologist, who kept a man’s heart working and beating for
-eighteen hours after the official verification of his death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE PROCESS OF DEATH.
-
- Constitution of organisms.—Partial lives.—Collective life.—The
- rôle of apparatus.—Death by lesion of the major apparatus.—The
- vital tripod.—Solidarity of the anatomical elements.—Humoral
- solidarity.—Nervous solidarity.—Independence and subordination of the
- anatomical elements.
-
-
-_Partial Lives._ _Collective Life._—With the exception of the
-physiologist, no one, neither he who is ignorant nor he who is
-intellectual, nor even the doctor, troubles his head about the life
-or the death of the element, although this is the basis, the real
-foundation, of the activity manifested by the social body and by its
-different organs. The life of the individual, of the animal, depends
-on these elementary partial lives just as the existence of the State
-depends upon that of its citizens. To the physiologist, the organism
-is a federation of cellular elements unified by close association.
-Goethe compared them to a “multitude”; Kant to a “nation”; and others
-have likened them to a populous city the anatomical elements of which
-are the citizens, and which possesses an individuality of its own. So
-that the activity of the federated organism may be discussed in each
-of its parts, and then it is _elementary life_, or in its totality,
-and then it is _general life_. Paracelsus and Bordeu had a glimpse
-of this truth when they considered a life appropriate to each part
-(_vita propria_) and a collective life, the life of the whole (_vita
-communis_). In the same way we must distinguish the _elementary death_,
-which is the cessation of the vital phenomena in the isolated cell,
-from the _general death_, which is the disappearance of the phenomena
-which characterised the collectivity, the totality, the federation, the
-nation, the city, the whole in so far as it is a unit.
-
-These comparisons enable us to understand how general life depends on
-the partial lives of each anatomical citizen. If all die, the nation,
-the federation, the total being clearly ceases to exist. This city
-has an enormous population—there are thirty trillion cellules in the
-body of man; it is peopled with absolutely sedentary citizens, each
-of which has its fixed place, which it never leaves, and in which
-it lives and dies. It must possess a system of more or less perfect
-arrangements to secure the material life of each inhabitant. All have
-analogous requirements: they feed very much the same; they breathe in
-the same way; each in fact has its profession, industry, talents, and
-aptitudes by which it contributes to social life, and on which, in its
-turn, it depends. But the process of alimentation is the same for all.
-They must have water, nitrogenous materials and analogous ternaries;
-the same mineral substances, and the same vital gas, oxygen. It is no
-less necessary that the wastes and the egesta, very much alike in every
-respect, should be carried off and borne away in discharges arranged so
-as to free the whole system from the inconvenience, the unhealthiness,
-and the danger of these residues.
-
-_Secondary Organization in Organs._—That is why, as we said above, the
-secondary organizations of the economy exist:—the digestive apparatus
-which prepares the food and enables it to pass into the blood, into the
-lymph, and finally into the liquid medium which bathes each cell and
-constitutes its real medium; the respiratory apparatus which imports
-the oxygen and exports the gaseous excrement, carbonic acid; the heart
-and the circulatory system which distributes through the system the
-internal medium, suitably purified and recuperated. The organization
-is dominated by the necessities of cellular life. This is the law of
-the city, to which Claude Bernard has given the name of the _law of the
-constitution of organisms_.
-
-_Death by Lesion of the Major Organs. Vital Tripod._—Thus we understand
-what life is, and at the same time what is the death of a complex
-living being. The city perishes if its more or less complicated
-mechanisms which look after its revictualling and its discharge are
-seriously affected at any point. The different groups may survive for
-a more or less lengthy period, but progressively deprived of the means
-of food or of discharge, they are finally involved in the general
-ruin. If the heart stops, there is a universal famine; if the lungs
-are seriously injured, we are asphyxiated; if the principal organ of
-discharge, the kidney, ceases to perform its allotted task, there is a
-general poisoning by the used-up and toxic materials retained in the
-blood.
-
-We understand how the integrity of the major organs,—the heart, the
-lungs, the kidney,—is indispensable to the maintenance of existence. We
-understand that their lesion, by a series of successive repercussions,
-involves universal death. We always die, said the doctors of old,
-because of the failure of one of these three organs, the heart, the
-lungs, or the brain. Life, they said in their inaccurate language,
-depends upon these as upon three supports. Hence the idea of the _vital
-tripod_. But it is not only this trio of organs which maintain the
-organism; the kidney and the liver are no less important. In different
-degrees each part exercises its action on the rest. Life is based in
-reality on the immense multitude of living cells associated for the
-formation of the body; on the thirty trillion anatomical elements,
-each part is more or less necessary to all the rest, according as the
-bond of solidarity is drawn more or less closely in the organism under
-consideration.
-
-_Death and the Brain._—There are indeed more noble elements charged
-with higher functions than the rest. These are the nervous elements.
-Those of the brain preside over the higher functions of animality,
-sensibility, voluntary movement, and the exercise of the intellect. The
-rest of the nervous system forms an instrument of centralization which
-establishes the relations of the parts one with the other and secures
-their solidarity. When the brain is stricken and its functions cease,
-man has lost the consciousness of his existence. Life seems to have
-disappeared. We say of a man in this plight that he no longer lives,
-thus confusing general life with the cerebral life which is its highest
-manifestation. But the man or the animal without a brain lives what may
-be called a vegetative life. The human anencephalic foetus lives for
-some time, just as the foetus which is properly formed. Observation
-always shows that this existence of the other parts of the body cannot
-be sustained indefinitely in the absence of that of the brain. By a
-series of impulses due to the solidarity of the grouping of the parts,
-the injury received by the brain affects by repercussion the other
-organs, and leads in the long run to the arrest of elementary life in
-all the anatomical elements. The death of the whole is then complete.
-
-Doctors have therefore a two-fold reason for saying that the brain
-may cause death. The death of the brain suppresses the highest
-manifestation of life, and, in the second place, by a more or less
-remote counter stroke, it suppresses life in all the rest of the system.
-
-_Death is a Process._—Besides, the fact is general. The death of one
-part always involves the death of the rest—_i.e._, universal death. A
-living organism cannot be at the same time alive and a cemetery. The
-corpses cannot exist side by side with the living elements. The dead
-contaminates the living, or in some other way involves it in its ruin.
-Death is propagated; it is a progressive phenomenon which begins at one
-point and gradually is extended to the whole. It has a beginning and a
-duration. In other words, the death of a complex organism is a process.
-And further, the end of a simple organism, of a protozoan, of a cell,
-is itself a process infinitely more shortened.
-
-The very perfection of the organism is therefore the cause of its
-fragility. It is the degree of solidarity of the parts one with another
-which involves the one set in the catastrophe of the rest, just as in
-a delicate piece of mechanism the derangement of a wheel brings nearer
-and nearer the total breakdown. The important parts, the lungs, the
-heart, the brain, suffer no serious alteration without the reflex being
-felt throughout. But there are also wheels less evident, the integrity
-of which is scarcely less necessary.
-
-_The Solidarity of the Anatomical Elements._—The cause of the mortal
-process—_i.e._, of the extension and the propagation of an initial
-destruction—is therefore to be found in the solidarity of the parts
-of the organism. The closer it is the greater do the chances of
-destruction become, for the accident which has happened to one will by
-repercussions affect the others.
-
-Now the solidarity of the parts of the organism may be carried out in
-two ways; there is a _humoral solidarity_ and a _nervous solidarity_.
-
-_Humoral Solidarity._—Humoral solidarity is realized by the mixture
-of humours. All the liquids of the organism which have lodged in the
-interstices of the elements and which soak the tissues, are in contact
-and in relation of exchange one with another, and through the permeable
-wall of the small vessels they are in relation with the blood and the
-lymph.
-
-All the liquid atmospheres which surround the cells and form their
-ambient medium have intercommunication. A change having taken place in
-one cellular group, and therefore in the corresponding liquid, modifies
-the medium of the further or nearer groups, and therefore these groups
-themselves.
-
-_Nervous Solidarity._—But the real instrument of the solidarity of the
-part is the nervous system. Thanks to it in the living machine the
-component activities of the cellular multitude restrain and control
-one another. Nervous solidarity makes of the complex being not a mob
-of cells, but a connected system, an individual in which the parts are
-subordinated to the whole and the whole to the parts; in which the
-social organism has its rights just as the individual has his rights.
-The whole secret of the vital functional activity of the complex
-being is contained in these two factors:—the independence and the
-subordination of the elementary lives. General life is the harmony of
-the elementary lives, their symphony.
-
-_Independence and Subordination of the Anatomical Elements._—The
-independence of the anatomical elements results from the fact that
-they are the real depositaries of the vital properties, the really
-active components. On the other hand the subordination of the parts
-to the whole is the very condition of the preservation of form in
-animals and plants. The architecture which is characteristic of
-them, the morphological plan which they realize in their evolutive
-development which they are ever preserving and repairing, form a
-striking proof of this. This dependence in no way contradicts the
-autonomy of the elements. For when with Claude Bernard and Virchow
-we study the circumstances we see that the element accommodates
-itself to the organic plan without violence to its nature. It behaves
-in its natural place as it would behave elsewhere, if elsewhere it
-were to meet around it the same liquid medium which at once is a
-stimulant and a food. This at least is the conclusion we may draw from
-experiments on transplanting, or on animal and vegetable grafting.
-Neither the neighbouring elements, nor the whole system act on it at
-a distance by a kind of mysterious induction, according to the ideas
-of the vitalists, in order to regulate the activity of the element.
-They contribute solely to the composition of the liquid atmosphere
-which bathes it. They intervene in order to provide it with a
-certain environment whose very characteristic physical and chemical
-constitution regulates its activity. This constitution may be some day
-imitated by the devices of experiment. When that result is achieved
-the anatomical element will live in isolation exactly as it lives in
-the organic association, and the mysterious bond which causes its
-solidarity with the rest of the economy will become intelligible. In
-fact, we may defer more or less the maturity of this prophecy, but
-there is no doubt that we are daily nearing its fulfilment.
-
-The general life of the complex being is therefore the more or less
-perfect synergy, the _ordered process_ of elementary lives. General
-death is the destruction of these partial lives. The nervous system,
-the instrument of this harmony of the parts, represents the social
-bond. It keeps most of the partial elements under its sway, and is
-thus the intermediary of their relations. The closer this dependence,
-the higher the development of the nervous apparatus, and the better,
-also, is assured the universal solidarity and therefore the unity of
-the organism. Cellular federation assumes the characteristic of a
-unique individuality in proportion to the development of this nervous
-centralization. With an ideal perfect nervous system the correlation
-of the parts would also attain perfection. As Cuvier said: “None could
-experience change without a change in the rest.”
-
-But no animal possesses this extreme solidarity of the parts of the
-living economy. It is a philosopher’s dream. It is the dream of Kant,
-to whom the perfect organism would be “a teleological system,” a system
-of reciprocal ends and means, a sum total of parts each existing for
-and by the rest, for and by the whole. An organism so completely
-connected would be unlikely to live. In fact, living organisms show
-a little more freedom in the interplay of their parts. Their nervous
-apparatus fortunately does not attain this imaginary perfection; their
-unity is not so rigorous. The idea of individuality, of individual
-existence, is therefore not absolute but relative. There are all
-degrees of it according to the development of the nervous system. What
-the man in the street and the doctor himself understand by death is the
-situation created by the stopping of the general wheels, the brain, the
-heart, and the lungs. If the breath leaves no trace on the glass held
-to the mouth, if the beating of the heart is no longer perceptible by
-the hand which touches or the ear which listens, if the movement and
-the reaction of sensitiveness have ceased to be manifest, these signs
-make us conclude that it is death. But this conclusion, as we have said
-before, is a prognostic rather than a judgment of fact. It expresses
-the belief that the subject will certainly die, and not that it is from
-this moment dead. To the physiologist the subject is only on the way to
-die. The process has started. The only real death is when the universal
-death of all the elements has been consummated.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL CHARACTERS OF CELLULAR DEATH. NECROBIOSIS.
-GROWING OLD.
-
- Characteristic of elementary life—Changes produced by death in the
- composition and the death of the cell—Schlemm; Loew; Bokorny; Pflüger;
- A. Gautier; Duclaux—The processive character of death—Accidental
- death—Necrobiosis—Atrophy—Degeneration—So-called natural
- death—Senescence—Metchnikoff’s theory of senescence—Objections.
-
-
-Elementary death is nothing but the suppression in the anatomical
-elements of all the phenomena of vitality.
-
-_Characteristics of Elementary Life._—The characteristic features of
-elementary life have been sufficiently fixed by science. First of
-all, there is _morphological unity_. All the living elements have
-an identical morphological composition. That is to say that life is
-only accomplished and sustained in all its fulness in organic units
-possessing the anatomical constitution of the cell, with its cytoplasm
-and its nucleus, constituted on the classical type. In the second
-place, there is _chemical unity_. The constituent matter, the matter of
-which the cell is built up, diverges but little from a chemical type—a
-proteid complex, with a hexonic nucleus, and from a physical model
-which is an emulsion of granulous, immiscible liquids, of different
-viscosities. The third character consists in the possession of a
-_specific form_ acquired, preserved, and repaired by the element.
-The fourth character, and perhaps the most essential of all, is _the
-property of growth_ or _nutrition_ with its consequence, namely, a
-relation of exchanges with the external medium, exchanges in which
-oxygen plays considerable part. Finally, there is a last property,
-that of _reproduction_, which in a certain measure is a necessary
-consequence of the preceding,—_i.e._, of growth.
-
-These five vital characters of the elements are most in evidence
-in cells living in isolation, in microscopical beings formed of a
-single cell, protophytes and protozoa. But we find them also in
-the associations formed by the cells among one another—_i.e._, in
-ordinary plants and animals, multicellular complexes, called for this
-reason metaphytes and metazoa. Free or associated, the anatomical
-elements behave in the same way—feed, grow, breathe, digest in the
-same manner. As a matter of fact, the grouping of the cells, the
-relations, proximity and contiguity, which they assume, introduce
-some variants into the expression of the common phenomena; but these
-slight differences cannot disguise the essential community of the vital
-processes.
-
-The majority of physiologists, following Claude Bernard, admit as
-valent and convincing the proof that the illustrious experimenter
-furnished of this unity of the vital processes. There are, however, a
-few voices crying in the wilderness. M. Le Dantec is one. In his new
-theory of life he amplifies and exalts the differences which exist
-between the elementary life of the proteids and the associated life of
-the metazoa. In them he can see nothing but contrasts and deviations.
-
-If this is elementary life, let us ask what is _elementary
-death_—_i.e._, the death of the cell. And in this connection let us
-ask the questions which we have to examine in the case of animals high
-in organization, and of man himself. What are the characteristics
-of elementary death? When the cell dies, is its death preceded by a
-growing old or senescence? What are the preliminary signs and the
-acknowledged symptoms?
-
-_Changes Produced by Death._—The state of death is only truly realized
-when the fundamental properties of living matter enumerated above have
-entirely disappeared. We must follow step by step this disappearance in
-all the anatomical elements of the metazoan.
-
-Now the properties of the cell are connected with the physical and
-chemical organization of living matter. For them to disappear entirely,
-this organization must be destroyed as far as all that is essential in
-it is concerned. We cannot admit with the vitalists that there is any
-material difference between the dead and the living, and that only an
-immaterial principle which has escaped into the air distinguishes the
-corpse from the animated being. In fact, the external configuration may
-be almost preserved, and the corpse may bear the aspect and the forms
-of the preceding state. But this appearance is deceptive. Something in
-reality has changed. The structure, the chemical composition of the
-living substance, have undergone essential changes. What are these
-changes?
-
-_Physical Changes._—Certain physiologists have endeavoured to determine
-them. Klemm, a botanist, pointed out in 1895 the physical changes
-which characterize the death of vegetable cells—loss of turgescence,
-fragmentation of the protoplasm, the formation of granules, and the
-appearance of vacuoles.
-
-_Chemical Changes._—O. Loew and Bokorny laid great stress in 1886 and
-1896 on the chemical changes. The living protoplasm according to them
-is an unstable proteid compound. A slight change would detach from the
-albuminoid molecule a nucleus with the function of aldehyde, and at the
-same time would transform an amido-group into an amido-group. This
-would suffice for the transition of the protoplasm from the living to
-the dead state. This theory is based on the fact that the compounds
-which exercise a toxic action on the living cell, without acting
-chemically on the dead albumin, are easily fixed by the aldehydes; and
-on the fact that many of them, which attack simultaneously the living
-albuminoids and the dead albumin, easily combine with the amido-group.
-
-E. Pflüger, a celebrated German scientist, has considered living matter
-as an albumin spontaneously decomposable, the essential nucleus of
-which is formed by cyanogen. Its active instability would be due to the
-penetration into the molecule of the oxygen which fixes on the carbon
-and separates it from the nitrogen. Armand Gautier has not confirmed
-this view. Duclaux (1898) has stated that the difference between the
-living and the dead albumin would be of a stereochemical order.
-
-_Progressive Character of Death. Accidental Death._—We have seen that
-in general the disappearance of the characteristics of vitality is not
-instantaneous, at least in the natural course of things, in complex
-organisms. It is the end of a more or less rapid process. But death
-is not instantaneous in the isolated anatomical element any more than
-it is in the protozoan or protophyte. We must have recourse to very
-violent devices of destruction to kill the cell at a blow, to leave
-absolutely nothing of its organization existing. The protoplasm of
-yeast when violently crushed by Büchner still possessed the power of
-secreting soluble ferments. A powerful action, a very high temperature,
-is necessary to obtain the result. _A fortiori_, the difficulty
-increases in the case of complex organisms, all of whose living
-elements cannot be attacked at the same moment by the destructive
-cause. A mechanical action, capable of destroying at one blow all the
-living parts of a complex being, of an animal, of a plant, must be of
-almost inconceivable power. The blow of a Nasmyth hammer would not be
-strong enough.
-
-The chemical alteration produced by a very toxic substance distributed
-throughout the blood, and thus brought into contact with each element,
-would produce a disorganization which, however rapid it were, could not
-be called instantaneous. And the same holds good of physical agents.
-
-But these are not the processes of nature under normal circumstances.
-They are accidents or devices. We shall leave on one side their
-consideration and we shall only deal here with the natural processes of
-the organism.
-
-Imagine it placed in a medium appropriate to its needs and following
-out without intervening complications the evolution assigned to it by
-its constitution. Experiment tells us that this natural evolution in
-every case known to us ends in death. Death supervenes sooner or later.
-For beings higher in organization, which we can bring into closer
-and closer resemblance to man, we find that they die of disease,
-by accident, or of old age. And as disease is an accident, we may
-naturally ask if what we call old age is not also a disease.
-
-However that may be, the mortal process, being never instantaneous, has
-a duration, a beginning, a development, an end—in a word, a history.
-It constitutes an intermediary phase between perfect life and certain
-death.
-
-_Necrobiosis._ _Atrophy._ _Degeneration._—The process according to
-the circumstances may be shortened or prolonged. When death is the
-result of violence events are precipitated. The physical and chemical
-transformations of the living matter constitute a kind of acute
-alteration called by Schultze and Virchow _necrobiosis_. According
-to the pathologists, there are two kinds of _necrobiosis_:—that by
-_destruction_, by _simple atrophy_, which causes the anatomical
-elements to disappear gradually without undergoing appreciable
-modifications; and _necrobiosis by degeneration_, which transforms the
-protoplasm into fatty matter into calcareous matter, into granulations
-(fatty degeneration, calcification, granulous degeneration). There is
-no disagreement as to the causes of this necrobiosis. They are always
-accidental; they originate in external circumstances:—the insufficiency
-of the alimentary materials, of water, of oxygen; the presence in the
-medium of real poisons destroying the organized matter; the violent
-intervention of physical agents, heat, electricity; the reflex on the
-composition of the cellular atmosphere of a violent attack on some
-essential organ, the heart, the lungs, the kidneys.
-
-_Senescence._ _Old Age._—In a second category we must place the
-mortal processes, slow in their movement, in which we cannot see the
-intervention of clearly accidental and abnormal disturbing agents.
-Death appears to be the termination of a breaking-up proceeding by
-insensible degrees in consequence of the progressive accumulation
-of very small inappreciable perturbations. This slow breaking up
-is adequately expressed by the term—growing old, or senescence.
-The alterations by which it is betrayed in the cell are especially
-_atrophic_, but they are also accompanied, however, by different
-forms of degeneration. An extremely important question arises on this
-subject, and that is whether the phenomena of senility have their cause
-in the cell itself, if they are inevitably found in its organization,
-and therefore if old age and death are natural and necessary phenomena.
-Or, on the other hand, should we consider them as due to a progressive
-alteration of the medium, the character of which would be accidental
-although frequent or habitual? This, in a word, is the problem which
-has so often engaged the attention of philosophical biologists. Are old
-age and death natural and inevitable phenomena?
-
-The recent experiments of Loeb and Calkins, and all similar
-observations, tend to attribute to the phenomenon of growing old the
-character of a remediable accident. But the remedy has not been found,
-and the animal finally succumbs to these slow transformations of its
-anatomical elements. We then say that it _dies of old age_.
-
-_Metchnikoff’s Theory of Senescence. Objections._—Metchnikoff has
-proposed a theory of the mechanism of this general senescence. The
-elements of the conjunctive tissue, phagocytes, macrophages, which
-exist everywhere around the specialized and higher anatomical elements
-would destroy and devour them as soon as their vitality diminishes,
-and would take their place. In the brain, for example, it would be the
-phagocytes which, attacking the nervous cellules, would disorganize the
-higher elements, incapable of defending themselves. This substitution
-of the conjunctive tissue, which only possesses vegetative properties
-of a low order, for the nervous tissues, which possesses very high
-vegetative properties, results in an evident breaking-up. The gross
-element of violent and energetic vitality stifles the refined and
-higher element.
-
-This expulsion is a very real fact. It constitutes what is called
-senile sclerosis. But the active _rôle_ attributed to it by Metchnikoff
-in the process of degeneration is not so certain. An expert observer
-in the microscopic study of the nervous system, M. Marinesco, does not
-accept this interpretation as far as the senescence of the elements of
-the brain is concerned. Diminution of the cell, the decrease in the
-number of its stainable granulations, chromatolysis, the formation of
-inert, pigmented substances—all these phenomena which characterize the
-breaking-up of the cerebral cells would be accomplished, according to
-this observer, without the intervention of the conjunctive elements,
-the phagocytes.
-
-The characteristic of extensive and progressive process presented
-by death necessitates in a complex organism, which is a prey to it,
-the existence side by side of living and dead cells. Similarly, in
-the organism which is growing old, there are young elements and
-elements of every age side by side with senile elements. As long as
-the disorganization of the last has not gone too far, they may be
-rejuvenated. All we have to do is to restore to them an appropriate
-ambient medium. The whole question is one of knowing and being able
-to realize, for this or that part which we wish to reanimate and to
-rejuvenate, the very special or very delicate conditions that this
-medium must fulfil. As we have said, success is attained in this
-respect as far as the heart is concerned, and this is why we are able
-to reanimate and to revive the heart of a dead man. It is hoped that
-ideas along these lines will extend with the progress of physiology.
-
-After this sketch of the conditions and of the varieties of cellular
-death we must return to the essential problem which is engaging the
-curiosity of biologists and philosophers. Is death unavoidable,
-inevitable? Is it the necessary consequence of life itself, the
-inevitable issue, the inevitable end?
-
-There are two ways of endeavouring to solve this question of the
-inevitability of death. The first is to examine popular observation,
-practised, so to speak, unintelligently and without special
-precautions. The second is to analyze everything we know relative to
-the conditions of elementary life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE APPARENT PERENNITY OF COMPLEX INDIVIDUALS.
-
- Millenary trees—Plants with a definite rhizome—Vegetables
- reproduced by cuttings—Animal colonies—Destruction due to extrinsic
- causes—Difficulty of interpretation.
-
-
-Popular opinion teaches us that living beings have only a transient
-existence, and as a poet has said: “Life is but a flash between two
-dark nights.” But, on the other hand, simple observation shows us, or
-appears to show us, beings whose duration of existence is far longer,
-and practically illimitable.
-
-_Millenary Trees._—We know of trees of venerable antiquity. Among these
-patriarchs of the vegetable world there is a chestnut tree on Mount
-Etna which is ten centuries old, and an ivy in Scotland which is said
-to be thirty centuries old. Trees of 5000 years old are not absolutely
-unknown. We may mention among those of that age the famous dragon
-tree[21] at Orotava, in the island of Teneriffe. Two other examples are
-known in California—the pseudo-cedar, or _Tascodium_, at Sacramento,
-and a _Sequoïa gigantea_. We know that the olive tree may live 700
-years. There are cedars 800 years old and oaks of the age of 1,500
-years.
-
- [21] Lately destroyed in a storm. [Tr.]
-
-_Plants with a Rhizome._—Vegetable species of almost unlimited
-duration of life are known to botanists. Such, for instance, are plants
-with a definite rhizome, such as colchicum. Autumnal colchicum has a
-subterranean root, the bulb of which pushes out every year fresh axes
-for a new bloom; and as each of these new axes stretches out an almost
-constant length, a botanist once set himself the singular problem of
-discovering how long it would take such a foot, if suitably directed,
-to travel round the world.
-
-_Vegetables Reproduced by Cuttings._—Vegetables reproduced by slips
-furnish another example of living beings of indefinite duration. The
-weeping willows which adorn the banks of sheets of water in the parks
-and gardens throughout the whole of Europe have sprung, directly or
-indirectly, from slips of the first _Salix Babylonica_ introduced to
-the West. May it not be said that they are the permanent fragments of
-that one and the same willow?
-
-_Animal Colonies._—These examples, as well as those furnished to
-zoologists by the consideration of the polypi which have produced by
-their slow growth the reefs, or _atolls_, of the Polynesian seas,
-do not, however, prove the perennity of living beings. The argument
-is valueless, for it is founded upon a confusion. It turns on the
-difficulty that biologists experience in defining the individual. The
-oak and the polypus are not simple individuals, but associations of
-individuals, or, to use Hegel’s expression, the nations of which we see
-the successive generations. We give to this succession of generations
-a unique existence, and our reasoning comes to this, that we confer on
-each present citizen of this social body the antiquity which belongs to
-the whole.
-
-_Destruction of the Social Individual due to Extrinsic Causes._—As
-for the destruction, the death of this social individual, of this
-hundred-year-old tree, it seems indeed that there is no ground for
-considering it a natural necessity. We find the sufficient reason of
-its usual end in the repercussion on the individual of external and
-contingent circumstances. The cause of the death of a tree, of an oak
-many centuries old, is to be found in the ambient conditions, and not
-in some internal condition. Cold and heat, damp and dryness, the weight
-of the snow, the mechanical action of the rain, of hail, of winds
-unchained, of lightning; the ravages of insects and parasites—these are
-what really work its ruin. And further, the new branches, appearing
-every year and increasing the load the trunk has to bear, increase the
-pressure of the parts, and make more difficult the motion of the sap.
-But for these obstacles, external, so to speak, to the vegetable being
-itself, it would continue indefinitely to bloom, to fructify, and as
-each spring returned to show fresh buds.
-
-_Difficulty of Interpretation._—In this as in all other examples we
-must know the nature of the beings that we see lasting on and braving
-the centuries. Is it the individual? Is it the species? Is it a living
-being, properly so called, having its unity and its individuality,
-or is it a series of generations succeeding one another in time and
-extending in space? In a word, the question is one of knowing if we
-have to do with a real tree or with a genealogical tree. We are just
-as uncertain when we deal with animals. What is the being that lasts
-on—a series of generations or an individual? This doubt forbids us to
-draw any conclusion from the observation of complex beings. We must
-therefore return from them to the _elementary being_; and we must
-examine it from the point of view of perennity or of vital decay. Let
-us then ask the questions that we have already examined with reference
-to animals high in organization and to man himself. Is the death of the
-cell an inevitable characteristic? Are there any cells, protophytes,
-protozoa, which are immortal?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE IMMORTALITY OF THE PROTOZOA.
-
- Impossibility of life without evolution—Law of increase and
- division—Immortality of the protozoa—Death, a phenomenon of adaptation
- which has appeared in the course of the ages—The infusoria—The
- death of the infusoria—Two kinds of reproduction—The caryogamic
- rejuvenescence of Maupas—Calkins on rejuvenescence—Causes of
- senescence—Impossibility of life without evolution.
-
-
-We take into account, _a priori_, the conditions that must be fulfilled
-by the monocellular being in order to escape the inevitability of
-evolution, of the succession of ages, of old age, and of death. It must
-be able indefinitely to maintain itself in a normal régime, without
-changing, without increasing, maintaining its constant morphological
-and chemical composition, in an environment vast enough for it to
-be unaltered by the borrowings or the spendings resulting from its
-nutrition—_i.e._, it must remain constant in the presence of the
-constant being. We might conceive of a nutrition perfect enough, of
-exchanges exact enough, and regular enough, for the state of things to
-be indefinitely maintained. This would be absolute permanence realized
-in the vital mobility.
-
-_The Law of Growth and Division._—This model of a perfect and
-invariable machine does not exist in nature. Life is incompatible with
-the absolute permanence of the dimensions and the forms of the living
-organism.
-
-In a word, it is a rigorous law of living nature that the cell can
-neither live indefinitely without growth, nor grow indefinitely without
-division.
-
-Why is this so? Why is there this impossibility of a regular régime in
-which the cell would be maintained in magnitude without diminution or
-increase? Why has nutrition as a necessary consequence the growth of
-the element? This is what we do not positively know.
-
-Things are so. It is an irreducible fact, peculiar to the protoplasm, a
-characteristic of the living matter of the cell. It is the fundamental
-basis of the property of generation. That is all we can say about it.
-Real living beings have therefore inevitably an evolution. They are not
-unchangeable. In its simple form this evolution consists in the fact
-that the cell grows, divides, and diminishes by this division, begins
-the upward march which ends in a new division. And so on.
-
-_Immortality of the Protozoa._—It may happen, and it does happen
-in fact, that this series of acts is repeated indefinitely at any
-rate unless an accidental cause should interrupt it. The animal thus
-describes an indefinite curve, constituted by a series of indentations,
-the highest point of which corresponds to the maximum of size, and the
-lowest point to the diminution which succeeds the division. This state
-of things has no inevitable end if the medium does not change. The
-being is immortal.
-
-In fact, the compound beings of a single cell, protophytes and
-protozoa, the algae and the unicellular mushrooms, at the minimum stage
-of differentiation, escape the necessity of death. They have not, as
-Weismann remarks, the real immortality of the gods of mythology, who
-were invulnerable. On the contrary, they are infinitely vulnerable,
-fragile, and perishable; myriads die every moment. But their death is
-not inevitable. They succumb to accidents, never to old age.
-
-Imagine one of these beings placed in a culture medium favourable to
-the full exercise of its activities, and, moreover, wide enough in
-its extent to be unaffected by the infinitely small quantities of
-material which the animal may take from it or expel into it. Suppose,
-for example, it is an infusorian in an ocean. In this invariable medium
-the being lives, increases, and grows continually. When it has reached
-the limits of a size fixed by its specific law, it divides into two
-parts, which are indistinguishable the one from the other. It leaves
-one of its halves to colonize in its neighbourhood, and it begins its
-evolution as before. There is no reason why the fact should not be
-repeated indefinitely, since nothing is changed, either in the medium
-or in the animal.
-
-To sum up. The phenomena which take place in the cell of the protozoan
-do not behave as a cause of check. The medium allows the organism
-to revictual and to discharge itself in such a way and with such
-perfection that the animal is always living in a regular régime, and,
-with the exception of its growth and later on of its division, there is
-nothing changed in it.
-
-_Death a Phenomenon of Adaptation—It appeared in the Course of the
-Ages._—This immortality belongs in principle to all the protista which
-are reproduced by simple and equal division. If it be remarked that
-these rudimentary organisms endowed with perennity are the first living
-forms which have shown themselves on the surface of the globe, and
-that they have no doubt preceded many others—the multicellular, for
-instance, which are liable, on the contrary, to decay—the conclusion
-is obvious:—Life has long existed without death. Death has been a
-phenomenon of adaptation which has appeared in the course of the ages
-in consequence of the evolution of species.
-
-_The Death of Infusoria._—We may ask ourselves at what moment in the
-history of the globe, at what period of the evolution of its fauna,
-this novelty, death, made its appearance. The celebrated experiments of
-Maupas on the senescence of the infusoria seem to authorize us to give
-a precise answer to this question. By means of these experiments we are
-led to believe that death must have appeared at the same time as sexual
-reproduction. Death became possible when this process of generation was
-established, not in all its plenitude, but in its humblest beginnings,
-under the rudimentary forms of unequal division and of conjugation.
-This happened when the infusoria began to people the waters.
-
-_The Two Modes of Multiplication._—Infusoria are, in fact, capable of
-multiplication by simple division. It is true to say that in addition
-to this resource, the only one which interests us here, because it
-is the only one which confers immortality, they possess another.
-They present and exercise under certain circumstances a second mode
-of reproduction, caryogamic conjugation. It is a rather complicated
-process in its detail, but it is definitively summed up as the
-temporary pairing of two individuals, which are otherwise very much
-alike, and which cannot be distinguished as male and female. They
-become closely united on one of their faces; they reciprocally exchange
-a semi-nucleus which passes into the conjoint individual; and then
-they separate. But infusoria can be prevented from this conjunction by
-regularly isolating them immediately after their birth. Then they grow,
-and are constrained after a lapse of time to divide according to the
-first method.
-
-Maupas has shown that the infusoria could not accommodate themselves
-to this régime indefinitely; they could not go on dividing for ever.
-After a certain number of divisions they show signs of degeneration
-and of evident decay. The size diminishes, the nuclear organs become
-atrophied, all the activities fail, and the infusorian perishes.
-It succumbs to this kind of senile atrophy unless it is given an
-opportunity of conjugation with another infusorian in the same plight.
-In this act it then derives new strength, it grows larger, attains its
-proper size, and builds up its organs once more. Conjugation gives it
-life, youth, and immortality.
-
-_Alimentary Rejuvenescence._—Recent observations due to Mr. G. N.
-Calkins, an American biologist, and confirmed by other investigators,
-have shown that this method of rejuvenescence is not the only one,
-and is not even the most efficacious. Conjugation has no mysterious,
-specific virtue. The infusoria need not be married in order to be
-rejuvenated. It is sufficient to improve their food. In the case of
-the “tailed” paramecium we may substitute beef broth and phosphates
-for conjugation. Calkins observed 665 consecutive generations without
-blemish, without exhaustion, and without any sign of old age. Plenty of
-food and simple drugs have successfully resisted senility and the train
-of atrophic degenerations which it involves.
-
-_Causes of Senescence._—As for the causes of senescence which have
-been remedied with such success, they are not exactly known. Calkins
-thinks that senescence results from the progressive losses to the
-organism of some substance essential to life. Conjugation or intensive
-alimentation would act by building up again this necessary compound.
-G. Loisel believes on the contrary that it is a matter of the
-progressive accumulation of toxic products due to a kind of alimentary
-auto-intoxication.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-LETHALITY OF THE METAZOA AND OF DIFFERENTIATED CELLS.
-
- Evolution and death of metazoa.—Possible rejuvenescence of the
- differentiated cells by the conditions of the medium.—Conditions of
- the medium for immortal cells.—The immortal elements of metazoa.—The
- element in accidental and remediable death.—Somatic cells and sexual
- cells.
-
-
-_Evolution and Death of Metazoa._—We have seen that the infusoria
-are no longer animals in which material exchanges take place with
-sufficient perfection, and in which cellular division, the consequence
-of growth, is produced with sufficient precision and equality for
-life to be carried on indefinitely in a perfect equilibrium in the
-appropriate medium without alteration or check. _A fortiori_ we no
-longer find the perfect regularity of nutritive exchange in the classes
-above them. In a word, starting from this inferior group, there are
-no animated beings in the state of existence which Le Dantec calls
-“condition Iº of manifested life?” Living matter, instead of being
-continually kept identical in conditions of identical media, is
-modified in the course of existence. It becomes dependent on time. It
-describes a declining trajectory; it experiences evolution, decay,
-and death. Thus the fundamental condition of invariable youth and of
-immortality fails in all metazoa. The vital wastes accumulate in all
-through the insufficiency or the imperfection of nutritive absorption
-or of excretion. Life decays; the organism progressively alters, and
-thus is constituted that state of decrepitude by atrophy or chemical
-modification which we call senescence, and which ends in death. To sum
-up, old age and death may be attributed to cellular differentiation.
-
-_Possible Alimentary Rejuvenescence of the Differentiated
-Cells—Conditions of Medium._—We must add, however—as the teaching
-of experiments in general and in particular as the teaching of the
-experiments of Loeb and of Calkins—that a slight change of the
-environment, made at the right time, is capable of re-establishing
-equilibrium and of completely rejuvenating the infusorian. Senescence
-has not in this case a definitive any more than an intrinsic character;
-a modification in the composition of the alimentary medium will
-successfully resist it. If we are allowed to generalize this result, it
-may be said that senescence, the declining trajectory, the evolution
-step by step down to death, are not for the cells considered in
-isolation an inevitable and essentially inherent in the organism, and
-a rigorous consequence of life itself. They preserve an accidental
-character. In senescence and death there is no really natural, internal
-cause, inexorable, and irremediable, as was claimed in the past by J.
-Müller, and more recently by Cohnheim in Germany and Sedgwick Minot in
-America.
-
-_Conditions of the Medium for Immortal Cells._—As for the cells which
-are less differentiated, the protophytes and the protozoa situated
-one degree lower in the scale than the infusoria, we must admit the
-possibility of that perfect and continuous equilibrium which would
-save them from senile decrepitude. And it is quite understood that
-this privilege remains subordinated to the perfect constancy of the
-appropriate medium. If the latter changes, the equilibrium is broken,
-the small insensible perturbations of nutrition accumulate, vital
-activity decays, and in sole consequence of the imperfection of the
-extrinsic conditions or of the medium, the living being finds itself
-once more dragged down to decay and to death.
-
-_Immortal Elements of the Metazoa._—All the preceding facts and
-considerations refer to isolated cells, to monocellular beings.
-But, and this is what makes these truths so interesting, they may
-be extended to all cells grouped in collectivity—i.e., to all the
-animals and living beings that we know. In the complicated edifice
-of the organism, the anatomical elements, at any rate the least
-differentiated, would have a continual brevet of immortality. Generally
-speaking, this would be the case for the egg, for the sexual elements,
-and perhaps, too, for the white globules of the blood, the leucocytes.
-And, further, around each of these elements must be realized the
-invariably perfect medium which is the necessary condition. This does
-not take place.
-
-_Elements in Accidental and Remediable Death._—As for the other
-elements, they are like the infusoria, but without the resource of
-conjugation. The ambient medium becomes exhausted and intoxicated
-around each cell, in consequence of the accidents which happen to the
-other cells. Each therefore undergoes progressive decay, and finally
-they perish—the decay and destruction being perhaps in principle
-accidental, but, in fact, they are the rule.
-
-The different anatomical elements of the organism are more or less
-sensitive to those perturbations which cause senescence, necrobiosis,
-and death. There are some more fragile and more exposed. Some are more
-resisting, and finally, there are some which are really immortal. We
-have just said that the sexual cell, the ovum, is one. It follows that
-the metazoan, man for instance, cannot entirely die. Let us consider
-one of these beings. Its ancestors, so to speak, have not entirely
-disappeared; each has left the fertile egg, the surviving element from
-which has issued the being of which we speak; and when it in its turn
-has developed, part of that ovum has been placed in reserve for a new
-generation. The death of the elements is not therefore universal. The
-metazoan is divided from the beginning into two parts. On the one
-hand are the cells destined to form the body, _somatic_ cells. They
-will die. On the other hand are the _reproductive_, or _germinal_, or
-_sexual_ cells, capable of living indefinitely.
-
-_Somatic and Sexual Cells._—In this sense we may say with Weismann
-that there are two things in the animal and in man—the one mortal,
-the _soma_ the body, the other immortal, the _germen_. These germinal
-cells, as in the case of the protozoa we mentioned above, possess a
-conditional immortality. They are imperishable, but on the contrary,
-are fragile and vulnerable. Millions of ova are destroyed and are
-disappearing every moment. They may die by accident, but never of old
-age.
-
-We now understand that if the protistae are immortal, it is because
-these living beings, reduced to a single cell, accumulate in it the
-compound characters of the somatic cell and germinal cell, and enjoy
-the privilege which is attached to the latter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-MAN. THE INSTINCT OF LIFE AND THE INSTINCT OF DEATH.
-
- The miseries of humanity: 1. Disease; 2. Old age.—Old age considered
- as a chronic disease.—Its occasional cause.—3. The disharmonies of
- human nature; 4. The instinct of life and the instinct of death.
-
-
-Man’s unhappy plight is the constant theme of philosophies and
-religions. Without referring to its moral basis, it has a physical
-basis due to four causes—the physical imperfection or disharmony of
-nature, disease, old age, and death—or rather of three, for what we
-call old age is perhaps a simple disease. These are the great sorrows
-of man, the sources of all his woes. Disease attacks him, old age
-awaits him, and death must tear him from all the ties which he has
-formed. All his pleasures are poisoned by the certain knowledge that
-they last but for a moment, that they are as precarious as his health,
-his youth, and his life itself.
-
-
- § 1. DISEASE.
-
-
-Disease, frequent, constant, and inevitable as it is, is, however,
-nothing but a fact outside the natural order. Its character is clearly
-accidental, and it interrupts the normal cycle of evolution. Medical
-observation teaches us, on the other hand, that the health of the body
-reacts on that of the mind; and therefore man as a whole, moral and
-physical, is affected by disease. Bacon described a diseased body as a
-jailer to the soul, and the healthy body as a host. Pascal recognized
-in diseases a principle of error. “They spoil our judgment and our
-senses.”
-
-I am not expressing a chimerical hope when I predict that science will
-conquer disease. Medicine has at last issued from the contemplative
-attitude of so many centuries; it has engaged in the struggle, and
-signs of victory are already appearing. Disease is no longer the
-mysterious power which it was impossible to escape. Pasteur gave to it
-a body. The microbe can be caught. In the words of Schopenhauer, an
-alteration of the atmosphere so slight that it is impossible to detect
-it by chemical analysis may bring on cholera, yellow fever, the black
-plague, diseases which carry off thousands of men; and a slightly
-greater alteration might endanger all life. The at once mysterious
-and terrifying spectacle of the cholera at Berlin in 1831 had such
-an effect on the philosopher that he fled in terror to Frankfort. It
-has been said that this was the origin of his pessimism, and that
-but for this he would have continued to teach idealistic philosophy
-in some Prussian university. L. Hartmann, another celebrated leader
-of contemporary pessimism, has also said that disease will always be
-beyond the resources of medicine. Facts have given the lie to these
-sombre prognostics. The microbic origin of most infectious diseases has
-been recognized. The discovery of attenuated poisons and serums has
-diminished their gravity. An exact knowledge of methods of contagion
-has enabled us to erect against them impregnable barriers. Cholera,
-yellow fever, the plague knock in vain at our doors. Diphtheria,
-dreaded by every mother, has partially lost its deadly character.
-Puerperal fever and blindness of the new-born child are tending to
-disappear. Legend tells us that Buddha in his youth, frightened at
-the sight of a sick man, expressed in his father’s presence the wish
-to be always in perfect health and sheltered from disease. The King
-answered: “My son! you are asking the impossible.” But it is towards
-the realization of this impossibility that we are on our way. Science
-is repelling the attacks of disease.
-
-
- § 2. OLD AGE.
-
-
-Old age is another sorrow of humanity. The stage of existence in
-which the strength grows less and never grows greater, and in which
-a thousand infirmities appear, is not, however, a stage universal in
-animals. Most of them die without our perceiving in them any apparent
-signs of senile weakness. On the other hand, some vegetables exhibit
-these signs. Some trees are old; but it is in birds and mammals that
-this decay, with the train of evils which accompanies it, becomes a
-very marked phase of existence. In man to debility is added a bodily
-shrinkage, grey hairs, withered skin, and the wearing out and loss of
-teeth. The exhausted and atrophied organism offers a favourable field
-to all intercurrent diseases and to every cause of destruction. It is
-this discrepitude which makes old age so hateful. All desire to be old,
-said Cicero; and when they are old, they say that old age has come
-quicker than they expected. La Bruyère expresses it in an apothegm,
-“We want to grow old, and we fear old age.” One would like longevity
-without old age.
-
-But can life be prolonged without senility diminishing its value?
-Metchnikoff thinks it can. He more or less clearly catches a glimpse
-of a normal evolution of existence which would make it longer and
-nevertheless exempt from senile decay.
-
-It is remarkable that we have so few scientific data on the old age of
-man, and we have still fewer on that of animals. The biologist knows
-no more than the layman. The old age of the dog is betrayed by its
-gait. Its coat loses its lustre, just as in disease. The hair whitens
-around the forehead and the muzzle. The teeth grow blunt and drop out.
-The character loses its gaiety and becomes gloomy; the animal becomes
-indifferent. He ceases to bark, and often becomes blind and deaf.
-
-It is admitted that senile degeneration is due to an alteration
-affecting most of the tissues. The cells, the special anatomical
-elements of the liver, the kidney, and the brain are reduced by atrophy
-and degeneration. At the same time, the conjunctive woof which serves
-them as a support develops, on the contrary, at the expense in a
-measure of the higher elements. For this reason the tissues harden.
-We know that the flesh of old animals is tough. We know in pathology
-that this is happening to the tissues. It is due to growth, to injury
-to the active and important elements, to the elements of support of
-the organs. They form a tissue sometimes called packed tissue, to
-show its secondary rôle with reference to the elements which are
-deposited in it. This kind of degeneration of the organs is known as
-sclerosis. It constitutes the characteristic lesion of a certain number
-of chronic diseases; and these diseases are serious, for the stifling
-of the characteristic elements by the less important elements of the
-conjunctive or packed tissue results in the more or less complete
-reduction or suppression of the function.
-
-The blood vessels also undergo this transformation, and what we
-may call universal trouble and danger ensue. This sclerosis of the
-arteries, this arterio-sclerosis, not only deprives the walls of the
-blood vessels of the suppleness and elasticity which are necessary for
-the proper irrigation of the organs, but it makes them more fragile.
-Thus it becomes a cause of hemorrhage, which is a very serious matter
-as far as the brain and lungs are concerned.
-
-It is remarkable that the alteration of the tissues during old age
-should be exactly similar to this. This is inferred from the few
-researches that have been made on the subject—from those of Demange in
-1886, of Merkel in 1891, and finally from the researches of Metchnikoff
-himself. It is a generalized sclerosis. As its consequence we have
-the lowering of the proper activity of the organs and the danger of
-cerebral hemorrhage created by arterio-sclerosis. The transformations
-of the tissues in old men are therefore summed up in the atrophy of the
-important and specific elements of the tissues, and their replacement
-by the hypertrophied conjunctive tissue. This sclerosis is comparable
-to that of chronic diseases; it is a pathological condition. Thus old
-age, as we understand it, is a chronic disease and not a normal phase
-of the vital cycle.
-
-On the other hand, if we ask ourselves what is the origin of the
-scleroses which engender chronic diseases, we find that they are due
-to the action of various poisons, among which syphilitic poison and
-the immoderate use of alcohol take the first place. These are also the
-usual causes of senile degeneration. But there must be some other,
-some very general cause to explain the universality of the process of
-senescence. Metchnikoff thinks that he has found this cause in the
-microbes which swarm in man’s digestive tube, particularly in the
-large intestine. Their number is enormous. Strassburger has given
-an approximate calculation, but words fail to express it. We have
-to imagine a figure followed by fifteen zeros. This microbic flora
-is composed of “bacilli” and of “cocci,” and comprises a third of
-the rejected matter. It produces slow poisons, which, being at once
-reabsorbed, pass into the blood and provoke the constant irritation
-from which results arterio-sclerosis and the universal sclerosis of old
-age. Instead of enjoying a healthy and normal old age, in which the
-faculties of ripening years are preserved, we drag out a diminished
-life, a kind of chronic disease, which is ordinary old age. This is
-due, according to Metchnikoff, to the parasitism and the symbiosis
-of microbic flora, lodged in a part of the economy in which it finds
-all the conditions favourable to its prolific expansion. Such is the
-specious theory, held to the verge of intrepidity, by which this
-investigator explains the misery of our old age, and which inspires him
-with the idea of a remedy. For his observations conclude with a régime,
-a series of prescriptions by which the author fancies that life may be
-lengthened and the evils of old age swept from our path. The dangerous
-flora must be transformed into a cultivated and selected flora.
-Although the organ in question may be of doubtful utility, and although
-its existence, the legacy of atavic heredity, must be considered as
-a disharmony of human nature, Metchnikoff does not go so far as to
-propose that it should be cut away, and that we should call in surgery
-to assist in making mankind perfect! But the rational means he proposes
-will be endorsed by the most judicious students of hygiene; and their
-effect, if it is not as wonderful as one hopes for, cannot fail to
-ameliorate the conditions of old age and make it more vigorous.
-
-
- § 3. DISHARMONIES IN HUMAN NATURE.
-
-
-Another misery in the condition of man is due to the dissidencies
-of his nature—that is to say, to his physical imperfections and the
-discordancies which exist between the physiological functions and the
-instincts which should regulate them.
-
-This discordance reigns throughout the physical organism. The body of
-man is not the perfect masterpiece it was once supposed to be. It is
-encumbered with annoying inutilities, with rudimentary organs that have
-neither rôle nor function, unfinished sketches which nature has left
-in the different parts of his body. Such are the lachrymal caruncle, a
-vestige of the third eyebrow in mammals; the extrinsic muscles of the
-ear; the pineal gland of the brain, which is only the rudiment of an
-ancestral organ; the third eye, or the Cyclopean eye of the saurians.
-The list is interminable. Wiedersheim has counted in man 107 of these
-abortive hereditary organs, the useless vestiges of organs useful
-to our remote animal ancestors, atrophied in the course of ages in
-consequence of modifications that have taken place in the external
-medium.
-
-These rudimentary organs are not only useless; they are often
-positively harmful.
-
-But the most serious discordance is that which exists between the
-physiological functions and the instincts which regulate them. In a
-well-regulated organism slowly developed by adaptation the instincts
-and the organs alike should be in relation with the functions. All
-really natural acts are solicited by an instinct, the satisfaction
-of which is at once a need and a pleasure. The maternal instinct is
-awakened at the proper moment in animals, and it disappears as soon as
-the offspring requires no more assistance. A craving for milk is shown
-in all newborn children, and often disappears at an early age.
-
-Nature has endowed man as well as the other animals with peculiar
-instincts, destined to preside over the different functions and to
-ensure their accomplishment. And, at the same time, it has enabled him
-in a measure to deceive those instincts and to satisfy them by other
-means than the execution of the physiological acts with a view to which
-they exist. Love and the instinct of reproduction exist in man before
-the age of puberty. Canova felt the spur of love at the age of five.
-Dante was in love with Beatrice at nine; and Byron, then scarcely
-seven, was already in love with Maria Duff. On the other hand, puberty
-has no necessary relation to the general maturity of the organism.
-
-The family instinct is subject to the same aberrations. Man limits
-the number of his children. The Turks of to-day follow the ancient
-Greeks in the practice of abortion. Plato approved of the custom, and
-Aristotle sanctioned its general prevalence. In the province of Canton
-the Chinese of the agricultural classes kill two-thirds of their girl
-children, and the same is done at Tahiti. All these customs co-exist
-with the perfect love and tender care of the living children.
-
-Because of these different discordancies the physical life of man is
-insufficiently regulated by nature. Neither the physiological instinct,
-nor the family instinct, nor the social instinct is, in general,
-sufficiently imperative and precise. Hence, since the internal impulse
-has not sufficient power, the necessity arises for a rule of conduct
-exercising its influence from without. Philosophies, religions, and
-legislation have provided for this. They have regulated man’s hygiene
-and the carrying out of his different physiological functions. Their
-control has, moreover, had its hygienic side. The scientific hygiene of
-to-day has inherited their rôle.
-
-The idea of the fundamental perversity of human nature is born of our
-cognizance of its discordancies, unduly amplified and exaggerated. Soul
-and body have been considered as distinctly discordant and hostile
-elements. The body, the shroud of the soul, the temporary host, the
-prison, the present source of miseries, has been subjected to every
-kind of mortification. Asceticism has treated the body and all the
-innate instincts as our mortal foes.
-
-This suspicion, this depreciation of human nature was the great
-error of the mystics. This view was as fatal as the inverse view
-of pagan antiquity. The model of the perfect life according to
-Greek philosophy is a life in conformity with nature. To aim at the
-harmonious development of man was the precept of the ancient Academy,
-formulated by Plato. The Stoics and the Epicureans had adopted the
-same principle. Physical nature is considered as good. It gives us
-the type, the rule, and the measure. The moral rule itself is exactly
-appropriate to the physical nature. We may say that pagan morality was
-hygiene, the hygiene of the soul and the body alike; the _mens sana in
-corpore sano_ gave individual and social direction. The Rationalists,
-the philosophers of the eighteenth century, such as Baron d’Holbach
-and later W. Von Humboldt, Darwin, and Herbert Spencer, have adopted
-analogous views. If these views have been contested, it is because of
-the imperfections or aberrations of the natural instincts of man. Also,
-if we wish to base individual family or social morality on the natural
-instincts of man, it must be specified that these instincts are to be
-regularized. We must necessarily appeal from the imperfect instincts of
-the present to the perfected instincts of the future. Their perfection,
-moreover, will only be a more exact approximation to the real nature of
-man, and he, having avoided by the aid of science the accidents which
-cause disease and senile decrepitude, will enjoy a healthy youth and an
-ideal old age.
-
-The reason of the discrepancies between instinct and function in man is
-given by the natural history of his development. We know that man has
-within him original sin—his long atavism. He has sprung, according to
-the transformists, from a simian stock. He is a cousin, the successful
-relation, of a type of antinomorphic monkeys, the chimpanzees. He
-has “arrived,” they have remained undeveloped. Probably he had a
-common ancestor with them, some dryopithecan of an extinct species.
-From that type sprang a new type already on the way to progress, the
-_Pithecanthropus erectus_. Finally, the anthropoid ancestor became
-one fine day the father of a scion, clearly superior to himself, a
-miraculously gifted being, man. Here, then, is no sign of the slow
-evolution and gradual progress, which is the doctrine held at present
-by Transformists. The Dutch botanist De Vries has shown us, in fact,
-that nature does leap: _natura facit saltus_. There would thus be
-crises, as it were, in the life of species. At certain critical epochs
-considerable differences of a specific value appear in their offspring.
-It is at one of these critical periods in the simian life that man
-has appeared as the phenomenal child of an anthropoid. He was born
-with a brain and an intellect superior to those of his humble parents;
-and on the other hand, he has inherited from them an organization
-which is only inadequately adapted to the new conditions of existence
-created by the development of his sensitiveness and his brain power.
-This intellect is not proportioned to his organization, which has not
-developed at the same rate; it protests against the discordances which
-adaptation has not yet had time to efface. But it will efface them in
-the future.
-
-
- § 4. THE INSTINCT OF LIFE AND THE INSTINCT OF DEATH.
-
-
-The greatest discrepancy of this kind is the knowledge of inevitable
-death without the instinct which makes it longed for.
-
-There are immortal animals. Man is not of the number. He belongs,
-like all highly organized beings, to the class of beings which have
-an end. They die from accident or from disease. They perish in the
-struggle with other animals, or with microbes, or with external
-conditions. There are certainly very few, if there are any, which die a
-really natural death. And so it is with man. We see old men gradually
-declining who appear to doze gently off into the last sleep, and become
-extinguished without disease, like a lamp whose oil is exhausted. But
-this is in most cases only apparently so. Besides the fact that the old
-age to which they seemed to succumb is really a disease, a generalized
-sclerosis, autopsy always reveals some lesion more or less directly
-responsible for the fatal issue.
-
-Man, like all the higher animals, is therefore subject to the law
-of lethality. But while animals have no idea of death and are not
-tormented by the sentiment of their inevitable end, man knows and
-understands this destiny. He has with the animals the instinct of
-self-preservation, the instinct of life, and at the same time the
-knowledge and the fear of death. This contradiction, this discordance,
-is one of the sources of his woes.
-
-Whether it be an accident or the regular term of the normal cycle,
-death always comes too soon. It surprises the man at a time when he
-has not yet completed his physiological evolution; hence the aversion
-and the terror it inspires. “We cannot fix our eyes on the sun or on
-death,” said La Rochefoucauld. The old man does not regard death with
-less aversion than the young man. “He who is most like the dead dies
-with most regret.” Man knows that he is not getting his full measure.
-
-Further, all the really natural acts are solicited by an instinct, the
-satisfaction of which is a need and a joy. The need of death should
-therefore appear at the end of life, just as the need of sleep appears
-at the end of the day. It would appear, no doubt, if the normal cycle
-of existence were fulfilled, and if the harmonious evolution were not
-always interrupted by accident. Death would then be welcomed and longed
-for. It would lose its horror. The instinct of death would replace at
-the wished for moment the instinct of life. Man would pass from the
-banquet of life with no other desire. He would die without regret,
-“being old and full of days,” according to the expression used in the
-Bible in the case of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. No doubt there are some
-analogies to this in the insects which only assume the perfect form
-for the purpose of procreation and immediately perish in their full
-perfection. In these animals the approach of death is blended with the
-intoxication of hymen. Thus we see some of them, the ephemerae, lose at
-that moment the instinct of life and the instinct of self-preservation.
-They allow themselves to be approached, taken, and seized, and make no
-effort at flight.
-
-But what is this full measure of life which is imparted to us?
-Metchnikoff holds that the ages attributed to several persons in the
-Bible are very probable. Abraham lived 175 years, Ishmael 137, Joseph
-110, Moses 120. Buffon believed in the existence of a ratio between the
-longevity of animals and the duration of their growth. He fixed it at
-7:1. The animal whose development lasts two years would thus have 14
-years of life. This law would give us 140 years, but the figure is too
-high, and Flourens has reduced the ratio to that of 5:1, which would
-still give us 100 years. Plato died in the act of conversation at 81;
-Isocrates wrote his _Panathenaïcus_ at 94; Gorgias died in the full
-possession of his intellect at 107.
-
-To reach the end of the promised longevity we must neither count on the
-elixir of life nor on the potable gold of the alchemists, nor on the
-stone of immortality which did not prevent its inventor, Paracelsus,
-from dying at the age of 58, nor on transfusion, nor on Graham’s
-celestial bed, nor on King David’s gerocomy, nor on any nostrum or
-remedy. _Contra vim mortis non est medicamen in hortis_, said the
-Salernian school. What Feuchtersleben said is most true, “The art of
-prolonging life consists in not cutting it short,” and it is a hygiene,
-but a brilliant hygiene, such as that of which Metchnikoff traces us
-the future lines, which will realize the desires of nature.
-
-And now shall we find that physiology has solved the enigma proposed by
-the Sphinx, and that it has answered these poignant questions:—Whence
-do we come? whither do we go? what is the end of life? The end of life
-is, to the physiologist as well as to Herbert Spencer, the tendency
-towards an existence as full and as long as possible, towards a life
-in conformity with real nature freed from the discordancies which
-still remain; it is the accomplishment of the harmonious cycle of our
-normal evolution. This ideal human nature, without discordancies, no
-longer vitiated as it is at present but improved, will be the work of
-time and science. Realized at last it will serve as a solid basis for
-individual, family, and social morality. Healthy youth fit for action;
-prolonged, adult age, the symbol of strength; normal old age, wise in
-council, these would have their natural places in harmonious society.
-“Great actions,” said one of old, “are not achieved by exertions
-of strength, or speed, or agility, but rather by the prudence, the
-authority, and the judgment which are found in a higher degree in old
-age.” The old age of which Cicero here speaks is the ideal old age,
-regular and normal, and not the premature, deformed, incapable and
-egoistic old age which results from a pathological condition. At the
-end of this full life, the old man being full of days, will crave for
-the eternal sleep and will resign himself to it with joy....
-
-Death, then, “the last enemy that shall be destroyed,” to use the
-expression of St. Paul, will yield to the power of science. Instead of
-being “the king of terrors,” it will become after a long and healthy
-life, after a life exempt from morbid accidents, a natural and longed
-for event, a satisfied need. Then will be realized the wish of the
-fabulist:—
-
- “_I should like to leave life at this age, just as one leaves a
- banquet, thanking the host, and departing._”
-
-Has this physiological solution of the problem of death the virtue
-attributed to it by Metchnikoff? Is it as optimistic as he thinks
-it is? The instinct of death supervening at the end of a normal and
-well-filled cycle will no doubt facilitate to the aged their departure
-on the great voyage. The wrench will no longer exist for the dead.
-Will it not exist for those who are left behind? And since the instinct
-of death can only exist about the time at which death is expected,
-will the young man and the man of ripened years look with less horror
-than to-day at the law which cannot be escaped, when they are in full
-possession of the instinct of life, but warned of the inevitability of
-death?
-
-
-
-
- INDEX OF AUTHORS.
-
-
- Altmann, 258
-
- Anaxagoras, 34
-
- Aquinas, St. Thomas, 3, 19, 248
-
- Aristotle, 3, 15, 18, 143, 146, 307
-
- Armstrong, 295
-
- Atwater, 137
-
-
- Bacon, vi., 35, 346
-
- Baker, 233
-
- Balbiani, 161, 165, 191, 206-7, 257
-
- Bang, d’Yvor, 179
-
- Barthez, 3, 19, 24
-
- Beclard, 121
-
- Becquerel, 278
-
- Beijerinck, 193
-
- Benoit, 271
-
- Bernard, Claude, vi., 17, 27, 29, 32, 48, 50-4, 107, 109, 112, 119,
- 148, 150-1, 171, 190-2, 194, 197, 204, 210, 214-218, 220 _et seq._,
- 310, 318
-
- Bernoulli, John, 35, 73
-
- Bert, Paul, 194
-
- Berthelot, 91, 98, 128-130, 152, 204, 296
-
- Berthollet, 82
-
- Berzelius, 117
-
- Bichat, 3, 6, 20, 22, 27-30, 35, 55, 158, 170, 198, 308
-
- Blumenbach, 46
-
- Boë, Sylvius Le, 35-6
-
- Boerhaave, 35, 147, 245
-
- Bohr, 29-30
-
- Bokorny, 324
-
- Boltzmann, 265
-
- Bonnet, 23, 49
-
- Bordeu, 3, 10, 19, 22, 24, 312
-
- Borelli, 35
-
- Boscovitch, 37, 248
-
- Bose, 264
-
- Bossuet, 11
-
- Bouasse, 73, 264-5
-
- Boullier, 12
-
- Bourdeau, 237, 242
-
- Boussingault, 149
-
- Brandt, 257
-
- Bravais, 282
-
- Brillouin, 264, 273
-
- Brown, 266 _et seq._
-
- Brücke, 44
-
- Büchner, 325
-
- Buffon, 46, 254, 357
-
- Bunge, von, 3, 14
-
- Burdon, Sanderson, 176
-
- Busquet, 175
-
- Bütschli, 161-2, 175
-
-
- Cabanis, 245, 246
-
- Cailletet, 272
-
- Calkins, 327, 338
-
- Calvert, 271
-
- Candolle, 20
-
- Cardan, 261
-
- Carnot, 72-3, 89, 92 _et seq._, 101, 114, 121
-
- Charpy, 237, 271
-
- Chauffard, 3, 10, 11, 294
-
- Chauveau, 75, 103, 108, 123, 130, 145, 213
-
- Chevreul, 32
-
- Chossat, 152
-
- Cicero, 347, 359
-
- Clausius, 67, 88
-
- Cohn, 191, 252
-
- Cohnheim, 341
-
- Colding, 58 _note_, 90
-
- Colin, 52
-
- Comte, 189-190, 310
-
- Confucius, 309
-
- Coulomb, 76, 264, 273
-
- Crookes, 295, 302
-
- Cuvier, 3, 6, 27-8, 105, 120, 152, 190, 198, 308, 310, 319
-
-
- D’Alembert, 20, 59 _note_, 90, 92
-
- Dantec, Le, 48, 52, 55 _note_, 110, 148, 173, 198, 201, 203, 213, 216,
- 220, 223 _et seq._, 231, 246, 261, 285, 296, 340
-
- D’Arsonval, 126
-
- Darwin, 3, 46, 167, 258, 354
-
- Dastre, A., 192, 198 _note_
-
- Davy, Sir Humphry, 61, 80
-
- Delafosse, 282
-
- Delage, 208
-
- Demange, 349
-
- Democritus, 34, 146
-
- Descartes, 3, 9, 35, 37, 40, 73, 91, 98
-
- Despretz, 126
-
- Diderot, 245, 246
-
- Drechsel, 183
-
- Dressel, 20
-
- Dubois-Reymond, 44, 58 _note_, 253
-
- Duclaux, 119, 137, 184, 324
-
- Dufour, 297
-
- Duguet, 264
-
- Duhem, 62, 264, 265
-
- Dulong, 126
-
- Dumas, 115, 149, 151-2
-
-
- Epicurus, 35, 146
-
- Ehrlich, 176
-
- Errera, 52, 193-4, 237, 153, 295, 302 _et seq._
-
- Euclid, v.
-
-
- Faye, 260
-
- Feuchterslehen, 358
-
- Flemming, 161
-
- Flourens, 20-1, 152, 208, 306, 358
-
- Fouillée, 242
-
- Fromann, 161
-
- Fuerth, 183
-
-
- Galen, 25, 55, 143
-
- Galeotti, 180
-
- Galileo, 73, 91, 98, 197, 241, 260
-
- Gardair, 19, 248
-
- Gautier, A., 3, 32, 36, 39, 176, 233, 324
-
- Gernez, 237, 288, 295 _et seq._
-
- Glisson, 27
-
- Goethe, 170, 312
-
- Gouy, 266, 268
-
- Grimaud, 19
-
- Gruber, 165, 206, 257
-
- Guignard, 161
-
- Guillaume, 237, 262, 264, 271, 277
-
- Guillemin, 237
-
- Guldberg, 83
-
-
- Harbermann, 183
-
- Haeckel, 3, 46, 164, 167, 246, 251
-
- Hales, 43
-
- Haller, 27
-
- Hamilton, Sir W. Rowan, 67
-
- Hammarsten, 180
-
- Hartmann, 276, 346
-
- Harvey, 43, 160
-
- Haüy, 282
-
- Hegel, 170, 331
-
- Heidenhain, 3, 29, 30-1
-
- Heitzmann, 161
-
- Helmholtz, 44, 56, 58, 67, 90, 97, 99, 252
-
- Helmont, van, 3, 21, 26, 33, 146, 250
-
- Henninger, 302
-
- Heraclitus, 34
-
- Hertwig, 167
-
- Hertz, 88
-
- Hess, 91, 98
-
- Hippocrates, 146
-
- Hirn, 126
-
- His, 46
-
- Hlasitwetz, 183
-
- Holbach, d’, 354
-
- Hoogewerf, 303
-
- Hopkinson, 271
-
- Humboldt, W. von, 354
-
-
- Ingenhousz, 115
-
- Izolet, 247
-
-
- Joule, 53 _note_, 90-1, 93, 133 _et seq._, 143, 152
-
-
- Kant, 312, 319
-
- Kaup, 213
-
- Kaufmann, 126
-
- Kelvin, Lord, 63, 67, 90, 92, 251-2, 264;
- and the idea of energy, 66
-
- Kepler, 29, 241
-
- Klemm, 323
-
- Koelliker, 160
-
- Kossel, 174, 179, 130-1, 136 _et seq._
-
- Kuhne, 45
-
- Kuhm, 216
-
- Kuliabko, 23, 311
-
- Kunstler, 157, 161-2, 175
-
- Kuppfer, 161
-
-
- Lammettrie, 147
-
- Lamarck, 46
-
- Lapparent, 284
-
- Lapicque, 140, 145
-
- Langley, 216
-
- Laplace, 43, 63, 126, 260
-
- Laulanié, 103
-
- Laurie, 271
-
- La Rochefoucauld, 356
-
- Lavoisier, 3, 28, 30, 36, 43, 65, 117, 121, 126, 128, 143, 176, 296
-
- Lea, 216
-
- Le Châtelier, 85, 92
-
- Lechatelier, H. and A., 271
-
- Lecocq de Boisbaudran, 295
-
- Leeuwenhoek, 232
-
- Lefèvre, 126
-
- Legallois, 21
-
- Leydig, 161-2
-
- Liebermeister, 136
-
- Liebig, 26, 53 _note_, 117
-
- Lilienfeld, 179, 247
-
- Locke, 23
-
- Lodge, 271
-
- Loeb, 43, 167, 327, 341
-
- Loew, 324
-
- Loisel, 339, 341
-
- Lorry, 21
-
- Longet, 52
-
- Lowitz, 297
-
- Loye, 192
-
- Ludwig, 44, 215
-
-
- Mach, 41, 62
-
- Magendie, 43, 143
-
- Magy, 37
-
- Malgaigne, 153
-
- Mallard, 284
-
- Marinesco, 231, 328
-
- Markel, 349
-
- Maspero, 3, 234
-
- Matthiesson, 271
-
- Maupas, 337
-
- Maxwell, 88
-
- Mayer, R., 56, 58, 89, 90, 97, 99, 101
-
- Mering, von, 133, 136
-
- Metchnikoff, 327 _et seq._
-
- Miescher, 174, 179
-
- Milne-Edwards, 152, 195
-
- Minot, 341
-
- Miura, 137
-
- Mori, 145
-
- Müller, 20, 27, 341
-
- Murato, 45
-
-
- Naegeli, 168
-
- Needham, 46
-
- Newton, 58 _note_, 70, 90-1, 93
-
- Noorden, van, 129, 137, 140, 210
-
- Nussbaum, 165, 206, 215, 217
-
-
- Obermeyer, 271
-
- Osmond, 237, 271
-
- Ostwald, 41, 62, 67, 85, 104, 237, 258, 289, 295 _et seq._
-
-
- Paracelsus, 26, 146, 312
-
- Pascal, 74, 161
-
- Pasteur, 53, 191, 222 _et seq._, 237, 250, 288, 346
-
- Payen, 151
-
- Persoz, 152
-
- Petit, 180
-
- Pettenkofer, 210
-
- Pfeffer, 175, 193
-
- Pflüger, 12, 56, 135, 144, 176, 210, 213
-
- Philpotts, 46
-
- Pictet, 233
-
- Pitcairn, 35
-
- Plato, 35, 307
-
- Plosz, 180
-
- Poincaré, 62
-
- Poisson, 63
-
- Preyer, 192, 252 _et seq._
-
- Priestley, 115
-
- Ptolemy, v.
-
- Pythagoras, 18
-
-
- Rauber, 237, 288
-
- Raulin, 191
-
- Regnault, 117
-
- Reinke, 3, 32
-
- Renan, 240
-
- Ribbert, 208
-
- Ribot, 247
-
- Riche, 271
-
- Richet, 50, 126, 140
-
- Richter, 252
-
- Rindfleisch, 4
-
- Roberts-Austen, 237, 271-2
-
- Robin, 62, 177
-
- Rosenthal, 126
-
- Rouvier, 160
-
- Roux, 46, 165
-
- Rubner, 129, 130, 140 _et seq._, 210
-
- Rumford, 80
-
-
- Sabatier, 242
-
- Sachs, 161, 194
-
- Salles-Guyon, 252
-
- Sanderson, Burdon, 176
-
- Scaliger, 241
-
- Schleiden, 159
-
- Schopenhauer, 346
-
- Schwartz, 162
-
- Schultze, 160, 326
-
- Schultzenberger, 174, 162 _et seq._
-
- Secchi, 88
-
- Seguin, 58 _note_, 90
-
- Senebier, 115
-
- Siven, 145
-
- Spallanzani, 43, 233
-
- Spencer, Herbert, 46, 247, 354, 358
-
- Spring, 272
-
- Stahl, 3, 9, 12, 35, 146
-
- Stammreich, 137
-
- Stead, 237
-
- Stohmann, 129, 130, 140
-
- Strassburger, 161, 350
-
- Swann, 159
-
- Swift, 262
-
-
- Tait, 53 _note_, 66
-
- Tammann, 237, 253, 295 _et seq._
-
- Thales, 34
-
- Thomson, Sir J. J., 279
-
- Tissot, 12
-
- Tomlinson, 264
-
- Trembley, 22, 206
-
- Tsuboï, 145
-
- Tylor, 8
-
-
- Verworn, 206, 252, 257
-
- Violette, 295
-
- Virchow, 318, 326
-
- Voit, 119, 133 _et seq._, 210
-
- Vries, de, 46, 258, 355
-
- Vulpian, 24
-
-
- Waage, 83
-
- Waller, 47, 206
-
- Wallerant, 282-3
-
- Warburg, 264
-
- Watt, 76
-
- Weismann, 46, 167, 336, 343
-
- Wertheim, 264
-
- Whitman, 46
-
- Widersheim, 351
-
- Wiedermann, 264
-
- Wiesner, 167
-
- Willis, 36, 147
-
- Winternitz, 126
-
-
- Yung, 233
-
-
- Zuntz, 133, 136, 210
-
-
-
-
- INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
-
-
- Activity, functional and vital, 106 _et seq._, 217 _et seq._
-
- Aerobia, 193
-
- Age, old, Book v.
-
- Albumin, 178
-
- Albuminoids, 178
-
- Alcohol, 136
-
- Alimentation, 116 _et seq._
-
- Alloys, structure of, 273
-
- Anærobia, 193
-
- Animism, 6, 7, Chap. ii., _passim_
-
- Annealing, 275
-
- Apposition, 291
-
- Archeus, the, 25, 26, 33
-
- Arginin, 187
-
- Assimilation, law of functional, 110, 213
-
- Atomicities, satisfied, 185
-
- Atrophy, 326
-
- Attraction, energy of position, 64
-
-
- Balance, sheet, nutritive, 118
-
- Beliefs, primitive, 239
-
- Bioblasts, 253
-
- Biophors, 167
-
- Blas, the, 25, 33
-
- Blood, lavage of, 192
-
- Brain, and death, 315
-
- Butylic ferments, 193
-
- Butyric ferments, 193
-
-
- Calorie, 125 _note_
-
- Calorimeter, ice, 126;
- bomb, 128
-
- Caprice, of Nature, 45
-
- Cause, final, 45
-
- Cells, 48, 147;
- somatic and sexual, 343
-
- Cellular theory, 158 _et seq._
-
- Centrosome, 163
-
- Chromosome, 165
-
- Cicatrization, 287
-
- Complex, homogeneity of the, 245
-
- Conductibility, 26
-
- Consciousness, in brute bodies, 244 _et seq._
-
- Continuity, principle of, 242, 247
-
- Contractility, 26
-
- Contraction, energy of static and dynamic, 75
-
- Conservation, of energy, 58;
- of force, 58
-
- Crystals, 200 _et seq._, 237 _et seq._, 281 _et seq._
-
- Cytoplasm, 161 _et seq._
-
-
- Death, apparent, 232;
- senescence of, 305 _et seq._;
- cellular, 321 _et seq._
-
- Decentralization, 24
-
- Degeneration, 326
-
- Destruction, functional, 106;
- organic, 211;
- of living matter, 213
-
- Determinism, 49
-
- Digestion, of plants and animals, 152 _et seq._
-
- Direction, idea of, 16
-
- Dominants, 33, 39, 45
-
- Dyne, the, 71
-
-
- Effort, of force, 71
-
- Electrolysis, 272
-
- Energetics, 39, 56;
- laws of biological, 105 _et seq._, 229;
- alimentary, 116 _et seq._
-
- Energy, 37, Book ii., _passim_;
- origin of idea of, 57;
- theory of, 62;
- the only objective reality, 64-5;
- and kinetic conception, 67;
- mechanical, 69, 73;
- of contraction, 75;
- kinetic, 76, 83;
- potential, 76, 83;
- virtual, 77;
- of motion and position, 79;
- thermal, and its measurements, 80-2;
- chemical, and its measurements, 81-2;
- chemical and potential, 83;
- materialization of, 84;
- transformations of, 85 _et seq._;
- luminous, 86 _et seq._;
- conservation of, 90 _et seq._;
- capacity of conversion of, 93;
- in biology, 97;
- in living beings, 99 _et seq._;
- physical, 99 _et seq._;
- vital, 99 _et seq._
-
- Ether, 89
-
- Equivalence, law of, 91
-
- Excitability, 26-7
-
-
- Fatigue, of metals, 264
-
- Ferments, butylic and butyric, 193
-
- Filiation, 250
-
- Finalism, 43
-
- Food, a source of energy, 118 _et seq._;
- thermogenic and biothermogenic types of, 131 _et seq._;
- dynamogenic type of, 143;
- nitrogenous, 143;
- of animals and plants, 153 _et seq._
-
- Force, directive, 16 _et seq._, 32, 39, 48;
- vital, 45;
- an anthromorphic notion, 71;
- and work, 74;
- measurement of, 71;
- plastic, 143;
- plastic and morphoplastic forces, 208
-
- Form, specific, 199 _et seq._, 281
-
- Fruits, acids of, 136
-
-
- Gemmules, 167, 258
-
- Generation, spontaneous, 249 _et seq._, 294 _et seq._
-
- Globulin, 178
-
- Glycerine, crystals of, 302
-
- Glycogen, 108, 153 _et seq._
-
- Gramme, 71
-
-
- Heat, a mode of motion, 61;
- rôle of animal heat, 122;
- mechanical equivalent of, 81;
- an excretum, 114;
- a degraded form of energy, 88;
- converted into work, 92
-
- Heterogeneity, 38, 61
-
- Histones, 179, 182 _et seq._
-
- Horse-power, 75
-
- Hyaloplasm, 161
-
-
- Iatro-chemistry and mechanics, 34-5
-
- Idioblasts, 167
-
- Infusoria, death of, 337
-
- Instability, 188 _et seq._
-
- Instinct, of life and death, 345 _et seq._
-
- Intussusception, 291
-
- Invariant, mass the first, 63
-
- Irreversibility, of vital energies, 104
-
- Irritability, 27, 196 _et seq._
-
- Isodynamism, 142
-
- Isomorphism, 286
-
-
- Ka, the, 8
-
- Kilogrammetre, 72, 75;
- per second, 75
-
- Kilowatt, 76
-
- Kinetic theory, 39, 62
-
- Knot, the vital, 21
-
-
- Leucines, 183
-
- Leucites, 163
-
- Life, defined, 28;
- latent, 233;
- physico-chemical theory of, 36;
- elementary, 321
-
- Linin, 163
-
-
- Mass, and matter, 63
-
- Materialism, 34
-
- Matter, 37, 60, 62;
- and mass, 63;
- two kinds of, 63;
- life of, 236 _et seq._;
- brute and living, 249 _et seq._;
- organization and constitution of, 255 _et seq._;
- defined as extension, 64;
- conservation of, 65
-
- “Memory,” of metals, etc., 265
-
- Merotomy, 47
-
- Metabolism, 117
-
- Metazoa, evolution and death of, 340 _et seq._
-
- Meteoric cosmozoa, 252
-
- Micellar theory, 166 _et seq._
-
- Microcosms, 163
-
- Micro-organisms, culture of, 297
-
- Mitomes, 169
-
- Mobility of stars, 260
-
- Modality, twofold, of soul, 12
-
- Molecules, organic, 254
-
- Monism, 34, Chap. iv. _passim_, 63
-
- Montpellier, the school of, 35
-
- Motion, cause of, 71;
- kinetic conception of molecular, 263
-
- Morphogenesis, idea of, 46
-
- Movements, internal of bodies, 262;
- Brownian, 266 _et seq._
-
- Mutability, 80, 188 _et seq._;
- of living matter, 259 _et seq._;
- of brute bodies, 259 _et seq._
-
-
- Necrobiosis, 326
-
- Neo-vitalism, 15, 29, 32
-
- Neurility, 27
-
- Nickel, steels, 277
-
- Nisus _formativus_, 46
-
- Nous, the, 18, 239
-
- Nucleins, 179, 180 _et seq._
-
- Nucleo-albuminoids, 178;
- -proteids, 177 _et seq._
-
- Nucleus, 163 _et seq._;
- hexonic, 186
-
- Nutrition, directed, 205, 209 _et seq._, 227 _et seq._, 290 _et seq._
-
-
- Organogenesis, 282
-
- Organs, organization of, 314;
- death of, 315;
- perfect, 319
-
-
- Pangenes, 167
-
- Panspermia, 252
-
- Parameter, mass the mechanical, 63
-
- Phenomena, vital, 44, 51, 189;
- modes of motion, 61
-
- Photography, colour, 277
-
- Physiology, general, 56;
- cellular, 56
-
- Plants, and immortality, 330
-
- Plasomes, 167
-
- Plurivitalism, 25
-
- Power, 70, 75
-
- Principle, vital, 15 _et seq._
-
- Properties, vital, 25, 103
-
- Proteids, 178
-
- Protoplasm, 109 _et seq._, 175 _et seq._, 231 _et seq._;
- life in crushed, 257 _et seq._
-
- Protozoa, immortality of, 352 _et seq._
-
- Psyche, 239
-
- Pyrozoa, 253
-
-
- Regeneration, normal, 205;
- accidental, 206
-
- Reparation, mechanism of, 288
-
- Repose, functional, 109, 217 _et seq._
-
- Reserve stuff, 106 _et seq._, 212, 230 _et seq._
-
- Rachidian, soul, 12
-
-
- Senescence, 305 _et seq._
-
- Sensibility, in brute bodies, 244
-
- Solidarity, of anatomical elements, humoral and nervous, 317
-
- Soul, the, 7 _et seq._
-
- Space, 69
-
- Specificity, vital, 48
-
- Spireme, 165
-
- Spongioplasm, 162
-
- States, initial and final, 128
-
- Swelling, 167
-
- Synthesis, organizing, 109
-
-
- Tagmata, 169, 175
-
- Teleology, 43
-
- Tetanus, bacteria of, 193
-
- Thermogenesis, 140
-
- Time, 69
-
- Tonus, muscular, 119
-
- Trees, and immortality, 330 _et seq._
-
- Tripod, vital, 2, 314
-
- Turgescence, 168
-
-
- Universe, the, mechanical explanation of, 60;
- the end of the, 95
-
- Unity, chemical, of living beings, 173 _et seq._, 321;
- morphological, 321
-
-
- Vacuoles, 113
-
- Vibrion, septic, 193
-
- Vis viva, 73
-
- Vital properties, theory of, 29 _et seq._
-
- Vitalism, 6, 7, Chap. iii. _passim_;
- physico-chemical, 29
-
- Vitality, phenomena of, 216
-
- Vortex, vital, 105, 120, 229 _et seq._
-
- Vulcans, 26-7
-
-
- Weight, energy of position, 64;
- conservation of, 65;
- movement under action of, 271 _et seq._
-
- Work, 70, 72;
- and force, 74, 77;
- converted into heat, 92;
- physiological, 103
-
-
- Xanthic bases, 180
-
-
- Zones, metastable and labile, 301
-
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Life and death, by Albert Dastre</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Life and death</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Albert Dastre</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Translator: William John Greenstreet</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 25, 2021 [eBook #65699]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Turgut Dincer, Les Galloway and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE AND DEATH ***</div>
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<h3>Transcriber’s Notes</h3>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
-in hyphenation and accents have been standardised but all other
-spelling and punctuation remains unchanged.</p>
-
-<p>In the section on The Instinct of Life, fifth paragraph “and <a href="#Flourens_has_reduced">Flourens
-has reduced</a> the ratio to that of 5:1, which would still give us 120
-years.” the 120 has been corrected to 100.</p>
-
-<p>In Book V, Chapter III, Chemical Changes, “and at the same time would
-transform an amido-group into an amido-group.” is as printed.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="half-title">LIFE AND DEATH.</p>
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h1>
-LIFE AND DEATH</h1>
-
-<p class="center spaced"><small>BY</small><br />
-
-A. DASTRE,<br />
-<span class="fs1">PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGY AT THE SORBONNE.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center spaced"><small>TRANSLATED BY</small><br />
-W. J. GREENSTREET, M.A., F.R.A.S.</p>
-
-<p class="center spaced">
-THE WALTER SCOTT PUBLISHING CO., LTD.,<br />
-<small>PATERNOSTER SQUARE, LONDON, E.C.</small><br />
-CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS,<br />
-<small>153-157 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.<br />
-1911</small><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The educated and inquiring public of the present
-day addresses to the experts who have specialized
-in every imaginable subject the question that was
-asked in olden times of Euclid by King Ptolemy
-Philadelphus, Protector of Letters. Recoiling in
-dismay from the difficulties presented by the study
-of mathematics and annoyed at his slow progress, he
-inquired of the celebrated geometer if there was
-not some royal road, could he not learn geometry
-more easily than by studying the Elements. The
-learned Greek replied, “There is no royal road.”
-These royal roads making every branch of science
-accessible to the cultivated mind did not exist in
-the days of Ptolemy and Euclid. But they do
-exist to-day. These roads form what we call
-Scientific Philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>Scientific philosophy opens a path through the
-hitherto inextricable medley of natural phenomena.
-It throws light on facts, it lays bare principles, it
-replaces contingent details by essential facts. And
-thus it makes science accessible and communicable.
-Intellectually it performs a very lofty function.</p>
-
-<p>There is virtually a philosophy of every science.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</span>
-There is therefore a philosophy of the science which
-deals with the phenomena of life and death—<i>i.e.</i>, of
-physiology. I have endeavoured to give a summary
-of this philosophy in this volume. I have had in
-view two classes of readers. In the first place there
-are readers of general culture who are desirous of
-knowing something of the trend of ideas in biology.
-They already form quite a large section of the great
-public.</p>
-
-<p>These scholars and inquirers, with Bacon, believe
-that the only science is general science. What they
-want to know is not what instruments we use, our
-processes, our technique, and the thousand and one
-details of the experiments on which we spend our
-lives in the laboratory. What they are interested in
-are the general truths we have acquired, the problems
-we are trying to solve, the principles of
-our methods, the progress of our science in the
-past, its state in the present, its probable course in
-the future.</p>
-
-<p>But I venture to think that this book is also
-addressed to another class of readers, to those whose
-professional study is physiology. To them it is
-dedicated. They have been initiated into the
-mysteries of the science. They are learning it by
-practice. That is the right method. Practice makes
-perfect. Claude Bernard used to say that in order
-to be an expert in experimental science you must
-first be “a laboratory rat.” And among us there are
-many such “laboratory rats.” They are guided in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</span>
-the daily task of investigation by a dim instinct
-of the path and of the direction of contemporary
-physiology. Perhaps it may be of assistance to
-them to find their more or less unconscious ideas
-here expressed in an explicit form.</p>
-
-<p class="psig">
-A. DASTRE.
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table class="standard" summary="">
-<tr class="trbig">
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><a href="#BOOK_I">BOOK I</a>.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">The Frontiers of Science. General Theories of
-Life and Death. Their Successive Transformations.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="fs2">CHAP.</span></td>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tdr"><span class="fs2">PAGE</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">I.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Early Theories</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">II.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Animism</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">III.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Vitalism</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">IV.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">The Monistic Theory</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_34">34</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">V.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">The Emancipation of Scientific Research from
-the Yoke of Philosophical Doctrine</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="trbig">
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><a href="#BOOK_II">BOOK II</a>.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">The Doctrine of Energy and the Living World.
-General Ideas of Life. Alimentary Life.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">I.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Energy in General</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">II.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Energy in Biology</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">III.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Alimentary Energetics</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><a href="#BOOK_III">BOOK III</a>.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">The Characters Common to Living Beings.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">I.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Doctrine of Vital Unity</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">II.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Morphological Unity of Living Beings</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">III.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Chemical Unity of Living Beings</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">IV.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Twofold Conditions of Vital Phenomena.
-Irritability</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_188">188</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">V.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">The Specific Form: its Acquisition, its Reparation</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">VI.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Nutrition. Functional Assimilation. Functional
-Distribution. Assimilating Synthesis</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="trbig">
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><a href="#BOOK_IV">BOOK IV</a>.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">The Life of Matter.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">I.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Universal Life (Opinions of the Philosophers
-and Poets). Continuity between Brute Bodies and Living Bodies. Origin of the Principle of
-Continuity</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_239">239</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">II.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Origin of Living Matter in Brute Matter</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">III.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Organization and Chemical Composition of Living
-Matter and Brute Matter</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_255">255</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">IV.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Evolution and Mutability of Living Matter and
-Brute Matter</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">V.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">The Composition of the Specific Form. Living
-Bodies and Crystals. Cicatrization</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_281">281</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">VI.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Nutrition in the Living Being and in the Crystal</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_290">290</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">VII.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Generation in Brute Bodies and Living Bodies.
-Spontaneous Generation</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_294">294</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="trbig">
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><a href="#BOOK_V">BOOK V</a>.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">Senescence and Death.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">I.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">The Different Points of View from which Death
-may be regarded</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_307">307</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">II.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Constitution of the Organisms. Partial Death.
-Collective Deaths</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_312">312</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">III.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Physical and Chemical Characteristics of
-Cellular Deaths. Necrobiosis</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_321">321</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">IV.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Apparent Perrennity of Complex Individuals</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_330">330</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">V.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Immortality of the Protozoa and of Slightly
-Differentiated Cells</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_334">334</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">VI.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Lethality of the Metazoa and of Differentiated
-Cells</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_340">340</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlt">VII.</td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap">Man. The Instinct of Life and the Instinct of
-Death</span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_345">345</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tdh"><span class="smcap"><a href="#INDEX_OF_AUTHORS">Index</a></span></td>
-<td class="tdrb"><a href="#Page_361">361</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="half-title">LIFE AND DEATH.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_I">BOOK I.<br />
-
-
-<span class="hang"><small>THE FRONTIERS OF SCIENCE—GENERAL THEORIES
-OF LIFE AND DEATH—THEIR SUCCESSIVE
-TRANSFORMATIONS.</small></span></h2>
-
-<p class="prel">Chapter I. Early Theories.—II. Animism.—III. Vitalism.—IV.
-Monism.—V. Emancipation of Scientific Research
-from the Yoke of Philosophy.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-<small>EARLY THEORIES</small>.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="prel">Animism—Vitalism—The Physico-Chemical Theory—Their
-Survival and Transformations.</p>
-
-
-<p>The fundamental theories of science are but the expression
-of its most general results. What, then, is
-the most general result of the development of
-physiology or biology—that is to say, of that department
-of science which has life as its object? What
-glimpse do we get of the fruit of all our efforts? The
-answer is evidently the response to that essential
-question—What is Life?</p>
-
-<p>There are beings which we call living beings; there
-are bodies which have never been alive—inanimate
-bodies; and there are bodies which are no longer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span>
-alive—dead bodies. The fact that we use these terms
-implies the idea of a common attribute, of a <i>quid proprium</i>,
-life, which exists in the first, has never existed
-in the second, and has ceased to exist in the last. Is
-this idea correct? Suppose for a moment that this
-is so, that this implicit supposition has a foundation,
-and that there really is something which corresponds
-to the word “<i>life</i>.” Must we then wait for the last
-days of physiology, and in a measure for its last
-word before we know what is hidden behind this
-word, “life”?</p>
-
-<p>Yes, no doubt positive science should be precluded
-from dealing with questions of this kind, which are
-far too general. It should be limited to the study of
-second causes. But, as a matter of fact, scientific
-men in no age have entirely conformed to this provisional
-or definitive antagonism. As the human
-mind cannot rest satisfied with indefinite attempts, or
-with ignorance pure and simple, it has always asked,
-and even now asks, from the spirit of system the
-solution which science refuses. It appeals to philosophical
-speculation. Now, philosophy, in order to
-explain life and death, offers us hypotheses. It offers
-us the hypotheses of thirty, of a hundred, or two
-thousand years ago. It offers us animism; vitalism
-in its two forms, unitary vitalism or the doctrine of
-vital force, and dismembered vitalism or the doctrine
-of vital properties; and finally, materialism, a
-mechanical theory, unicism or monism,—to give it
-all its names—<i>i.e.</i>, the physico-chemical doctrine of
-life. There are, therefore, at the present day, in
-biology, representatives of these three systems which
-have never agreed on the explanation of vital
-phenomena—namely, animists, vitalists, and monists.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>
-But it is pretty clear that there must have been
-some change between yesterday and to-day. Not
-in vain has general science and biology itself made
-the progress which we know has been made since
-the Renaissance, and especially during the course
-of the nineteenth century. The old theories have
-been compelled to take new shape, such parts as have
-become obsolete have been cut away, another
-language is spoken—in a word, the theories have
-become rejuvenated. The neo-animists of our day,
-Chauffard in 1878, von Bunge in 1889, and more
-recently Rindfleisch, do not hold exactly the same
-views as Aristotle, St. Thomas Aquinas, or Stahl.
-Contemporary neo-vitalists, physiologists like Heidenhain,
-chemists like Armand Gautier, or botanists like
-Reinke do not between 1880 and 1900 hold the same
-views as Paracelsus in the fifteenth century and Van
-Helmont in the seventeenth, as Barthez and Bordeu at
-the end of the eighteenth, or as Cuvier and Bichat at
-the beginning of the nineteenth century. Finally, the
-mechanicians themselves, whether they be disciples
-of Darwin and Haeckel, as most biologists of our
-own time, or disciples of Lavoisier, as most physiologists
-of the present day, have passed far beyond the
-ideas of Descartes. They would reject the coarse
-materialism of the celebrated philosopher. They
-would no longer consider the living organism as a
-machine, composed of nothing but wheels, springs,
-levers, presses, sieves, pipes, and valves; or again
-of matrasses, retorts, or alembics, as the iatro-mechanicians
-and would-be chemists of other days
-believed.</p>
-
-<p>All that is changed, at any rate in form. If we look
-back only thirty or forty years we see that the old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>
-doctrines have undergone more or less profound
-modifications. The changes of form, which have been
-made necessary by the acquisitions of contemporary
-science, enable us to appreciate its progress. They
-enable us to give an account of the progress of
-biology, and for this reason they deserve to be
-examined with some attention. It is into this
-examination that I ask my readers to accompany me.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-<small>ANIMISM.</small></h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">The Common Characteristic of Animism and Vitalism: the
-Human Statue—Primitive Animism—Stahl’s Animism—First
-Objection with Reference to the Relation between
-Soul and Body—Second Objection: the Unconscious
-Character of Vital Operations—Twofold Modality of the
-Soul—Continuity of the Soul and Life.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Children are taught that there are three kingdoms
-in Nature—the mineral kingdom and the two living
-kingdoms, animal and vegetable. This is the whole
-of the sensible world. Then above all that is placed
-the world of the soul. School-boys therefore have
-no doubts on the doctrines that we discuss here.
-They have the solution. To them there are three
-distinct spheres, three separate worlds—matter, life,
-and thought.</p>
-
-<p>It is this preconceived idea that we are about to
-examine. Current opinion solves <i>a priori</i> the question
-of the fundamental homogeneity or lack of resemblance
-of these three orders of phenomena—the
-phenomena of inanimate nature, of living nature, and
-of the thinking soul. <i>Animism</i>, <i>vitalism</i>, and <i>monism</i>
-are, in reality, different ways of looking at them.
-They are the different answers to this question:—Are
-vital, psychic, and physico-chemical manifestations
-essentially distinct? Vitalists distinguish be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>tween
-life and thought, animists identify them. In
-the opposite camp mechanicians, materialists, or
-monists make the same mistake as the animists, but
-to that mistake they add another: they assimilate the
-forces at play in animals and plants to the general
-forces of the universe; they confuse all three—soul,
-life, inanimate nature.</p>
-
-<p>These problems belong on many sides to metaphysical
-speculation. They have been discussed by
-philosophers; they have been solved from time immemorial
-in different ways, for reasons and by arguments
-which it is not our purpose to examine here,
-and which, moreover, have not changed. But on
-some sides they belong to science, and must be tested
-in the light of its progress. Cuvier and Bichat, for
-example, considered that the forces in action in
-living beings were not only different from physico-mechanical
-forces, but were utterly opposed to them.
-We now know that this antagonism does not exist.</p>
-
-<p>The preceding doctrines, therefore, depend up to a
-certain point on experiment and observation. They
-are subject to the test of experiment and observation
-in proportion as the latter can give us information on
-the degree of difference or analogy presented by
-psychic, vital, and physico-chemical facts. Now,
-scientific investigations have thrown light on these
-points. There is no doubt that the analogies and
-the resemblances of these three orders of manifestations
-have appeared more and more numerous and
-striking as our knowledge has advanced. Hence it is
-that animism can count to-day but very few advocates
-in biological science. Vitalism in its different forms
-counts more supporters, but the great majority have
-adopted the physico-chemical theory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span></p>
-
-<p>Both animism and vitalism separate from matter a
-directing principle which guides it. At bottom they
-are mythological theories somewhat similar to the
-paganism of old. The fable of Prometheus or the
-story of Pygmalion contains all that is essential.
-An immaterial principle, divine, stolen by the
-Titan from Jupiter, or obtained from Venus by the
-Cypriot sculptor, descends from Olympus and
-animates the form, till then inert, which has been
-carved in the marble or modelled in the clay. In a
-word, there is a human statue. It receives a breath
-of heavenly fire, a vital force, a divine spark, a soul,
-and behold! it is alive. But this breath can also
-leave it. An accident happens, a clot in a vein, a
-grain of lead in the brain—the life escapes, and all
-that is left is a corpse. A single instant has proved
-sufficient to destroy its fascination. This is how all
-men picture to their minds the scene of death. The
-breath escapes; something flies away, or flows away
-with the blood. The happy genius of the Greeks
-conceived a graceful image of this, for they represented
-the life or the soul in the form of a butterfly
-(Psyche) leaving the body, an ethereal butterfly,
-as it were, opening its sapphire wings.</p>
-
-<p>But what is this subtle and transient guest of the
-human statue, this passing stranger which makes of
-the living body an inhabited house? According to
-the animists it is the soul itself, in the sense in
-which the word is understood by philosophers; the
-immortal and reasoning soul. To the vitalists it is
-an inferior, subordinate soul; a soul, as it were, of
-secondary majesty, the vital force, or in a word, life.</p>
-
-<p><i>Primitive Animism.</i>—Animism is the oldest and
-most primitive of the conceptions presented to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>
-human mind. But in so far as it is a co-ordinated
-doctrine, it is the most recent. In fact it only
-received its definitive expression in the eighteenth
-century, from Stahl, the philosopher-physician and
-chemist.</p>
-
-<p>According to Tylor, one of the first speculations of
-primitive man, of the savage, is as to the difference
-between the living body and the corpse. The former
-is an inhabited house, the latter is empty. To such
-rudimentary intellects the mysterious inhabitant is a
-kind of <i>double</i> or duplicate of the human form. It is
-only revealed by the shadow which follows the body
-when illuminated by the sun, by the image of its
-reflection in the water, by the echo which repeats the
-voice. It is only seen in a dream, and the figures
-which people and animate our dreams are nothing
-but these doubled, impalpable beings. Some savages
-believe that at the moment of death the double, or
-the soul, takes up its residence in another body.
-Sometimes each individual possesses, not one of these
-souls, but several. According to Maspero, the
-Egyptians counted at least five, of which the
-principle, the <i>ka</i> or <i>double</i>, would be the aeriform or
-vaporous image of the living form. Space is peopled
-by souls on their travels, which leave one set of bodies
-to occupy another set. After having been the cause
-of life in the bodies which they animated, they
-react from without on other beings, and are the
-cause of all sorts of unexpected events. They are
-benevolent or malevolent spirits.</p>
-
-<p>Analogy inevitably leads simple minds to extend
-the same ideas to animals and plants; in a word, to
-attribute souls to everything alive, souls more or less
-nomadic, wandering, or interchangeable, as is taught<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
-in the doctrine of metempsychosis. Mons. L. Errera
-points out that this primitive, co-ordinated, hierarchized
-doctrine—meet subject for the poet’s art—is
-the basis of all ancient mythologies.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Animism of Stahl.</i>—Modern animism was
-much more narrow in scope. It was a medical theory—<i>i.e.</i>
-almost exclusive to man. Stahl had adopted it
-in a kind of reaction against the exaggerations of the
-mechanical school of his time. According to him, the
-life of the body is due to the intelligent and reasoning
-soul. It governs the corporeal substance and
-directs it towards an assigned end. The organs are
-its instruments. It acts on them directly, without
-intermediaries. It makes the heart beat, the muscles
-contract, the glands secrete, and all the organs perform
-their functions. Nay more, it is itself the
-architectonic soul, which has constructed and which
-maintains the body which it rules. It is the <i>mens
-agitat molem</i> of Virgil.</p>
-
-<p>It is remarkable that these ideas, so excessively
-and exaggeratedly spiritualistic, should have been
-brought forward by a chemist and a physician, while
-ideas completely opposed to these were admitted by
-philosophers like Descartes and Leibniz, who were
-decided believers in the spirituality of the soul. Stahl
-had been Professor of Medicine at the University of
-Halle, physician to the Duke of Saxe-Weimar, and
-later to the King of Prussia. He left an important
-medical and chemical work, both theoretical and
-practical. He is the author of the celebrated theory
-of phlogiston, which held its ground in chemistry up
-to the time of Lavoisier. He died about 1734.</p>
-
-<p>Animism survived him for some time, maintained
-by the zeal of a few faithful disciples. But after the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
-witty mockery of Bordeu,<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-in 1742, it began to decay.
-We must, however, point out that an attempt to revive
-this theory was made in 1878 by a well-known doctor
-of the last generation, E. Chauffard. While preserving
-the essential features of the theory, this learned
-physician proposed to bring it into harmony with
-modern science, and to free it from all the reproaches
-which had been levelled at it.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Animism of E. Chauffard.</i>—These reproaches
-were numerous. The most serious is of a philosophic
-nature. It rises from the difficulty of conceiving a
-direct and immediate action of the soul, considered as
-a spiritual principle, upon the matter of the body.
-There is such an abyss—hewn by the philosophic
-mind itself—between soul and body, that it is impossible
-to imagine any relation between them. We
-can only get a glimpse of how the soul might become
-an instrument of action.</p>
-
-<p>This was the problem which sorely tried the genius
-of Leibniz. Descartes, in earlier days, attacked it
-vigorously, like an Alexander cutting the Gordian
-knot. He separated the soul from the body, and
-made of the latter a pure machine in the government
-of which the soul had no part. He attributed all the
-known manifestations of vital activity to inanimate
-forces. Leibniz, also, was compelled to reject all
-action, all contact, all direct relation, every real bond
-between soul and body, and to imagine between them
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>a purely metaphysical relation—pre-established harmony:—“Soul
-and body agree in virtue of this
-harmony, the harmony pre-established since the
-creation, and in no way by a mutual, actual, physical
-influence. Everything that takes place in the soul
-takes place as if there were no body, and so everything
-takes place in the body as if there were no
-soul.” At this point we almost reach a scientific
-materialism. It is easy for the materialist to break
-this frail tie of pre-established harmony which so
-loosely unites body and soul, and to exhibit the
-organism as under the sole control of universal
-mechanics and physics.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the weak point of Stahl’s animism was the
-supposition of a direct action exercised on the organism
-by a distinct, heterogeneous, spiritual principle.</p>
-
-<p>Chauffard has endeavoured to avoid this pitfall. In
-conformity with modern ideas, he has brought together
-what the ancient philosophers and Stahl himself
-separated—the activity of matter and the activity of
-the soul. “Thought, action, function, are embraced
-in an indissoluble union.” This is the classical but
-not very lucid theory which has been so often reproduced—<i>Homo
-factus est anima vivens</i>—which
-Bossuet has expressed in the celebrated formula:
-“Soul and body form a natural whole.”</p>
-
-<p>A second objection raised against animism is that
-the soul acts consciously, with reflection, and with
-volition, and that its essential attributes are not found
-in most physiological phenomena, which, on the contrary
-are automatic, involuntary, and unconscious.
-The contradictory nature of these characteristics has
-obliged vitalists to conceive of a vital principle
-distinct from thought. Chauffard, agreeing here with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
-Boullieu, Tissot, and Stahl himself, does not accept
-this distinction; he refuses to shatter the unity of the
-vivifying and thinking principle. He prefers to attribute
-to the soul two modes of action: the one
-which is exercised on the acts of thought, and hence
-it proceeds consciously, with reflection, and with
-volition; the other exercising control over the physiological
-phenomena which it governs, “by unconscious
-impressions, and by instinctive determinations, obeying
-primordial laws.” This soul is hardly in keeping with
-his definition of a conscious, reflecting, and voluntary
-principle; it is a new soul, a somatic soul, singularly
-akin to that <i>rachidian soul</i> which, according to
-Pflüger, a well-known German physiologist, resides
-in each segment of the spinal marrow, and is responsible
-for reflex movements.</p>
-
-<p><i>Twofold Modality of the Soul.</i>—This twofold
-modality of the soul, this duality admitted by Stahl
-and his disciples, was repugnant to many thinkers,
-and it is this repugnance that gave rise to the vitalistic
-school. It appeared to them to be a heresy tainted
-by materialism—and so it was. In this lay the
-strength and the weakness of animism. It admits
-of a unique animating principle for all the manifestations
-of the living being, for the higher facts in the
-realm of thought, and for the lower facts connected
-with the body. It throws down the barriers which
-separate them. It fills up the gap between the
-different forms of human activity, and assimilates
-them the one to the other.</p>
-
-<p>Now this is precisely what materialism does. It,
-too, reduces to a single order the psychical and physiological
-phenomena, between which it no longer
-recognizes anything but a difference of degree,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>
-thought being only a maximum of the vital movement,
-or life a minimum of thought. In truth, the
-aims of the two schools are diametrically opposed;
-the one claims to raise corporeal activity to the
-dignity of thinking activity, and to spiritualize the
-vital fact; the other lowers the former to the level of
-the latter and materializes the psychic fact. But,
-though the intentions are different, the result is
-identical. Spiritualistic monism inclines towards
-materialistic monism. One step more, and the soul,
-confused with life, will be confused with physical
-forces.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, twofold modality has this
-advantage, that it escapes the objection drawn from
-the existence of so many living beings to which a
-thinking soul cannot be attributed; an anencephalous
-fœtus, the young of the higher animals, the lower
-animals and plants, living without thought, or with a
-minimum of real, conscious thought. The advocate
-of animism replies that this physiological activity is
-still a soul, but one which is barely aware of its
-existence—a gleam of consciousness. In this theory,
-the knowledge of self, the consciousness, is of all
-degrees. On the other hand, in the eyes of the
-vitalist, it is an absolute fact which allows of no
-attenuation, of no middle course between the being
-and the non-being.</p>
-
-<p>It is this conception of the continuity of the soul and
-life, it is the affirmation of a possible lowering of the
-complete consciousness down to a mere gleam of knowledge,
-and finally down to unconscious vital activity,
-which saved animism from complete shipwreck. That
-is why this ancient doctrine finds, even in the present
-day, a few rare supporters. An able German scientist,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
-G. von Bunge, well known for his researches in physiological
-chemistry, professes animistic views in a work
-which appeared in 1889. He attributes to organized
-beings a guiding principle, a kind of vital soul. A
-distinguished naturalist, Rindfleisch, of Lübeck, has
-likewise taken his place among the advocates of what
-we may call neo-animism.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-
-<small>VITALISM.</small></h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Its Extreme Forms—Early Vitalism, and Modern Neo-vitalism—Advantage
-of distinguishing between Soul and Life—§
-1. <i>The Vitalism of Barthez</i>—Its Extension—The Seat of
-the Vital Principle—The Vital Knot—The Vital Tripod—Decentralisation
-of the Vital Principle—§ 2. <i>The Doctrine
-of Vital Properties</i>—Galen, Van Helmont, Xavier Bichat,
-and Cuvier—Vital and Physical Properties antagonistic—§
-3. <i>Scientific Neo-vitalism</i>—Heidenhain—§ 4. <i>Philosophical
-Neo-vitalism</i>—Reinke.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><i>Extreme Forms: Early Vitalism and Modern Neo-vitalism.</i>—Contemporary
-neo-vitalism has weakened
-primitive vitalism in some important points. The
-latter made of the vital fact something quite specific,
-irreducible either to the phenomena of general physics
-or to those of thought. It absolutely isolated life,
-separating it above from the soul, and below from inanimate
-matter. This sequestration is nowadays
-much less rigorous. On the psychical side the barrier
-remains, but it is lowered on the material side. The
-neo-vitalists of to-day recognize that the laws of
-physics and chemistry are observed within, as well as
-without, the living body; the same natural forces
-intervene in both, only they are “otherwise directed.”</p>
-
-<p>The vital principle of early times was a kind of
-anthromorphic, pagan divinity. To Aristotle, this
-force, the <i>anima</i>, <i>the Psyche</i>, worked, so to speak, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
-human hands. According to the well-known expression,
-its situation in the human body corresponds
-to that of a pilot on a vessel, or to that of a sculptor
-or his assistant before the marble or clay. And, in
-fact, we have no other clear image of a cause external
-to the object. We have no other representation of a
-force external to matter than that which is offered by
-the craftsman making an object, or in general by the
-human being with his activity, free, or supposed to be
-free, and directed towards an end to be realized.</p>
-
-<p>Personifications of this kind, the mythological
-entities, the imaginary beings, the ontological fictions,
-which ever filled the stage in the mind of our predecessors,
-have definitely disappeared; no longer have
-they a place in the scientific explanations of our time.
-The neo-vitalists replace them by <i>the idea of direction</i>,
-which is another form of the same idea of finality.
-The series of second causes in the living being seems
-to be regulated in conformity with a plan, and directed
-with a view to carrying it out. The tendency which
-exists in every being to carry out this plan,—that is to
-say, the tendency towards its end,—gives the impulse
-that is necessary to carry it out. Neo-vitalists claim
-that vital force directs the phenomena which it does not
-produce, and which are in reality carried out by the
-general forces of physics and chemistry.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, the directing impulse, <i>considered as really
-active</i>, is the last concession of modern vitalism. If
-we go further, and if we refuse to the directing idea
-executive power and efficient activity, the vital
-principle is weakened, and we abandon the doctrine.
-We can no longer invoke it. We cease to be vitalists
-if the part played by the vital principle is thus far
-restricted. At first it was both the author of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
-plan and the universal architect of the organic edifice;
-it is now only the architect directing his workmen,
-and they are physical and chemical agents. It is now
-reduced to the plan of the work, and even this plan
-has no objective existence; it is now only an <i>idea</i>.
-It has only a shadow of reality. To this it has been
-reduced by certain biologists. For this we may thank
-Claude Bernard; and he has thereby placed himself
-outside and beyond the weakest form of vitalism. He
-did not consider the <i>idea of direction</i> as a real
-principle. The connection of phenomena, their
-harmony, their conformity to a plan grasped by the
-intellect, their fitness for a purpose known to the
-intellect, are to him but a mental necessity, a metaphysical
-concept. The plan which is carried out has
-only a subjective existence; the directing force has no
-efficient virtue, no executive power; it does not
-emerge from the intellectual domain in which it took
-its rise, and does not “react on the phenomena which
-enabled the mind to create it.”</p>
-
-<p>It is between these two extreme incarnations of the
-vital principle, on the one hand an executive agent, on
-the other a simple directing plan, that the motley procession
-of vitalist doctrines passes on its way. At the
-point of departure we have a vital force, personified,
-acting, as we have stated, as if with human hands
-fashioning obedient matter; this is the pure and
-primitive form of the theory. At the other extreme we
-have a vital force which is now only a directing idea,
-without objective existence, and without an executive
-rôle; a mere concept by which the mind gathers
-together and conceives of a succession of physico-chemical
-phenomena. On this side we are brought
-into touch with monism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>The Reasons given by the Vitalists for distinguishing
-Soul from Life.</i>—It is, in particular, on the opposite
-side, in the psychical world, that the early vitalists professed
-to entrench themselves. We have just seen that
-their doctrines were not so subtle as those of to-day;
-the vital principle to them was a real agent, and not an
-ideal plan in the process of being carried out. But
-they distinguished this spiritual principle from another
-co-existent with it in superior living beings—at any
-rate, in man: the thinking soul. They boldly distinguished
-between them, because the activity of the
-one is manifested by knowledge and volition, while
-on the contrary, the manifestations of the other for
-the most part escape both consciousness and volition.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, we know nothing of what goes on in the
-normal state of our organs. Their perfect performance
-of their functions is translated to us solely by an
-obscure feeling of comfort. We do not feel the beating
-of the heart, the periodic dilations of the arteries,
-the movements of the lungs or intestine, the glands at
-their work of secretion, or the thousand reflex manifestations
-of our nervous system. The soul, which is
-conscious of itself, is nevertheless ignorant of all this
-vital movement, and is therefore external to it.</p>
-
-<p>This is the view of all the philosophers of antiquity.
-Pythagoras distinguished the real soul, the thinking
-soul, the <i>Nous</i>, the intelligent and immortal principle,
-characterized by the attributes of consciousness and
-volition, from the vital principle, the <i>Psyche</i>, which
-gives breath and animation to the body, and which is
-a soul of secondary majesty, active, transient, and
-mortal. Aristotle did the same. On the one side he
-placed the soul properly so called, the <i>Nous</i> or
-intellect—that is to say, the understanding with its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>
-rational intelligence; on the other side was the
-directing principle of life, the irrational and vegetative
-Psyche.</p>
-
-<p>This distinction agrees with the fact of the diffusion
-of life. Life does not belong to the superior animals
-alone, and to the man in whom we can recognize a
-reasoning soul. It is extended to the vast multitude
-of humbler beings to which such lofty faculties cannot
-be attributed, the invertebrates, microscopic animals,
-and plants. The advantage is compensated for by
-the inconvenience of breaking down all continuity
-between the soul and life; a continuity which is the
-principle of the two other doctrines, animism and
-monism, and which is, we may say, the very aim and
-the unquestionable tendency of science.</p>
-
-<p>As for classical philosophy, it satisfies the necessity
-of establishing the unity of the living being,—<i>i.e.</i>, of
-bringing into harmony soul and body,—but in a
-manner which we need not here discuss. It attributes
-to the soul several modalities, several distinct
-powers: powers of the vegetative life, powers of the
-sensitive life, and powers of the intellectual life. And
-this other solution of the problem would be, in the
-opinion of M. Gardair, in complete agreement with
-the doctrines of St. Thomas Aquinas.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">The Vitalism of Barthez: its Extension.</span></h4>
-
-<p>Vitalism reached its most perfect expression in the
-second half of the eighteenth century in the hands of
-the representatives of the Montpellier school—Bordeu,
-Grimaud, and Barthez. The last, in particular,
-contributed to the prevalence of the doctrine in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>
-medical circles. A man of profound erudition, a
-collaborates with d’Alembert in the <i>Encyclopædia</i>,
-he exercised quite a preponderant influence on the
-medicine of his day. Stationed at Paris during part
-of his career, physician to the King and the Duke of
-Orleans, we may say that he supported his theories by
-every imaginable influence which might contribute to
-their success. In consequence of this, the medical
-schools taught that vital phenomena are the immediate
-effects of a force which has no analogues outside the
-living body. This conception reigned unchallenged
-up to the days of Bichat.</p>
-
-<p>After Bichat, the vitalism of Barthez, more or less
-modified by the ideas of the celebrated anatomist,
-continued to hold its own in all the schools of
-Europe until about the middle of the nineteenth
-century. Johannes Müller, the founder of physiology
-in Germany, admitted, about 1833, the existence of a
-unique vital force “aware of all the secrets of the
-forces of physics and chemistry, but continually in
-conflict with them, as the supreme cause and regulator
-of all phenomena.” When death came, this principle
-disappeared and left no trace behind. One of the
-founders of biological chemistry, Justus Liebig, who
-died in 1873, shared these ideas. The celebrated
-botanist, Candolle, who lived up to 1893, taught at
-the beginning of his career that the vital force was one
-of the four forces ruling in nature, the other three
-being—attraction, affinity, and intellectual force.
-Flourens, in France, made the vital principle one of
-the five properties of forces residing in the nervous
-system. Another contemporary, Dressel, in 1883,
-endeavoured to bring back into fashion this rather
-primitive, monistic, and efficient vitalism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>The Seat of the Vital Principle.</i>—Meanwhile,
-another question was asked with reference to this
-vital principle. It was a question of ascertaining its
-seat: or, in other words, of finding its place in the
-organism. Is it spread throughout the organism, or is
-it situated in some particular spot from which it acts
-upon every part of the body? Van Helmont, a celebrated
-scientist at the end of the sixteenth century,
-who was both physician and alchemist, gave the first
-and rather quaint solution of this difficulty. The vital
-principle, according to him, was situated in the
-stomach, or rather in the opening of the pylorus. It
-was the <i>concierge</i>, so to speak, of the stomach. The
-Hebrew idea was more reasonable. The life was
-connected with the blood, and was circulated with it
-by means of all the veins of the organism. It escaped
-from a wound at the same time as the liquid blood.
-It is clear that in this belief we see why the Jews were
-forbidden to eat meat which had not been bled.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Vital Knot.</i>—In 1748 a doctor named Lorry
-found that a very small wound in a certain region of
-the spinal marrow brought on sudden death. The
-position of this remarkable point was ascertained in
-1812 by Legallois, and more accurately still by
-Flourens in 1827. It is situated in the rachidian
-bulb, at the level of the junction of the neck and the
-head; or more precisely, on the floor of the fourth
-ventricle, near the origin of the eighth pair of cranial
-nerves. This is what was called the <i>vital knot</i>.
-Upon the integrity of this spot, which is no bigger
-than the head of a pin, depends the life of the animal.
-Those who believed in a localisation of the vital
-principle thought that they had found the seat
-desired; but for that to be so the destruction of this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
-spot must be irremediable, and must necessarily cause
-death. But if the <i>vital knot</i> be destroyed, and
-respiration be artificially induced by means of a
-bellows, the animal resists: it continues to live. It is
-only the nervous stimulating mechanism of the
-respiratory movements which has been attacked in
-one of its essential parts.</p>
-
-<p>Life, therefore, resides no more in this point than it
-does in the blood or in the stomach. Later experiment
-has shown that it resides everywhere, that each
-organ enjoys an independent life. Each part of the
-body is, to use Bordeu’s strong expression, “<i>an animal
-in an animal</i>”; or to adopt the phrase due to Bichat,
-“<i>a particular machine within the general machine</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>The Vital Tripod.</i>—What then is life, or, in other
-words, what is the biological activity of the individual,
-of the animal, of man? It is clearly the sum total, or
-rather, the harmony of these partial lives of the
-different organs. But in this harmony it seems that
-there are certain instruments which dominate and
-sustain the others. There are some whose integrity
-is more necessary to the preservation of existence and
-health, and of which any lesion makes death more
-inevitable. They are the lungs, the heart, and the
-brain. Death always ensues, said the early doctors, if
-any one of these three organs be injured. Life
-depends, therefore, on them, as if upon a three-legged
-support. Hence the idea of the <i>vital tripod</i>. It is no
-longer a single seat for the vital principle, but a kind
-of throne on three-supports. Life is decentralized.</p>
-
-<p>This was only the first step, very soon followed by
-many others, in the direction of vital decentralization.
-Experiment showed, in fact, that every organ separated
-from the body will continue to live if provided with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>
-the proper conditions. And here, it is not only a
-question of inferior beings; of plants that are propagated
-by slips; of the <i>hydra</i> which Trembley cut
-into pieces, each of which generated a complete hydra;
-of the <i>naïs</i> which C. Bonnet cut up into sections, each
-of which reconstituted a complete annelid. There is
-no exception to the rule.</p>
-
-<p><i>Decentralization of the Vital Principle.</i>—The result
-is the same in the higher vertebrates, only the experiment
-is much more difficult. At the Physiological
-Congress of Turin in 1901, Locke showed the heart of
-a hare, extracted from the body of the animal, and
-beating for hours as energetically and as regularly as
-if it were in its place. He suspended it in the air of
-a room at the normal temperature, the sole condition
-being that it was irrigated with a liquid composed of
-certain constituents. The animal had been dead some
-time. More recently Kuliabko has shown in the same
-way the heart of a man still beating, although the
-man had been dead some eighteen hours. The same
-experiment is repeated in any physiological laboratory,
-in a much easier manner, with the heart of a
-tortoise. This organ, extracted from the body, fitted
-up with rubber tubes to represent its arteries and
-veins, and filled with the defibrinated blood of a horse
-or an ox taken from the slaughter-house, works for
-hours and days pumping the liquid blood into its
-rubber aorta, just as if it were pumping it into the
-living aorta.</p>
-
-<p>But it is unnecessary to multiply examples. Every
-organ can be made to live for a longer or shorter
-period even though removed from its natural position;
-muscles, nerves, glands, and even the brain itself.
-Each organ, each tissue therefore enjoys an inde<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>pendent
-existence; it lives and works for itself.
-No doubt it shares in the activity of the whole, but
-it may be separated therefrom without being thereby
-placed in the category of dead substances. For each
-aliquot part of the organism there is a partial life and
-a partial death.</p>
-
-<p>This decentralization of the vital activity is finally
-extended in complex beings from the organs to the
-tissues, and from the tissues to the anatomical
-elements—the cells. The idea of decentralization
-has given birth to the second form of vitalism, a
-softened down and weakened form—namely, pluri-vitalism,
-or the theory of vital properties.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">The Theory of Vital Properties.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The advocates of the theory of vital properties have
-cut up into fragments the monistic and indivisible
-guiding principle of Bordeu and Barthez. They have
-given it new currency—pluri-vitalism. This theory
-maintains the existence of spiritual powers of a lower
-order, which control phenomena more intimately than
-the vital principle did. These powers, less lofty in
-their dignity than the rational soul of the animists, or
-the soul of secondary majesty of the unitarian
-vitalists, are eventually incorporated in the living
-matter of which they will then be no longer more
-than the properties. Brought into closer connection
-therefore with the sensible world, they will be more
-in harmony with the spirit of research and with
-scientific progress.</p>
-
-<p>The defect of the earlier conceptions, their common
-illusion, rose from their seeking the cause outside the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
-object, from their demanding an explanation of vital
-phenomena from a principle external to living,
-immaterial, and unsubstantial matter. Here this
-defect is less marked. The pluri-vitalists will in turn
-appeal to the vital properties as modes of activity,
-inherent in the living substance in which and by which
-they are manifested, and derived from the arrangement
-of the molecules of this substance—that is to say, from
-its organization. This is almost the conception of
-the present day.</p>
-
-<p>But this progress will only be realized at the end of
-the evolution of the pluri-vitalist theory. At the outset
-this theory seems an exaggeration of its predecessor,
-and a still more exaggerated form of the mythological
-paganism with which it was reproached. The archeus,
-the blas, the properties, the spirits—all have at first
-the effect of the genii or of the gods imagined by the
-ancients to preside over natural phenomena, of
-Neptune stirring up the waters of the sea, and of
-Eolus unchaining the winds. These divinities of the
-ancient world, the nymphs, the dryads, and the sylvan
-gods, seem to be transported to the Middle Ages, to
-that age of argument, that philosophical period of the
-history of humanity, and there metamorphosed into
-occult causes, immaterial powers, and personified
-forces.</p>
-
-<p><i>Galen.</i>—The first of the pluri-vitalists was Galen,
-the physician of Marcus Aurelius, the celebrated
-author of an Encyclopædia of which the greater part
-has been lost, and of which the one book preserved
-held its own as the anatomical oracle and breviary
-throughout the Middle Ages. According to Galen
-the human machine is guided by three kinds of
-spirits: <i>animal spirits</i>, presiding over the activity of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
-the nervous system; <i>vital spirits</i> governing most of
-the other functions; and finally, <i>natural spirits</i>
-regulating the liver and susceptible of incorporation
-in the blood. In the sixteenth century, in the time of
-Paracelsus, Galen’s spirits became <i>Olympic spirits</i>.
-They still presided over the functional activity of the
-organs, the liver, heart, and brain, but they also
-existed in all the bodies of nature.</p>
-
-<p><i>Van Helmont.</i>—Finally, the theory was laid down
-by Van Helmont, physician, chemist, experimentalist,
-and philosopher, endowed with a rare and penetrating
-intellect. Here we find many profound truths combined
-with fantastic dreams. Refusing to admit the
-direct action of an immaterial agent, such as the soul,
-on inert matter, on the body, he filled up the abyss
-which separated them by creating a whole hierarchy
-of immaterial principles which played the part of
-mediators and executive agents. At the head of this
-hierarchy was placed the thinking and immortal soul;
-below was the sensitive and mortal soul, having for its
-minister the <i>principal archeus</i>, the <i>aura vitalis</i>, a kind
-of incorporeal agent, which is remarkably like the
-vital principle, and which had its seat at the orifice of
-the stomach. Below again were the subordinate
-agents, the <i>blas</i>, or <i>vulcans</i> placed in each organ, and
-intelligently directing its mechanism like skillful
-workmen.</p>
-
-<p>These chimerical ideas are not, however, so far
-astray as the theory of vital properties. When we
-see a muscle contract, we say that this phenomenon
-is due to a vital property—<i>i.e.</i>, a property without any
-analogue in the physical world, namely <i>contractility</i>,
-in the same way the nerve possesses two vital
-properties, <i>excitability</i> and <i>conductibility</i>, which Vulpian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>
-proposed to blend into one, calling it <i>neurility</i>. These
-are mere names, serving as a kind of shorthand; but
-to those who believe that there is something real in it,
-this something is not very far from the <i>blas</i> of Van
-Helmont. <i>Vulcans</i>, hidden in the muscle or the nerve,
-are here detected by attraction, there by the production
-and the propagation of the nervous influx;
-that is to say, by phenomena of which we as yet
-know no analogues in the physical world, but of
-which we cannot say that they do not exist.</p>
-
-<p><i>X. Bichat and G. Cuvier: Vital and Physical
-Properties Antagonistic.</i>—The archeus and the blas of
-Van Helmont were but a first rough outline of
-vital properties. Xavier Bichat, the founder of general
-anatomy, wearied of all these incorporeal entities, of
-these unsubstantial principles with which biology was
-encumbered, undertook to get rid of them by the
-methods of the physicist and the chemist. The physics
-and the chemistry of his day referred phenomenal
-manifestations to the properties of matter, gravity,
-capillarity, magnetism, etc. Bichat did the same.
-He referred vital manifestations to the properties of
-living tissues, if not, indeed, of living matter. Of
-these properties as yet but very few were known:
-the irritability described by Glisson, which is the
-excitability of current physiology; and the irritability
-of Haller, which is nothing but muscular contractility.
-Others had to be discovered.</p>
-
-<p>There is no need to recall the mistake made by
-Bichat and followed by most scientific men of his
-time, such as Cuvier in France, and J. Müller in
-Germany, for the story has been told by Claude
-Bernard. His mistake was in considering the vital
-properties not only as distinct from physical properties<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
-but even as opposed to them. The one preserve the
-body, the others tend to destroy it. They are always
-in conflict. Life is the victory of the one; death is
-the triumph of the other. Hence the celebrated
-definition given by Bichat: “Life is the sum total of
-functions which resist death,” or the definition of the
-Encyclopædia: “Life is the contrary of death.”</p>
-
-<p>Cuvier has illustrated this conception by a graphic
-picture. He represents a young woman in all the
-health and strength of youth suddenly stricken by
-death. The sculptural forms collapse and show the
-angularities of the bones; the eyes so lately sparkling
-become dull; the flesh tint gives place to a livid
-pallor; the graceful suppleness of the body is now
-rigidity, “and it will not be long before more horrible
-changes ensue; the flesh becomes blue, green, black,
-one part flows away in putrid poison, and another
-part evaporates in infectious emanations. Finally,
-nothing is left but saline or earthy mineral principles,
-all the rest has vanished.” Now, according to Cuvier,
-what has happened?</p>
-
-<p>These alterations are the effect of external agents,
-air, humidity, and heat. They have acted on the
-corpse just as they used to act on the living being;
-but before death their assault had no effect, because it
-was repelled by the vital properties. Now that life
-has disappeared the assault is successful. We know
-now that external agents are not the cause of these
-disorders. They are caused by the microbes of
-putrefaction. It is against <i>them</i> that the organs were
-struggling, and not against physical forces.</p>
-
-<p>The mistake made by Bichat and Cuvier was inexcusable,
-even in their day. They were wrong not
-to attach the importance they deserved to Lavoisier’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
-researches. He had asserted, apropos of animal heat
-and respiration, the identity of the action of physical
-agents in the living body and in the external world.
-On the other hand, Bichat, by a flash of genius, decentralized
-life, dispersing the vital properties in the
-tissues, or, as we should now say, in the living matter.
-It was from the comparison between the constitution
-and the properties of living matter and those of inanimate
-matter that light was to come.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 3. <span class="smcap">Scientific Neo-Vitalism.</span></h4>
-
-<p>We can now understand the nature of modern
-neo-vitalism. It borrows from its predecessor its
-fundamental principle—namely, the specificity of the
-<i>vital fact</i>. But this specificity is no longer <i>essential</i>,
-it is only <i>formal</i>. The difference between it and the
-physical fact grows less and almost vanishes. It consists
-of a diversity of mechanisms or executive agents.
-For example, digestion transforms the alimentary
-starch in the intestines into sugar; the chemist does
-the same in his laboratory, only he employs acids,
-while the organism employs special agents, ferments,
-in this case a diastase. It is a particular form of
-chemistry, but still it is a chemistry. That is how
-Claude Bernard looked at it. The vital fact was not
-fundamentally distinguished from the physico-chemical
-fact, but only in form.</p>
-
-<p>This expurgated and accommodated vitalism
-(Claude Bernard pushed his concessions so far as to
-call his doctrine “physico-chemical vitalism”) was revived
-a few years ago by Chr. Bohr and Heidenhain.</p>
-
-<p>Other biologists, instead of attributing the difference<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
-between the phenomena of the two orders to the
-manner of their occurrence, seem to admit the complete
-identity of the mechanisms. It is no longer
-then in itself, individually, that the vital act is
-particularized, but in the manner in which it is
-linked to others. The vital order is a series of
-physico-chemical acts realizing an ideal plan.</p>
-
-<p>Neo-vitalism has therefore assumed two forms,
-one the more scientific and the other the more
-philosophical.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chr. Bohr and Heidenhain.</i>—Its scientific form was
-given to it by Chr. Bohr, an able physiologist at
-Copenhagen, and by Heidenhain, a professor at
-Breslau, who was one of the lights of contemporary
-German physiology. The course of their researches
-led these two experimentalists, working independently,
-to submit to fresh investigation the ideas of
-Lavoisier and those of Bichat, on the relation of
-physico-chemical forces to the vital forces.</p>
-
-<p>It was by no means a question of a general
-inquiry, deliberately instituted with the object of discovering
-the part played respectively by physical and
-physiological factors in the performance of the various
-functions. Such an investigation would have taken
-several generations to complete. No; the question
-had only come up incidentally. Chr. Bohr had studied
-with the utmost care the gaseous exchanges which
-take place between the air and the blood in the lungs.
-The gaseous mixture and the liquid blood are face
-to face; they are separated by thin membrane formed
-of living cells. Will this membrane behave as an
-inert membrane deprived of vitality, and therefore
-obeying the physical laws of the diffusion of gases?
-Well! no. It does not so behave. The most careful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>
-measurements of pressures and of solubilities leave no
-doubt in this respect. The living elements of the
-pulmonary membrane must therefore intervene in
-order to disturb the physical phenomenon. Things
-happen as if the exchanged gases were subjected not
-to a simple diffusion, a physical fact obeying certain
-rules, but to a real secretion, a physiological or vital
-phenomenon, obeying laws which are also fixed, but
-different from the former.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, Heidenhain was led about the
-same time to analogous conclusions with respect
-to the liquid exchanges which take place within
-the tissues, between the liquids (lymphs) which
-bathe the blood-vessels externally and the blood
-which those vessels contain. The phenomenon is
-very important because it is the prologue of the
-actions of nutrition and assimilation. Here again,
-the two factors of exchange are brought into relation
-through a thin wall, the wall of the blood-vessel. The
-physical laws of diffusion, of osmosis, and of dialysis,
-enable us to foretell what would take place if the
-vitality of the elements of the wall did not intervene.
-Heidenhain thought he observed that things took
-place otherwise. The passage of the liquids is disturbed
-by the fact that the cellular elements are alive.
-It assumes the characteristics of a physiological act,
-and no longer those of a physical act. Let us add
-that the interpretation of these experiments is difficult,
-and it has given rise to controversies which still
-persist.</p>
-
-<p>These two examples, around which others might be
-grouped, have led certain physiologists to diminish the
-importance of the physical factors in the functional
-activity of the living being to the advantage of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
-physiological factors. It would therefore seem that
-the vital force, to use a rather questionable form
-of language, withdraws in a certain measure the
-organized being from the realm of physical forces—and
-this conclusion is one form of contemporary
-neo-vitalism.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 4. <span class="smcap">Philosophical Neo-Vitalism.</span></h4>
-
-<p>Contemporary neo-vitalism has assumed another
-form, more philosophical than scientific, by which it is
-brought closer to vitalism, properly so called. We
-should like to mention the experiment of Reinke,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-in Germany. Reinke is a botanist of distinction, who
-distinguishes the speculative from the positive domain
-of science, and cultivates both with success.</p>
-
-<p>His ideas are analogous to those of A. Gautier, of
-Chevreul, and of Claude Bernard himself. He thinks,
-with these masters, that the mystery of life is not to be
-found in the nature of the forces that it brings into
-play, but in the direction that it gives them. All these
-thinkers are struck by the order and the direction
-impressed upon the phenomena which take place
-in the living being, by their interconnection, by their
-apparent adaptation to an end, by the kind of impression
-that they give of a plan which is being
-carried out. All these reflections lead Reinke to
-attach great weight to the idea of a “directing
-force.”</p>
-
-<p>The physico-chemical energies are no doubt the
-only ones which are manifested in the organized
-being, but they are directed as a blind man is by his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
-guide. It seems as if a <i>double</i> accompanies them like
-a shadow. This intelligent guide of blind, material
-force is what Reinke calls a <i>dominant</i>. Nothing
-could be more like the blas and the archeus of Van
-Helmont. Material energies would thus be paired
-off with their blas, their dominants, in the living
-organisms. In them there would therefore be two categories
-of force: “material forces,” or rather, material
-energies obeying the laws of universal energetics;
-and in the second place, intelligent “spiritual forces,”
-the dominants. When the sculptor is working his
-marble, in every blow which elicits a spark there is
-something more than the strong force of the hammer.
-There is thought, the volition of the artist, which is
-realizing a plan. In a machine there is more than
-machinery. Behind the wheels is the object which
-the author had in view when he adjusted them for a
-determined end. The energies spent in action are
-regulated by the adjustment—that is to say, by the
-dominants due to the intellect of the constructor.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it is in the living machine. The dominants
-in this case are the guardians of the plan, the agents
-of the aim in view. Some regulate the functional
-activity of the living body, and some regulate its
-development and its construction. Such is the second
-form, the philosophical form, extreme and teleological,
-of contemporary neo-vitalism.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-
-<small>THE MONISTIC THEORY.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-
-<p class="prel">Physico-chemical Theory of Life.—Iatro-mechanism.—Descartes,
-Borelli.—Iatro-chemistry.—Sylvius le Boë.—The
-Physico-chemical Theory of Life.—Matter and Energy.—Heterogeneity
-is merely the result of the arrangement or
-combination of homogeneous bodies.—Reservation relative
-to the world of thought.—The Kinetic Theory.</p>
-
-
-<p>The unicist or monistic doctrine gives us a third way
-of conceiving the functional activity of the living
-being, by levelling and blending its three forms of
-activity—spiritual, vital, and material. It was
-expressed in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
-in “iatro-mechanism” and “iatro-chemistry,” conceptions
-to which have more recently succeeded the
-physico-chemical doctrine of life, and finally “current
-materialism.”</p>
-
-<p>Materialism is not only a biological interpretation;
-it is a universal interpretation applicable to the whole
-of nature, because it is based on a determinate conception
-of matter. Here we find ourselves confronted
-by the eternal enigma discussed by philosophers
-relative to this fundamental problem of force and
-matter. We know what answers were given to
-the problem by the Ionic philosophers—Thales,
-Democritus, Heraclitus, and Anaxagoras, who discarded
-the agency of every spiritual power external<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>
-to matter. The explanation of the world, the
-explanation of life, were reduced to the play of
-physical or mechanical forces. Epicurus, a little later,
-maintained that the knowledge of matter and its
-different forms accounts for all phenomena, and therefore
-for those of life.</p>
-
-<p>Descartes, sharply separating the metaphysical
-world—that is to say, the soul defined by its attribute,
-thought—from the physical or material world
-characterized by extension, practically came to the
-same conclusions as the materialists of antiquity. To
-him, as to them, the living body was a mere machine.</p>
-
-<p><i>Iatro-mechanism. Descartes. Borelli.</i>—This, then, is
-the theory of the iatro-mechanicians, of which we may
-consider Descartes the founder, instead of the Greek
-philosophers. These ideas held their own for two
-centuries, and were productive of such fruitful results
-in the hands of Borelli, Pitcairn, Hales, Bernoulli, and
-Boerhaave, as to justify the jest of Bacon that “the
-philosophy of Epicurus had done less harm to science
-than that of Plato.” The iatro-mechanic school tenaciously
-held its own until Bichat came upon the scene.</p>
-
-<p><i>Iatro-chemistry. Sylvius le Boë.</i>—It was from a
-reaction against their exaggerations that Stahl
-created animism, and the Montpellier school created
-vitalism. We gather some idea of the extravagant
-character of their explanations by reading Boerhaave.
-To this celebrated doctor the muscles were springs,
-the heart was a pump, the kidneys a sieve, and the
-secretions of the glandular juices were produced by
-pressure; the heat of the body was the result of the
-friction of the globules of blood against the walls of
-the blood-vessels; it was greater in the lungs because
-the vessels of the lungs were supposed to be narrower<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
-than those of other organs. The inadequacy of these
-explanations suggested the idea of completing them
-by the aid of the chemistry which was then springing
-into being. This chemistry, rudimentary as it was,
-longed for a share in the government of living bodies
-and in the explanation of their phenomena. Distillations,
-fermentations, and effervescences are now
-seen to play their rôle, a rôle which was premature
-and carried to excess. Iatro-chemistry from the
-general point of view is only an aspect of iatro-mechanics;
-but it is also an auxiliary. Sylvius le Boë
-and Willis were its most eminent representatives.
-This theory remained in the background until
-chemistry made its great advance—that is to say, in
-the days of Lavoisier. After that, its importance has
-gradually increased, particularly in the present day.
-Nowadays, the general tendency is to regard the
-organic functional activity, or even morphogeny—<i>i.e.</i>,
-whatever there is that is most peculiar to and characteristic
-of living beings—as a consequence of the
-chemical composition of their substance. This is a
-point of capital importance, and to it we must recur.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Physico-chemical Theory of Life.</i>—Contemporary
-biological schools have made many efforts to secure
-themselves from any slips on the philosophical side.
-They have avoided in most cases the psychological
-problem; they have deliberately refrained from
-penetrating into the world of the soul. Hence, <i>the
-physico-chemical theory</i> of life has been built up free
-from spiritualistic difficulties and objections. But
-this prudence did not exclude the tendency. And
-there is no doubt, as Armand Gautier said, that “real
-science can affirm nothing, but it also can deny
-nothing outside observable facts;” and again, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
-“only a science progressing backwards can venture to
-assert that matter alone exists, and that its laws alone
-govern the world.” It is none the less true that by
-establishing the continuity between inert matter and
-living matter, we thereby render probable the continuity
-between the world of life and the world of
-thought.</p>
-
-<p><i>Matter and Energy.</i>—Besides, and without any
-wish to enter into this burning controversy, it is
-only too evident that there is no agreement as to the
-terms that are used, and in particular as to “matter”
-and “laws of matter.” It is not necessary to repeat
-that the geometrical mould in which Descartes cast
-his philosophy has long since been broken. The
-celebrated philosopher, in defining matter by one
-attribute—extension, does not enable us to grasp its
-activity, an activity revealed by all natural facts; and
-in defining the soul by thought alone, prevents us
-from seeking in it the principle of this material activity.
-This purely passive matter, consisting of extension
-alone, this <i>bare matter</i> was to Leibniz a pure concept.
-A philosopher of our own time, M. Magy, has called it
-a sensorial illusion. The bodies of nature exhibit to
-us <i>matter clad</i> with energy, formed by the indissoluble
-union of extension with an inseparable dynamical
-principle. The Stoics declared that matter is mobile
-and not immobile, active and not inert. Leibniz also
-had this in his mind when he associated it indissolubly
-with an active principle, an “entelechy.” Others have
-said that matter is “an assemblage of forces,” or with
-P. Boscovitch, “a system of indivisible points without
-extension, centres of force, in fact.” Space would be
-the geometrical locus of these points.</p>
-
-<p>In this conception the materialistic school finds the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
-explanation of all phenomenality. Physical properties,
-vital phenomena, psychical facts, all have their foundation
-in this immanent activity. Material activity is
-a minimum of soul or thought which, by continuous
-gradation and progressive complexity, without solution
-of continuity, without an abrupt transition from the
-homogeneous to the heterogeneous, rises through the
-series of living beings to the dignity of the human
-soul. The observation of the transitions, an imperfect
-tracing of the geometrical method of limits, thus
-enables us to pass from material to vital, and from
-thence to psychical activity.</p>
-
-<p><i>Apparent Heterogeneity is the Result of the Arrangement
-or the Combination of Homogeneous Bodies.</i>—In
-this system, material energy, life, soul would only be
-more and more complex combinations of the consubstantial
-activity with material atoms. Life appears
-distinct from physical force, and thought from life,
-because the analysis has not yet advanced far enough.
-Thus, glass would appear to the ancient Chaldeans
-distinct from the sand and salt of which they made it.
-In the same way, again, water, to modern eyes, is
-distinct from its constituents, oxygen and hydrogen.
-The whole difficulty is that of explaining what this
-“arrangement” of the elements can introduce that
-is new in the aspect of the compound. We must
-know what novelty and apparent homogeneity the
-variety of the combinations, which are only special
-arrangements of the elementary parts, may produce in
-the phenomena. But we do not know, and it is this
-ignorance which leads us to consider them as heterogeneous,
-irreducible, and distinct in principle. The
-vital phenomenon, the complexus of physico-chemical
-facts, thus appears to us essentially different from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-those facts, and that is why we picture to ourselves
-“dominants” and “directing forces” more or less
-analogous to the sidereal guiding principle of Kepler,
-which, before the discovery of universal attraction,
-regulated the harmony of the movements of the
-planets.</p>
-
-<p><i>A Reservation relative to the Psychical Order.</i>—The
-scientific mind has shown in every age a real
-predilection towards the mechanical or materialistic
-theory. Contemporary scientists as a whole have
-accepted it in so far as it blends the vital and the
-physical orders. Objections and contradictions are
-only offered in the realm of psychology. A. Gautier,
-for example, has contested with infinite originality
-and vigour the claims of the materialists who would
-reduce the phenomenon of thought to a material
-phenomenon. The most general characteristic of
-material phenomenality is—as we shall later see—that
-it may be considered as a mutation of energy—<i>i.e.</i>,
-it obeys the laws of energetics. Now thought,
-says A. Gautier, is not a form of material energy.
-Thought, comparison, volition, are not acts of material
-phenomenality; they are states. They are realities;
-they have no mass; they have no physical existence.
-They respond to adjustments, arrangements, and
-concerted groupings of material manifestations of
-chemical molecules. They escape the laws of
-energetics.</p>
-
-<p><i>Kinetic Theory.</i>—We shall lay aside for a moment
-this serious problem relative to the limits of the world
-of conscious thought and of the world of life. It is on
-the other side, on the frontiers of living and inanimate
-nature, that the mechanical view triumphs. It
-has furnished a universal conception agreeing with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
-phenomena of every kind—viz., the kinetic theory,
-which ascribes everything in nature to the movements
-of particles, molecules, or atoms.</p>
-
-<p>The living and the physical orders are here reduced
-to one unique order, because all the phenomena of the
-sensible universe are themselves reduced to one and
-the same mechanics, and are represented by means of
-the atom and of motion. This conception of the
-world, which was that of the philosophers of the Ionic
-school in the remotest antiquity, which was modified
-later by Descartes and Leibniz, has passed into
-modern science under the name of the kinetic theory.
-The mechanics of atoms ponderable or imponderable,
-would contain the explanation of all phenomenality.
-If it were a question of physical properties or vital
-manifestations, the objective world in final analysis
-would offer us nothing but motion. Every phenomenon
-would be expressed by an atomistic integral,
-and that is the inner reason of the majestic unity
-which reigns in modern physics. The forces which
-are brought into play by Life are no longer to
-be distinguished in this ultimate analysis from
-other natural forces. All are blended in molecular
-mechanics.</p>
-
-<p>The philosophical value of this theory is undeniable.
-It has exercised on physical science an influence which
-is justified by the discoveries which it has suggested.
-But to biology, on the other hand, it has lent no aid.
-It is precisely because it descends too deeply into
-things, and analyzes them to the uttermost, that it
-ceases to throw any light upon them. The distance
-between the hypothetical atom and the apparent and
-concrete fact is too great for the one to be able to
-throw light on the other. The vital phenomenon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
-vanishes with its individual aspect; its features can
-no longer be distinguished.</p>
-
-<p>Besides, a whole school of contemporary physicists
-(Ostwald of Leipzig, Mach of Vienna) is beginning to
-cast some doubt on the utility of the kinetic hypothesis
-in the future of physics itself, and is inclined to propose
-to substitute for it the theory of energetics. We
-shall see, in every case, that this other conception, as
-universal as the kinetic theory, <i>the theory of Energy</i>,
-causes a vivid light to penetrate into the depths of the
-most difficult problems in physiology.</p>
-
-<p>Such are, with their successive transformations, the
-three principal theories, the three great currents
-between which biology has been tossed to and fro.
-They are sufficiently indicative of the state of positive
-science in each age, but one is astonished that they
-are not more so; and this is due to the fact that these
-conceptions are too general. They soar too high above
-reality. More characteristic in this respect will be
-particular theories of the principal manifestations of
-living matter, of its perpetuity by generation, of the
-development by which it acquires its individual form,
-on heredity. It is here that it is of importance to
-grasp the progressive march of science—that is to say,
-the design and the plan of the building which is being
-erected, “blindly, so to speak,” by the efforts of an
-army of workers, an army becoming more numerous
-day by day.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.<br />
-
-<small>THE EMANCIPATION OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
-FROM THE YOKE OF PHILOSOPHICAL THEORIES.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">The excessive use of Hypothetical Agents in Physiological
-Explanations—§ 1. <i>Vital Phenomena in Fully-constituted
-Organisms</i>—Provisory Exclusion of the Morphogenic
-idea—The Realm of the Morphogenic Idea as the
-Sanctuary of Vital Force—§ 2. <i>The Physiological Domain
-properly so called</i>—Harmony and Connection of Phenomena—Directive
-Forces—Claude Bernard’s Work—Exclusion
-of Vital Force, of Final Cause, of the “Caprice”
-of Living Nature—Determinism—The Comparative
-Method—Generality of Vital Phenomena—Views of
-Pasteur.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>The theories whose history we have just sketched
-in broad outline long dominated science and exercised
-their influence on its progress.</p>
-
-<p>This domination has ceased to exist. Physiology
-has emancipated itself from their sway, and this,
-perhaps, is the most important revolution in the whole
-history of biology. Animism, vitalism, materialism,
-have ceased to exercise their tyranny on scientific
-research. These conceptions have passed from the
-laboratory to the study; from being physiological,
-they have become philosophical.</p>
-
-<p>This result is the work of the physiologists of sixty
-years ago. It is also the consequence of the general
-march of science and of the progress of the scientific
-spirit, which shows a more and more marked tendency<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
-to separate completely the domain of facts from the
-domain of hypotheses.</p>
-
-<p><i>Excessive Use of Hypothetical Agents in Physiological
-Explanations.</i>—It may be said that in the
-early part of the nineteenth century, in spite of the
-efforts of a few real experimenters from Harvey to
-Spallanzani, Hales, Laplace, Lavoisier, and Magendie,
-the science of the phenomena of life had not followed
-the progress of the other natural sciences. It remained
-in the fog of scholasticism. Hypotheses were mingled
-with facts, and imaginary agents carried out real acts,
-in inexpressible confusion. The soul (<i>animism</i>), the
-vital force (<i>vitalism</i>), and the final cause (<i>finalism</i>,
-<i>teleology</i>) served to explain everything.</p>
-
-<p>In truth, it was also at this time that physical
-agents, electric and magnetic fluids, or, again, chemical
-affinity, played an analogous part in the science of
-inanimate nature. But there was at least this
-difference in favour of physicists and chemists, that
-when they had attributed some new property or
-aptitude to their hypothetical agents they respected
-what they attributed. The physiological physicians
-respected no law, they were subject to no restraint.
-Their vital force was capricious; its spontaneity made
-anticipation impossible; it acted arbitrarily in the
-healthy body; it acted more arbitrarily still in the
-diseased body. All the subtlety of medical genius
-was called into play to divine the fantastic behaviour
-of the spirit of disease. If we speak here of physiologists
-and doctors alone and do not quote biologists,
-it is because the latter had not yet made their
-appearance as authorities; their science had remained
-purely descriptive, and they had not yet begun to
-explain phenomena.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span></p>
-
-<p>Such was the state of things during the first years
-of the nineteenth century. It lasted, thanks to the
-founders of contemporary physiology—Claude Bernard
-in France, and Brücke, Dubois-Reymond, Helmholtz,
-and Ludwig in Germany—until a separation took
-place between biological research and philosophical
-theories. This delimitation operated in physiology
-properly so called—<i>i.e.</i> in a branch of the biological
-domain in which as yet joint tenancy had been the
-rule. An important revolution fixed the respective
-divisions of experimental science and philosophical
-interpretation. It was understood that the one ends
-where the other begins, that the one follows the other,
-that one may not cross the other’s path. There is
-between them only one doubtful region about which
-there is dispute, and this uncertain frontier is constantly
-being shifted and science daily gains what
-philosophy loses.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">Vital Phenomena in Constituted
-Organisms.</span></h4>
-
-<p>A displacement of this kind had taken place at the
-time of which we speak. It was agreed, that as far as
-concerns the phenomena which take place in <i>a constructed
-and constituted living organism</i>, it would no
-longer be permissible to allow to intervene in their
-explanation forces or energies other than those
-which are brought into play in inanimate nature.
-Just as when explaining the working of a clock,
-the physicist will not invoke the volition or the art
-of the maker, or the design that he had in view, but
-only the connection of causes and effects which he
-has utilized; so, for the living machine, whether the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
-most complex, such as the human body, or the most
-elementary, such as the cell, we may not invoke a
-final cause, a vital force, external to that organism
-and acting on it from without, but only the connections
-and the fluctuations of effects which are the
-sole actual and efficient causes. In other words
-Ludwig, and Claude Bernard in particular, expelled
-from the domain of active phenomenality the three
-chimeras—Vital Force, Final Cause, and the “Caprice”
-of Living Nature.</p>
-
-<p>But the living being is not only a <i>completely constructed
-and completely constituted</i> organism. It is not
-a finished clock. It is a clock which is making itself,
-a mechanism which is constructing and perpetuating
-itself. Nothing of the kind is known to us in inanimate
-nature. Physiology has found—in what is
-called morphogeny—its temporary limit. It is beyond
-this limit, it is in the study of phenomena by which
-the organism is constructed and perpetuated, it is in
-the region of the functions of generation and development,
-that philosophical doctrines expand and flourish.
-This is the present frontier of these two powers,
-philosophy and science. We shall presently delimit
-them more precisely. W. Kühne, a well-known
-scientist whose death is deplored, not in Germany
-alone, amused himself by studying the division of
-biological doctrines among the members of learned
-societies and in the world of academies. He
-summed up this kind of statistical inquiry by
-saying in 1898 at the Cambridge Congress, that
-physiologists were nearly all advocates of the physico-chemical
-doctrine of life, and that the majority of
-naturalists were advocates of vital force, and of the
-theory of final causes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Domain of the Morphogenic Idea as the Last Sanctuary
-of Vital Force.</i>—We see the reason for this.
-Physiology, in fact, has taken up its position in
-the explanation of the functional activity of the
-constituted organism—<i>i.e.</i>, on a ground where
-intervene, as we shall show further on, no energies
-and no matter other than universal energies and
-matter. Naturalists, on the other hand, have more
-especially considered—and from the descriptive point
-of view alone, at least up to the times of Lamarck
-and Darwin—the functions, the generation, the
-development and the evolution of species. Now
-these functions are most refractory and inaccessible
-to physico-chemical explanations. So, when the
-time came to give an account of what they had done,
-the zoologists had substituted for executive agents
-nothing but vital force under its different names.
-To Aristotle it is the vital force itself which, as soon
-as it is introduced into the body of the child, moulds
-its flesh and fashions it in the human form. Contemporary
-naturalists, the Americans C. O. Whitman
-and C. Philpotts, for example, take the same line of
-argument. Others, such as Blumenbach and Needham,
-in the eighteenth century, invoked the same division
-under another name, that of the <i>nisus formativus</i>.
-Finally, others play with words; they talk of heredity,
-of adaptation, of atavism, as if these were real, active,
-and efficient beings; while they are only appellations,
-names applied to collections of facts.</p>
-
-<p>This region was therefore eminently favourable
-to the rapid increase of hypotheses, and so they
-abounded. There were the theories of Buffon, of
-Lamarck, of Darwin, of Herbert Spencer, of E.
-Haeckel, of His, of Weismann, of De Vries, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>
-of W. Roux. Each biologist of any mark had his own,
-and the list is endless. But here already this domain
-of theoretical speculation is checked on various sides
-by experiment. J. Loeb, a pure physiologist, has
-recently given his researches a direction in which
-zoology believes may be found the explanation of the
-mysterious part played by the male element in
-fecundation. On the other hand, the first experiment
-of the artificial division of the living cell
-(<i>merotomy</i>), with its light upon the part played by
-the nucleus in the preservation and regeneration of
-the living form, is also the work of a physiological
-experimenter. It dates back to 1852, and is due to
-Augustus Waller. This experiment was made on the
-sensitive nervous cell of the spinal ganglions and on
-the motor cell of the anterior cornua of the spinal
-cord. The effects were correctly interpreted twelve
-or fifteen years later. All that zoologists have done
-is to repeat, perhaps unconsciously, this celebrated
-experiment and to confirm the result.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we see that the attack upon the vitalist
-sanctuary has commenced. But it would be a grave
-mistake to suppose that final cause and vital force are
-on the point of being dislodged from their entrenchments.
-Philosophical speculation has an ample field
-before it. Its frontiers may recede. For a long time
-yet there will be room for a more or less modernized
-vitalism.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">The Physiological Domain properly so
-called.</span></h4>
-
-<p>Vitalism is even found installed in the region of
-physiology, although for the moment this science
-limits its ambition to the consideration of the com<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>pletely
-constructed organized being, perfected in its
-form. The explanation of the working of this constituted
-machine cannot be complete until we take
-into account the harmony and the adjustment of its
-parts.</p>
-
-<p><i>Harmony and Connection of Parts: Directive Forces.</i>—These
-constituent parts are the cells. We know
-that the progress of anatomy has resulted in the
-cellular doctrine—<i>i.e.</i>, in the two-fold affirmation
-that the most complicated organism is composed of
-microscopic elements, the cells, all similar, true
-stones of the living building, and that it derives its
-origin from a single cell, egg, or spore, the sexual cell,
-or cell of germination. The phenomena of life, looked
-at from the point of view of the formed individual,
-are therefore harmonized in space; just as, regarded
-from the point of view of the individual in formation
-and in the species, they are connected in time. This
-harmony and this connection are in the eyes of the
-majority of men of science the most characteristic properties
-of the living being. This is the domain of <i>vital
-specificity</i>, of the <i>directive forces</i> of Claude Bernard and
-A. Gautier, and of the <i>dominants</i> of Reinke. It is not
-certain, however, that this order of facts is more
-specific than the other. Generation and development
-have been considered by many physiologists, and
-quite recently by Le Dantec, as simple aspects or
-modalities of nutrition or assimilation, the common
-and fundamental property of every living cell.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Work of Claude Bernard. Exclusion of Vital
-Force, of Vital Cause, of the “Caprice” of Living Nature.</i>—It
-is not, however, a slight advance or inconsiderable
-advantage to have eliminated vitalistic hypotheses
-from almost the whole domain of present-day physi<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>ology,
-and to have them, as it were, thrown back into
-its hinterland. This is the work of the scientific men
-of the first half of the nineteenth century, and particularly
-of Claude Bernard, who has thereby won
-the name of the founder or lawgiver of physiology.
-They found in the old medical school an obstinate
-adversary glorying in its sterile traditions. In vain
-was it proved that vital force cannot be an efficient
-cause; that it was a creation of the brain, an insubstantial
-phantom introduced into the anatomical
-marionette and moving it by strings at the will of
-any one—its adepts having only to confer upon it a
-new kind of activity to account for the new act. All
-that had been shown with the utmost clearness by
-Bonnet of Geneva, and by many others. It had also
-been said that the teleological explanation is equally
-futile, since it assigns to the present, which exists, an
-inaccessible, and evidently ultimately inadequate cause,
-which does not yet exist. These objections were in
-vain.</p>
-
-<p><i>Determinism.</i>—And so it was not by theoretical
-arguments that the celebrated physiologist dealt with
-his adversaries, but by a kind of lesson on things. In
-fact he was continually showing by examples that
-vitalism and the theory of final causes were idle errors
-which led astray experimental investigation; that
-they had prevented the progress of research and the
-discovery of the truth in every case and on every
-point in which they had been invoked. He laid down
-the principle of <i>biological determinism</i>, which is nothing
-but the negation of the “caprice” of living nature.
-This postulate, so evident that there was no need to
-enunciate it in the physical sciences, had to be shouted
-from the housetops for the benefit of supporters of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
-vital spontaneity. It is the statement that, under
-determined circumstances materially identical, the
-same vital phenomena will be identically reproduced.</p>
-
-<p><i>Comparative Method.</i>—Claude Bernard completed
-this critical work by laying down the laws of experiment
-on living beings. He commended as the rational
-method of research the <i>comparative method</i>. This
-should be, and is in fact, the daily instrument of all
-those who work in physiology. It compels the
-investigator in every research bearing on organized
-beings to institute a series of tests, such that the
-conditions which are unknown and impossible to
-know may be regarded as identical from one test to
-another; and when we are certain that a single
-condition is variable, it compels him to discover the
-character of the condition we are dealing with, and
-to learn to appreciate, and to measure its influence.
-It is safe to say that the errors which are daily
-committed in biological work have their cause in
-some infraction of this golden rule. In physical
-science the obligation to follow the comparative
-method is much less felt. In most cases the <i>witness
-test</i><a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> is useless. In physiology the witness test is
-indispensable.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span></p>
-<p><i>Generality of Vital Phenomena.</i>—If we add that
-Claude Bernard opposed the narrow opinion, so dear
-to early medicine, which limited the consideration of
-vitality to man, and the contrary notion of the essential
-generality of the phenomena of life from man to the
-animal, and from the animal to the plant, we shall
-have given very briefly an idea of the kind of revolution
-which was accomplished about the year 1864, the
-date of the appearance of the celebrated <i>l’Introduction
-à la médecine expérimentale</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The ideas we have just recalled seem to be as
-evident as they are simple. These principles appear
-so well founded that in a measure they form an integral
-part of contemporary mentality. What scientist
-would nowadays deliberately venture to explain some
-biological fact by the intervention of the evidently
-inadequate vital force or final cause? And who, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-account for the apparent inconsistency of the result,
-would bring forward the “caprice” of living nature?
-And who again would openly dispute the utility of
-the comparative method?</p>
-
-<p>What the physiologists of to-day, according to
-Claude Bernard, would no longer do, their predecessors
-would do, and not the least important of
-them. Longet, for example, at a full meeting of the
-Académie, apropos of recurrent sensibility, and Colin
-(of Alfort), communicating his statistical results on
-the temperature of two hearts, accepted more or
-less explicitly the indetermination of vital facts. And
-why confine our remarks to our predecessors? The
-scientists of to-day are much the same. So here
-again we see the reappearance of the phantom of
-the final cause in so-called scientific explanations.
-One fact is accounted for by the necessity of the
-self-defence of the organism; another by the necessity
-to a warm-blooded animal of keeping its temperature
-constant. Le Dantec has recently reproached zoologists
-for giving as an explanation of fecundation
-the advantage that an animal enjoys in having a
-double line of ancestors. We might as well say, as
-L. Errera has pointed out, that the inundations of the
-Nile occur in order to bring fertility to Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>We must not therefore depreciate the marvellous
-work which has emancipated modern physiology from
-the tutelage of early theories. The witnesses of this
-revolution appreciated its importance. One of them
-remarked as follows, on the appearance of <i>l’Introduction
-à la médecine expérimentale</i>, which contained,
-however, only a portion of the theory:—“Nothing
-more luminous, more complete, or more profound, has
-ever been written upon the true principles of an art so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
-difficult as that of experiment. This book is scarcely
-known because it is on a level to which few people
-nowadays attain. The influence it will have on medical
-science, on its progress, and on its very language,
-will be enormous. I cannot now prove my assertion,
-but the reading of this book will leave so strong an
-impression that I cannot help thinking that a new
-spirit will at once inspire these splendid researches.”
-This was said by Pasteur in 1866. That is what he
-thought of the work of his senior and his rival, at the
-moment when he himself was about to inspire those
-“splendid researches” with the movement of reform,
-the importance and the consequences of which have
-no equivalent in the history of science. By their
-discoveries and their teaching, by their examples and
-their principles, Claude Bernard and Pasteur have
-succeeded in emancipating a portion of the domain of
-vital facts from the direct intervention of hypothetical
-agents and first causes. They were compelled, however,
-to leave to philosophical speculation, to directing
-forces, to animism, to vitalism, an immense provisory
-field, the field which corresponds to the functions of
-generation and of development, to the life of the
-species and to its variations. Here we find them
-again in various disguises.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_II">BOOK II.<br />
-
-
-<small>THE DOCTRINE OF ENERGY AND THE LIVING
-WORLD.</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Summary: General Ideas of Life.—Elementary Life.—Chapter
-I. Energy in General.—Chapter II. Energy in Biology.—Chapter
-III. Alimentary Energetics.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">GENERAL IDEAS OF LIFE. ELEMENTARY LIFE.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Life is the Sum-total of the Phenomena Common
-to all Living Beings. Elementary Life.</i>—Living
-beings differ more in form and configuration than
-in their manner of being. They are distinguished
-more by their anatomy than by their physiology.
-There are, in fact, phenomena common to all, from
-the highest to the lowest. This is because there is
-that similar or identical foundation, that <i>quid commune</i>
-which has enabled us to apply to them the common
-name of “living beings.” Claude Bernard gave to
-this sum-total of manifestations common to all (nutrition,
-reproduction) the name of <i>elementary life</i>. To
-him <i>general physiology</i> was <i>the study of elementary
-life</i>; the two expressions were equivalent, and they
-were equivalent to a longer formula which the
-illustrious biologist has given as a title to one of
-his most celebrated works—<i>The Study of the
-Phenomena Common to all Living Beings, Animals,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
-and Plants</i>. From this point of view each being is
-distinguished from another being as a given <i>individual</i>
-and as a particular <i>species</i>; but all are in some way
-alike and thus resemble one another: common life,
-elementary life, the essential phenomena of life; it is
-<i>life itself</i>.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>The manifestations of life may therefore be regarded
-from the point of view of what is most general among
-them. As we go down the scale of anatomical organization,
-as we pass from apparatus (circulatory,
-digestive, respiratory, nervous) to the <i>organs</i> which
-compose them, from the organs to the <i>tissues</i>, and
-finally from the tissues to the <i>anatomical elements</i> or
-<i>cells</i> of which they are formed, we approach that
-common, physiological dynamism which is <i>elementary
-life</i>, but we do not actually reach it. The cell, the
-anatomical element, is still a complicated structure.
-The elementary fact is further from us and lower
-down. It is in the living matter, in the molecule of
-this matter, and there we must seek it.</p>
-
-<p>Galen gave in days gone by as the object of
-researches on life, the knowledge of the use of the
-different organs of the animal machine; “de usu
-partium.” Later, Bichat assigned to them as their
-end the determination of the <i>properties of tissues</i>.
-Modern anatomists and zoologists try to reach the
-constituent element of these tissue—the cell. Their
-dream is to construct a <i>cellular physiology</i>, a <i>physiological
-cytology</i>; but we must go further than that.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span></p>
-<p><i>General Physiology, Cellular Physiology, the
-Energetics of Living Beings.</i>—General physiology,
-as was taught by Pflüger and his school, claims
-to go deeper down than the apparatus, or the
-organ, or even the cell. As in the case of
-physics, general physiology endeavours to reach,
-and really does in many cases reach, as far as
-the molecule. It is not cellular, it is <i>molecular</i>.
-Already, in fact, the efforts of modern science have
-succeeded in penetrating into the most general phenomena
-of the living being—those attributable to living
-matter, or, to speak more clearly, those which result
-from the play of the universal laws of matter at work
-in this particular medium which is the organized
-being.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Mayer and Helmholtz have the honour of
-having set physiology in the right road. They
-founded <i>the energetics of living beings</i>—<i>i.e.</i>, they
-regarded the phenomena of life from the point of
-view of energy, which is the factor of all the phenomena
-of the universe.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I_2">CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-<small>ENERGY IN GENERAL.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Origin of the Idea of Energy.—The Phenomena of Nature bring
-into play only two Elements, Matter and Energy.—§ 1.
-Matter.—§ 2. Energy.—§ 3. Mechanical Energy.—§ 4.
-Thermal Energy.—§ 5. Chemical Energy.—§ 6. The Transformations
-of Energy.—§ 7. The Principles of Energetics.—The
-Principle of the Conservation of Energy.—§ 8. Carnot’s
-Principle.—The Degradation of Energy.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><i>Origin of the Idea of Energy.</i>—A new term, namely
-<i>energy</i>, has been for some years introduced into natural
-science, and has ever since assumed a more and more
-important place. It is owing to the English physicists,
-and especially to the English electrical engineers, that
-this expression has made its way into technology, an
-expression which is part and parcel of both languages,
-and which has the same meaning in both. The idea
-it expresses is, in fact, of infinite value in industrial
-applications, and that is why its use has gradually
-spread and become generalized. But it is not merely
-a practical idea. It is above all a theoretical idea of
-capital importance to pure theory. It has become
-the point of departure of a science, <i>energetics</i>, which,
-although born but yesterday, already claims to
-embrace, co-ordinate, and blend within itself all the
-other sciences of physical and living nature, which the
-imperfection of our knowledge alone had hitherto
-kept distinct and apart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span></p>
-
-<p>On the threshold of this new science we find inscribed
-<i>the principle of the conservation of energy</i>,
-which has been presented to us by some as Nature’s
-supreme law, and which we may say dominates
-natural philosophy. Its discovery marked a new era
-and accomplished a profound revolution in our conception
-of the universe. It is due to a doctor, Robert
-Mayer, who practised in a little town in Wurtemberg,
-and who formulated the new principle in 1842, and
-afterwards developed its consequences in a series of
-publications between 1845 and 1851. They remained
-almost unknown until Helmholtz, in his celebrated
-memoir on the conservation of force, brought them to
-light and gave them the importance they deserved.
-From that time forward the name of the doctor of
-Heilbronn, until then obscure, has taken its place
-among the most honoured names in the history of
-science.<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span></p>
-<p>As for <i>energetics</i>, of which thermodynamics is only
-a section, it is agreed that even if it cannot forthwith
-absorb mechanics, astronomy, physics, chemistry, and
-physiology, and build up that general science which
-will be in the future the one and only science of
-nature, it furnishes a preparation for that ideal state,
-and is a first step in the ascent to definite progress.</p>
-
-<p>Here I propose to expound these new ideas, in so
-far as they contain anything universally accessible;
-and in the second place, I propose to show their
-application to physiology—that is to say, to point out
-their rôle and their influence in the phenomena of
-life.</p>
-
-<p><i>Postulate: the Phenomena of Nature bring into
-play only two Elements, Matter and Energy.</i>—If we
-try to account for the phenomena of the universe,
-we must admit with most physicists that they
-bring into play two elements, and two elements only;
-namely, <i>matter</i> and <i>energy</i>. All manifestations are
-exhibited in one or other of these two forms. This,
-we may say, is the postulate of experimental science.</p>
-
-<p>Just as gold, lead, oxygen, the metalloids, and the
-metals are different kinds of matter, so it has been
-recognized that sound, light, heat, and generally, the
-imponderable agents of the days of early physics, are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
-different varieties of energy. The first of these ideas
-is older and more familiar to us, but it has not for that
-reason a more certain existence. Energy is objective
-reality for the same reason that matter is. The
-latter certainly appears more tangible and more easily
-grasped by the senses. But, upon reflection, we are
-assured that the best proof of their existence, in both
-cases, is given by the law of their conservation—that
-is to say, their persistence in subsisting.</p>
-
-<p>The objective existence of matter and that of
-energy will therefore be taken here as a postulate of
-physical science. Metaphysicians may discuss them.
-We have but little room for such a discussion.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ I. <span class="smcap">Matter.</span></h4>
-
-<p>It is certainly difficult to give a definition of
-matter which will satisfy both physicists and metaphysicians.</p>
-
-<p><i>Mechanical Explanation of the Universe. Matter is
-Mass.</i>—Physicists have a tendency to consider all
-natural phenomena from the point of view of mechanics.
-They believe that there is a mechanical explanation
-of the universe. They are always on the look out for
-it, implicitly or explicitly. They endeavour to reduce
-each category of physical facts to the type of the facts
-of mechanics. They have made up their minds to see
-nowhere anything but the play of motion and force.
-Astronomy is celestial mechanics. Acoustics is the
-mechanics of the vibratory movements of the air or of
-sonorous bodies. Physical optics has become the
-mechanics of the undulations of the ether, after having
-been the mechanics of emission—a wonderful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
-mechanics which represents exactly all the phenomena
-of light, and furnishes us with a perfect objective
-image of it. Heat, in its turn, has been reduced to a
-mode of motion, and thermodynamics claims to embrace
-all its manifestations. As early as 1812, Sir
-Humphry Davy wrote as follows:—“The immediate
-cause of heat is motion, and the laws of transmission
-are precisely the same as those of the transmission
-of motion.” From that time forth, this conception
-developed into what is really a science. The constitution
-of gases has been conceived by means of two
-elements—particles, and the motions of these particles,
-determined in the strictest detail. And finally, in spite
-of the difficulties of the representation of electrical and
-magnetic phenomena after Ampère and before Maxwell
-and Hertz, physicists have been able to announce in the
-second half of the nineteenth century the unity of the
-physical forces realized in and by mechanics. From
-that time forth, all phenomena have been conceived
-as motion or modes of motion, only differing essentially
-one from the other in so far as motions may
-differ—that is to say, in the masses of the moving
-particles, their velocities, and their trajectories. The
-external world has appeared essentially homogeneous;
-it has fallen a prize to mechanics. Above all, there
-is heterogeneity in ourselves. It is in the brain,
-which responds to the nervous influx engendered by
-the longitudinal vibration of the air, by the specific
-sensation of sound, which responds to the transverse
-vibration of the ether by a luminous sensation, and in
-general to each form of motion by an irreducible
-specific sensation.</p>
-
-<p>Forty years have passed since the mechanical explanation
-of the universe reached its definite and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
-perfect form. It dominates physics under the name
-of the <i>theory of kinetic energy</i>. The minds of men in
-our own time are so strongly impregnated with this
-idea that most scientists of ordinary culture get no
-glimpse of the world of phenomena but by means of
-this conception. And yet it is only an hypothesis.
-But it is so simple, so intuitive, and appears to be so
-thoroughly verified by experiment, that we have
-ceased to recognize its arbitrary and unnecessarily
-contingent character. Many physicists from this
-standpoint consider the kinetic theory as an imperishable
-monument.</p>
-
-<p>However, as in the case of H. Poincaré, the most
-eminent physicists and mathematicians are not the
-dupes of this system; and without failing to recognize
-the immense services which it has rendered to science,
-they are perfectly well aware that it is only a system,
-and that there may be other systems. Certain among
-them, such as Ostwald, Mach, and Duhem, believe
-that the monument is showing signs of decay, and at
-present the theory is opposed by another theory—namely,
-the theory of <i>energy</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The theory of <i>energy</i> is usually considered and presented
-as a consequence of the kinetic theory; but it
-is perfectly independent of it, and it is, in fact, without
-relying on the kinetic theory, without assuming the
-unity of physical forces, which are combined in molecular
-mechanics, that we shall expound the general
-system.</p>
-
-<p>This is not the point at issue for the moment. It is
-not a question of deciding the reality or the merit of
-this or that mechanical explanation; it is a question
-of something more general, because upon it depends
-the <i>idea of matter</i>. It is a question of knowing if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
-there are any explanations other than mechanical.
-The illustrious English physicist, Lord Kelvin, does
-not seem willing to admit this. “I am never satisfied,”
-he said, in his <i>Molecular Mechanics</i>, “until I have
-made a mechanical model of the object. If I can
-make this model, I understand; if I cannot, I do not
-understand.”</p>
-
-<p>This tendency of so vigorous a mind to be content
-only with mechanical explanations, has been
-that of the majority of scientific men up to the
-present day, and from it has arisen the scientific idea
-of matter.</p>
-
-<p>What is matter, in fact, to the student of mechanics?
-It is mass. All mechanics is constructed of masses
-and forces. Laplace said: “The mass of a body is the
-sum of its material points.” To Poisson, mass is the
-quantity of matter of which a body is composed.
-Matter is therefore confused with mass. Now, mass
-is the characteristic of the motion of a body under the
-action of a given force; it defines obedience or resistance
-to the causes of motion; it is the <i>mechanical
-parameter</i>; it is the co-efficient proper to every mobile
-body; it is the first <i>invariant</i> of which a conception
-has been established by science.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, the word matter appears to be used in
-other senses by physicists, but this is only apparently
-so. They have but broadened the idea of the
-mechanicians. They have characterized matter by
-the whole series of phenomenal manifestations which
-are <i>proportional to mass</i>, such as weight, volume,
-chemical properties—so that we may say that the
-notion of matter does not intervene scientifically with
-a different signification from that of mass.</p>
-
-<p><i>Two kinds of Matter. Ponderable and Imponder<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>able.</i>—In
-physics we distinguish between two kinds
-of matter—ponderable, obeying the law of universal
-attraction or weight, and imponderable matter or
-ether, which we assume to exist and to escape the
-action of that force. Ether has no weight, or extremely
-little weight. It is material in so far as it
-has mass. It is its mass which confers existence on
-it from the mechanical point of view—a logical existence,
-inferred from the necessity of explaining the
-propagation of heat, light, or electricity.</p>
-
-<p>It may be observed that the use of mass really
-comes to bringing another element, force, to intervene,
-and we shall see that force is connected with energy;
-thus it comes to defining matter indirectly by energy.
-The two fundamental elements are not therefore
-irreducible; on the contrary, they should be one and
-the same thing.</p>
-
-<p><i>Energy is the only Objective Reality.</i>—This fusion
-into one will become more evident still when we
-examine the different kinds of energy, each of which
-exactly corresponds to one of the aspects of active
-matter. Shall we define matter by <i>extension</i>, by the
-portion of space it occupies, as certain philosophers
-do? The physicist will answer that space is only
-known to us by the expenditure of energy necessary
-to penetrate it (the activity of our different senses).
-And then what is weight? It is <i>energy of position</i>
-(universal attraction). And so with the other attributes.
-So that if matter were separated from the
-energetic phenomena by means of which it is revealed
-to us—weight or energy of position, impenetrability
-or energy of volume, chemical properties or chemical
-energies, mass or capacity for kinetic energy—the very
-idea of matter would vanish. And that comes to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
-saying that fundamentally there is only one objective
-reality, <i>energy</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Philosophical Point of View.</i>—But from the philosophical
-point of view are there objective realities?
-That is a wider question which throws doubt upon
-matter itself, and which it is not our place to investigate
-here. A metaphysician may always discuss and
-deny the existence of the objective world. It may be
-maintained that man knows nothing beyond his
-sensations, and that he only objectivates them and
-projects them outside himself by a kind of hereditary
-illusion. We must avoid taking sides in all these
-difficulties. Physics for the moment ignores them—<i>i.e.</i>,
-postpones their consideration.</p>
-
-<p>In a first approximation we agree to consider
-ponderable matter only. Chemistry acquaints us
-with its different forms. They are the different
-simple bodies, metalloids, metals, and the compound
-bodies, mineral or organic. Hence we may say that
-chemistry is <i>the history of the transformations of
-matter</i>. From the time of Lavoisier this science has
-followed the transformations of matter, balance in
-hand, and ascertains that they are accomplished
-without change of weight.</p>
-
-<p><i>Law of the Conservation of Matter.</i>—Imagine a
-system of bodies enclosed in a closed vessel, and the
-vessel placed in the scale of a balance. All the
-chemical reactions capable of completely modifying
-the state of this system have no effect upon the scale
-of the balance. The total weight is the same before,
-during, and after. It is precisely this equality of
-weight which is expressed in all the equations with
-which treatises on chemistry are filled.</p>
-
-<p>From a higher point of view we recognize here, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
-this <i>law of Lavoisier</i> or of the <i>conservation of weight</i>,
-the verification of one of the great laws of nature
-which we extend to every kind of matter, ponderable
-or not. It is the <i>law of the conservation of matter</i>,
-or again, of the indestructibility of matter—“Nothing
-is lost, nothing is created, all is transformation.” This
-is exactly what Tait held, this impossibility of creating
-or destroying matter which at the same time is a
-proof of its objective existence. This indestructibility
-of ponderable matter is at the same time the fundamental
-basis of chemistry. Chemical analysis could
-not exist if the chemist were not sure that the contents
-of his vessel at the end of his operations ought to be
-quantitatively, that is to say by weight, the same as at
-the beginning, and during the whole course of the
-experiment.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span></p>
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">Energy.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>The Idea of Energy Derived from the Kinetic
-Theory.</i>—The notion of energy is not less clear than
-the notion of matter, it is only more novel to our
-minds. We are led to it by the mechanical conception
-which now dominates the whole of physics, <i>the kinetic
-conception</i>, according to which in the sensible universe
-there are no phenomena but those of motion. Heat,
-sound, light, with all their manifestations so complex
-and so varied, may, according to this theory, be
-explained by motion. But then, if outside the brain
-and the mind which has consciousness and which
-perceives, Nature really offers us only motion, it
-follows that all phenomena are essentially homogenous
-among one another, and that their apparent
-heterogeneity is only the result of the intervention of
-our sensorium. They differ only in so far as movements
-are capable of differing—that is to say, in
-velocity, mass, and trajectory. There is something
-fundamental which is common to them and this <i>quid
-commune</i> is <i>energy</i>. Thus the idea of energy may be
-derived from the kinetic conception, and this is the
-usual method of exposition.</p>
-
-<p>This method has the great inconvenience of causing
-an idea which lays claim to reality to depend upon an
-hypothesis. And besides that, it gives a view of it
-which may be false. It makes of the different forms
-of energy something more than varieties which are
-equivalent to one another. It makes of them <i>one and
-the same thing</i>. It blends into one the modalities of
-energy and mechanical energy. For the experimental
-idea of equivalence, the kinetic theory substitutes the
-arbitrary idea of the equality, the blending, and the
-fundamental homogeneity of phenomena. This no
-doubt is how the founders of energetics, Helmholtz,
-Clausius, and Lord Kelvin understood things. But a
-more attentive study and a more scrupulous determination
-not to go beyond the teaching of experiment
-should compel us to reform this manner of looking at
-it. And it is Ostwald’s merit that, after Hamilton, he
-insisted on this truth—that the various kinds of
-physical magnitudes furnished by the observation of
-phenomena are different and characteristic. In particular,
-we may distinguish among them those which
-belong to the order of <i>scalar</i> magnitudes and others
-which are of the order of <i>vector</i> magnitudes.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Idea of Energy derived from the Connection
-of Phenomena.</i>—The idea of energy is not absolutely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
-connected with the kinetic theory, and it should not
-be exposed therefore to the vicissitudes experienced
-by that theory. It is of a higher order of truth. We
-can derive it from a less unsafe idea, namely that of
-the <i>connection of natural phenomena</i>. To conceive it
-we must get accustomed to this primordial truth, that
-there are no <i>phenomena isolated</i> in time and space.
-This statement contains the whole point of view of
-energetics.</p>
-
-<p>The physics of early days had only an incomplete
-view of things, for it considered phenomena independently
-the one of the other.</p>
-
-<p>Phenomena for purposes of analysis were classed in
-separate and distinct compartments: weight, heat,
-electricity, magnetism, light. Each phenomenon was
-studied without reference to that it succeeded or that
-which should follow. Nothing could be more artificial
-than such a method as this. In fact, there is a
-sequence in everything, everything is connected up,
-<i>everything precedes and succeeds in nature</i>—in nature
-there are only series. The isolated fact without
-antecedent or consequent is a myth. Each
-phenomenal manifestation is in solidarity with
-another. It is a metamorphosis of one state of
-things into another. It is transformation. It implies
-a state of things anterior to that which we are
-observing, a phenomenal form which has preceded
-the form of the present moment.</p>
-
-<p>Now there exists a link between the anterior state
-and the succeeding state—that is to say, between the
-new form which is appearing and the preceding form
-which is disappearing. The science of energy shows
-that something has passed from the first condition to
-the second, but covering itself as it were with a new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
-garment; in a word, that something active and
-permanent subsists in the passage from one condition
-to another, and that what has changed is only the
-aspect, the appearance.</p>
-
-<p>This constant something which is perceived beneath
-the inconstancy and the variety of forms, and which
-circulates in a certain manner from the antecedent
-phenomenon to its successor, is energy.</p>
-
-<p>But still this is only a very vague view, and it may
-seem arbitrary. It may be made more exact by
-examples borrowed from the different categories of
-natural phenomena. There are energetic modalities
-in relation with the different phenomenal modalities.
-The different orders of phenomena which may be
-presented—mechanical, chemical, thermal, electrical—give
-rise to corresponding forms of energy.</p>
-
-<p>When to a mechanical phenomenon succeeds a
-mechanical, thermal, or electrical phenomenon, we
-say, embracing transformation in its totality, that
-there has been a transformation of mechanical energy
-into another form of energy, mechanical, thermal, or
-electrical, etc.</p>
-
-<p>This idea becomes more precise if we examine
-successively each of these cases and the laws which
-regulate them.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 3. <span class="smcap">Mechanical Energy.</span></h4>
-
-<p>Mechanical energy is the simplest and the oldest
-known.</p>
-
-<p><i>Mechanical Elements: Time, Space, Force, Work,
-Power.</i>—Mechanical phenomena may be considered
-under two fundamental conditions—<i>time</i> and <i>space</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
-which are, in a measure, logical elements, to which
-may be joined a third element, itself experimental,
-having its foundations in our sensations—namely,
-<i>force</i>, <i>work</i>, or <i>power</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The ideas of force, work, and power, are drawn from
-the experience man has of his muscular activity.
-Nevertheless the greatest mathematical minds from
-from Descartes to Leibniz have been obliged to define
-and explain them clearly.</p>
-
-<p><i>Force</i>.—The prototype of force is weight, universal
-attraction. Experiment shows us that every body
-falls as long as no obstacle opposes its fall. This is
-so universal a property of matter that it serves to
-define it. The <i>force</i>, weight, is therefore the name
-given to the cause of the fall of the bodies.</p>
-
-<p>Force in general is the <i>cause of motion</i>. Hence
-force exists only in so far as there is motion. There
-would be no force without action. This is Newton’s
-point of view. It did not prevail, and was not the
-point of view of his successors. The name of force
-has been given not only to the cause which produces
-or modifies motion, but to the cause which resists and
-prevents it. And then not only have <i>forces in action</i>
-been considered (dynamics), but <i>forces at rest</i> (statics).
-Now, to Newton there was no statics. Forces do not
-continue to exist when they produce no motion; they
-are not in equilibrium, they are destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>The idea of force therefore is a metaphysical idea
-which contains the idea of <i>cause</i>. But it becomes
-experimental immediately it is looked upon as resisting
-motion, according to the point of view of Newton’s
-opponents. Its foundations lie in the muscular
-activity of man.</p>
-
-<p>Man can support a burden without bending or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>
-moving. This burden is a weight—that is to say, a
-mass acted on by the force of weight. Man resists
-this force so as to prevent its effect. If it were not
-annihilated by man’s <i>effort</i>, this effect would be the
-motion or the fall of the heavy body. The <i>effort</i> and
-the force are thus in equilibrium, and the effort is
-equal and opposite to the force. It gives to the man
-who exercises it the conscious idea of <i>force</i>. Thus we
-know of force through effort. Every clear idea that
-we can have of <i>force</i> springs from the observation of
-our muscular effort.</p>
-
-<p>The notion of force is thus an anthropomorphic
-notion. When an effect is produced in nature outside
-human intervention, we say that it is by something
-analogous to what in man is effort, and we give to this
-something a name which is also analogous, namely
-<i>force</i>. To give a name to <i>effort</i> and to compare
-efforts in magnitude, we need not know all about
-them, nor need we know in what they essentially
-consist, of what series of physical, chemical, and
-physiological actions they are the consequence. And
-so it is with force. It is a resistance to motion or
-the cause of motion. This cause of motion may be
-an anterior motion (kinetic force). It may be an
-anterior physical energy (physical and chemical
-forces).</p>
-
-<p>Forces are measured in the C.G.S. system by comparing
-them with the unit called the Dyne.<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> In
-practice they are compared with a much larger unit—the
-gramme, which is the weight, the force acting on
-a unit of mass of one centimetre of distilled water at
-a temperature of 4° C.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Work.</i>—The muscular activity of man may be
-brought into play in yet another manner. When we
-employ workmen, as Carnot said in his <i>Essai sur
-l’équilibre et le mouvement</i>, it is not a question of
-“knowing the burdens that they can carry without
-moving from their position,” but rather the burdens
-that they can carry from one point to another. For
-instance, a workman may have to lift the water from
-the bottom of a well to a given height, and the case is
-the same for the animals we employ. “This is what
-we understand by force when we say that the force of
-a horse is equal to the force of seven men. We do
-not mean that if seven men were pulling in one
-direction and the horse in another that there would be
-equilibrium, but that in a piece of work the horse
-alone would lift, for example, as much water from the
-bottom of a well to a given height as the seven men
-together would do in the same time.”<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<p>Here, then, we have to do with the second form of
-muscular activity, which is called in mechanics, “work”—at
-least, if in the preceding quotation we attach no
-particular importance to the words “in the same
-time,” and retain the employment of muscular activity
-only “under constant conditions.” Mechanical work
-is compared with the elevation of a certain weight to a
-certain height. It is measured by the product of the
-force (understood in the sense in which it was used
-just now—that is to say, as causing or resisting motion)
-and the displacement due to this motion. The unit is
-the Kilogrammetre—that is to say, the work necessary
-to lift a weight of one kilogramme to the height of
-one metre.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span></p>
-<p>It will be remarked that the idea of time does not
-intervene in our estimation of work. The notion of
-work is independent of the ideas of velocity and
-time. “The greater or less time that we take to do
-a piece of work is of no more assistance in measuring
-its magnitude than the number of years that
-a man may have taken to grow rich or to ruin himself
-can help to estimate the present amount of his
-fortune.”</p>
-
-<p>Going back to Carnot’s comparison, an employer
-who employed his workmen only on piece-work,—that
-is to say, who would only care about the amount of
-work done, and would be indifferent to the time that
-they took over it,—would be at the same point of view
-as the advocates of the mechanical theory. M.
-Bouasse, whom we follow here, has remarked that this
-idea of mechanical work may be traced back to
-Descartes. His predecessors, and Galileo in particular,
-had quite a different idea of the way in which
-mechanical activity should be measured; and so,
-among the mathematicians of the eighteenth century,
-Leibniz and, later, John Bernoulli were almost alone
-in looking at it from this point of view.</p>
-
-<p><i>Energy.</i>—Work thus understood is <i>mechanical
-energy</i>. It represents the lasting and objective effect
-of the mechanical activity independent of all the circumstances
-under which it was carried out. The
-same work may be done under very different conditions
-of time, velocity, force, and displacement.
-It is therefore the permanent element in the variety of
-mechanical aspects. Work, for example, in the
-collision of bodies when the motion of a body appears
-to be destroyed on impact with another, reappears as
-indestructible <i>vis viva</i>. This, then, is exactly what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-we call <i>energy</i>; and if we agree to give it this name,
-we may say that the conservation of energy is
-invariable throughout all mechanical transformations.</p>
-
-<p><i>Distinction between Work and Force, and between
-Energy and Work.</i>—The history of mechanics shows
-us what trouble has been taken and what efforts have
-been made to distinguish work (now mechanical
-energy) from force.</p>
-
-<p>It is worth while insisting on this distinction. It
-could be easily shown that force has no objective existence.
-It has no duration, no permanence. It does
-not survive its effect, motion. There is no conservation
-of force. It passes instantly from infinity to
-zero. It is a <i>vectorial magnitude</i>—that is to say, it
-involves the idea of direction. Work, on the other
-hand, is the real element; it is a <i>scalar magnitude</i>
-involving the idea of opposite directions, indicated by
-the signs + and-. Work and force are heterogeneous
-magnitudes. Energy, and this is the only
-characteristic by which it is distinguished from work,
-is an <i>absolute magnitude</i> to which we may not even
-give opposite signs.</p>
-
-<p>An example may perhaps throw these characteristics
-into relief—namely, the hydraulic press. We have on
-the platform exactly the work which has been done
-on the other side. The machine has only made it
-change its form. On the contrary, the force has been
-infinitely multiplied. We may, in fact, consider an
-infinite number of surfaces equal to that of a small
-piston, placed and orientated at will within the liquid;
-each, according to Pascal’s principle, will support a
-pressure equal to that which is exercised. As soon as
-we cease to support it, this infinity falls at once to zero.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>
-Now what real thing could pass instantly from infinity
-to zero?</p>
-
-<p>That skilful and very able physiologist, M. Chauveau,
-has endeavoured to use the same term <i>energy of contraction</i>
-for the two phenomena of effort (force) and
-work. It seems, however, from the point of view of
-the expenditure imposed on the organism, that these
-two modes of activity, <i>static contraction</i> (effort), and
-<i>dynamical contraction</i> (work), may be, in fact, perfectly
-comparable. But although this manner of conceiving
-the phenomena may certainly be exact, and may be
-of great value, the idea of force must none the less
-remain distinct from that of work. The persistence
-of the author in violating established custom in this
-connection has prevented him from enabling mechanicians
-and even some physiologists to understand and
-accept very useful truths.</p>
-
-<p><i>Power.</i>—The idea of mechanical <i>power</i> differs from
-those of force and work. The idea of time must
-intervene. It is not sufficient, in fact, in order to
-characterize a mechanical operation, to point to the
-task accomplished. It may be necessary or useful to
-know how much time it required. This is true,
-especially when we are concerned with the circumstances
-as well as the results of the performance of
-the work; and this is the case when we wish to
-compare machines. We say that the machine which
-does the work in the shortest space of time is
-the most powerful. The unit of power is the Kilogrammetre-second—that
-is to say, the power of a
-machine which does a kilogrammetre in a second. In
-manufactures we generally employ a unit 75 times
-greater than this—a <i>horse-power</i>. This is the power of
-a machine which does 75 kilogrammetres a second.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
-In the electrical industry we measure by <i>kilowatts</i>,
-which are equivalent to 1.36 horse power, or by a <i>watt</i>,
-a unit a thousand times smaller.</p>
-
-<p>Let us add that the power of a machine is not an
-absolute and permanent characteristic of the machine.
-It depends on the circumstances under which the
-work is carried out, and that is why, in particular, we
-cannot appreciate the power of the human machine in
-comparison with industrial machines. Experience
-has shown that the mechanical power of living beings
-depends upon the nature of the work they are doing.
-In this connection we may mention some very interesting
-experiments communicated to the Institute, in
-the year VI., by the celebrated physicist, Coulomb. A
-man of the average weight of 70 kilogrammes was
-made to climb the stairs of a house 20 metres high.
-He ascended at the rate of 14 metres a minute, and
-he performed this daily task for four effective hours.
-This work was equivalent to 235,000 kilogrammetres.
-But if, instead of climbing without a burden, the same
-man had had to carry a load, the result would have
-been quite different. Coulomb’s workman took up
-six loads of wood a day to a height of 12 metres
-in 66 journeys, corresponding to a maximum
-work of 109,000 instead of 235,000 kilogrammetres.
-The mechanical power of the human machine
-thus varied in the two cases in the ratio of 235
-to 109.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Two Aspects of Mechanical Energy: Kinetic
-and Potential.</i>—Energy, or mechanical work, may
-present itself in two forms—kinetic energy, corresponding
-to the mechanical phenomenon which has
-really taken place, and <i>potential energy</i>, or the energy
-of reserve.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span></p>
-
-<p>A body which has been raised to a certain
-height will, if it be let fall, perform work which
-can be exactly measured in kilogrammetres by the
-product of its weight into the height it falls. Such
-work may be utilized in many ways. In this way,
-for instance, public clocks are worked. Now, as long
-as the clock-weight is raised and not let go, and
-as long as it is motionless, the physics of early
-days would say that there is nothing to discuss;
-the phenomenon is the fall; it is going to take
-place, but at the present moment there has been
-no fall.</p>
-
-<p>In energetics we do not reason in this way. We
-say that the body possesses a <i>capacity for work</i> which
-will be manifested when the opportunity arises, a
-storage of energy, a virtual or <i>potential energy</i>, or
-again, an <i>energy of position</i>, which will be transformed
-into actual energy or real work as soon as the body
-falls.</p>
-
-<p>Let us ask whence this energy arises. It proceeds
-from the previous operation which has raised the
-weight from the surface of the soil to the position it
-occupies. For example, if it is a question of the
-weights of a public clock, which, by its fall, will develop
-in 15 days the work that is necessary to turn the
-wheels, to strike the bell, and to turn the hands,
-this work ought to bring to our minds the exactly equal
-and opposite work done by the clockmaker, who has
-to carry the clock-weight and to lift it up from the
-ground to its point of departure. The work of the
-fall is the faithful counterpart of the work of elevation.
-The phenomenon has therefore in reality two phases.
-We find in the second exactly what was put into the
-first, the same quantity of energy—<i>i.e.</i>, the same work.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
-Between these phases comes the intermediary phase
-of which we say that it is a period of virtual <i>or potential
-energy</i>. This is a way of remembering in some
-measure the preceding phenomenon—<i>i.e.</i>, the work of
-lifting up, and of indicating the phenomena which will
-follow—<i>i.e.</i>, the work of the fall. And thus we connect
-by our thoughts the present situation with the antecedent
-and with the consequent position, and it is
-from this consideration of continuity alone that the
-conception of energy springs—that is to say, of something
-which is conserved and is found to be permanent
-in the succession of phenomena. This energy of
-which we lose no trace does not appear to us new
-when it is manifested. Our imagination eventually
-materializes the idea of it. We follow it as a real
-thing, having an objective existence, which is asleep
-during the latent potential period, and is revealed or
-manifested later.</p>
-
-<p>Among other examples, that of the coiled spring
-which is unwound is particularly suitable for showing
-this fundamental character of the idea of
-mechanical energy, an idea which is the clearest
-of all. Machines are only transformers and not
-creators of mechanical energy. They only change
-one form into another.</p>
-
-<p>In the same way, too, a stream of water or the
-torrent of a mountainous region may be utilized for
-setting in motion the wheels and the turbines of the
-factories situated in the valley. Its descent produces
-the mechanical work which would be a creation <i>ex
-nihilo</i> if we do not connect the phenomenon with its
-antecedents. We look on it as a simple restitution, if
-we think of the origin of this water which has been
-transported and lifted in some way to its level by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
-play of natural forces—evaporation under the action
-of the sun, the formation of clouds, transport by winds,
-etc. And we here again see that a complex energy
-has been transformed, in its first phenomenal condition,
-into <i>potential energy</i>, and that this potential
-energy is always expended in the second phase without
-loss or gain.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Different Kinds of Mechanical Energy; of
-Motion, of Position.</i>—There are as many forms of
-energy as there are distinct categories of phenomena
-or of varieties in these categories. Physicists distinguish
-between two kinds of mechanical energy—energy
-of motion and energy of position. The energy
-of position presents several variants—energy of distance,
-which corresponds to force: of this we have just
-spoken; energy of surface, which corresponds to particular
-phenomena of surface tension; and energy of
-volume which corresponds to the phenomena of pressure.
-Energy of motion, <i>kinetic energy</i>, is measured in two
-ways: as work (the product of force and displacement,
-W = <i>fs</i>) or as <i>vis viva</i> (half the product of the mass
-into the square of the velocity U = <i>mv<sup>2</sup></i>∕2.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span></p>
-
-<h4>§ 4. <span class="smcap">Thermal Energy.</span></h4>
-
-<p>In the elements of physics it is nowadays taught
-that mechanical work may be transformed into heat,
-and reciprocally that heat may be transformed into
-mechanical work. Friction, impact, pressure, and
-expansion destroy or annihilate the mechanical energy
-communicated to a body or to the organs of a
-machine. With the disappearance of motion we
-note the appearance of heat. Examples abound.
-The tyre of a wheel is heated by the friction of the
-road. Portions of steel are warmed by the impact
-with stone, as in the old flint and steel. Two pieces
-of ice were melted by Davy, who rubbed them one
-against the other, the external temperature being
-below zero. The boiling of a mass of water caused
-by a drill was noticed by Rumford in 1790, during
-the manufacture of bronze cannon. Metal, beaten on
-an anvil, is heated. A leaden ball flattened against a
-resisting obstacle shows increase of temperature carried
-to the point of fusion. Finally, and symbolically, we
-have the origin of fire in the fable of Prometheus, by
-rubbing together the pieces of wood which the Hindoos
-called <i>pramantha</i>. Correlation is constant between
-the thermal and mechanical phenomena, a correlation
-that becomes evident as soon as observers have ceased
-to restrict themselves to the determination in isolation
-of the one fact or the other. There is never any real
-destruction of heat and motion in the true sense of the
-word; what disappears in one form appears again in
-another; just as if something indestructible were appearing
-in a series of successive disguises. This
-impression is translated into words when we speak<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
-of the metamorphosis of mechanical into thermal
-energy.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Mechanical Equivalent of Heat.</i>—The interpretation
-assumes a remarkable character of precision,
-which at once strikes the mind when physics applies
-to these transformations the almost absolute accuracy
-of its measurements. We then find that the rate of
-exchange is invariable. Transformations of heat into
-motion, and of motion into heat, take place according
-to a rigorous numerical law, which brings into exact
-correspondence the quantity of each. Mechanical
-effect is estimated, as we have seen, by work, that is in
-kilogrammetres. Heat is measured in calories, the
-calorie being the quantity of heat necessary to raise
-from 0°C to 1°C a kilogramme of water (Calorie) or
-one gramme of water (calorie). It is found that
-whatever may be the bodies and the phenomena
-which serve as intermediaries for carrying out this
-transformation, we must always expend 425 kilogrammetres
-to create a Calorie, or expend 0·00234
-Calories to create a kilogrammetre. The number 425
-is the mechanical equivalent of the Calorie, or, as is
-incorrectly stated, of the heat. It is this constant fact
-which constitutes <i>the principle of the equivalence of heat
-and of mechanical work</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 5. <span class="smcap">Chemical Energy.</span></h4>
-
-<p>We cannot yet actually measure chemical activity
-directly, but we know that chemical action may give
-rise to all other phenomenal modalities. It is their
-most ordinary source, and it is to it that industries
-appeal to obtain heat, electricity, and mechanical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
-action. In the steam engine, for instance, the work
-that is received arises from the combustion of carbon
-by the oxygen of the air. This gives rise to the heat
-which vaporizes the water, produces the tension of the
-steam, and ultimately produces the displacement of
-the piston. The theory of the steam engine might be
-reduced to these two propositions: chemical activity
-gives rise to heat, and heat gives rise to motion; or to
-use the language to which the reader by now will be
-accustomed, chemical energy is transformed into
-thermal energy, and that into mechanical energy. It
-is a series of phases and of instantaneous changes, and
-the exchange is always affected according to a fixed
-rate.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Measurement of Chemical Energy.</i>—Our knowledge
-of chemical energy is less advanced than that of
-the energies of heat and sensible motion. We have
-not yet reached the stage of numerical verifications.
-We can only therefore affirm the equivalence of
-chemical and thermal energies without the aid of
-numerical constants, because we do not yet, in the
-present state of science, know how to measure
-chemical energy directly. Other known energies are
-always the product of two factors: the mechanical
-energy of position, or work, is measured by the
-product of the force <i>f</i>, and the displacement <i>s</i>; work
-= <i>fs</i>; the mechanical energy of motion, U = 1∕2<i>mv<sup>2</sup></i>, is
-measured by the product of the mass into half the
-square of the velocity. Thermal energy is measured
-by the product of the temperature and the specific
-heat; electric energy by the product of the quantity
-of electricity (in coulombs) and of the electromotive
-force (in volts). As for chemical energy, we guess
-that it may be valued directly according to Berthollet’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
-system, adopted by the Norwegian chemists, Guldberg
-and Waage, by means of the product of the masses
-and of a force, or co-efficient of affinity, which depends
-on the nature of the substances which are brought together,
-on the temperature, and on the other physical
-circumstances of the reaction. On the other hand,
-the researches of M. Berthelot enable us in many
-cases to obtain an indirect valuation in terms of the
-equivalent heat.</p>
-
-<p><i>Its Two Forms.</i>—It is interesting to note that
-chemical energy may also be regarded from the two
-states of <i>potential</i> and <i>kinetic energy</i>. The coal-oxygen
-system, to burn in the furnace of the steam
-engine, must be primed by preliminary work (local
-ignition), just as the weight that is raised and left
-motionless at a certain height requires a small
-effort to be detached from its support. When this
-condition is fulfilled, energy is at once manifest.
-We must admit that it existed in the latent state, in
-the state of <i>chemical potential energy</i>. Under the
-impulse received, the carbon combines with the
-oxygen and forms carbonic acid, C + 2O becomes
-CO<sub>2</sub>; potential energy is changed into actual chemical
-energy, and immediately afterwards into thermal
-energy. We should have only a very incomplete and
-fragmentary view of the reality of things if we were
-to consider this phenomenon of combustion in isolation.
-We must consider it in connection with what has
-actually created the energy which it is about to
-dissipate. This antecedent fact is the action of the
-sun upon the green leaf. The carbon which burns in
-the furnace of the machine comes from the mine in
-which it was stored in the form of coal—that is to say,
-of a product which was vegetable in its primitive form,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
-and which was formed at the expense of the carbonic
-acid of the air. The plant had separated, at the
-expense of the solar energy, the carbon from the
-oxygen to which it was united in the carbonic acid of
-the atmosphere. It had created the system C + 2O.
-So that the solar energy produces the chemical potential
-energy which was so long before it was utilized.
-Combustion expends this energy in making carbonic
-acid over again.</p>
-
-<p><i>Materialization of Energy.</i>—The fertility of the
-idea of energy is therefore, as we see from all
-these examples, due to the relations it establishes
-between the natural phenomena of which it exhibits
-the necessary relation, destroyed by the excessive
-analysis of early science. It shows us that in the
-world of phenomena there is nothing but transformations
-of energy. And we regard these transformations
-themselves as the circulation of a kind of
-indestructible agent which passes from one form of
-determination to another, as if it were simply putting
-on a fresh disguise. If our intellect requires images
-or symbols to embrace the facts and to grasp their
-relation, it may introduce them here. It will materialize
-energy, it will make of it a kind of imaginary being,
-and confer upon it an objective reality. And for the
-mind, as long as it does not become the dupe of the
-phantom which it itself has created, this is an
-eminently comprehensive artifice which enables us
-to grasp readily the relations between phenomena
-and their bond of affiliation.</p>
-
-<p>The world appears to us then, as we said at the
-outset, constructed with singular symmetry. It offers
-to us nothing but transformations of matter and
-transformations of energy; these two kinds of meta<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>morphoses
-being governed by two laws equally
-inevitable, the conservation of matter and the conservation
-of energy. The first of these laws expresses
-the fact that matter is indestructible, and passes
-from one phenomenal determination to another at
-a rate of equivalence measured by weight; the
-second, that energy is indestructible, and that it
-passes from one phenomenal determination to another
-at a rate of equivalence fixed for each category by
-the discoveries of the physicists.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 6. <span class="smcap">Transformations of Energy.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The idea of energy has become the point of departure
-of a science, <i>Energetics</i>, to the establishment of which
-a large number of contemporary physicists, among
-whom are Ostwald, Le Châtelier, etc., have devoted
-their efforts. It is the study of phenomena, regarded
-from the point of view of <i>energy</i>. I have said that it
-claims to co-ordinate and to embrace all other sciences.</p>
-
-<p>The first object of energetics should be the consideration
-of the different forms of energy at present
-known, their definition and their measurement. This
-is what we have just done in broad outline.</p>
-
-<p>In the second place, each form of energy must be
-regarded with reference to the rest, so as to determine
-if the transformation of this into that is directly
-realizable, and by what means, and, finally, according
-to what rate of equivalence. This new chapter is a
-laborious task which would compel us to traverse the
-whole field of physics.</p>
-
-<p>Of this long examination we need only concern
-ourselves here with three or four results which will be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
-more particularly important in the case of applications
-to living beings. They refer to mechanical energy, to
-the relations of thermal energy and chemical energy,
-to the complete rôle of thermal energy, and finally to
-the extreme adaptability of electrical energy.</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>Transformation of Mechanical Energy.</i>—Mechanical
-energy may change into every other form
-of energy, and all others can change into it, with but
-one exception, that of chemical energy. Mechanical
-effort does not produce chemical combination. What
-we know of the part played by pressure in the reactions
-of dissociation seems at first to contradict
-this assertion. But this is only in appearance. Pressure
-intervenes in these operations only as <i>preliminary
-work</i> or <i>priming</i>, the purpose of which is to bring the
-bodies into contact in the exact state in which they
-must be for the chemical affinities to be able to enter
-into play.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>Transformation of Thermal Energy; Priming.</i>—Thermal
-(or luminous) energy does not change
-directly into chemical energy. In fact, heat and light
-favour and even determine a large number of chemical
-reactions; but if we go down to the foundation of
-things we are not long before we feel assured that
-heat and light only serve in some measure for
-<i>priming</i> for the phenomenon, for preparing the
-chemical action, for bringing the body into the
-physical state (liquid, steam) or to the degree of
-temperature (400° C. for instance, for the combination
-of oxygen and hydrogen) which are the preliminary
-indispensable conditions for the entry upon the scene
-of chemical affinities.</p>
-
-<p>On the contrary, chemical energy may really be
-transformed into thermal energy. We have an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
-instance of this in the reactions which take place
-without the aid of external energy; and again, in
-those very numerous cases which, such as the combustion
-of hydrogen and carbon, or the decomposition
-of explosives, the reactions continue when once primed.
-I may make a further observation apropos of thermal
-and photic energy. These are not two really and
-essentially distinct forms, as was thought in the early
-days of physics. When we consider things objectively,
-there is absolutely no light without heat; light and
-heat are one and the same agent. According as it is
-at this or that degree of its scale of magnitude, it
-makes a stronger impression on the skin (sensation of
-heat) or on the retina (sensation of light) of man and
-animals. The difference may be put down to the
-diversity of the work and not to that of the agent.
-The kinetic theory shows us that the agent is
-qualitatively identical. The words heat and light
-only express the chance of the meeting of the radiant
-agent with a skin and a retina. At the lowest degree
-of activity this agent exerts no action on the terminations
-of the thermal cutaneous nerves, nor on the
-optic nerve-terminations. As this degree is raised
-the former of these nerves are affected (cold, heat) and
-are so to the exclusion of the nerves of vision. Then
-they are both affected (sensation of heat and light),
-and finally, beyond that, sight alone is affected. The
-transformation of one energy into the other is therefore
-here reduced to the possibility of increasing or
-decreasing the intensity of the action of this common
-agent in the exact proportions suitable for passing
-from one of the conditions to the other; and this is
-easy when it is a question of going up the scale in the
-case of light, and, on the contrary, it is not realizable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-directly, that is to say without external assistance,
-when it is a question of going down the scale again, in
-the case of heat.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Heat a Degraded Form of Energy.</i>—We have
-seen that thermal energy is not directly transformed
-into chemical energy. There is yet another restriction
-in the case of this thermal energy if we study the laws
-which govern the circulation and the transformations
-of thermal energy; and the most important comes from
-the impossibility of transporting it from a body at
-a lower temperature to a body at a higher temperature.
-On the whole, and because of these restrictions,
-thermal energy is an imperfect variety of universal
-energy, or, as the English physicists call it, a degraded
-form.</p>
-
-<p>4. <i>Simple Transformations of Electrical Energy. Its
-Intermediary Rôle.</i>—On the other hand, electrical energy
-represents a perfected and infinitely advantageous form
-of this same universal energy, and this explains the vast
-development of its industrial applications within less
-than a century. It is not that it is better known than
-the others in its nature and in the secret of its action.
-On the contrary, there is more dispute than ever as to
-its nature. To some, electricity, which is transported
-and propagated with the speed of light, is a real flux
-of the ether as was taught by Father Secchi, who
-compared it to a current of water in a pipe. It would
-do its work, just as the water of the mill does its
-work by flowing over a wheel or through a turbine.
-Electricity, like water in this case, would not be
-an energy in itself, but a means of transporting
-energy.</p>
-
-<p>To others, such as Clausius, Hertz, and Maxwell, it
-is not so; the electric current is not a transport of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
-energy. It is a state of the ether of a peculiar,
-specific kind, periodically produced (electric oscillation),
-and propagated with a speed of the order of
-that of light.</p>
-
-<p>However that may be, what constitutes the essential
-peculiarity of electrical energy, and what causes its
-value, is that it is an incomparable agent of transformation.
-Every known form of energy may be
-converted into it, and inversely, electrical energy may
-be changed with the utmost facility into all other
-energies. This extreme adaptability assigns to it
-the part of an intermediary between the other less
-tractable agents. Mechanical energy, for instance,
-lends itself with difficulty to the production of light,
-that is to say, to a metamorphosis into photic energy
-(a variety of thermal energy). A fall of water cannot
-be directly utilized for lighting purposes. The
-mechanical work of this fall, which cannot be
-exploited in its present form, serves to set in
-motion in industrial lighting the installations, the
-electric machines, and the dynamos which feed the
-incandescent lamps. Mechanical work is changed
-into electrical energy, and it, in its turn, into thermal
-or photic energy. Electricity has here played the part
-of a useful intermediary.</p>
-
-<p>The last part of energetics must be consecrated to
-the study of the general principles of this science.
-These principles are two in number, the principle of
-the <i>conservation of energy</i>, or Mayer’s principle, and
-the principle of the transformation of energy, or
-Carnot’s principle. The doctrine of energy thus
-reduces to two fundamental laws the multitude of
-laws, often known as “general,” to which natural
-science is subject.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 7. <span class="smcap">The Principle of the Conservation
-of Energy.</span></h4>
-
-<p>In all that precedes, the principle of conservation has
-intervened at every step. In fact, the very idea of
-energy is connected with the existence of this principle.
-We first discover the idea in the work of the philosophical
-mathematicians who established the foundations
-of mechanics:—Newton, Leibniz, d’Alembert,
-and Helmholtz; or of inductive physicists such as
-Lord Kelvin. Its experimental proof, sketched by
-Marc Seguin and R. Mayer, is due to Colding and
-Joule.</p>
-
-<p><i>It is Independent of the Kinetic Theory.</i>—Mayer’s
-law states that energy is indestructible; that all
-phenomenality is nothing but a transformation of
-energy from one form to another, and that this
-transformation takes place either at equal values,
-or rather, at a certain rate of equivalence. This is
-what takes place when thermal energy is transformed
-into mechanical energy (equivalent 425). This rate
-of equivalence is fixed by the researches of physicists
-for each category of energy.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noticed that this law and this theory of
-energy, which is always presented by authors of
-elementary books as a consequence of the kinetic
-theory, is quite independent of it. In the preceding
-lines we have not even mentioned its name. We
-have not assumed that all phenomena are movements
-or transformations of movements, whether sensible or
-vibratory; we have not affirmed that what was
-passing from one phenomenal determination to
-another was the <i>vis viva</i> of the motion, as is the case<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
-in the impact of elastic bodies. No doubt the kinetic
-theory affords us a very striking image of these truths
-which are independent of it; but it may be false: and
-the theory of energy which assumes the minimum of
-possible hypotheses would yet be true.</p>
-
-<p><i>It contains a great many other Principles.</i>—The
-principle of the conservation of energy contains
-a large number of the most general principles of
-science. It may be shown without much difficulty
-that, for example, it contains the principle of the
-inertia of matter, laid down by Galileo and Descartes;
-that of the equality of action and reaction, due to
-Newton; and even that of the conservation of matter,
-or rather of mass, due to Lavoisier. And finally, it
-contains the experimental law of equivalence connected
-with the name of the English physicist Joule,
-from which may be derived the Law of Hess and the
-principle of the initial and final states which we owe
-to Berthelot.</p>
-
-<p><i>It involves the Law of Equivalence.</i>—Here we may
-be content with noticing that the law of the conservation
-of energy involves the existence of relations of
-equivalence between the different varieties. A certain
-quantity of a given energy, measured, as we have
-seen, by the product of two factors, is equivalent to a
-certain fixed quantity of quite a different form of
-energy into which it may be converted. The laws
-which govern energetic transformations therefore contain,
-from both the qualitative and the quantitative
-points of view, all the connections of the phenomena
-of the universe. To study these laws in their detail is
-the task that physics must take upon itself.</p>
-
-<p>The conversion one into the other of the different
-forms of energy by means of equivalents is only a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
-possibility. It is subject, in fact, to all sorts of
-restrictions, of which the most important are due to
-the second principle.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 8. <span class="smcap">Carnot’s Principle. Its Generality.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The second fundamental principle is that of the
-transformations of equilibrium, or of the conditions
-of reversibility, or again, Carnot’s principle. This
-principle, which first assumed a concrete form in
-thermodynamics, has been very widely extended. It
-has reached a degree of generality such that contemporary
-theoretical physicists such as Lord Kelvin, Le
-Châtelier, etc., consider it the universal law of
-physical, mechanical, and chemical equilibrium.</p>
-
-<p>Carnot’s principle contains, as was shown by G.
-Robin, d’Alembert’s principle of virtual velocities,
-and according to physicists of to-day, as we have just
-remarked, it contains the laws peculiar to physico-chemical
-equilibrium. The application of this principle
-gives us the differential equations from which
-are derived numerical relations between the different
-energies, or the different modalities of universal
-energy.</p>
-
-<p><i>Its Character.</i>—It is very remarkable that we cannot
-give a general enunciation of this principle which
-by its revealing power has changed the face of
-physics. This is because it is less a law, properly so
-called, than a method or manner of interpreting the
-relations of the different forms of energy, and particularly
-the relations of heat and mechanical energy.</p>
-
-<p><i>Conversion of Work into Heat and Vice-versâ.</i>—The
-conversion of work into heat is accomplished without
-difficulty. For example, the hammering of a piece of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
-iron on an anvil may bring it to a red heat. A shell
-which passes through an armour plate is heated, and
-melts and volatilizes the metal all round the hole it
-has made. By utilizing mechanical action under the
-form of friction all energy can be converted into heat.</p>
-
-<p>The inverse transformation of heat into work, on
-the contrary, cannot be complete. The best motor
-that we can think of, and <i>à fortiori</i> the best we can
-realize, can only transform a third or a fourth of the
-heat with which it is supplied.</p>
-
-<p>This is an extremely important fact. It is of incalculable
-importance to natural philosophy, and may
-be ranked among the greatest discoveries.</p>
-
-<p><i>Higher and Degraded Forms of Energy.</i>—Of these
-we may give an account by distinguishing among the
-forms of universal energy <i>higher forms</i>, and <i>lower</i> or
-<i>degraded forms</i>. Here we have the principle of the
-<i>degradation of energy</i> on its trial, and it may be
-regarded as a particular aspect of the second principle
-of energetics, or Carnot’s principle. Mechanical
-energy is a higher form. Thermal energy is a lower
-form, a degraded form, and one which has degrees in
-its degradation. Higher energy, in general, may be
-completely converted into lower energy; for example,
-work into heat: the slope is easy to descend, but it is
-difficult to retrace our steps; lower energy can be
-only partially transformed into higher energy, and the
-fraction thus utilizable depends upon certain conditions
-on which Carnot’s principle has thrown considerable
-light.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, although in theory the thermal energy of a
-body may have its equivalent in mechanical energy,
-the complete transformation is only realizable from
-the latter to the former, and not from the former to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
-the latter. This is due to a condition of thermal
-energy which is called <i>temperature</i>. The same
-quantity of thermal energy, of heat, may be stored
-in the same thermal body at different temperatures.
-If this quantity of thermal energy is in a very hot
-body we can utilize a large portion of it; if it is in a
-relatively cold body we can only convert a small
-portion of it into mechanical work. Thus the value
-of energy,—<i>i.e.</i>, its capacity of being converted into
-a higher and more useful form,—depends on temperature.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Capacity of Conversion depends on Temperature.</i>—The
-conversion of heat into work assumes two
-bodies of different temperatures, the one warm and
-the other cold; a boiler and a condenser. Every
-thermal machine conveys a certain amount of heat
-from the boiler to the condenser, and what is not thus
-carried is changed into work. This residue is only a
-small fraction, a quarter, or at most a third of the
-heat employed, and that, too, in the theoretically
-perfect machine, in the ideal machine.</p>
-
-<p>This output, this utilizable fraction depends on the
-fall of temperature from the higher to the lower level,
-just as the work of a turbine depends on the height
-of the waterfall which passes through it. But it also
-depends on the conditions of this fall, on the
-accessory losses from radiation and conduction.
-However, Carnot has shown that the output is the
-same, and a maximum for the same fall of temperature,
-whatever be the working agent (steam, hot air, etc.),
-and whatever be the machine—provided that this
-agent, this substance which works is not exposed to
-accessory losses, that it is never in contact with a
-body having temperature different to its own—or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
-again, that it is connected only with bodies impermeable
-to heat.</p>
-
-<p>This is Carnot’s principle in one of its concrete
-forms.</p>
-
-<p>A machine which realizes this condition, that the
-agent (steam, alcohol, ether) is in relation, at all
-phases of its function, with bodies which can neither
-take heat from it nor give heat to it, is a <i>reversible
-machine</i>. Such a machine is perfect. The fraction
-of heat that it transforms into motion is constant; it
-is a maximum; it is independent of the motor, of its
-organs, of the agent: it accurately expresses the
-transformability of the heat agent into a mechanical
-agent under the given conditions.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Degradation and Restoration of Energy.</i>—The
-fraction not utilized, that which is carried to the
-condenser at a lower temperature, is <i>degraded</i>. It
-can only be used by a new agent, in a new machine
-in which the boiler has exactly the same temperature
-as the condenser in the first machine, and the new
-condenser has a lower temperature, and so on. The
-proportion of utilizable energy thus goes on diminishing.
-Its utilization requires conditions more and
-more difficult to realize. The thermal energy loses its
-potential and its value, and is further and further degraded
-as its temperature approaches that of the
-surrounding medium.</p>
-
-<p>The degraded energy, theoretically, has kept its
-equivalent value but, practically, it is incapable of
-conversion. However, it is shown in physics that it
-can be raised and re-established at its initial level.
-But for that purpose another energy must be utilized
-and degraded for its benefit.</p>
-
-<p><i>The End of the Universe.</i>—What we have just<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
-seen with respect to heat and motion is to some
-degree true of all other forms of energy, as Lord
-Kelvin has shown. The principle of the degradation
-of energy is very general. Every manifestation of
-nature is an energetic transformation. In each of
-these transformations there is a degradation of energy—<i>i.e.</i>,
-a certain fraction is lowered and becomes less
-easily transformable. So that the energy of the
-universe is more and more degraded; the higher
-forms are lowered to the thermal form, the latter
-increasing at temperatures which become more and
-more uniform. The end of the universe, from this
-point of view, would then be unity of (thermal) energy
-in uniformity of temperature.</p>
-
-<p><i>Importance of the Idea of Energy in Physiology.</i>—I
-have said that the application of Carnot’s principle
-furnished numerical relations between the different
-energetic transformations.</p>
-
-<p>The science of living beings has not yet reached
-that point of development at which it is possible for
-us to obtain its numerical relations. However, the
-consideration of energy and the principle of conservation
-has altered the outlook of physiology on many
-questions which are of the highest importance.</p>
-
-<p>The determination of the sources from which plants
-and animals draw their vital energies; the mediate
-transformation of chemical energy into animal heat in
-nutrition, or into motion in muscular contraction; the
-chemical evolution of foods; the study of soluble
-ferments—all these questions are of considerable
-importance when we wish to understand the
-mechanisms of life. They are therefore departments
-of physiological energetics in which great
-advances have already been made.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II_2">CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-<small>ENERGY IN BIOLOGY.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">§ 1. Energy in Living Beings.—§ 2. The First Law of Biological
-Energetics:—All Vital Phenomena are Energetic Transformations.—§ 3. Second
-Law:—The Origin of Vital
-Energy is in Chemical Energy. Functional Activity and
-Destruction.—§ 4. Third Law:—The Final Form of
-Energetic Transformation in the Animal is Thermal
-Energy. Heat is an Excretum.</p>
-
-
-<p>The theory of energy was thought of and utilized in
-physiology before it was introduced into physics, in
-which it has exercised such an extraordinary influence.
-Robert Mayer was a physicist and a doctor. Helmholtz
-was equally at home in physiology and in physics.
-From the outset both had seen in this new idea a
-powerful instrument of physiological research. The
-volume in which Robert Mayer expounded, in 1845,
-his remarkable views on organic movement in relation
-to nutrition, and Helmholtz’ commentary leave us in
-no doubt in this respect. The essay on the mechanical
-equivalent of heat, of a more particularly physical
-character, is six years later than the earlier work.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Relations between Energetics and Biology.</i>—The
-theory of energy is therefore only returning to
-its cradle; and to that cradle it returns with all the
-sanction of physical proof, as the most general theory<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
-ever proposed in natural philosophy, and the theory
-least encumbered with hypotheses. It reduces all
-particular laws to two fundamental principles—that
-of the conservation of energy, which contains the
-principles of Galileo and Descartes, of Newton, of
-Lavoisier, Joule’s law, Hess’s law, and Berthelot’s
-principle of the initial and final states; and also
-Carnot’s principle, from which are deduced the laws
-of physico-chemical and chemical equilibrium. These
-two principles therefore sum up the whole of natural
-science. They express the necessary relation of all
-the phenomena of the universe, their uninterrupted
-gentic connection, and their continuity.</p>
-
-<p><i>A priori</i> there would be little likelihood that a
-doctrine, so universal and so thoroughly verified in
-the physical world, could be restricted, and thus
-be useless to the living world. Such a supposition
-would be contrary to the scientific method, which
-always tends to the generalization and the explanation
-of elementary laws. The human mind has always
-proceeded thus: it has applied to the unknown
-order of living phenomena the most general laws of
-contemporary physics.</p>
-
-<p>This application has been found legitimate, and has
-been justified by experiment whenever it has been a
-question of the laws or of the really fundamental or
-elementary conditions of phenomena. It has, on the
-other hand, however, been unfortunate when it has
-stopped short of secondary characteristics. When we
-now concede the subjection of living beings to these
-general laws of energetics, we are following a
-traditional method. There is no doubt that this
-application is legitimate, and that experiment will
-justify it <i>a posteriori</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span></p>
-
-<p>I will therefore grant, as a provisional <i>postulate</i>,
-the consequences of which will have to be ultimately
-justified, that the living and inanimate world alike
-show us nothing but <i>transformations of matter</i> and
-<i>transformations of energy</i>. The word phenomenon
-will have no other signification, whatever be the
-circumstances under which the phenomenon occurs.
-The varied manifestations which translate the activity
-of living beings thus correspond to transformations of
-energy, to conversions of one form into another, in
-conformity with the rules of equivalence laid down by
-the physicists. This conception may be formulated
-in the following manner:—<i>The phenomena of life have
-the same claim to be energetic metamorphoses as the
-other phenomena of nature</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This postulate is the foundation of biological
-energetics. It may be useful to give some explanation
-relative to the signification, the origin, and
-the scope of this statement.</p>
-
-<p>Biological energetics is nothing but general physiology
-reduced to the principles that are common to all
-the physical sciences. Robert Mayer and Helmholtz
-gave the best description of this science, and laid
-down its limits by defining it as “the study of the
-phenomena of life regarded from the point of view
-of energy.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">Energy at play in Living Beings.
-Common or Physical Energies. Vital
-Energies.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p>Our first object will be to define and to enumerate the
-energies at play in living beings; to determine their
-more or less easy transformations from one to another,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
-to bring to light the general laws which govern those
-transformations, and finally to apply them to the
-detailed study of phenomena. This programme may
-be divided into four parts.</p>
-
-<p>In the physical world the specific forms of energy
-are not numerous. When we have mentioned
-mechanical, chemical, radiant (thermal and photic)
-energies, electrical energy, with which is blended
-magnetic energy, we have exhausted the catalogue of
-natural agents.</p>
-
-<p>But is this list for ever closed? Are vital energies
-comprised in this list? These are the first questions
-which we must ask ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>The iatro-mechanical school, on <i>a priori</i> grounds
-give an affirmative answer. No doubt there are in the
-living organism many manifestations which are pure
-physical manifestations of known energies, mechanical,
-chemical, thermal, etc. But are all the manifestations
-of the living being of this order? Are they all, henceforth,
-reducible to the categories and varieties of energy
-which are investigated in physics? This is the claim
-of the mechanical school. But the claim is rash. Our
-fundamental postulate affirms, in principle, that universal
-energy is manifested in living beings; but, as a
-matter of fact, there is no reason for the assertion that
-it does not assume particular forms, according to the
-circumstances peculiar to the conditions under which
-they are produced.</p>
-
-<p>These <i>special forms of energy</i> manifested in the conditions
-suitable to living beings would swell the list
-drawn up by the physicists. And it would not be the
-first instance of an extension of this kind. The
-history of science records many remarkable cases.
-Scarcely a century has passed since we first heard of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
-electrical energy. This discovery in the world of
-energy, which took place, so to speak, before our
-very eyes, of an agent which plays so large a part
-in nature, clearly leaves the door open to other
-surprises.</p>
-
-<p>We shall therefore concede that there may be
-other forms of energy at work in living beings than
-those we already know in the physical world. This
-reservation would enable us to discover at once the
-essential characteristics by which vital phenomena
-are henceforth reduced to universal physics, and
-the purely formal differences still distinguishing
-them.</p>
-
-<p>If there are really special energies in living beings,
-our monistic postulate leads us to assert that these
-energies are homogeneous with the others, and that
-they do not differ from them more than they differ
-among themselves. It is probable that some day
-they will be discovered external to living bodies, if
-the material conditions (which it is always possible to
-imagine) are realized externally to them. And if we
-must admit that the peculiarity of the medium is
-such that these forms must remain indefinitely
-peculiar to living beings, we may assert with every
-confidence that these special energies do not obey
-special laws. They are subject to the two fundamental
-principles of Robert Mayer and Carnot.
-They are exchanged according to fixed laws with
-the other physical forms of energies at present
-known.</p>
-
-<p>To sum up, then, we must establish three categories
-in the forms of energy which express the phenomena
-of vitality.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, most of these energies are those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
-which have already been studied and recognized in
-general physics. They are the same energies:
-chemical, thermal, mechanical, with their characteristics
-of mutability, their lists of equivalents,
-and their actual and potential stales.</p>
-
-<p>In the second place, it may happen, and it probably
-will happen, as it happened in the last century
-in the case of electricity, that some new form of
-energy will be discovered belonging to the universal
-order as to the living order. This will be a conquest
-of general physics as well as of biology.</p>
-
-<p>And finally we may rigorously and provisionally
-admit a last category of <i>vital energies properly so
-called</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to give much precision to the idea of
-<i>vital energies properly so called</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It will be easier to measure them by means of
-equivalents than to indicate their nature. Besides,
-this is the ordinary rule in the case of physical agents.
-We can measure them, although we know not what
-they are.</p>
-
-<p><i>Characteristics of Vital Energies.</i>—We see why we
-cannot exhibit with precision, <i>a priori</i>, the nature of
-vital energies. In the first place, they are expressed
-by what takes place in the tissues in activity, and
-this cannot at present be identified with the known
-types of physical, chemical, and mechanical phenomena.
-This is a first, intrinsic reason for not being
-able to distinguish them readily, since what takes
-place is not distinguished by the phenomenal appearances
-to which we are accustomed.</p>
-
-<p>There is a second, intrinsic reason. These vital
-phenomena are intermediary, as we shall see, between
-manifestations of known energies. They lie between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
-a chemical phenomenon which always precedes them,
-and a thermal phenomenon which always follows
-them. They are lost sight of, as it were, between
-manifestations which strike our attention. Generally
-speaking, intermediary energies often escape us
-even in physics. Only the extreme manifestations
-are clearly seen. In the presence of the organism
-we are, as it were, in electric lighting works which
-are run by a fall of water, and at first we only
-see the mechanical energy of the falling water,
-of the turbine and dynamo at work, and the
-photic energy of the lamps which give the light.
-Electrical energy, an intermediary, which has only
-a transient existence, does not impose itself on our
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>And so <i>vital energies</i> for this twofold reason, intrinsic
-and extrinsic, are not readily apparent. To
-reveal them, the careful analysis of the physiologists
-is required. They are acts, in most cases silent and
-invisible, which we should scarcely recognize but by
-their effects, after they have terminated in familiar,
-phenomenal forms. This is, for example, what goes
-on in the muscle in process of shortening, in the nerve
-carrying the nervous influx, in the secreting gland.
-And this is what constitutes the different forms of
-energy which we call <i>vital properties</i>. M. Chauveau
-and M. Laulanié use the phrase <i>physiological work</i>
-to distinguish them. <i>Vital energy</i> would be preferable.
-It better expresses the analogy of this special
-form with the other forms of universal energy; it
-helps us better to understand that we must henceforth
-consider it as exchangeable by means of
-equivalents with the energies of the physical world
-just as they are exchangeable one with another.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">First Law of Biological Energetics.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p>It is easy to understand, after these remarks, the
-significance and the scope of this assertion which
-contains the first principle of biological energetics—namely,
-that the phenomena of life have the same
-claim to be called energetic metamorphoses as the
-other phenomena of nature.</p>
-
-<p><i>Irreversibility of Vital Energies.</i>—However, there
-is one characteristic of vital energies which deserves
-the closest attention. Their transformations have a
-direction which is in some measure inevitable. They
-descend a slope which they never re-ascend. They
-appear to be irreversible. Ostwald has rightly insisted
-on this fundamental characteristic, which no
-doubt is not that of all the phenomena of the living
-being without exception, but which is certainly that of
-the most essential phenomena. There are reversible
-phenomena in organisms; there are energetic transformations
-which may take place from one form of
-energy to another, or <i>vice versâ</i>. But the most
-characteristic phenomena of vitality do not act in
-this way. We shall presently see that most functional
-physiological acts begin with chemical and end with
-thermal action. The series of energetic transformations
-takes place in an inevitable direction, from
-chemical to thermal energy. The order of succession
-of ordinary energies is thus determined in the machine
-of the organism, and therefore by the conditions of
-the machine. The order of transformation of vital
-energies is still more rigorously regulated, and the
-phenomena of life evolve from childhood to ripened
-years, and thence to old age, without a possible
-return.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span></p>
-
-<p>The laws of biological energetics are three in number.
-First of all, there is the fundamental principle
-which we have just developed, and which is, so to
-speak, laid down <i>a priori</i>; and there are two other
-principles, those established by experiment and
-summing-up, as it were, the multitude of known
-physiological effects. Of these two experimental
-laws, one refers to the <i>origin</i> and the other to the
-<i>termination of the energies developed in living beings</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 3. <span class="smcap">Second Law of Biological Energetics.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>The Origin of Vital Energy.</i>—Vital energies have
-their origin in one of the <i>external or common energies</i>—not
-in any one we choose, as might be supposed,
-but in one only: chemical energy. The third principle
-will show us that they terminate in another energy or
-a few others, also completely fixed.</p>
-
-<p>It follows that the phenomena of life must appear
-to us to be a circulation of energy which, starting from
-one fixed point in the physical world, returns to that
-world by a few points, also fixed, after a transient
-passage through the animal organism.</p>
-
-<p>Or more precisely, it is a transposition from the
-realm of matter into the world of energy, of the idea
-of the <i>vital vortex</i> of Cuvier and the biologists.
-They defined life by its most constant property—nutrition.
-Nutrition was exactly this current of
-matter which the organism obtains from without by
-alimentation, and which it throws out again by excretion;
-and the even momentary interruption of
-which, if complete, would be the signal of death.
-The cycle of energy is the exact counterpart of
-this cycle of matter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span></p>
-
-<p>The second truth taught us by general physiology,
-a truth which physiology learned from experiment, is
-enunciated as follows:—<i>The maintenance of life consumes
-none of its energy. It borrows from the external
-world all the energy which it expends, and borrows it in
-the form of potential chemical energy.</i> This is a translation
-into the language of energetics of the results
-acquired in animal physiology during the last fifty years.
-No comment is needed to exhibit the importance of
-such a truth. It reveals the origin of animal activity.
-It reveals the source from which proceeds that energy
-which at some moment of its transformations in the
-animal organism will be a <i>vital energy</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>primum movens</i> of vital activity is, therefore,
-according to this law, the chemical energy stored up
-in the immediate principles of the organism.</p>
-
-<p>Let us try to follow, for a moment, this energy
-through the organism and to specify the circumstances
-of its transformations.</p>
-
-<p><i>Organic Functional Activity, and the Destruction of
-Reserve-stuff.</i>—Let us suppose then, for this purpose,
-that our attention is directed to a given limited part
-of this organism, to a certain tissue. Let us seize
-it, so to speak, by observation at a given moment,
-and let us make an examination of the functional
-activity starting from this conventional moment.
-This functional activity, like all other vital phenomena,
-will be the result, as we have just explained, of
-a transformation of the potential chemical energy
-contained in the materials held in reserve in the
-tissue. This is our first perceptible fact. This
-energy, when disengaged, will furnish to the vital
-action the means by which it may be prolonged.</p>
-
-<p>There is, then, a <i>functional destruction</i>. There is, at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
-the beginning of the functional process, and by a
-necessary effect of that very process, a liberation of
-chemical energy; and that can only take place by a
-decomposition of the immediate principles of the
-tissue, or, as we may say, by a destruction of organic
-material. Claude Bernard insisted on this consideration,
-that the vital function is accompanied by a
-destruction of organic material. “When a movement
-is produced, when a muscle is contracted, when
-volition and sensibility are manifested, when thought
-is exercised, when a gland secretes, then the substance
-of the muscles, of the nerves, of the brain, of the
-glandular tissue, is disorganized, is destroyed, and is
-consumed.” Energetics enables us to grasp the
-deeply-seated reason of this coincidence between
-chemical destruction and the functional activity, the
-existence of which Claude Bernard intuitively suspected.
-A portion of organic material is decomposed,
-is chemically simplified, becomes less complex, and
-loses in this kind of descent the chemical energy
-which it contained in its potential state. It is this
-energy which becomes the very texture of the vital
-phenomenon.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear that the reserve of energy thus expended
-must be replaced, because the organism remains in
-equilibrium. Alimentation provides for this.</p>
-
-<p>How does it provide for it? This is a question
-which deserves detailed examination. We cannot
-incidentally treat it in full; we can only indicate its
-main features.</p>
-
-<p><i>How the supply of Reserve Stuff is kept up.</i>—We
-know that food does not directly replace the reserve
-of energy consumed by the functional activity. It is
-not its potential chemical energy which replaces,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
-purely and simply, the energy brought into play,
-consumed, or, better still, transformed in the active
-organ, or tissue. Food as it is introduced, inert food,
-does not, in fact, take up its place <i>as it is</i>, without
-undergoing changes in that organ and that tissue, in
-order to restore the <i>status quo ante</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Before building up the tissue it will have undergone
-various modifications in the digestive apparatus. It
-will have also undergone changes in the circulatory
-apparatus, in the liver, and in the very organ we are
-considering. It is after all these changes that assimilation
-takes place. It will find its place and will have
-then passed into the state of <i>reserve</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The food digested, modified, and finally incorporated
-as an integral part in the tissue in which it will be expended,
-is therefore in a new state, differing more or
-less from its state when it was ingested. It is a part
-of the living tissue in the state of constitutive reserve.
-Its potential chemical energy is not the same as that
-of the food introduced. It may differ from it very
-remarkably in consequence of sudden alterations.</p>
-
-<p>We do not know for certain at the expense of what
-category of foods this or that given organ builds up
-its reserve stuff. There is a belief, for instance,
-according to M. Chauveau, that the muscle does its
-work at the expense of the reserve of glycogen which
-it contains. The potential chemical energy of this
-substance would be a source of muscular mechanical
-energy. But we do not know exactly at the expense
-of what foods, albumenoids, fats, or carbohydrates
-the muscle builds up the reserve of <i>glycogen</i> expended
-during its contraction. It is probable that it builds it
-up at the expense of each of the three categories after
-the various more or less simple alterations undergone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
-by the materials in the digestive tube, the blood, the
-liver, or other organs.</p>
-
-<p>This building up of reserve stuff, the complement
-and counterpart of <i>functional destruction</i>, is not chemical
-synthesis. It is, on the contrary, generally, and
-on the whole, a simplification of the food that has
-been introduced. This is true, at least as far as the
-muscle is concerned. However, to this operation,
-Claude Bernard has given the name of <i>organizing
-synthesis</i>, but the phrase is not a happy one. But
-in no case was the eminent physiologist deceived
-as to the character of the operation. “The organizing
-synthesis,” says he, “remains internal, silent,
-hidden in its phenomenal expression, gathering
-together noiselessly the materials which will be
-expended.”</p>
-
-<p>These considerations enable us to understand the
-existence of the two great categories into which the
-eminent physiologist divides the phenomena of animal
-life: the phenomena of the <i>destruction of reserve-stuff</i>
-corresponding to <i>functional facts</i>—that is to say
-expenditures of energy; and the <i>plastic phenomena</i> of
-the <i>building-up of reserves</i> of organic regeneration, corresponding
-to <i>functional repose</i>—<i>i.e.</i>, to the supply of
-food to the tissues.</p>
-
-<p><i>Distinction between Active Protoplasm and Reserve-stuff.</i>—If
-it is not exactly in these terms that Claude
-Bernard formulated this fruitful idea, it is at any
-rate in this way that it is to be interpreted. This
-can be done by giving it a little more precision.
-We apply more rigorously than that great physiologist
-the distinction drawn by himself between <i>really
-active and living protoplasm</i> and the <i>reserve-stuff</i>
-which it prepares. To the latter is restricted the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>
-destruction by the functional activity and the building
-up by repose.</p>
-
-<p>The classification of Claude Bernard is strictly true
-for reserve-stuff. It is easy to criticize the wavering
-and, as it were, dimly groping expressions in
-which the celebrated physiologist has shrouded his
-ideas. The old adage will excuse him: <i>Obscuritate
-rerum verba obscurantur</i>. In the depths of his ignorance
-he had a flash of genius; perhaps he did not find
-the definitive and, as it were, clearly-cut formula defining
-what was in his mind. But, in this respect, he
-has left his successors an easy task.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Law of Functional Assimilation.</i>—The progress
-of physiological knowledge compels us therefore to
-distinguish in the constitution of anatomical elements
-two parts—the materials of <i>reserve-stuff</i> and the <i>really
-active</i> and <i>living protoplasm</i>. We have just seen how
-the reserve-stuff behaves, alternately destroyed by
-functional activity, and built up afterwards by the
-ingestion of food, followed by the operations of digestion,
-elaboration, and assimilation. It remains to
-ask how this really living and protoplasmic matter
-behaves. Does it follow the same law? Is it destroyed
-during the functional activity, and is it afterwards
-replaced? As to this we can express no
-opinion. M. le Dantec fills a gap in our knowledge,
-in this respect, by an hypothesis. He assumes that
-this essentially active matter grows during functional
-activity, and is destroyed during repose. This is what
-he calls the <i>law of functional assimilation</i>. The
-protoplasm would therefore behave in an exactly
-contrary manner to the reserve-stuff. It will be its
-counterpart. But this is only an hypothesis which,
-in the present state of our knowledge, cannot be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
-verified by experiment We are at liberty to
-assert either that the protoplasm increases by
-functional activity or that it is destroyed. Neither
-the arguments nor the objections pro or con have any
-decisive value. The facts alleged on either side are
-capable of too many interpretations.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
-
-<p>The only favourable argument (not demonstrative)
-is furnished by energetics. It is this. The <i>re-building
-of the protoplasm</i> is not like the <i>organisation of reserve-stuff</i>,
-a slightly complicated or even simplified phenomenon,
-as happens in the case of the reserve of
-muscular glycogen. The glycogen, in fact, is built up
-at the expense of foods chemically more complex.
-It is, on the contrary, a clearly synthetic phenomenon,
-certainly of chemical complexity, since it ends
-in building up the active protoplasm which is, in some
-measure, of the highest scale of complexity. Its formation
-at the expense of the simplest alimentary
-materials requires, therefore, an appreciable quantity
-of energy.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span></p>
-<p>The assimilation which organizes the active protoplasm
-therefore requires energy for its realization.
-Now, at the moment of functional activity, and by a
-necessary consequence thereof, the chemical destruction
-or simplification of the substance of reserve takes
-place. Here is something that meets the case, and
-we may note the coincidence. It does not mean that
-the disposable energy is really used to increase the
-protoplasm, nor that the protoplasm itself is thereby
-increased. It merely signifies that the wherewithal
-exists to provide for that increase if it takes place.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore <i>possible</i> that the active protoplasm
-follows the law of functional assimilation; but it is
-<i>certain</i> that the reserve-stuff follows the law laid down
-by Claude Bernard.</p>
-
-<p>All these considerations definitely result in the
-confirmation of this second law of general physiology,
-according to which all vital energies are borrowed
-from the potential chemical energy of the reserve-stuff
-of alimentary origin.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 4. <span class="smcap">The Third Law of Biological Energetics.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p>The third law of biological energetics is also drawn
-from experiment. It relates no longer to the point of
-departure of the cycle of animal energy, but to its
-final position. <i>The energetic transformations of the
-animal end in thermal energy.</i></p>
-
-<p>This is the most novel part of the theory, and, if we
-may say so, that least understood by physiologists
-themselves. The energy resulting from the chemical
-potential of food, having passed through the organism
-(or simply through the organ which we are considering
-in action), and having given rise to phenomenal appearances
-more or less diversified, more or less dim or
-clear, obscure or obvious, which are the characteristic
-or still irreducible manifestations of vitality, finally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
-returns to the physical world. This return takes
-place (with certain exceptions which will be presently
-indicated) under the ultimate form of thermal energy.
-This we are taught by experiment. The phenomena
-of functional activity are exothermal.</p>
-
-<p>Real vital phenomena thus lie between the chemical
-energy which gives rise to them, and the thermal
-phenomena to which they in their turn give rise. The
-place of the vital fact in the cycle of universal energy
-is therefore completely determined. This conclusion
-is of the utmost importance to biology. It may be
-expressed in a concise formula which sums up in a
-few words all that natural philosophy can teach as to
-energetics applied to living beings. “Vital energy is
-a transformation of chemical energy into thermal
-energy.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Exceptions.</i>—There are some exceptions to the
-rigour of this statement, but they are not many in
-number. We must first of all remark that it applies
-to <i>animal life</i> alone.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of vegetables, looked at as a whole, the
-law must be modified. Their vital energy has another
-origin, and another final form. Instead of being the
-destroyers of chemical potential energy, they are its
-creators. They build up by means of the inert and
-simple materials afforded them by the atmosphere
-and the soil, the immediate principles by which their
-cells are filled. Their vital functional activity forms by
-synthesis of the reserves, carbo-hydrates (sugars and
-starches), fats, albuminoid nitrogenous materials—that
-is to say, the same three principal categories of foods
-as those used by animals.</p>
-
-<p>And to return to the latter, it should be observed
-that thermal energy is not the only final form of vital<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
-energy, as this dogmatic statement would have it
-supposed. It is only the principle of the final forms.
-The cycle of energy occasionally terminates in
-mechanical energy (phenomena of motion) and in
-a less degree in other energies; such as, for example,
-the electrical energy produced by the functional activity
-of the nerves and muscles in all animals, or in the
-functional activity of special organs in rays, torpedo-fish,
-and the malapterurus electricus, or finally, in the
-photic energy of phosphorescent animals. But these
-are secondary facts.</p>
-
-<p><i>Heat is an Excretum.</i>-The third principle of biological
-energetics may be therefore thus enunciated:—<i>Vital
-energy in its final form becomes thermal energy.</i>
-This principle teaches us that if chemical energy is
-the primitive generating form of vital energies,
-thermal energy is the form of waste, of emunctory,
-the degraded form as the physicists would say. Heat
-is in the dynamical order an excretion of animal
-life, as urea, carbonic acid and water, are excreta in
-the substantial order. By a false interpretation of
-the principle of the mechanical equivalence of heat, or
-through ignorance of Carnot’s principle, certain
-physiologists have fallen into error when they still
-speak of the transformation of heat into motion or into
-into electricity in the animal organism. Heat is transformed
-into nothing in the animal organism. It is dissipated.
-Its utility arises not from its energetic value,
-but from the part it plays as a primer in the chemical
-reactions, as has been explained with reference to the
-general characteristics of chemical energy.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Effect of Energetics on our Knowledge of the
-Relations of the Universe.</i>—The consequences of these
-principles of energetic physiology, which give us so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>
-much and which are so clear, are of the greatest
-importance from the practical as well as from the
-theoretical point of view.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, they show us the position and the
-rank of the phenomena of life in the universe as a
-whole. They throw fresh light on the noble harmony
-of the animal and vegetable kingdoms which Priestley,
-Ingenhousz, Senebier, and the chemical school of the
-beginning of the nineteenth century discovered, and
-which was expounded by Dumas with incomparable
-lucidity and brilliance. Energetics is expressed in a
-line. “The animal world expends the energy accumulated
-by the vegetable world.” It extends these
-views beyond the living kingdoms. It shows how the
-vegetable world itself draws its activity from the
-energy radiated by the sun, and how animals restore
-it again, in dissipated heat, to the cosmic medium.
-It extends the harmony of the two kingdoms to the
-whole of nature. The new science makes of the
-whole universe one connected system.</p>
-
-<p>From a more limited point of view, and so that we
-may not restrict ourselves to a consideration of the
-domain of animal physiology, the laws of energetics
-sum up and explain a multitude of facts and of
-experimental laws—for example, the law of the intermittence
-of physiological activity, the facts of fatigue,
-the rôle and the general principles of alimentation,
-and the conditions of muscular contraction.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III_2">CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-<small>ALIMENTARY ENERGETICS.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Various Problems of Alimentation. § 1. <i>Food the source of
-Energy and Matter.</i> The two forms of Energy afforded by
-Food—Vital Energy, Thermal Energy. Food the source
-of Heat. The rôle of Heat.—§ 2. <i>Measure of the output of
-Energy</i>—by the Calometric Method—by the Chemical
-Method.—§ 3. The regular type of Food, Biothermogenic,
-and the irregular type, Thermogenic.—§ 4. Food considered
-as the source of Heat. The Law of Surfaces. The limits
-of Isodynamics.—§ 5. Plastic rôle of Food. Preponderance
-of Nitrogenous Foods.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Among the problems on which energetics has
-thrown a vivid light we have mentioned alimentation,
-muscular contraction, and, more general still, the
-intermittence of vital functional activity. We shall
-begin with the study of alimentation.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Different Problems of Alimentation.</i>—What is a
-food? In what does alimentation consist? The
-dictionary of the <i>Académie</i> will give us our first
-answer. It tells us that the word food is applied to
-“every kind of matter, whatever may be its nature,
-which habitually serves or may serve for nutrition.”
-This is very well put, but here again we must know
-what nutrition is, and that is not a simple matter; in
-fact, it practically means whatever is usually placed
-on the table in a civilized and polished society. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>
-it is just the profound reasons for this traditional
-practice that we are trying to discover.</p>
-
-<p>The problem of alimentation may be looked at in a
-thousand ways. It is culinary, no doubt, and gastronomic;
-but it is also economical and social,
-agricultural, fiscal, hygienic, medical, and even moral.
-But first and foremost, it is physiological. It comprises
-and assumes the knowledge of the general
-composition of foods, of their transformations in the
-digestive apparatus, and their comparative utility in
-the maintenance and the sound functional activity
-of the organism. To this first group of subjects for
-our discussion are attached others relating to the
-effects of inanition, of insufficient alimentation, and of
-over-feeding. And in order to throw light on all
-these aspects of the problem of alimentation, we have
-to lay bare the most intimate and delicate reactions by
-which the organism is maintained and recruited, and,
-in the words of a celebrated physiologist, “to penetrate
-into the kitchen of vital phenomena.” And here
-neither Apicius, nor Brillat-Savarin, nor Berchoux,
-nor the moralists, nor the economists are of any use
-to us as guides. We must appeal to the scientists,
-who, following the example of Lavoisier, Berzelius,
-Regnault, and Liebig, have applied to the study of
-living beings the resources of general science, and
-have thus founded <i>chemical biology</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This branch of science developed considerably in
-the second half of the nineteenth century. It has now
-its methods, its technique, its chairs at the universities,
-its laboratories, and its literature. It has particularly
-applied itself to the study of the “material changes”
-or the <i>metabolism</i> of living beings, and with that
-object in view it has done two things. In the first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
-place, it has determined the composition of the
-constituent materials of the organism; then analyzing
-qualitatively and quantitatively all that penetrates into
-that organism in a given time—that is to say, all the
-alimentary or respiratory ingesta, and all that issues
-from the organism, <i>i.e.</i>, all the excreta, all the <i>egesta</i>,—it
-has drawn up <i>nutritive balance sheets</i>, corresponding
-to the various conditions of life, whether
-naturally or artificially created. And thus we can
-determine the alimentary régimes which give too
-much, and which give too little, and which finally
-restore equilibrium.</p>
-
-<p>We do not propose to give a detailed account of
-this scientific movement. This may be done in monographs.
-All we wish to indicate here is the most
-general result of these laborious researches—that is
-to say, the laws and the doctrines which are derived
-from them, and the theories to which they have given
-birth. It is by this alone that they are brought into
-relation with general science, and may therefore
-interest the reader. The facts of detail are never
-lacking to the historian; it is more profitable to show
-the movement of ideas. The theories of alimentation
-bring into conflict very different conceptions of
-the vital functional activity. And here we find a
-confused medley of opinions on which it is not without
-interest to endeavour to throw some light.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">Food, a Source of Energy and Matter.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>Definitions of Food.</i>—Before the introduction into
-physiology of the notion of energy, no one had
-succeeded in giving an exact idea and a precise
-definition of food and alimentation. Every physio<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>logist
-and medical man who attempted it had failed,
-and this for various reasons.</p>
-
-<p>The general cause of this failure was that most definitions,
-popular or technical, interposed the condition
-that the food must be introduced into the digestive
-apparatus. “It is,” said they, “a substance which
-when introduced into the digestive tube undergoes,
-etc., etc.” But plants draw food from the soil, and
-they possess no digestive apparatus; many animals
-have no intestinal tube; and in the case of certain
-rotifera, the females possess a digestive apparatus,
-while the males have none. Nevertheless all animals
-feed.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, there are other substances than
-those which use the digestive tract for the purpose of
-entering the organism, and which are eminently useful
-or necessary to the maintenance of life. In particular
-we may mention oxygen.</p>
-
-<p>The distinctive feature of food is its <i>utility</i>—when
-conveniently introduced or employed—to the living
-being. Claude Bernard’s definition is this:—A substance
-taken in the external medium “necessary for the
-maintenance of the phenomena of the healthy organism
-and for the reparation of the losses it constantly
-suffers.” “A substance which supplies an element
-necessary for the constitution of the organism, or
-which <i>diminishes its disintegration</i>” (stored-up food);
-this is the definition of C. Voit, the German physiologist.
-M. Duclaux says, in his turn, but in far too
-general terms, that it is a substance which contributes
-to assure the sound functional activity of any of the
-organs of the living being. None of these ways of
-describing food gives a complete idea.</p>
-
-<p><i>Food, the Source of Energy and Matter.</i>—The inter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>vention
-of the notion of energy enables us more
-completely to understand the true nature of food.
-We must, in fact, have recourse to the energetic conception
-if we desire to take into account all that the
-organism requires from food. It not only requires
-<i>matter</i>, but also, and most important of all, energy.</p>
-
-<p>Investigators so far concentrated their thoughts exclusively
-on the necessity of a supply of matter—that
-is to say, they only looked upon one side of the
-problem. The living body presents, at each of its
-points, an uninterrupted series of disintegrations and
-reconstitutions, the materials being supplied from
-without by alimentation, and rejected by excretion.
-Cuvier gave to this unceasing circulation of ambient
-matter throughout the vital world the name of <i>vital
-vortex</i>, and he rightly saw in it the characteristic of
-nutrition, and the distinctive feature of life.</p>
-
-<p>This idea of the <i>cycle of matter</i> has been completed
-in our own time by that of the <i>cycle of
-energy</i>. All the phenomena of the universe, and
-therefore those of life, are conceived of as energetic
-transformations. We now look at them in their relationship
-instead of considering them individually as of old.
-Each has an antecedent and a consequent unity with
-which it is connected in magnitude by the law of
-equivalents taught us by contemporary physics. And
-thus we may conceive of their succession as the
-cycle of a kind of indestructible agent, which changes
-only apparently, or assumes another form as it passes
-from one to the other, but its magnitude remains
-unaltered. This is energy. Thus, in the living being
-there is not only a circulation of matter, but also a
-circulation of energy.</p>
-
-<p>The most general result of research in physiological<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
-chemistry from the time of Lavoisier down to our own
-day has been to teach us that <i>the antecedent of the
-vital phenomenon is always a chemical phenomenon</i>.
-The vital energies are derived from the potential
-chemical energy accumulated in the immediate constituent
-principles of the organism. In the same way
-<i>the consequent phenomenon of the vital phenomenon is in
-general a thermal phenomenon</i>. The final form of
-vital energy is thermal energy. These three assertions
-as to the nature, the origin, and the final form of vital
-phenomena constitute the three fundamental principles,
-the three laws, of biological energetics.</p>
-
-<p><i>Food, a Source of Heat. It is not quâ source of heat
-that food is the source of vital energy.</i>—The place of
-vital energy in the cycle of universal energy is completely
-determined. It lies between the chemical
-energy which is its generating form and the thermal
-energy which is its form of disappearance, of breakdown,
-the “degraded form,” as the physicists say.
-Hence we have a result which can be immediately
-applied in the theory of food—namely, that heat is in
-the dynamical order an excretum of the animal life
-rejected by the living being, just as in the substantial
-order, urea, carbonic acid and water, are the materials
-used up and again rejected by it. We therefore must
-not think of the transformation in the animal organism
-of heat into vital energy, as certain physiologists
-always do. Nor must we think, with Béclard, of its
-transformation into muscular movement; or, as others
-have maintained, into animal electricity. This is not
-only an error of doctrine but an error of fact. It
-proceeds from a false interpretation of the principle of
-the mechanical equivalent of heat and a misunderstanding
-of Carnot’s principle. Thermal energy does<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
-not repeat the course of the energetic flux in the
-animal organism. The heat is not transformed into
-anything. It is simply dissipated.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Part played by Animal Heat as a Condition of
-Physiological Manifestations.</i>—Does this mean that
-heat is useless to life in the very beings in which it is
-most abundantly produced—<i>i.e.</i>, in man and in the
-warm-blooded vertebrates? So far from this being so,
-it is necessary to life. But its utility has a peculiar
-character which must neither be misunderstood nor
-exaggerated. It is not transformed into chemical
-or vital reactions, but merely creates for them a
-favourable condition.</p>
-
-<p>According to the first principle of energetics, for
-the vital fact to be derived from the thermal fact, the
-heat must be preliminarily transformed into chemical
-energy, since chemical energy is necessarily an antecedent
-and generating form of vital energy. Now
-this regressive transformation is impossible according
-to the current theories of general physics. The part
-played by heat in the act of chemical combination is
-that of a primer to the reaction. It consists in placing
-the reacting bodies, by changing their state or by
-modifying their temperature, in the condition in which
-they ought to be for the chemical forces to come into
-play. For example, in the combination of hydrogen
-and oxygen by setting light to an explosive mixture,
-heat only acts as a primer to the phenomenon, because
-the two gases which are passive at ordinary temperatures,
-require to be raised to 400° C. before chemical
-affinity comes into play. And so it is with the
-reactions which go on in the organism. They have
-a maximum temperature, and the part played by
-animal heat is to furnish them with it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
-
-<p>It follows that heat intervenes in animal life in two
-capacities—first and foremost as <i>excretum</i>, or end of
-the vital phenomenon, of <i>physiological work</i>; and on
-the other hand, as a <i>condition</i> or <i>primer</i> of the chemical
-reactions of the organism; and generally, as a favourable
-condition for the appearance of the physiological
-manifestations of living matter. Thus, it is not
-dissipated in sheer waste.</p>
-
-<p>I was led to adopt these views some years ago
-from certain experiments on the rôle played in food by
-alcohol. I did not then know that they had already
-been expressed by one of the masters of contemporary
-physiology, M. A. Chauveau, and that they were
-related in his mind to a series of conceptions and of
-researches of great interest, in the development of
-which I have since then taken a share.</p>
-
-<p><i>Two Forms of Energy supplied to Animals by Food.</i>—To
-say that food is simultaneously a supply of
-energy and a supply of matter, is really to express in
-a single sentence the fundamental conception of
-biology, in virtue of which life brings into play no
-substratum or characteristic dynamism. According
-to this, the living being appears to us as the
-seat of an incessant circulation of matter and energy,
-starting from the external world and returning
-to it. All food is nothing but this matter and this
-energy. All its characteristics, our views as to its
-rôle, its evolution, all the rules of alimentation are
-simple consequences of this principle, interpreted by
-the light of energetics.</p>
-
-<p>And first of all, let us ask what forms of energy are
-afforded by food? It is easy to see that there are
-two—food is essentially a source of chemical energy;
-and secondarily and accessorily, it is a source of heat.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
-Chemical energy is the only energy, according to the
-second law of energetics, which may be transformed
-into vital energy. It is true at any rate for animals;
-for in plants it is otherwise. There the vital cycle has
-neither the same point of departure nor the same final
-position. The circulation of energy does not take
-place in the same manner.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, and this we are taught by the
-third law, energy brought into play in vital phenomena
-is finally liberated and restored to the physical
-world in the form of heat. We have just said that
-this release of heat is employed in raising the temperature
-of the living being. It is animal heat.</p>
-
-<p>Thus there are two forms of energy supplied by
-food, chemical and thermal.</p>
-
-<p>It must be added that these are not the only forms,
-but the principal, and by far the most important. It is
-not absolutely true that heat is the only outcome of the
-vital cycle. It is only so in the subject in repose, contented
-to live idly without doing external mechanical
-work, without lifting a tool or a weight, even that of its
-own body. And again, speaking in this way, we neglect
-all the movements and all the mechanical work which
-is done without exercise of the volition, by the beating
-of the heart and of the arteries, the movements of
-respiration, and the contractions of the digestive tube.</p>
-
-<p>Mechanical work is, in fact, another possible termination
-of the cycle of energy. But there is no
-longer anything necessary or inevitable in this, since
-motion and the use of force are in a certain measure
-subordinated to the capricious volition of the animal.<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span></p>
-<p>At other times, again, it is an electrical phenomenon
-which terminates the vital cycle, and it is, in fact, in
-this way that things happen in the functional activity
-of the nerves and muscles in all animals, and in the
-functional activity of the electrical organ in fish,
-such as the ray and the torpedo. Finally, the termination
-may be a photic phenomenon, and this is
-what happens in phosphorescent animals.</p>
-
-<p>It is idle to diminish the power of these principles
-by proceeding to enumerate the whole of the exceptions
-to their validity. We know perfectly well
-that there are no absolute principles in nature. Let
-us say, then, that the energy which temporarily
-animates the living being is furnished to it by the
-external world under the exclusive form of potential
-chemical energy; but that, if there is only one door of
-entry, there are two exits. It may return to the external
-world in the principal form of thermal energy
-and in the accessory form of mechanical energy.</p>
-
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">§ 2. Measurement of the Supply Of
-Alimentary Energy.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>Calorimetric Method.</i>—From what has preceded it
-is clear that if the energetic <i>flux</i> which circulates
-through the animal emerges, <i>in toto</i>, in the state of
-heat, the measurement of this heat becomes the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
-measurement of the vital energy itself, for the origin
-of which we must go back to the food. If the flux is
-divided into two currents, mechanical and thermal,
-they must both be measured and the sum of their
-values taken. If the animal does not produce mechanical
-work, and all ends in heat, we have only to
-capture, by means of a calorimeter, this energetic flux
-as it emerges, and thus measure in magnitude and
-numerically the energy in motion in the living being.
-Physiologists use for this purpose various types of
-apparatus. Lavoisier and Laplace used an ice calorimeter—that
-is to say, a block of ice in which they
-shut up a small animal, such as a guinea-pig; they
-then measured its thermal production by the quantity
-of ice it caused to melt. In one of their experiments,
-for instance, they found that a guinea-pig had melted
-341 grammes of ice in the space of ten hours, and had
-therefore set free 27 Calories.</p>
-
-<p>But since those days more perfect instruments have
-been invented. M. d’Arsonval employed an air calorimeter,
-which is nothing but a differential thermometer
-very ingeniously arranged, and giving an automatic
-record. Messrs. Rosenthal, Richet, Hirn and Kaufmann,
-and Lefèvre have used more or less simplified
-or complicated air calorimeters. Others, following
-the example of Dulong and Despretz, have used
-calorimeters of air and mercury, or with Liebermester,
-Winternitz, and J. Lefèvre (of Havre), have had
-recourse to baths. Here, then, there is a considerable
-movement of research which has led to the discovery
-of very interesting facts.</p>
-
-<p><i>Measurement of the Supply of Alimentary Energy
-by the Chemical Method.</i>—We may again reach our
-result in another way. Instead of surprising the cur<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span>rent
-of energy as it emerges and in the form of
-heat, we may try and capture it at its entry in the
-form of potential chemical energy.</p>
-
-<p>The evaluation of potential chemical energy may
-be effected with the same unit of measurement as the
-preceding—that is to say, the Calorie. If we consider
-man and mammals, for example, we know that there
-is only apparently an infinite variety in their foods.
-We may say that they feed on only three substances.
-It is a very remarkable fact that all the complexity
-and multiplicity of foods, fruits, grains, leaves, animal
-tissues, and vegetable products of which use is made,
-reduce to so great a simplicity and uniformity, that all
-these substances are of three types only: albuminoids,
-such as albumen or white of egg—foods of animal
-origin or varieties of albumen; carbo-hydrates, which
-are more or less disguised varieties of sugar; and
-finally, fats.</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, from the chemical point of view, leaving
-out certain mineral substances, are the principal
-categories of alimentary substances. Here, with the
-oxygen that is brought in by respiration, is everything
-that penetrates the organism.</p>
-
-<p>And now, what comes out of the organism? Three
-things only, water, carbonic acid, and urea. But the
-former are the products of the combustion of the
-latter. If we consider an adult organism in perfect
-equilibrium, which varies throughout the experiment
-neither in weight nor in composition, we may say that
-the receipts balance the expenditure. Albumen, sugar,
-fat, plus the oxygen brought in, balance quantitatively
-the water, carbonic acid, and urea expelled. Things
-happen, in fact, as if the foods of the three categories
-were burned up more or less completely by the oxygen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is this combustion that we have known since the
-days of Lavoisier to be the source of animal heat.
-We can easily determine the quantity of heat left by
-albumen passing into the state of urea, and by the
-starch, the sugars, and the fats reduced to the state of
-water and carbonic acid. This quantity of heat does
-not depend on the variety of the unknown intermediary
-products which have been formed in the
-organism. Berthelot has shown that this quantity of
-heat which measures the chemical energy liberated by
-these substances is identical with the quantity obtained
-by burning the sugar and the fats in a chemical
-apparatus, in a calorimetric bomb, until we get carbonic
-acid and water, and by burning albumen till we get
-urea. This result is a consequence of Berthelot’s
-<i>principle of initial and final states</i>. The liberated
-heat only depends on the initial and final states, and
-not on the intermediary states. The heat left in the
-economy by the food being the same as that left in
-the calorimetric bomb, it is easy for the chemist to
-determine it. It has thus been discovered that one
-gramme of albumen produces 4.8 Calories, one gramme
-of sugar 4.2 Calories, and one gramme of fat 9.4
-Calories. We thus gather what a given ration—a mixture
-in certain proportions of these different kinds of
-foods—supplies to the organism and what energy
-it gives it, measured in Calories.</p>
-
-<p>The calculation may be carried out to a high degree
-of accuracy if, instead of confining ourselves to the
-broad features of the problem, we enter into rigorous
-detail. It is only, in fact, approximately that we have
-reduced all foods to albumen, sugar, and fat, and all
-excreta to water, carbonic acid, and urea.</p>
-
-<p>The reality is a little more complicated. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>
-are varieties of albumen, carbo-hydrates, and fatty
-bodies, the heats of combustion of which in the
-organism oscillate in the neighbourhood of the numbers
-4.8, 4.2, and 9.4. Each of these bodies has been
-individually examined, and numerical tables have
-been drawn up by Berthelot, Rubner, Stohmann, Van
-Noorden, etc. The tables exhibit the thermal value
-or energetic value of very different kinds of foods.</p>
-
-<p>In our climate, the adult average man, doing no
-laborious work, daily consumes a maintenance ration
-composed, as a rule, of 100 grammes of albuminoids,
-49 grammes of fats, and 403 grammes of carbo-hydrates.
-This ration has an energetic value of 2,600
-Calories.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore, thanks to the victories won in the
-field of thermo-chemistry, and to the principles laid
-down since 1864 by M. Berthelot, that this second
-method of attack on nutritive dynamism has been
-rendered possible. Physiologists, by the aid of these
-methods, have drawn up <i>balance-sheets of energy</i> for
-living beings just as they had previously established
-<i>balance-sheets of matter</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Now, it is precisely researches of this kind that we
-have indicated here as a consequence of biological
-energetics, which in reality have helped to build up
-that principle. These researches have shown us that,
-in conformity with the <i>principles of thermodynamics</i>,
-there was not, in fact, in the organism, any transformation
-of heat into mechanical work, as the
-physiologists for a short time supposed, on the
-authority of Berthelot. With the help of our theory
-this mistake is no longer possible. The doctrine of
-energetics shows us in fact the current of energy
-dividing itself, as it issues from the living being, into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
-two divergent branches, the one thermal and the
-other mechanical, external the one to the other
-although both issuing from the same common trunk,
-and having between them no relation but this, that
-the sum of their discharges represents the total of the
-energy in motion. Let us now translate these very
-simple notions into the more or less barbarous jargon
-in use in physiology. We shall be convinced as we
-go on of the truth of the saying of Buffon, that “the
-language of science is more difficult to learn than the
-science itself.” We shall say, then, that chemical
-energy, that the unit of weight of the food which may
-be placed in the organism, constitutes the alimentary
-<i>potential</i>, the <i>energetic value</i> of this substance, its
-<i>dynamogenic power</i>. It is measured in units of heat,
-in Calories, which the substance may leave in the
-organism. The evaluation is made according to the
-principles of thermo-chemistry, by means of the
-numerical tables of Berthelot, Rubner, and Stohmann.
-The same number also expresses the <i>thermogenic
-power</i>, virtual or theoretical, of the alimentary substance.
-This energy being destined to be transformed
-into <i>vital energies</i> (Chauveau’s <i>physiological work</i>,
-<i>physiological energy</i>), the dynamogenic or thermogenic
-value of the food is at the same time its biogenetic
-value. Two weights of different foods which supply
-the organism with the same number of Calories,—<i>i.e.</i>
-for which these numerical values are the same,—will be
-called <i>isodynamic</i> or <i>isodynamogenic</i>, <i>isobiogenetic</i>, <i>isoenergetic</i>
-weights. They will be equivalent from the
-point of view of their alimentary value. And finally,
-if, as is usually the case, the cycle of energy ends in
-the production of heat, the food which has been
-utilized for this purpose has a real <i>thermogenic value</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>
-identical with its theoretical thermogenic value. In
-this case it might be determined experimentally by
-direct calorimetry, measuring the heat produced by
-the animal supposed absolutely unchanged and identical
-before and after the consumption of the food.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 3. <span class="smcap">Different Types of Foods. The Regular,
-Biothermogenic Type and the Irregular,
-Thermogenic Type.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p>Food is a source of thermal energy for the organism
-because it is decomposed within it, and undergoes
-within it a chemical degradation. Physiological
-chemistry tells us that whatever be the manner in
-which it is broken up, it always results in the same
-body and always sets free the same quantity of heat.
-But if the point of departure and the point of arrival
-are the same, it is possible that the path pursued is
-not constantly identical. For example, one gramme
-of fat will always give the same quantity of heat,
-9.4 Calories, and will always come to its final state
-of carbonic acid and water; but from the fat to
-the mixture of carbonic acid gas and water there
-are many different intermediaries. In a word we
-get the conception of varied cycles of alimentary
-evolutions.</p>
-
-<p>From the point of view of the heat produced it has
-just been said that these cycles are equivalent. But
-are they equivalent from the vital point of view?
-This is an essential question.</p>
-
-<p>Let us imagine the most ordinary alternative.
-Food passes from the natural to the final state after
-being incorporated with the elements of the tissues,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>
-and after having taken part in the vital operations.
-The chemical potential only passes into thermal
-energy after having passed through a certain intermediary
-phase of vital energy. This is the normal
-case, <i>the regular type of alimentary evolution</i>. It may
-be said in this case that the food has fulfilled the
-whole of its function, it has served for the vital
-functional activity before producing heat. It has
-been <i>biothermogenic</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>The irregular or pure thermogenic type.</i>—And now
-let us conceive of the most simple <i>irregular or
-aberrant type</i>. Food passes from the initial to the
-final state without incorporation in the living cells of
-the organism, and without taking part in the vital
-functional activity. It remains confined in the blood
-and the circulating liquids, but it undergoes in the
-end, however, the same molecular disintegration as
-before, and sets free the same quantity of heat
-Its chemical energy changes at once into thermal
-energy. Food is a <i>pure thermogen</i>. It has fulfilled
-only one part of its work. It has been of slight
-vital utility.</p>
-
-<p>Does this ever occur in reality? Are there foods
-which would be only <i>pure thermogens</i>—that is to
-say, which would not in reality be incorporated with
-the living anatomical elements, which would form no
-part of them either in a state of provisory constituents
-of the living protoplasm, or in the state of reserve-stuff;
-which would remain in the internal medium, in
-the blood and the lymph, and would there undergo
-their chemical evolution? Or again, if the whole of
-the food does not escape assimilation, would it be
-possible for part to escape it? Would it be possible
-for one part of the same alimentary substance to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
-incorporated, and for the rest to be kept in the blood
-or the lymph, in the circulating liquids <i>ad limina
-corporis</i>, so to speak? In other words, can the same
-food be according to circumstances a <i>biothermogen</i> or
-a <i>pure thermogen</i>? Some physiologists—Fick of
-Wurzburg, for instance—have claimed that this is
-really the case for most nitrogenous elements, carbohydrates,
-and fats; all would be capable of evolving
-according to the two types. On the other hand, Zuntz
-and von Mering have absolutely denied the existence
-of the aberrant or pure thermogenic type. No substances
-would be directly decomposed in the organic
-liquids apart from the functional intervention of the
-histological elements. Finally, other authors teach
-that there is a small number of alimentary substances
-which thus undergoes direct combustion, and among
-them is alcohol.</p>
-
-<p><i>Liebig’s Superfluous Consumption.</i>—Liebig’s <i>theory
-of superfluous consumption</i> and Voit’s <i>theory of the
-circulating albumen</i> assert that the proteid foods
-undergo partial direct combustion in the blood vessels.
-The organism only incorporates what is necessary
-for physiological requirements. As for the surplus
-of the food that is offered it, it accepts it, and, so
-to speak, squanders it; it burns it directly; and
-we have a “sumptuary” consumption, consumption
-<i>de luxe</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In this connection arose a celebrated discussion
-which still divides physiologists. If we disengage
-the essential body of the discussion from all
-that envelops it, we see that it is fundamentally a
-question of deciding whether a food always follows the
-same evolution whatever the circumstances may be,
-and particularly when it is introduced in great excess.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>
-Liebig thought that the superabundant part, escaping
-the ordinary process, was destroyed by direct combustion.
-He affirmed, for instance, that nitrogenous
-substances in excess were directly burned in the blood
-instead of passing through their usual cycle of vital
-operations. We might express the same idea by
-saying that they then undergo an accelerated
-evolution. Instead of passing through the blood in
-the anatomical element, to return in the dismembered
-form from the anatomical element to the blood,
-their breaking up takes place in the blood itself.
-They save a displacement, and therefore in reality
-remain external to the construction of the living
-edifice. Their energy, crossing the intermediary vital
-stage, passes with a leap from the chemical to the
-thermal form. Liebig’s doctrine reduced to this
-fundamental idea deserved to survive, but mistakes
-in minor details involved its ruin.</p>
-
-<p><i>Voit’s Circulating Albumen.</i>—A few years later
-C. Voit, a celebrated physiological chemist of Munich,
-revived it in a more extravagant form. He held
-that almost the whole of the albuminoid element
-is burned directly in the blood. He interpreted
-certain experiments on the utilization of nitrogenous
-foods by imagining that these substances
-when introduced into the blood were divided as a
-result of digestion into two parts: the one very small,
-which was incorporated with the living elements, and
-passed into the stage of <i>organized albumen</i>, the other,
-corresponding to the greater part of the alimentary
-albumen, remained mingled with the blood and
-lymph, and was subjected in this medium to direct
-combustion. This was <i>circulating albumen</i>. In this
-theory the tissues are almost stable; the organic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
-liquids alone are subjected to oxydizing transformations,
-to nutritive metabolism. The accelerated
-evolution, which Liebig considered as an exceptional
-case, was to C. Voit the rule.</p>
-
-<p><i>Current Ideas as to the Rôle of Foods.</i>—The ideas
-of to-day are not those of Voit; but they do not,
-however, differ from them essentially. We no longer
-admit that the greater part of the ingested and
-digested albumen remains confined in the circulating
-medium external to the anatomical elements. It is
-held, with Pflüger and the school of Bonn, that it
-penetrates the anatomical element and is incorporated
-in it; but in agreement with Voit it is believed
-that a very small part is assimilated to the really
-living matter, to the protoplasm properly so called;
-the greater part is deposited in the cellular element
-as reserve-stuff. The material, properly so called, of
-the living machine does not undergo destruction and
-reparation as extensively as our predecessors supposed.
-There is no need for great reparation. On the contrary,
-the physiological activity consumes to a great
-extent the reserve-stuff. And the greater part of
-the food, after having undergone suitable elaboration,
-serves to replace the reserve-stuff destroyed
-in each anatomical element by the vital functional
-activity.</p>
-
-<p><i>Experimental Facts.</i>—Among the facts which
-brought physiologists of the school of Voit to believe
-that most foods do not get beyond the internal
-medium, there is one which may well be mentioned
-here. It has been observed that the consumption of
-oxygen in respiration increases notably (about a fifth
-of its value) immediately after a meal. What does
-this mean? The interval is too short for the digested<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
-alimentary substances to have been elaborated and
-incorporated in the living cells. It is supposed that
-an appreciable time is required for this complete
-assimilation. The products of alimentary digestion
-are therefore in all probability still in the blood, and
-in the interstitial liquids in communication with it.
-The increase of oxygen consumed would show that a
-considerable portion of these nutritive substances
-absorbed and passed into the blood would be oxydized
-and then and there destroyed. But this
-interpretation, however probable it may be, does not
-really fit in with the facts in such a way that we may
-consider it as proved. Certain experiments by Zuntz
-and Mering are opposed to the idea that combustion
-in the blood is easy. These physiologists injected
-certain oxydizable substances into the vessels without
-being able to detect any instantaneous oxidation.
-It is only fair to add that against these fruitless
-attempts other more fortunate experiments may be
-quoted.</p>
-
-<p><i>Category of Purely Thermogenic Foods, with Accelerated
-Evolution. Alcohol. Acids of Fruits.</i>—The
-accelerated evolution of foods—an evolution
-which takes place in the blood, that is to say outside
-the really living elements—remains, therefore, very
-uncertain as far as ordinary food is concerned. It
-has been thought that it was a little less uncertain
-as far as the special category of alcohol, acids of
-fruits, and glycerine is concerned.</p>
-
-<p>Some authors consider these bodies as pure
-thermogens. When alcohol is ingested in moderate
-doses, they say that about a tenth of the
-quantity absorbed becomes fixed in the living tissues;
-the rest is “circulating alcohol.” It is oxidized<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>
-directly in the blood and in the lymph, without intervening
-in the vital functions other than by the heat
-it produces. From the point of view of the energetic
-theory these are not real foods, because their potential
-energy is not transformed into any kind of vital
-energy, but passes at once to the thermal form. On
-the other hand, other physiologists look upon alcohol
-as really a food. According to them everything is
-called a food which is transformed in the organism
-with the production of heat; and they measure the
-nutritive value of a substance by the number of
-Calories it can give up to the organism. So that
-alcohol would be a better food than carbohydrated
-and nitrogenous substances. A definite quantity of
-alcohol, a gramme for instance, is equivalent from
-the thermal point of view to 1.66 grammes of sugar,
-1.44 of albumen, or 0.73 of fat. These quantities
-would be <i>isodynamic</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Experiment has not entirely decided for or against
-this theory. However, the first tests have not been
-very favourable to it. The researches of C. von
-Noorden and his pupils, Stammreich and Miura, have
-clearly and directly established that alcohol cannot
-be substituted in a maintenance ration for an exactly
-isodynamic quantity of carbohydrates. If the substitution
-is effected, a ration only just capable of
-maintaining the organism in equilibrium becomes insufficient.
-The animal decreases in weight. It loses
-more nitrogenous matter than it can recover from
-its diet, and this situation cannot be sustained for
-long. On the other hand, the celebrated researches
-of the American physiologist, Atwater, would plead,
-on the contrary, in favour of almost isodynamic substitution.
-Finally, Duclaux has shown that alcohol<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>
-is a real food, biothermogenic for certain vegetable
-organisms. But urea is also a food for <i>micrococcus
-ureæ</i>. It does not follow that it is a food for mammals.
-We have not reached the solution yet—<i>adhuc
-sub judice</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Conclusion: The Energetic Character of Food.</i>—To
-sum up we have confined ourselves, in what has been
-said, to the consideration of a single character of
-food, and really the most essential, its energetic
-character. Food must furnish energy to the organism,
-and for that purpose it is decomposed and broken up
-within it, and issues from it simplified. It is thus,
-for instance, that the fats, which from the chemical
-point of view are complicated molecular edifices,
-escape in the form of carbonic acid and water. And
-so it is with carbo-hydrates, starchy and sugary
-substances. This is because these compounds
-descend to a lower degree of complexity during their
-passage through the organism, and by this drop, as it
-were, they get rid of the chemical energy which they
-contained in the potential state. Thermo-chemistry
-enables us to deduce from the comparison of the
-initial and final states the value of the energy
-absorbed by the living being. This energetic, dynamogenic
-or thermogenic value, thus gives a measure of
-the alimentary capacity of the substance. A gramme
-of fat, for instance, gives to the organism a quantity
-of energy equivalent to 9.4 Calories; the thermogenic
-value of the albumenoids is 4.8 Calories.
-The thermogenic or thermal value of carbohydrates
-is less than 4.7 calories. This being so, we understand
-why the animal is nourished by foods which
-are products very high in the scale of chemical
-complexity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 4. <span class="smcap">Food considered exclusivelyy as
-Source of Heat.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p>We have seen that food is, in the first place, a
-source of <i>chemical energy</i>; and, in the second place,
-a source of <i>vital energy</i>—finally, and consequently, a
-source of thermal energy. It is this last point of
-view which has exclusively struck the attention of
-certain physiologists, and hence has arisen a peculiar
-manner of conceiving the rôle of food. It consists in
-looking on food as a source of thermal energy.</p>
-
-<p>This conception is easily applied to warm-blooded
-animals, but to them exclusively—and this is where
-it first fails. The animal is warmer than the environment
-in general. It is constantly giving out heat to
-it. To repair this loss of heat it takes in food in
-exact proportion to the loss it sustains. When it is a
-question of cold-blooded vertebrates, which live in
-water and in most cases have an internal temperature
-which is not distinguishable from that of
-the environment, we see less clearly the thermal rôle
-of food. It seems then that the production of heat
-is an episodic phenomenon, not existing for itself.</p>
-
-<p>However that may be, food is in the second place
-a source of thermal energy for the organism. Can it
-be said, inversely, that every substance which we introduce
-into the economy, and which is there broken
-up and gives off heat, is a food? This is a moot
-point. We dealt just now with purely thermogenic
-foods. However, most physiologists are inclined to
-give a positive answer. In their eyes the idea of food
-cannot be considered apart from the fact of the production
-of heat. They take the effect for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>
-cause. To these physiologists everything ingested is
-called food, if it gives off heat within the body.</p>
-
-<p>To be heated by food is, indeed, an imperious
-necessity for the higher animals. If this need be not
-satisfied the functional activities become enervated;
-the animal falls into a state of torpor; and if it is
-capable of attenuated, of more or less latent, life it
-sleeps in a state of hibernation; but if it is not
-capable of this, it dies. The warm-blooded animal
-with a fixed temperature is so organized that this
-constancy of temperature is necessary to the exercise
-and to the conservation of life. To maintain this
-indispensable temperature there must be a continual
-supply of thermal energy. According to this, the
-necessity of alimentation is confused with the
-necessity of a supply of heat to cover the deficit
-which is due to the inevitable cooling of the organism.
-This is the point of view taken up by theorists, and
-we cannot say that they have no right to do so. We
-can only protest against the exaggeration of this
-principle, and the subordination of the other rôles of
-food to this single role as a thermogen. It is the
-magnitude of the thermal losses which, according to
-these physiologists, determines the need for food, and
-regulates the total value of the maintenance ration.
-From the quantitative view it is approximately true.
-From the qualitative point of view it is false.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the theory opposed to the theory of
-chemical and vital energy. It has on its side a large
-number of experts, among whom are Rubner,
-Stohmann, and von Noorden. It has been defended in an
-article in the <i>Dictionnaire de Physiologie</i> by Ch.
-Richet and Lapicque. They hold that thermogenesis
-absolutely dominates the play of nutritive exchanges;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>
-and it is the need for the production of heat that
-regulates the total demand for Calories which every
-organism requires from its ration. It is not because
-it produces too much heat that the organism gets rid
-of it peripherally: it is rather because it inevitably
-disperses it that it is adapted to produce it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rubner’s Experiments.</i>—This conception of the rôle
-of alimentation is based on two arguments. The first
-is furnished by Rubner’s last experiment (1893). A
-dog in a calorimeter is kept alive for a rather long
-period (two to twelve days); the quantity of heat
-produced in this lapse of time is measured, and it is
-compared with the heat afforded by the food. In all
-cases the agreement is remarkable. But is it possible
-that there should be no such agreement? Clearly no,
-because there is a well-known regulating mechanism
-which always exactly proportions the losses and the
-gains of heat to the necessity of maintaining the fixed
-internal temperature. This first argument is, therefore,
-not conclusive.</p>
-
-<p>The second argument is drawn from what has been
-called the <i>law of surfaces</i>, clearly perceived by Regnault
-and Reiset in their celebrated memoir in 1849,
-formulated by Rubner in 1884, and beautifully
-demonstrated by Ch. Richet. In comparing the
-maintenance rations for subjects of very different
-weights, placed under very different conditions, it is
-found that the food always introduces the same number
-of Calories for the same extent of skin—<i>i.e.</i>, for
-the same cooling surface. The numerical data
-collected by E. Voit show that, under identical conditions,
-warm-blooded animals daily expend the same
-quantity of heat per unit of surface—namely, 1.036
-Calories per square yard. The average ration intro<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>duces
-exactly the amount of food which gives off
-sensibly this number of Calories. Now, this is an
-interesting fact, but, like the preceding, it has no
-demonstrative force.</p>
-
-<p><i>Objections. The Limits of Isodynamism.</i>—On the
-contrary, there are serious objections. The thermal
-value of the nutritive principles only represents one
-feature of their physiological rôle. In fact, animals
-and man are capable of extracting the same profit
-and the same results from rations in which one of the
-foods is replaced by an <i>isodynamic</i> proportion of the
-other two—that is to say, a proportion developing the
-same quantity of heat. But this substitution has very
-narrow limits. Isodynamism—that is to say, the
-faculty that food has of supplying <i>pro ratâ</i> its thermal
-values—is limited all round by exceptions. In the
-first place, there are a few nitrogenous foods that no
-other nutritive principle can supply; and besides, beyond
-this minimum, when the supply takes place, it is
-not perfect. Lying between the albuminoids and the
-carbohydrates relatively to the fats, it is not between
-these two categories relatively to nitrogenous substances
-if the thermal power of food were the only
-thing that had to be considered in it, the isodynamic
-supply would not fail in a whole category of principles
-such as alcohol, glycerin, and the fatty acids. Finally,
-if the thermal power of a food is the sole measure of
-its physiological utility, we are compelled to ask why
-a dose of food may not be replaced by a dose of heat.
-External warming might take the place of the internal
-warming given by food. We might be ambitious
-enough to substitute for rations of sugar and fat an
-isodynamic quantity of heat-giving coal, and so
-nourish the man by suitably warming his room. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>
-reality, food has many other offices to fulfill than
-that of warming the body and of giving it energy—that
-is to say, of providing for the functional activity
-of the living machine. It must also serve to provide
-for wear and tear. The organism needs a suitable
-quantity of certain fixed principles, organic and
-mineral. These substances are evidently intended to
-replace those which have been involved in the cycle
-of matter, and to reconstitute the organic material.
-To these materials we may give the name of <i>histogenetic</i>
-foods (repairing the tissues), or of <i>plastic</i>
-foods.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 5. <span class="smcap">The Plastic Rôle of Food.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>Opinions of the Early Physiologists.</i>—It is from this
-point of view that the ancients regarded the rôle of
-alimentation. Hippocrates, Aristotle, and Galen
-believed in the existence of a unique nutritive substance,
-existing in all the infinitely different bodies
-that man and the animals utilize for their nourishment.
-It was Lavoisier who first had the idea of a
-dynamogenic or thermal rôle of foods. Finally, the
-general view of these two species of attributes and
-their marked distinction is due to J. Liebig, who
-called them <i>plastic</i> and <i>dynamogenic</i> foods. In addition
-he thought that the same substance should accumulate
-the same attributes, and that this was the case with
-the albuminoid foods, which were at once <i>plastic</i> and
-<i>dynamogenic</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Preponderance of Nitrogenous Foods.</i>—Magendie, in
-1836, was the pioneer who introduced in this interminable
-list of foods the first simple division. He
-divided them into proteid substances, still called<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>
-albuminoids, nitrogenous, quaternary, and <i>ternary
-substances</i>. Proteid substances are capable of maintaining
-life. Hence the preponderant importance
-given by the eminent physiologist to this order of
-foods. These results have since been verified. Pflüger,
-of Bonn, gave a very convincing proof of this a few
-years ago. He fed a dog, made it work, and finally
-fattened it, by giving it nothing at all to eat but meat
-from which had been extracted, as thoroughly as
-possible, every other substance.<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> The same experiment
-showed that the organism can manufacture fats and
-carbo-hydrates at the expense of the nitrogenous food,
-when it does not find them ready formed in the ration.
-The albumen will suffice for all the needs of energy and
-and matter. To sum up, there is no necessary fat, no
-carbohydrate is necessary; albuminoids alone are indispensable.
-Theoretically, the animal and man alike
-could maintain life by the exclusive use of proteid
-food; but, practically, this is not possible for man,
-because of the enormous amount of meat which
-would have to be used (3 kilogrammes a day).</p>
-
-<p>Ordinary alimentation comprises a mixture of
-three orders of substances, and to this mixture
-albumen brings the plastic element materially necessary
-for the reparation of the organism; it also is
-the source of energy. The two other varieties only
-bring energy. In this mixed regimen the quantity
-of albumen must never descend below a certain
-minimum. The efforts of physiologists of late years
-have tended to fix with precision this minimum
-ration of albuminoids—or as we may briefly put it,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>
-of <i>albumen</i>—below which the organism would perish.
-Voit had found 118 grammes of albumen necessary
-for the average adult man weighing 70 kilos. This
-figure is certainly too high. The Japanese doctors,
-Mori, Tsuboï, and Murato, have shown that a considerable
-portion of the population of Japan is
-content with a diet much poorer in nitrogen, and
-suffers no inconvenience. The Abyssinians, according
-to Lapicque, ingest, on the average, only 67
-grammes of albumen per day. A Scandinavian physiologist,
-Siven, experimenting on himself, found that
-he could reduce the ration of albumen necessary to
-the maintenance and equilibrium of the organism to
-the lowest figures which have been yet reached—namely,
-from 35 to 46 grammes a day. These
-experiments, however, must be confirmed and interpreted.
-Besides, it is important to point out that the
-most advantageous ration of albumen requires to be
-a good deal above the strictly sufficient quantity.</p>
-
-<p>It only remains to refer to several other recent
-researches. The most important of many are those
-published by M. Chauveau, on the reciprocal transformation
-of the immediate principles in the organism
-according to the conditions of its functioning and
-the circumstances of its activity. To deal with
-these researches with as much detail as they deserve,
-we must study the physiology of muscular contraction
-and of movement—that is to say, of muscular
-energetics.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_III">BOOK III.</h2>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE CHARACTERS COMMON TO LIVING BEINGS.</p>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Chapter I. Summary: The doctrine of vital unity.—Chapter II.
-The morphological unity of living beings.—Chapter III.
-The chemical unity of living beings.—Chapter IV. The
-mutability of living beings.—Chapter V. The specific
-form, its acquisition, and reparation.—Chapter VI. Nutrition.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I_3">CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-<small>THE DOCTRINE OF VITAL UNITY.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Phenomena common to all living beings—Theory of vital
-duality—Unity in the formation of immediate principles—Unity
-in the digestive acts—The common vital fund.</p>
-
-
-<p>When we ask the various philosophical schools what
-life is, some show us a chemical retort, and others
-show us a soul. Whether vitalists or of the mechanical
-school, these are the adversaries who since philosophy
-began have vainly contested the possession of the
-secret of life. We need not concern ourselves with this
-eternal quarrel. We need not ask Pythagoras, Plato,
-Aristotle, Hippocrates, Paracelsus, Van Helmont,
-and Stahl what idea they formed of the vital
-principle; nor need we probe to the depths the
-ideas of living nature held by Epicurus, Democritus,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>
-Boerhaave, Willis, and Lamettrie; nor need we
-apply to the iatromechanicians nor to the chemists.
-We may do better than that. We may ask nature
-itself.</p>
-
-<p><i>Phenomena Common to Living Beings.</i>—Nature
-shows us an infinite number of beings, animal or
-vegetable, described in ordinary language as <i>living
-beings</i>. This language implicitly assumes something
-common to them all, a universal manner of being
-which belongs to them without distinction, without
-regard to differences of species, types, or kingdoms.
-On the other hand, anatomical analysis teaches us
-that animated beings and plants may be divided into
-parts ever decreasing in complexity, of which the
-last and the simplest is the <i>anatomical element</i>, the
-<i>cell</i>, the microscopic organic unit which, too, is alive.
-Common opinion suspects that all these beings,
-whether entire as in the case of animal and vegetable
-individuals, or fragmentary as in the case of
-cellular elements, have the same manner of being,
-and present the same body of common characteristics
-which rightly gives them this unmistakable title of
-living beings. Life then essentially would be this
-manner of being, common to animals, vegetables, and
-their elements. To seize in isolation these common,
-necessary, and permanent features, and then to
-synthetize them into a whole, will be the really
-scientific method of defining life, and of explaining
-its nature.</p>
-
-<p>And here then immediately arises a fundamental
-question which gives one pause, a question of fact
-which must be solved before we can go further.
-Is there really a common manner of being in all
-these things? Are <i>animal life, vegetable life</i>, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
-life of the elements or <i>elementary life</i>, all the same?
-Is there a sum total of characteristics which may
-define life in general?</p>
-
-<p>The physiologists, following in the steps of Claude
-Bernard, respond in the affirmative. They accept as
-valid and convincing the proof given of this vital
-community by the illustrious experimentalist. However
-there are some rare exceptions to this universal
-assent. In this concert of approval there is at least
-one discordant voice, that of M. F. Le Dantec.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span></p>
-<p><i>The Doctrine of the Vital Duality of Animals and
-Plants.</i>—There are, therefore, biologists who, in the
-domain of theory and in virtue of more or less well-founded
-conceptions or interpretations, separate
-<i>elementary life</i> from other vital forms, and thus break
-the bond of vital unity proclaimed by Claude Bernard.
-This monistic doctrine at the outset met with other
-opponents, and that, too, in the domain of facts.
-But it triumphed over them and became established.
-We have to deal with scientists like J. B. Dumas and
-Boussingault, who drew a dividing line between
-<i>animal life</i> and <i>vegetable life</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But let us in a few words recall to the reader this
-victorious struggle of the monistic doctrine against
-the dualism of the two kingdoms. If we consider an
-animal in action, said the champions of vital dualism,
-we agree that it feels, moves, breathes, digests, and
-finally, that it destroys by a real operation of chemical
-analysis the materials afforded to it by its ambient
-world. It is in these phenomena that are manifested
-its activity, its life. Now, added the dualists, plants
-do not feel, do not move, do not breathe, and do not
-digest. They build up from immediate principles,
-by an operation of chemical synthesis, the materials
-they borrow from the soil which bears them, or from
-the atmosphere which surrounds them. There is,
-therefore, nothing in common between the representatives
-of the two kingdoms if we confine ourselves
-to the examination of the actual phenomena which
-take place in them. To find a resemblance between
-the animal and the vegetable, said the dualists, we
-must set aside what they <i>do</i>, for they do different, or
-even contrary things. We must consider whence
-they come and what they <i>become</i>. Both originate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>
-in organisms similar to themselves. They grow,
-evolve, and generate as they themselves were
-generated. In other words, while their acts separate
-plants from animals, their mode of origin and
-evolution alone bring them together. Such analogies
-are of no slight importance; but they were neutralized
-by their dissimilarities, which were exaggerated by
-the dualistic school.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear that the word <i>life</i> would lose all actual
-significance to those who would reduce it to the
-faculty of evolution, and who would separate all its
-real manifestations in animated beings and in plants.
-If there are two lives, the one animal and the other
-vegetable, there are no more; or, what comes to the
-same thing, there is an infinite number of lives which
-have nothing in common but the name, or at most,
-the possession of some secondary characteristics.
-There are as many of them as there are different
-beings, for each has its own particular evolution.
-Here the specific is the negation of the general and
-it destroys it instead of being subordinate to it. The
-principle of life becomes for each being something as
-individual as its own evolution. And this, if we
-think it out, is how the philosophers look at life, and
-it is the real reason of their disagreement with the
-physiological school.</p>
-
-<p><i>Proof of the Monistic Theory.</i>—On the other hand,
-under the disguise of living forms, the physiologist
-recognizes the existence of an identical basis. His
-trained ear marks amid the overcharged instrumentation
-of the vital work the recognizable
-undertones of a constant theme. It was the work of
-Claude Bernard to bring this common basis to
-light. He shows that plants live as animals do,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
-that they breathe, digest, have sensory reactions,
-move essentially like animals, destroy and build up
-in the same manner the immediate chemical principles.
-For that purpose it was necessary to pass in
-review, examining them from their foundation and
-distinguishing the essential from the secondary, the
-different vital manifestations—digestion, respiration,
-sensibility, motility, and nutrition. This is what
-Claude Bernard did in his work <i>Sur les Phénomènes
-de la vie communs aux animaux et aux plantes</i>. We
-need only to sketch in broad outline the characteristic
-features of his lengthy demonstration.</p>
-
-<p><i>Unity in the Formation of Immediate Chemical
-Principles.</i>—The first and most important of the
-differences pointed out between the life of animals
-and that of plants was relative to the formation of
-immediate principles. On this ground, indeed, vital
-dualism raised its fortress. The animal kingdom
-was considered in its totality as the parasite of the
-vegetable kingdom. To J. B. Dumas, animals,
-whatever they may be, make neither fat nor any
-elementary organic matter; they borrow all their
-foods, whether they be sugars or starches, fats or
-nitrogenous substances, from the vegetable kingdom.
-About the year 1843 the researches of the chemists,
-and of Payen in particular, succeeded in proving the
-presence, almost constant, of fatty matters in vegetables;
-and, further, these matters existed there in
-proportions more than sufficient to explain how
-the beast which fed upon them was fattened. The
-chemists attributed to nature as much practical sense
-as they themselves possessed; and since the hay and
-the grass of the ration brought fat ready made to the
-horse, the cow, and the sheep, they declared that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>
-animal organism had nothing whatever to do but to
-put this food into the tissues, or to arrange for it to
-pass into the milk. But nature is not so wise and
-economical as was supposed at the Académie des
-Sciences. After a memorable debate, in which
-Dumas, Boussingault, Payen, Liebig, Persoz, Chossat,
-Milne-Edwards, and Flourens took part, and, later on,
-Berthelot and Claude Bernard, it was agreed that
-the animal does not grow fat from the fatty food
-which is supplied it, and that it makes its own fat
-just as the vegetable does, but in another manner.
-In the same way sugar, the normal constituent substance
-necessary for the nutrition of animals and
-plants, instead of being a vegetable product passing
-by alimentation from the herbivorous animals and
-thence to the carnivorous, is manufactured by the
-animal itself. Generally speaking, immediate principles
-have an equal claim to existence in the two
-kingdoms. Both form and destroy the substances
-indispensable to life.</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, one of the barriers between animal life
-and vegetable life is overthrown and destroyed.</p>
-
-<p><i>Unity of Digestive Acts in Animals and Plants.</i>—Similarly,
-another barrier falls if we show that
-digestion, long considered the exclusive function of
-animals, and, in particular, of the higher animals, is
-in reality universal.</p>
-
-<p>Cuvier pointed out the absence of a digestive
-apparatus as a very general and distinctive characteristic
-of plants. But the absence of a digestive
-apparatus does not necessarily imply the absence of
-digestion. The essential act of digestion is independent
-of the infinite variety of the organs, just as a
-reaction is independent of the form of the vessel in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>
-which it takes place. It is, in fact, a chemical
-transformation of an alimentary substance. This
-transformation may be realized outside the organism,
-<i>in vitro</i>, just as it can in the living being without
-masticating organs, without an intestinal apparatus,
-without glands, in a vessel placed in a stove, simply
-by means of a few soluble ferments—pepsine, trypsine,
-amylolytic diastases.</p>
-
-<p>All alimentary substances, whether taken from
-without or borrowed from the reserves accumulated
-in the internal stores of the organism, must undergo
-preparation. This preparation is digestion. Digestion
-is the prologue of nutrition. It is over when the
-reparative substance, whether food or reserve-stuff,
-is brought into a state enabling it to pass into the
-blood, and to be utilized by the organism.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Identity of Categories of Foods in the Two
-Kingdoms.</i>—Now the alimentary substances are the
-same in the two kingdoms, and so is their digestive
-preparation. Alimentary materials are of four
-kinds: albuminoid, starchy, fatty, and sugary substances.
-The animal takes them from without
-(food properly so-called), or from within (reserve-stuff).
-Man obtains starch, for instance, from different
-farinaceous dishes. It may, however, equally well
-be borrowed from the reserve of flour that we carry
-within us in our liver, which is a veritable granary,
-full of floury substance, glycogen. And so it is with
-vegetables. The potato has its store of flour in its
-tuber just as the animal has in its liver. The grain
-which is about to germinate has it in reserve-stuff in
-its cotyledons, or in its albumen. The bud which is
-about to develop into a tree or a flower carries it at
-its base.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span></p>
-
-<p>The same conclusions are true for another class
-of substances, the sugars. They may be a food taken
-from without, or a reserve deposited in the tissues.
-The animal takes from without, in fruits for instance,
-the ordinary sugar which pleases its taste. Beetroot,
-when flowering and fructifying, draws this substance
-from its roots in which stores have been amassed.
-The sugar cane when running to seed takes the
-sugar from the stores which it possesses in its cane.
-Brewer’s yeast, the <i>saccharomyces cerevisiæ</i>, the agent
-of alcoholic fermentation, finds this same substance in
-the sugary juices favourable to its development.</p>
-
-<p>In the same way, identically fatty substances,
-either in the form of food or of reserve-stuff, serve
-for nutrition to animals and vegetables; and that is
-again true of the substances of the fourth class,
-albuminoids, identical in the two kingdoms, foods or
-reserve-stuff, equally utilizable in both after digestion.</p>
-
-<p><i>Identity of the Digestive Agents and Mechanisms in
-Plants and Animals.</i>—Now, the results of contemporary
-research have been to establish a surprising
-resemblance in the modifications experienced by these
-foods, or reserve stuffs, in animals and plants; and
-even resemblances in the agents which realize them,
-and in the mechanisms by which they are performed.
-There is a real unity. The flour accumulated in the
-tuber of the potato is liquefied and digested on the
-appearance of the buds or of the flower, just as the
-starch of the liver or the alimentary flour is digested
-by the animal. The fatty matter which is stored up
-in the oleaginous grain is digested at the moment of
-germination, just as the fat during a meal is digested
-in the animal’s intestine. As the beetroot begins to
-run to seed, the root gives up part of its store of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
-sugar, and this reserve stuff is distributed throughout
-the stalk after having been digested, exactly as would
-have been the case in the digestive canal of man.</p>
-
-<p>Vegetables, then, really digest. The four classes of
-substances mentioned above are really digested in
-order to pass from their actual form, a form unsuitable
-for interstitial exchanges, to another form suitable for
-nutrition. As there are four kinds of foods, so there
-are four kinds of digestions, four kinds of ferment-producing
-agents—amylolytic,<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> proteolytic,<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> saccharine,
-and lipasic<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> diastases, identical in the animal
-and the plant. Identity of ferments implies identity
-of digestions. Going down to the very basis of
-things, the digestive act is nothing but the action of
-this ferment. This is the crux of the whole question.
-All else is only difference in scene, varying in the
-means of execution and in the accessories. The
-difference arises from the stage on which it takes
-place, but the piece which is being played is the
-same, and the actors are the same, and so is the
-action of the play.</p>
-
-<p>This identity between animal and vegetable life is
-found in the phenomena of respiration and of motility.
-The limits of this book do not allow of our entering
-into the details of facts. Besides, the facts are well
-known, and may be found in any treatise on general
-physiology. This science, therefore, enables us to
-perceive the imposing unity of life in its essential
-manifestations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span></p>
-
-<p>The community of the phenomena of vitality in
-animals and plants being thus placed beyond a doubt,
-we must now discover the reason why. This reason
-is to be found in their anatomical and in their
-chemical unity. The fundamental phenomena are
-common because the composition is common, and
-because the universal anatomical basis, the cell,
-possesses in all cases a sum total of identical
-properties.</p>
-
-<p>If we appeal to physiology for the characteristics
-common to living beings, it will generally give us the
-following:—A structure or organization; a certain
-chemical composition which is that of <i>living matter</i>;
-a specific form; an evolution which in the earliest
-stage occasions the being to grow and develop until
-it is divided, and which in the highest stage includes
-one or more evolutive cycles with growth, the adult
-stage, senility, and death; a property of increase or
-nutrition, with its consequence—namely, a relation of
-material exchanges with the ambient medium;—and
-finally, a property of reproduction. It is important
-to pass them rapidly in review.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II_3">CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-<small>MORPHOLOGICAL UNITY OF LIVING BEINGS.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">§ 1. The cellular theory. First period: division of the organism—§
-2. Second period: division of the cell—Cytoplasm—The
-nucleus—§ 3. Physical constitution of living matter—The
-micellar theory—§ 4. Individuality of complex beings—The
-law of the constitution of organisms.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>The first characteristic of the living beings is
-<i>organization</i>. By that we mean that they have a
-structure; that they are complex bodies formed of
-smaller aliquot parts and grouped according to a
-certain disposition. The most simple elementary
-being is not yet homogeneous. It is heterogeneous.
-It is organized. The least complex protoplasms,
-those of bacteria, for example, still possess a
-physical structure; Kunstler distinguishes in them
-two non-miscible substances, presenting an alveolar
-organization. Thus animals and plants present an
-organization, and it is sensibly constant from one end
-to the other of the scale of beings. There is a
-<i>morphological unity</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">The Cellular Theory. First Period:
-Division of the Organism into Cells.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>Cellular Theory. First Period.</i>—Morphological
-unity results from the existence of a universal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
-anatomical basis, the <i>cell</i>. The cellular theory sums
-up the teaching of general anatomy or histology.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the nineteenth century anatomy
-was following a routine dating from ancient times.
-It divided animal and vegetable machines into units
-in descending order, first into different forms of
-apparatus (circulatory, respiratory, digestive, etc.);
-then the apparatus into organs examined one by one,
-figuring and describing each of them from every
-point of view with scrupulous accuracy and untiring
-patience. If we think of the duration of these
-researches—the <i>Iliad</i>, as Malgaigne says, already
-containing the elements of a very fine regional
-anatomy—and especially of the powerful impulse
-they received in the seventeenth and eighteenth
-centuries, we shall understand the illusion of those
-who, in the days of X. Bichat, could fancy that the
-task of anatomy was almost ended.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact this task was barely begun, for
-nothing was known of the intimate structure of the
-organs. X. Bichat accomplished a revolution when
-he decomposed the living body into tissues. His
-successors, advancing a step in the analysis, dissociated
-the tissues into elements. These elements,
-which one would have thought were infinitely varied,
-were reduced in their turn to one common <i>prototype</i>,
-the cell.</p>
-
-<p>The living body, disaggregated by the histologist,
-resolves under the microscope into a dust, every grain
-of which is a cell. A cell is an anatomical element
-the constitution of which is the same from one part
-to the other of the same being, and from one being to
-another; and its dimensions, which are sensibly
-constant throughout the whole of the living world,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>
-have an average diameter of several thousandths of
-a millimetre—<i>i.e.</i>, of several <i>microns</i>. This element,
-the cell, is a real organ. It is smaller, no doubt, than
-those described by the ancient anatomists, but it is not
-less complex. Its complexity is only revealed later.
-It is an organic unit. Its form varies from one
-element to another. Its substance is a semi-fluid
-mass, a mixture of different albuminoids. In the
-mean value of its dimensions, so carefully measured—<i>exceptis
-excipiendis</i>—we have a condition the significance
-of which has not yet been discovered, but
-which may be of great value in the explanation of its
-peculiar activities.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the result to which have converged the researches
-of the biologists who have examined plants
-or the lower animals, as well as of the anatomists who
-have been more especially occupied with the vertebrates
-and with man. All their researches have
-brought them to the same conclusion—the cellular
-theory. Either living beings are composed of a single
-cell—as is the case with the microscopic animals called
-<i>protozoa</i>, and the microscopic vegetables called <i>protophytes</i>—or,
-they are cellular complexes, <i>metazoa</i> or
-<i>metaphytes</i>—that is to say, associations of these
-microscopic organic units which are called cells.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Law of the Composition of Organisms.</i>—The
-law of the composition of organisms was discovered
-in 1838 by Schleiden and Schwann. From that time
-up to 1875 it may be said that micrographers have
-spent their time in examining every organ and every
-tissue, muscular, glandular, conjunctive, nervous, etc.,
-and in showing that in spite of their varieties of
-aspect and form, of the complexity of structures due
-to cohesion and fusion, they all resolve into the com<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>mon
-element, the cell. Contemporary anatomists,
-Koelliker, Max Schultze, and Ranvier, have thus
-established the generality of the cellular constitution,
-while zoologists and botanists confirm the same law
-for all animals and vegetables, and exhibit them all
-as either unicellular or multicellular.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Cellular Origin of Complex Beings.</i>—At the
-same time embryogenic researches showed that all
-beings spring from a corpuscle of the same type.
-Going back in the history of their development to the
-most remote period, we find a cell of very constant
-constitution—namely, the <i>ovule</i>. This truth may be
-expressed by changing a word in Harvey’s celebrated
-aphorism—<i>omne vivum ex ovo</i>; we now say omne
-<i>vivum e cellula</i>. The myriads of differentiated anatomical
-elements whose association forms complex
-beings are the posterity of a cell, of the <i>primordial
-ovule</i>, unless they are the posterity of another equivalent
-cell. The second task of histology in the latter
-half of the nineteenth century consisted in following
-up the filiation of each anatomical element from the
-cell-egg to its state of complete development.</p>
-
-<p>The whole cellular theory is contained in the
-two following statements, which establish the morphological
-unity of living beings:—<i>Everything is a
-cell, everything comes from an initial cell</i>; the cell
-being defined as a mass of substance, protoplasm or
-protoplasms, of an average diameter of a few microns.</p>
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">The Second Period: the Division Of
-the Cell.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>Second Period: Constitution of the Cell.</i>—This was,
-however, only the first phase in the analytical study<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>
-of the living being. A second period began in
-1873 with the researches of Strassburger, Bütschli,
-Flemming, Kuppfer, Fromann, Heitzmann, Balbiani,
-Guignard, Kunstler, etc. These observers in their
-turn submitted this anatomical, this infinitely small
-cellular microcosm, to the same penetrating dissection
-their predecessors had applied to the whole organism.
-They brought us down one degree lower into
-the abyss of the infinitely small. And as Pascal,
-losing himself in these wonders of the imperceptible,
-saw in the body of the mite which is only a point,
-“parts incomparably smaller, legs with joints, veins in
-the legs, blood in the veins, humours in the blood,
-drops in the humours, vapours in these drops,” so
-contemporary biologists have shown in the epitome
-of organism called a cell, an edifice which itself is
-marvellously complex.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Cytoplasm.</i>—The observers named above revealed
-to us the extreme complexity of this organic
-unit. Their researches have shown us the structure
-of the two parts of which it is composed—the cellular
-protoplasm and the nucleus. They have determined
-the part played by each in genetic multiplication.
-They have shown that the protoplasm which forms the
-body of the cell is not homogeneous, as was at first
-supposed. The idea which was mooted later, that
-this protoplasm was formed, to use Sachs’ words, of a
-kind of “protoplasmic mud,”—<i>i.e.</i>, of a dust consisting
-of grains and granules connected by a liquid,—is no
-longer accurate. There is a much simpler view of the
-case. According to Leydig and his pupils, we must
-compare the protoplasm to a sponge in the meshes of
-which is lodged a fluid, transparent, hyaline substance,
-a kind of cellular juice, hyaloplasm. From the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
-chemical point of view this cellular juice is a mixture
-of very different materials, albumens, globulins, carbohydrates,
-and fats, elaborated by the cell itself. It is
-a product of vital activity; it is not yet the seat of
-this activity. The living matter has taken refuge in
-the spongy tissue itself, in the <i>spongioplasm</i>.</p>
-
-<p>According to other histologists, the comparison of
-protoplasm to a spongy mass does not give the
-most exact idea, and, in particular, it does not furnish
-the most general idea. It would be far better to say
-that the protoplasm possesses the structure of foam
-or lather. As was seen by Kunstler in 1880, a comparison
-with some familiar objects gives the best idea.
-Nothing could be more like protoplasm physically
-than the culinary preparation known as <i>sauce mayonnaise</i>,
-made with the aid of oil and a liquid with
-which oil does not mix. Emulsions of this kind were
-made artificially by Bütschli. He noted that these
-preparations mimicked all the aspects of cellular
-protoplasm. Thus, in the living cell there is a
-mixture of two liquids, non-miscible and of unequal
-fluidity. This mixture gives rise to the formation of
-little cells. The more consistent substance forms
-their supporting framework (Leydig’s spongioplasm),
-while the other, which is more fluid, fills its interior
-(hyaloplasm).</p>
-
-<p>However that may be, whether the primitive
-organization of the cellular protoplasm be that of a
-sponge, as is asserted by Leydig, or that of a <i>sauce
-mayonnaise</i>, as is claimed by Bütschli and Kunstler,
-the complexity does not rest there. Further recourse
-must be made to analysis. Just as the tissue of a
-sponge, when torn, shows the fibres which constitute
-it, so the spongioplasm, the parietal substance, is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>
-exhibited as formed of a tangle of fibrils, or better
-still, of filaments or ribbons (in Greek, <i>mitome</i>), which
-are called <i>chromatic filaments</i>, because they are deeply
-stained when the cell is plunged into aniline dye. In
-each of these filaments, the substance of which is
-called chromatin, the devices of microscopic examination
-enable us to discover a series of granulations like
-beads on a string, the <i>microsomes</i> or bioblasts, connected
-one with the other by a sort of cement,
-Schwartz’s <i>linin</i>, which is a kind of nuclein.</p>
-
-<p>And let us add, to complete this summary of the
-constitution of cellular protoplasm, that it presents, at
-any rate at a certain moment, a remarkable organ,
-the <i>centrosome</i>, which plays an important part in
-cellular division. Its pre-existence is not certain.
-Some writers make it issue from the nucleus. At the
-moment of cellular division it appears like a compressed
-mass of granulations, which may be deeply
-stained. Around it is seen a clear unstainable zone,
-called the attraction-sphere; and finally, beyond this
-is a crown of striæ, which diverge like the rays of a
-halo—<i>i.e.</i>, the <i>aster</i>. In conclusion, there are yet in
-the cellular body three kinds of non-essential bodies:
-the vacuoles, the leucites, and various inclusions. The
-<i>vacuoles</i> are cavities, some inert, some contractile; the
-<i>leucites</i> are organs for the manufacture of particular
-substances; the <i>inclusions</i> are the manufactured products,
-or wastes.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Nucleus</i>.—Every cell capable of living,
-growing, and multiplying, possesses a <i>nucleus</i> of
-constitution very analogous to the cellular mass
-which surrounds it. The anatomical elements in
-which no nucleus is found, such as the red globules
-of blood in adult mammals, are bodies which are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
-certain, sooner or later, to disappear. There is therefore
-no real cell without a nucleus, any more than
-there is a nucleus without a cell. The exceptions to
-this law are only apparent. Histologists have
-examined them one by one, and have shown their
-purely specious character. We may therefore lay
-aside, subject to possible appeal from this decision,
-organisms such as Haeckel’s <i>monera</i> and the problem
-of finding out if bacteria really have a nucleus. The
-very great, if not the absolute generality of the
-nuclear body, must be admitted.</p>
-
-<p>It hence follows that there is a nuclear protoplasm
-and a nuclear juice, just as we have seen that there is a
-protoplasm and a cellular juice. What was just said of
-the one may now be repeated of the other, and perhaps
-with even more emphasis. The nuclear protoplasm
-is a filamentary mass sometimes formed of a single
-mitome or cord, folded over on itself and capable of
-being unrolled. The mitome in its turn is a string
-of microsomes united by the cement of the linin.
-These are the same constituent elements as before,
-and the language of science distinguishes them one
-from the other by a prefix to their name of the words
-<i>cyto</i> or <i>karyo</i>, which in Greek signify cell and nucleus,
-according as they belong to one or the other of these
-organs. These are mere matters of nomenclature,
-but we know that in the descriptive sciences such
-matters are not of minor importance.</p>
-
-<p>We have just indicated that in a state of repose,—that
-is to say, under ordinary conditions,—the structure
-of a nucleus reproduces clearly the structure of the
-cellular protoplasm which surrounds it. The nuclear
-essence is best separated from the spongioplasm.
-It takes more clearly the form of a filamentary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
-thread, and the filaments themselves (mitome) show
-very thick chromatic granulations, or microsomes,
-connected by the linin.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment of reproduction of the cell these
-granulations blend into a stainable sheath which
-surrounds the filaments, and the latter dispose themselves
-so as to form a single thread. This chromatic
-filament, which has now become a single thread, is
-shortened as it thickens (<i>spireme</i>); it is then cut into
-segments, twelve or twenty-four in the case of animals
-and a larger number in the case of plants. These
-are <i>chromosomes</i>, or <i>nuclear segments</i>, or <i>chromatic</i>
-loops. Their part is a very important one. They
-are constant in number and permanent during the
-whole of the life of the cell. Let us add that the
-nucleus still contains accessory elements (nucleoli).</p>
-
-<p><i>The Rôle of the Nucleus</i>.—Experiment has shown
-that the nucleus presides over the nutrition, the
-growth, and the conservation of the cell. If, following
-the example of Balbiani, Gruber, Nussbaum, and
-W. Roux of Leipzig, we cut into two a cell without
-injuring the nucleus, the fragment which is denuded
-of the nucleus continues to perform its functions for
-some time in the ordinary manner, and in some
-measure in virtue of its former impulse. It then
-declines and dies. On the contrary, the fragment
-provided with the nucleus repairs its wound, is
-reconstituted and continues to live. Thus the nucleus
-takes a very remarkable part in the reproduction of
-the cell, but it is still a matter of uncertainty whether
-its rôle is here subordinated to that of the cellular
-body, or if it is pre-eminent. However that may be,
-it follows from this experiment that the nucleus
-presents all the characteristics of a vigorous vitality,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>
-and that it is in its protoplasm that the chemists
-should be able to find the compounds, the special
-albuminoids, which, <i>par excellence</i>, form living matter.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 3. <span class="smcap">The Physical Constitution of Living
-Matter. The Micellar Theory.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>Physical Constitution of Living Matter</i>.—Microscopic
-examination does not take us much farther.
-The microscope, with the strongest magnification
-of which it is capable at present, shows us nothing
-beyond these links of aligned microsomes forming
-the species of protoplasmic thread or mitome, whose
-cellular body is a confused tangle or a very tangled
-ball. It is not probable that direct sight can penetrate
-much farther than this. No doubt the microscope,
-which has been so vastly improved, is capable
-of still further improvement. But these improvements
-are not indefinite. We have already reached
-a linear magnification of 2000, and theory tells us
-that a magnification of 4000 is the limit which cannot
-be passed. The penetrating power of the instrument
-is therefore near its culminating point. It has already
-given almost all that we have a right to expect
-from it.</p>
-
-<p>We must, however, penetrate beyond this microscopic
-structure at which the sense of sight has been
-arrested. How is this to be done? When observation
-is arrested, hypothesis takes its place. Here
-there are two kinds of hypotheses, the one purely
-anatomical, the other physical. Anatomically, beyond
-the visible microsomes there have been imagined
-invisible hyper-microscopic corpuscles, the plastidules<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>
-of Haeckel, the idioblasts of Hertwig, the pangenes of
-de Vries, the plasomes of Wiesner, the gemmules of
-Darwin, and the biophores of Weismann.</p>
-
-<p>Biologists who have not got all that they hoped
-from microscopic structure are therefore thrown back
-on hyper-microscopic structure.</p>
-
-<p>It is very remarkable that all this profound knowledge
-of structure has been so sterile from the point
-of view of the knowledge of cellular functional activity.
-All that is known of the life of the cell has been
-revealed by experiment. Nothing has resulted from
-microscopic observation but ideas as to configuration.
-When it is a question of giving or imagining an
-explanation of vital facts, of heredity, etc., biologists
-unable to supply anything beyond the details of
-structure revealed by anatomy have had recourse to
-hypothetical elements, gemmules, pangenes, biophores,
-and different kinds of determinants.</p>
-
-<p>Anatomy never has explained and never will explain
-anything. “Happy physicists!” wrote Loeb,
-“in never having known the method of research by
-sections and stainings! What would have happened
-if by chance a steam engine had fallen into the hands
-of a histological physicist? How many thousands of
-sections differently stained and unstained, how many
-drawings, how many figures, would have been produced
-before they knew for certain that the machine
-is an engine, and that it is used for transforming
-heat into motion!”</p>
-
-<p>The study of physical properties, continued on
-rational hypotheses, has also thrown some light
-on the possible constitution of living matter. The
-gap between microscopical structure and molecular or
-chemical structure has thus been filled.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span></p>
-
-<p>The consideration of the properties of <i>turgescence</i>
-and of <i>swelling</i>, which very generally belong to
-organized tissues, and therefore to the organic
-substance of protoplasm, has enabled us to obtain
-some idea of its ultra-microscopic constitution. If
-we wet a piece of sugar or a morsel of salt, before
-they are dissolved they absorb and imbibe the water
-without sensibly increasing their volume. It is quite
-otherwise with a tissue (<i>i.e.</i>, with a protoplasm)
-when weakened in water as a preliminary. The
-tissue, plunged into the liquid, absorbs it, swells, and
-often grows considerably. And this water does not
-lodge in the gaps, in pre-existing lacunar spaces, for
-organic matter presents no gaps of this kind. It
-does not resemble a porous mass with capillary
-canals, such as sandstone, tempered mortar, clay, or
-refined sugar. The molecules of water interpose
-between and separate the organic molecules, thus
-increasing by a sort of intussusception the intervals
-separating the one from the other—molecular intervals
-escaping the senses, as do the molecules themselves
-because they are of the same order of magnitude.</p>
-
-<p><i>Micellar Theory.</i>—While pondering over this
-phenomenon, an eminent physiologist, Nägeli, was
-led in 1877 to propose his <i>micellar theory</i>. Micellæ
-are groups of molecules in the sense in which
-physicists and chemists use the word. They are
-molecular structures with a configuration. They
-rapidly absorb water and are capable of fixing a
-more or less thick and adherent layer of it to their
-surface. In a word, they are aggregates of organic
-matter and water.</p>
-
-<p>There is therefore every reason for believing that
-the <i>microsomes</i> of spongy protoplasm, the physical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>
-support or basis of cellular life, are <i>groups of micellæ</i>
-formed of albuminoid substances and water. These
-clustered forms, these micellæ, are not absolutely
-peculiar to organized matter. Pfeffer, the learned
-botanist, has pointed them out under another name,
-<i>tagmata</i>, in the membranes of chemical precipitates.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond this limit analysis finds nothing but the
-chemical molecule and the atom. So that if we
-wish to reconstruct the hierarchy of the materials of
-constitution of the protoplasm in order of ascending
-complexity, we shall find at the foundation the atom or
-atoms of simple bodies. They are principally carbon,
-hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, the elements of all
-organic compounds, to which may be added sulphur
-and phosphorus. At the head we have the albuminoid
-molecule, or the albuminoid molecules,
-aggregates of the preceding atoms. In the third
-stage the micellæ or tagmata, aggregates of albuminoids
-and water, are still too small to be observed
-by the senses. They unite in their turn to form the
-microsomes, the first elements visible to the microscope.
-The microsomes, cemented by linin, form the
-filaments or links which are called mitomes. The
-living protoplasm is therefore nothing but a chain, or
-tangled skein, or a spongy skeleton formed by its
-filaments.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the typical constitution of living matter
-according to microscopic observation, supplemented by
-a perfectly reasonable hypothesis, which is, so to speak,
-only a translation of one of its most evident physical
-properties. This relatively simple scheme has become
-a complex scheme in the hands of later biologists.
-On the micellar hypothesis, which seems almost
-inevitable in its character, new hypotheses have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
-grafted, merely for the sake of convenience. Hence,
-we are led farther and farther from the real truth,
-and this is why, in order to explain the phenomena
-of heredity, we find ourselves compelled to intercalate
-hypothetical elements between micellæ and
-the microsome in the higher hierarchy quoted above—gemmules,
-pangenes, plasomes, which are only mental
-pictures or simple images to represent them.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 4. <span class="smcap">The Individuality of Complex Beings.
-Law of the Constitution of Organisms.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>Individuality of Complex Beings.</i>—From the cellular
-doctrine follows a remarkably suggestive conception
-of living beings. The metazoa and the metaphytes—that
-is to say, the multicellular living beings which
-may be seen with the eyes and do not require the
-microscope to reveal them—are an assemblage of
-anatomical elements and the posterity of a cell.
-The animal or the plant, instead of being an
-individual unity, is a “multitude,” a term which is
-used by Goëthe himself when pondering, in 1807, over
-the doctrine taught by Bichat; or, according to the
-equally correct expression of Hegel, it is a “nation”;
-it springs from a common cellular ancestor, just as
-the Jewish people sprang from the loins of Abraham.</p>
-
-<p>We now picture to ourselves the complex living
-being, animal or plant, with its configuration which
-distinguishes it from every other being, just as a
-populous city is distinguished by a thousand
-characteristics from its neighbour. The elements
-of this city are independent and autonomous for the
-same reason as the anatomical elements of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>
-organism. Both have in themselves the means of
-life, which they neither borrow nor take from their
-neighbours nor from the whole. All these inhabitants
-live in the same way, are nourished and breathe in
-the same manner, all possessing the same general
-faculties, those of man; but each has besides, his
-profession, his trade, his aptitudes, his talents, by
-which he contributes to social life, and by which in
-his turn he depends on it. Professional men, the
-mason, the baker, the butcher, the manufacturer, the
-artist, carry out different tasks and furnish different
-products, the more varied, the more numerous and
-the more differentiated, in proportion as the social
-state has reached a higher degree of perfection. The
-living being, animal or plant, is a city of this kind.</p>
-
-<p><i>Law of the Constitution of Organisms.</i>—Such is
-the complex animal. It is organized like the city.
-But the higher law of this city is that the conditions
-of the elementary or individual life of all the anatomical
-citizens are respected, the conditions being
-the same for all. Food, air, and light must be
-brought everywhere to each sedentary element; the
-waste must be carried off in discharges which will
-free the whole from the inconvenience or the danger
-of such debris; and that is why we have the different
-forms of apparatus in the circulatory, respiratory,
-and excretory economy. The organization of the
-whole is therefore dominated by the necessities of
-cellular life. This is expressed in <i>the law of the constitution
-of organisms</i> formulated by Claude Bernard.
-The organic edifice is made up of apparatus and
-organs, which furnish to each anatomical element
-the necessary conditions and materials for the maintenance
-of life and the exercise of its activity. We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>
-now understand what is the life, and at the same
-time what is the death, of a complex being. The
-life of the complex animal, of the metazoon, is of two
-degrees; at the foundation, the activity proper to
-each cell, <i>elementary life</i>, cellular life; above, the
-forms of activity resulting from the association of the
-cells, <i>the life of the whole</i>, the sum or rather the
-complex of elementary partial lives. There is a
-solidarity between them produced by the nervous
-system, by the community of the general circulatory,
-respiratory apparatus, etc., and by the free communication
-and mixture of the liquids which constitute
-the media of culture for each cell. We shall
-have an opportunity of recurring to current ideas as
-to the morphological constitution of organisms.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III_3">CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-<small>THE CHEMICAL UNITY OF LIVING BEINGS.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">The varieties and essential unity of the protoplasm—Its
-affinity for oxygen—The chemical composition of protoplasm—Its
-characteristic substances.—§ 1. The different
-categories of albuminoid substances—Nucleo-proteids—Albumins
-and histones—Nucleins.—§ 2. Constitution of
-nucleins.—§ 3. Constitution of histones and albumins—Schultzenberger’s
-analysis of albumin—Kossol’s analysis—The
-hexonic nucleus.</p>
-
-
-<p>The chemical unity of living beings corresponds to
-their morphological unity.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Varieties and Essential Unity of the Protoplasm.</i>—One
-essential feature of the living being is
-that it is composed of matter peculiar to it, which is
-called <i>living matter</i>, or <i>protoplasm</i>. But this is a
-somewhat incorrect way of expressing the facts.
-There is no unique living matter, no single protoplasm;
-their number is infinite, there are as many as
-there are distinct individuals. However like one
-man may be to another, we are compelled to admit
-that they differ according to the substance of which
-they are constituted. That of the first offers a certain
-characteristic personal to the first, and found in all
-his anatomical elements; similarly for the second.
-With Le Dantec we shall say that the chemical
-substance of Primus is not only of the substance of
-man, but in all parts of his body and in all his con<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>stituent
-cells it is the exclusive substance of Primus;
-and, in the same way, the living matter of another
-individual Secundus will carry everywhere his personal
-impress, which differs from that of Primus.</p>
-
-<p>But it is none the less true that this absolute
-specificity is based with certainty only on differences
-which from the chemical point of view are exceedingly
-slight. All these protoplasms have a very analogous
-composition. And, if we regard as negligible the
-smallest individual, specific, generic, or ordinal variations
-we may then speak in a general manner of
-<i>protoplasm</i> or <i>living matter</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Experiment shows us, in fact, that the real living
-substance—apart from the products it manufactures
-and can retain or reject—is in every cell tolerably
-similar to itself. The fundamental chemical resemblance
-of all protoplasms is certain, and thus
-we may speak of their typical composition. We
-may sum up the work of physiological chemistry for
-the last three quarters of a century by affirming that
-it has established the chemical unity of all living
-beings—that is to say, a very notable analogy in the
-composition of their protoplasm.</p>
-
-<p>This living matter is essentially a mixture of the
-proteid or albuminoid substances, to which may be
-added other categories of immediate principles, such
-as carbohydrates and fatty matters. But the latter
-are of secondary importance. The essential element
-is the proteid substance. The most skilful chemists
-have tried for more than half a century to discover
-its composition. Only during the last few years—thanks
-to the researches of Kossel, the German
-chemist, following on those of Schultzenberger and
-Miescher—we are beginning to know the outer walls<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span>
-or the framework of the albuminoid molecule; in
-other words, its chemical nucleus.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physical Characters of Protoplasm.</i>—About 1860
-Ch. Robin thought that he had defined living matter
-sufficiently—or, at least, as perfectly as could be
-expected at that time—by attributing to it three
-physical characteristics. They were:—Absence of
-homogeneity, molecular symmetry, and the association
-of three orders of immediate principles—albuminoids,
-carbohydrates and fats. These characteristics assist,
-but do not suffice, to define the organization.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt the characteristics must be completed by
-the addition of a certain number of more subtle
-physical features.</p>
-
-<p>One of them refers to the structure of protoplasm
-as revealed by the microscope. Throughout the
-whole of the living kingdom, from the bacteria studied
-by Kunstler and Busquet to the most complicated
-protozoa, protoplasmic matter presents the same
-constitution, and in consequence, this structure of
-the protoplasm must be considered as one of its
-distinctive characters. It is not homogeneous; it
-is not the last term of the visible organization: it is
-itself organized. Experiment shows that it does not
-resist breaking up or crushing. Mutilations cause
-it to lose its properties. As for the kind of structure
-that it presents, it may be expressed by saying that it
-is that of a foamy emulsion.</p>
-
-<p>We saw above that our knowledge as to the physical
-condition of protoplasm has been completed by the
-theories of Bütschli’s micellæ or Pfeffer’s tagmata.</p>
-
-<p><i>Properties of the Protoplasm. Its Affinity for
-Oxygen.</i>—From the chemical point of view, living
-matter presents a very remarkable property—namely,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>
-a great affinity for oxygen. It absorbs it so greedily
-that the gas cannot remain in a free state in its
-neighbourhood. Living protoplasm, therefore, exercises
-a reducing power. But it does not absorb
-oxygen in this way for its own advantage; oxygen
-is not absorbed, as was supposed thirty years ago, to
-supply fuel wherewith to burn the protoplasm. The
-products are not those of its oxidation, of its own
-disintegration. They are the products of combustion
-of the reserve-stuff which is incorporated in it.
-These substances have been supplied to it from
-without, like the oxygen itself, with the blood. This
-was proved by G. Pflüger in 1872 to 1876. The
-protoplasm is only the focus, the scene, or the
-factor of combustion. It is not its victim, it does
-not itself furnish the fuel. It works like the chemist,
-who obtains a reaction with the substances that are
-given to him.</p>
-
-<p>As for the reducing power of protoplasm, A.
-Gautier in 1881 and Ehrlich in 1890 have given fresh
-proofs. A. Gautier in particular has insisted that the
-phenomena of combustion take place, so to speak,
-outside the cell, and at the expense of the products
-which surround it; while on the contrary the really
-active and living parts of the nucleus and of the
-cellular body, work protected by the oxygen, as in the
-case of anaerobic microbes.</p>
-
-<p>This result is of great importance. Burdon Sanderson,
-the late learned professor of physiology at the
-University of Oxford, has not hesitated to compare
-it to the discovery of respiratory combustion by
-Lavoisier. There is no doubt some exaggeration in
-the comparison; but there is, on the other hand, no
-less exaggeration in supposing that it is not of great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
-importance. We may no longer in these days speak
-without reservation of the vital vortex of Cuvier, and
-of the incessant twofold movement of assimilation
-and dissimilation which is ever destroying living
-matter and building it up again. In reality, the
-living protoplasm varies very little; it only undergoes
-oscillations of very slight extent; it is the
-materials, the reserve stuff on which it operates, which
-are subject to continual transformations.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chemical Composition of Protoplasm.</i>—One of the
-the three characters attributed by Ch. Robin to living
-matter was its chemical composition, of which little
-was known in his time. He insisted on the constant
-presence in the living elements of three orders of
-immediate principles—proteid substances, carbohydrates,
-and fatty bodies. In reality the proteid
-substances, or albuminoids, alone are characteristic.
-The two other groups, carbohydrates and fatty bodies,
-are rather the signs and the products of the vital
-activity, than constituents of the matter on which it is
-exercised.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore on the knowledge of the proteid
-substances that all the sagacity of biological chemists
-has been exercised. Their efforts for thirty years,
-and particularly in the last few years, have not been
-barren; they enable us to give a first rough sketch of
-the constitution of these substances.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">The Characteristic Substances of the
-Protoplasm. The Nucleo-Proteids.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>The Different Categories of Albuminoid Substances.</i>—Albuminoid
-or proteid substances are extremely
-complex compounds, much more so than any of those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>
-which are being constantly studied by the chemist.
-They also are to be found in great variety. It has
-been difficult to separate them one from the other, to
-characterize them rigorously, or, in other words, to
-classify them. However, it has been done now, and
-we distinguish three classes which are differentiated
-at once from the physiological and from the chemical
-points of view. The first comprises the complete or
-typical albuminoids. They are the <i>proteids</i> or <i>nucleo-albuminoids</i>.
-They are to be found in the most active
-and most living parts of the protoplasm, and therefore
-in the spongioplasm of the cell and around the
-nucleus. The second group is formed of <i>albumins</i>
-and <i>globulins</i>, compounds already simpler, fragments
-derived from the destruction of the preceding, into
-which they enter as constituent elements. In the
-isolated state they do not belong to the really living
-protoplasm; they exist in the cellular juice, in the
-interstitial and circulating liquids in the blood and in
-the lymph. The third category comprises real but
-incomplete albuminoids. They are to be found in
-the portions of the economy which have a specialized
-or attenuated life, and are destined to serve as a
-support to the more active elements—<i>i.e.</i>, they contribute
-to the building up of the bony, cartilaginous,
-conjunctive, elastic tissues. They are called <i>albumoids</i>.
-It is naturally the first group, that of the
-proteids—<i>i.e.</i>, of the complete and characteristic compounds
-of the living substance—upon which the
-attention of the physiologists must be fixed. It is
-only quite recently that the clear definition of these
-substances has been given, and proteid compounds
-detected in the confused mass.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Nucleo-proteids.</i>—This progress in the char<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>acterization
-and specification of the proteids required
-in the first place a knowledge of two particular compounds,
-the <i>nucleins</i> and the <i>histones</i>. This did not
-become possible until after the researches of Miescher
-and Kossel on the nucleins, which went on from 1874
-to 1892, and those of Lilienfeld and d’Yvor Bang on
-the histones, from 1893 to 1899. The complete
-albuminoids are constituted by the combination of
-two kinds of substances—albumins or histones on the
-one hand, and nucleins on the other. By combining
-solutions of albumins or histones with solutions of
-nuclein, the synthesis of the proteid is effected. The
-study of the properties and characteristics of these
-nucleo-albumins and nucleo-histones is going on at
-the present moment. It is being carried out with
-much method and with wonderful patience by the
-German school.</p>
-
-<p>All the proteids contain phosphorus in addition to
-the five chemical elements, carbon, oxygen, hydrogen,
-nitrogen, and sulphur, which are common to the
-other albuminoids. Another interesting feature in
-their history is that the action of the gastric juice
-divides them into their two constituents:—the nuclein,
-which is deposited and resists the destructive action
-of the digestive liquid, and the albumin or histone,
-which on the contrary experiences this action with
-the usual consequences. Thus the gastric juice
-furnishes a process which is very simple and very
-convenient in the analysis of the proteids.</p>
-
-<p><i>Localization of the Nucleo-Proteids.</i>—What we said
-before as to the important physiological rôle of the
-cellular nucleus may arouse the expectation that in it
-will be found the living matter which is chemically
-the most differentiated, the albuminoids of highest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
-rank—<i>i.e.</i>, the nucleo-proteids and their constituents.
-Not that they would not be found in the protoplasm
-of the rest of the cell, but there is certainly a risk
-that they would be less concentrated there and more
-blended with accessory products; they are there connected
-with much more secondary vital functions.
-This conclusion inspired the early researches of Professor
-Miescher, of Basle, in 1874, and, twenty years
-later, those of Professor Kossel, one of the most
-eminent physiological chemists in Germany.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, these compounds have been found in all
-tissues which are rich in cellular elements with well-developed
-nuclei. The white globules of the blood
-furnished to Lilienfeld the first nucleo-histone ever
-isolated. The red globules themselves, when they
-possess a nucleus, which is the case in birds and
-reptiles as well as in the embryo of mammals, contain
-a nucleo-proteid which was easily isolated by Plosz and
-Kossel. Hammarsten, the Swedish chemist, who has
-acquired a great reputation from his researches in
-other domains of biological chemistry, prepared the
-nucleo-proteids of the pancreas in 1893. They have
-been obtained from the liver, from the thyroid
-gland (Ostwald), from brewers’ yeast (Kossel), from
-mushrooms, and from barley (Petit). They have
-been detected in starchy bodies and in bacteria
-(Galeotti).</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">Constitution of Nucleins.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>Constitution of Nucleins.</i>—Our path is already
-marked out if we wish to penetrate farther into the
-constitution of these proteids, which are the imme<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>diate
-principles highest in complexity among those
-which form the living protoplasm. We must analyze
-the two components, the albumins and the histones on
-the one hand, and the nucleins on the other. As for
-the nucleins, this has already been done, or very
-nearly so.</p>
-
-<p>Kossel, in fact, decomposed the nuclein by a series
-of very carefully arranged operations, and has reduced
-it step by step to its crystallizable organic radicals.
-At each stage that we descend in the scale of
-simplification a body appears which is more acid and
-more rich in phosphorus. At the third stage we
-come to phosphoric acid itself. The first operation
-divides the nuclein into two substances: the new
-albumin and nucleinic acid. After separating these
-elements they can be reunited: a solution of albumin
-with a solution of nucleinic acid reconstitutes the
-nuclein. A second operation separates the nucleinic
-acid in its turn into three parts. One is a body of
-the nature of the sugars—<i>i.e.</i>, a carbohydrate. The
-appearance of a sugar in this portion of the molecule
-of nucleinic acid is an interesting fact and fertile in
-results. The second part is constituted by a mixture
-of nitrogenous bodies, well known in organic chemistry
-under the name of <i>xanthic bases</i> (xanthin, hypoxanthin,
-guanin, and adenin). The third part is a
-very acid body and full of phosphorus—thymic acid.
-If in a third and last operation the thymic acid is
-analyzed, it is finally separated into phosphoric acid
-and into thymene, a crystallizable base, and thus we
-are brought back to the physical world, for all these
-bodies incontestably belong to it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 3. <span class="smcap">The Constitution of Histones and
-Albumins.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>Constitution of Histones.</i>—But we are only half-way
-through our task. We are acquainted in its origin
-with one of the genealogical branches of the proteid,
-the nucleinic branch. We must also learn something
-of the other branch, the albumin or histone branch.
-But on this side the problem assumes a character of
-difficulty and complexity which is admirably adapted
-to discourage the most untiring patience.</p>
-
-<p>The analysis of albumin for a long time baulked
-the chemist “Here,” said Danilewsky, “we come to
-a closed door which resists all our efforts.” We know
-how vastly interesting what is taking place on the
-other side must be, but we cannot get there. We get
-a mere glimpse through the cracks or chinks which
-we have been able to make.</p>
-
-<p>This analysis of albuminous matter at first requires
-great precautions. The chemist finds himself in the
-presence of architecture of a very subtle kind. The
-molecule of albumin is a complex edifice which has
-used up several thousand atoms. To perceive the
-plan and structure, it must be dismantled and
-separated into parts which are neither too large nor
-too small. Such careful demolition is difficult.
-Processes too rough or too violent will reduce the
-whole to the tiniest of fragments. It is a statue
-which may be reduced to dust, instead of being
-separated into recognizable fragments, easily fitted in
-place along their fractured faces.</p>
-
-<p><i>Analysis of Albumin by Schützenberger.</i>—Schützenberger,
-a chemist of great merit, attempted (about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>
-1875) this thankless task. Others before him had
-experimented in various ways. Two Austrian
-scientists, Hlasitwetz and Habermann, in 1873, and
-a little later Drechsel in 1892, had used concentrated
-hydrochloric acid to break down albumin.
-They also employed bromine for the same purpose.
-More recently Fuerth had used nitric acid with a
-similar object. Schützenberger tried another way.
-The battering ram which he used against the edifice
-of albumin was a concentrated alkali, baryta. He
-warmed the white of an egg with barium hydrate
-in a closed vessel at a temperature of 200°. The
-albumin of egg then divides into a certain number of
-simpler groups. The difficulty is to isolate and to
-recognize each part in this mass of the materials of
-demolition. That can be done by the aid of the
-processes of direct analysis. By mentally combining
-these different fragments, the original building is
-reconstructed. This method of demolition is certainly
-too rough and violent. Schützenberger’s operation
-gives us very fine fragments—small molecules of free
-hydrogen, of ammonia, of carbonic, acetic, and oxalic,
-acids which reveal extreme pulverization. These
-products represent about a quarter of the total mass.
-The other three-quarters are formed of larger fragments,
-the examination of which is most instructive.
-They belong to four groups. The first comprises five
-or six bodies, amido-acids or <i>leucins</i>. It proves the
-existence in the molecule of albumin of compounds of
-the series of fats—<i>i.e.</i>, arranged in an open chain.
-The second group is formed by tyrosin and kindred
-products—<i>i.e.</i>, by the bodies of the aromatic series,
-which force us to acknowledge the presence in the
-molecule of albumin of a benzene nucleus. The third<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
-group forms around the nucleus known to chemists
-under the name of pyrrol. The fourth comprises
-bodies such as the glucoproteins, connected with the
-sugars, or carbohydrates.</p>
-
-<p>Does the fact that the molecule of albumin is
-destroyed in producing these compounds raise the
-question as to whether it implies the idea that in
-reality they pre-exist in it? Chemists are rather
-inclined to admit this. However, the conclusion does
-not appear to be permissible. Duclaux considers it
-doubtful. It is not certain that all these fragmentary
-bodies pre-exist in reality, and it is no more certain
-that a simple bringing of them together represents
-the primitive edifice. Materials of demolition from a
-house that has been pulled down give no idea of its
-natural architectural character. There is only one
-way of justifying the hypothesis, and that is to reconstitute
-the original molecule of albumin by bringing
-the fragments together. We have not got to that
-stage yet. The era of syntheses of such complexity
-is more or less near, but it has certainly not yet
-begun.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, it is not correct to say that the simple
-juxtaposition of the surfaces of fracture will reproduce
-the initial body. The fragments, so far as analysis
-has obtained them, are not absolutely what they might
-have been in the original structure. There they
-adhered the one to the other, not only by the mere
-contact of their surfaces of fracture, as is supposed,
-but in a slightly more complex manner. The fragments
-of the molecule are joined by bonds. We can
-picture them to ourselves by supposing these bonds
-to be like hooks. The hooks, which could only be
-broken by violence, are called by the chemists<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>
-<i>satisfied atomicities</i>. These atomicities, set free by
-the breaking up, cannot remain in this condition;
-they must be satisfied anew. The hook tries to attach
-itself. In Schützenberger’s experiment the addition
-of water provides for this necessity. A molecule of
-water (H<sub>2</sub>O) splits into two, the hydrogen (H) on the
-one side and the hydroxyl (OH) on the other. These
-two elements cling to the liberated bonds of the
-fragments of the molecule of albumin, and thus
-the bodies were found complete. Schützenberger’s
-experiment was too violent, too radical, and it gave
-too large a number of fragments, with their free hooks
-and atomicities unsatisfied, for rather a large proportion
-of the water added disappeared during the
-experiment. In one case this quantity was as much
-as 17 grammes per 100 grammes of albumin. The
-molecules of this water were employed in the
-reparation of the incomplete fragmentary molecules
-of the albumin.</p>
-
-<p>It follows that Schützenberger’s experiment gave
-too large a number of very small pieces corresponding
-to far too great a pulverization. The very small fragments
-are the molecules of acids such as acetic acid,
-oxalic acid, carbonic acid, molecules of ammonia,
-and even of hydrogen, which we know we are setting
-free.</p>
-
-<p>But, apart from these products which represent a
-quarter of the molecule of albumin submitted to
-analysis, the other three quarters represent larger
-fragments which may be considered as the real
-constituents of the building. Thus we find four
-kinds of groups which may be accepted as natural.
-The first of these groups is that of the leucins or
-amido-acids. It proves the existence in the molecule<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>
-of albumin of compounds of the fatty series. There
-is also an aromatic group—a pyridine group—and a
-group belonging to the category of sugars. Imagine
-a certain grouping of these four series. This would
-be the nucleus of the molecule of albumin. If we
-graft on to this nucleus, on to this framework as it
-were, so many annexes, or lateral chains, the building
-will be loaded with embellishments; it will have
-been made unstable and <i>ipso facto</i> appropriate for the
-part that it plays in the incessant transformations
-of the organism.</p>
-
-<p><i>Kossel’s Analysis. Hexonic Nucleus.</i>—Kossel has
-approached the problem in another fashion. He
-did not attempt to attack the albumin of the egg.
-This body is, in fact, a heterogeneous mixture as
-complex as the needs of the embryo of which it forms
-the food. Kossel tried a physiologically simpler
-albuminoid. He got it from an anatomical element
-having no nutritive rôle, of a very elementary
-organization and physiological functional activity,
-and yet one of energetic vitality—the male generating
-cell. Instead of the hen’s egg he therefore analyzed
-the milt of fish, and, in the first place, of salmon. As
-was to be expected from what has been said of the
-proteids, this living matter gives a combination of
-the nuclein, already known, with an albumin. The
-latter is abundant, forming a quarter of the total
-mass. Its reaction is strongly alkaline, which is the
-general characteristic of the variety of albumin known
-by the name of histones. Miescher, the learned
-chemist of Basle, who had noticed this basic albumin
-when working on the Rhine salmon, gave it the name
-of protamin. This is the substance submitted by
-Kossel to analysis in preference to the albumin of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>
-egg, so dear to the chemists who had preceded him.
-The disintegration of this molecule, instead of giving
-the series of bodies obtained by Schützenberger,
-gave but one, a real chemical base, <i>arginin</i>. At the
-first trial the albumin examined was reduced to a
-simple crystallizable element. The conclusion was
-obvious. The protamin of salmon is the simplest of
-albumins. To form this elementary proteid substance
-a hexonic base with water is all that is required.</p>
-
-<p>Continuing on these lines other male generating
-cells were examined and a series of protamines constructed
-on the same type was found, and these
-albuminous bodies proved to be formed of a base or
-mixture of analogous hexonic bases: arginin, histidin,
-and lysin—all bodies closely akin in their properties
-and entirely belonging to the physical world.</p>
-
-<p>Once aware of the existence of this fundamental
-nucleus, chemists found it in the more complex
-albumins where it had been missed. It was found in
-the albumin of egg hidden under the mass of other
-groups. It was recognized in all animal or vegetable
-albumins. The nuclei of Schützenberger may be
-missing. Hexonic bases are the constant and
-universal element of all varieties of albumins. They
-prevail in the chemical nucleus of the albuminous
-molecule, and perhaps as is suggested by Kossel,
-they may form it exclusively. All the other elements
-are superadded and accessory. The essential type of
-this molecular edifice, sought for so long, is known at
-last.</p>
-
-<p><i>Conclusion.</i>—To sum up, the chemical unity of
-living beings is expressed by saying that living
-matter, protoplasm, is a mixture or a complex of
-proteid substances with an hexonic nucleus.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV_3">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-
-<small>THE TWOFOLD CONDITIONING OF VITAL
-PHENOMENA. IRRITABILITY.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Appearance of internal activity of the living being—Vital
-phenomena regarded as a reaction of the ambient world.—§
-1. Extrinsic conditions—The optimum law.—§ 2. Intrinsic
-conditions—The structure of organs and apparatus—How
-experiment attacks the phenomena of life. Generalization
-of the law of inertia—Irritability.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Instability. Mutability. The Appearance of Internal
-Activity of the Living Being.</i>—One of the most
-remarkable characteristics of the living being is its
-instability. It is in a state of continual change. The
-simplest of the elementary beings, the plastid, grows
-and goes on growing and becoming more complex,
-until it reaches a stage at which it divides, and thus
-rejuvenated it commences the upward march which
-leads it once again to the same segmentation. Its
-evolution is thus betrayed by its growth, by the
-variations of form which correspond to it, and by
-its division.</p>
-
-<p>If it be a question of beings higher in organization
-than the cellular element the evolutionary
-character of this mutability becomes more obvious.
-The being is formed, it grows; then in most cases,
-after having passed through the stages of youth and
-adult age, it grows old, declines and dies, and is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
-disorganized after having gone through what we may
-call an ideal trajectory. This march in a fixed
-direction with its points of departure, its degrees, and
-its termination, is a repetition of the path that the
-ancestors of the living being have already followed.</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, is a characteristic fact of vitality, or
-rather there are two facts. The one consists in this
-morphological and organic evolution, the negation of
-immutability, the negation of the indefinite maintenance
-of a permanent state or form which is
-regarded, on the contrary, as the condition of inert,
-fixed stable bodies, eternally at rest. The other
-consists in the repetition, realized by this evolution,
-of the similar evolution of its ancestors; this is a
-fact of heredity. Finally, evolution is always in a
-cycle—that is to say, that it comes to an end which
-brings the course of things to their point of departure.</p>
-
-<p>This kind of internal activity of the living being
-is so striking, that not only does it serve us to
-differentiate the living being from the inert body,
-but it gives rise to the illusion of a kind of internal
-demon, vital force, manifested by the more or less
-apparent acts of the life of relation, of the motricity,
-of the displacement, or by the less obvious acts of
-vegetative life.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vital Phenomena regarded as a Reaction of the
-Ambient World. Their Twofold Conditioning.</i>—In
-reality, as the doctrine of energetics teaches us, the
-phenomena of vitality are not the effect of a purely
-internal activity. They are a reaction of the environment.
-“The idea of life,” says Auguste Comte,
-“constantly assumes the necessary correlation of two
-indispensable elements:—an appropriate organism
-and a suitable environment. It is from the reciprocal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
-action of these two elements that all vital phenomena
-inevitably result.” The environment furnishes the
-living being with three things:—its matter, its
-energy, and the exciting forces of its vitality. All
-vital manifestation results from the conflict of two
-factors: the extrinsic factor which provokes its
-appearance; the intrinsic factor, the very organization
-of the living body, which determines its form.
-Bichat and Cuvier saw in the phenomena of life the
-exclusive intervention of a principle of action entirely
-internal, checked rather than aided by the universal
-forces of nature. The exact opposite is true. The
-protozoan finds the stimuli of its vitality in the
-aquatic medium which is its habitat. The really
-living particles of the metazoan—that is to say, its
-cells, its anatomical elements—meet these stimuli in
-the lymph, in the interstitial liquids which bathe
-them and which form their real external environment.</p>
-
-<p>Auguste Comte thoroughly understood this truth,
-and has clearly expressed it in the passage we have
-just quoted. Claude Bernard has fully developed it
-and given it its classical form.</p>
-
-<p>In order to manifest the phenomena of vitality,
-the elementary being, the protoplasmic being, requires
-from the external world certain favourable
-conditions; these it finds there, and they may be
-called the stimuli, or extrinsic conditions of vitality.
-This being possesses no initiative or spontaneity in
-itself, it has only a faculty of entering into action
-when an external stimulus provokes it. This subjection
-of the living matter is called <i>irritability</i>.
-The term expresses that life is not solely an internal
-attribute, but an internal principle of action.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">Extrinsic Conditions.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>Extrinsic Conditions.</i>—By showing that every vital
-manifestation results from the conflict of two factors:
-the extrinsic or physico-chemical conditions which
-determine its appearance, and the intrinsic or organic
-conditions which regulate its form, Claude Bernard
-dealt a mortal blow at the old vitalist theories. For
-he has not only asserted the close dependence of the
-two kinds of factors, but he has shown them in action
-in most physiological phenomena. The study of the
-extrinsic or physico-chemical conditions necessary to
-vital manifestations teaches us our first truth—namely,
-that they are not infinitely varied as might
-be supposed. They present, on the contrary, a
-remarkable uniformity in their essential qualities.
-The fundamental conditions are the same for the
-animal or vegetable cells of every species. They are
-four in number:—<i>moisture</i>, the air, or rather <i>oxygen</i>,
-<i>heat</i>, and a certain <i>chemical constitution</i> of the medium,
-and the last condition, the enunciation of which
-seems vague, becomes more precise if we look at it
-a little closer. The chemical constitution of media
-favourable to life, the media of culture, obeys three
-general laws. It is the knowledge of these laws
-which formerly enabled Pasteur, Raulin, Cohn, and
-Balbiani to provide the media appropriate to the
-existence of certain relatively simple organisms, and
-thus to create an infinitely valuable method for
-the study of nutrition, etc.,—namely, the <i>method of
-artificial cultures</i>, numerous developments of which
-have been shown us by microbiology and physiology.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Optimum Law.</i>—It has been said, and it is
-more than a play on words, that the conditions of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
-the vital medium were the conditions of the <i>juste
-milieu</i>. Water is wanted, there must not be too
-much or too little. Oxygen is necessary, and also in
-certain proportions. Heat is required, and for that,
-too, there is an optimum degree. Certain chemical
-compounds are needed and, in this respect too, there
-must also be <i>optima</i> proportions.</p>
-
-<p>Water is a constituent element of the organisms.
-They contain fixed proportions for the same tissue,
-proportions varying from one tissue to another
-(between 2∕3 and 9∕10). The cell of a living tissue requires
-around it an aqueous atmosphere, formed by
-the different juices of the organism, the interstitial
-liquids, the blood, and the lymph. We are deceived
-by appearances when we distinguish between aerial,
-aquatic, and land-dwelling animals, and when we
-speak of the air, the water, and the land as their
-natural environment. If we go to the bottom of
-things, and fix our attention on the real living
-unities, on the cells of which the organism is composed,
-we shall find around them the juices, rich in water,
-which are their real environment. If these juices are
-diluted or concentrated the least in the world, life
-stops. The cell, the whole animal, falls into a state
-of latent life, or dies. “All living beings are aquatic,”
-said Claude Bernard. “Beings that live in the air are
-in reality wandering aquariums,” said another physiologist.
-“No moisture, no life,” wrote Preyer. The
-environment must contain water, but it must contain
-it in certain proportions. In the higher animals
-there is a mechanism which works automatically to
-keep at a constant level the quantity of water in the
-blood. Researches on the lavage of the blood (A.
-Dastre and Loye) have clearly shown this.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span></p>
-
-<p>Oxygen is also necessary to life. It is the <i>pabulum
-vitæ</i>. But the discovery of the beings called by
-Pasteur <i>anaerobia</i> appears to contradict this statement.
-Pfeffer, the illustrious botanist, was certain,
-in 1897, that the dogma of the necessity of oxygen
-no longer held good. This is no longer tenable.
-In 1898 Beijerinck carried out most careful researches
-on anaerobia said to have been cultivated
-in a vacuum, such as the <i>bacteria of tetanus</i> and the
-<i>septic vibrion</i>; or on those to which oxygen seems to
-be a poison, such as the <i>butyric</i> and the <i>butylic
-ferments</i>, the anaerobia of putrefaction, the reducing
-spirilla of the sulphates. All use free oxygen. They
-consume very little it is true; they are micro-aerobia.
-The other organisms, on the contrary, need more.
-They are macro-aerobia or simply <i>aerobia</i>. Besides,
-if the so-called anaerobia take little or no free
-oxygen, it matters little. They take the oxygen
-in combination. It may be said with L. Errera
-that they have an affinity for oxygen, for they
-extract it from its combinations, and that “they
-are so well adapted to this mode of existence that
-life in the open air being too easy no longer suits
-them.” There are for the different animal species
-different optima of oxygen.</p>
-
-<p>Living beings require a certain amount of heat.
-Life, which could not have existed on the globe when
-it was incandescent, will not be able to exist when it
-is frozen. For each organism and each function
-there is a maximum and a minimum of temperature
-compatible with activity. There is also an optimum.
-For instance, the optimum is 29° C for the germination
-of corn.</p>
-
-<p>The condition of the optimum exists in the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
-way for the chemical composition of the vital medium—and
-for the other ambient physical conditions, such
-as atmospheric pressure.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore a law of <i>universal</i> scope, a regulating
-law, as it were, of life. Life is a function of extrinsic
-variables, water, air, heat, the chemical composition of
-the medium, and pressure. “Every vital phenomenon
-begins to be produced, starting from a certain stage
-of the variable (minimum), becomes more and more
-vigorous as it increases up to a determinate value
-(optimum), weakens if the variable continues to increase,
-and disappears when it has reached a certain
-limiting value (maximum).” This law, proved by
-Sachs, the German botanist, in 1860, apropos of the
-action of temperature on the germination of plants,
-by Paul Bert in 1875, apropos of the action of oxygen
-and of atmospheric pressure on animals, and already
-formulated at that time by Claude Bernard, was
-illustrated by Leo Errera in 1895. It is a law of
-moderation. It expresses La Fontaine’s “<i>rien de
-trop</i>” Terence’s “<i>ne quid nimis</i>,” the μηδὲν ἄγαν of
-Theognis, and the biblical phrase “<i>omnia in mensura
-et numero et pondere</i>.” L. Errera sees the profound
-cause of this optimum law in the properties of the
-living protoplasm, which are mean properties. It
-is semi-liquid. It is composed of albuminoid substances,
-which can stand no extremes either from the
-physical or from the chemical points of view.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">Intrinsic Conditions. The Law of the
-Constitution of Organs and Apparatus.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>Law of the Constitution of Organs and Apparatus.</i>—If
-we consider more highly organized beings, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
-influence of the intrinsic conditions appears quite
-as clearly. As we have seen, this is so that the
-requisite fundamental materials may be spent by
-each element in suitable proportions,—water, chemical
-compounds, air, and heat,—that organs may be added
-to organs, and that apparatus may be set to work in
-complex structures. Why a digestive apparatus?
-To prepare and introduce into the internal medium
-liquid materials which are necessary to life. Why a
-respiratory apparatus? To impart the vital gas
-necessary to the cells, and to expel the gaseous
-excrement, the carbonic acid which they reject.
-Why a circulatory apparatus? To transport and
-renew this medium throughout. The apparatus, the
-functional wheels, the vessels, the digestive and
-respiratory mechanisms do not exist for themselves,
-like the random sketches of an artistic nature. They
-exist for the innumerable anatomical elements which
-people the economy. They are arranged to assist
-and more rigorously to regulate cellular life with
-respect to the extrinsic conditions which it demands.
-They are, in the living body, as in civilized society,
-the manufactories and the workshops which provide
-for the different members of society dress, warmth,
-and food. In a word, the <i>law of the construction of
-organisms</i> or of the <i>bringing to perfection of an
-organism</i> is the same as the law of cellular life. It
-is otherwise suggestive as the law of <i>division of
-physiological labour</i> formerly enunciated by Henry
-Milne-Edwards; and in every case it has a more
-concrete significance. Finally, it brings the organic
-functional activity into relation with the conditions of
-the ambient medium.</p>
-
-<p><i>How Experiment acts on the Phenomena of Life.</i>—<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>
-The two orders of conditions, the one provided by the
-being itself, the other by external agents, are equally
-indispensable—and therefore of equal importance or
-dignity. But they are not equally accessible to the
-experimentalist. It is not easy to exercise on the
-organization direct and measurable actions. On the
-contrary, the physical conditions are in the hands
-and at the discretion of the experimenter. By them
-he may reach the vital manifestations as they appear,
-stimulate or check them, defer or precipitate them.
-Thus, for instance, the physiologist suspends or re-establishes
-at his will full vital activity in a multitude
-of reviviscent or hibernating beings, such as grains,
-the infusoria capable of <i>encystment</i>, the vibrio, the
-tardigrade, the cold-blooded animals, and perennial
-plants.</p>
-
-<p>The ambient world therefore furnishes to the animal
-and to the vegetable, whole or fragmentary, those
-materials of its organization which are at the same
-time the stimuli of its vitality. That is to say, the
-vital mechanism would be a dormant and inert
-mechanism if nothing in the surrounding medium
-could provoke it to action or give it a check. It
-would be a kind of steam engine without coal and fire.</p>
-
-<p>Living matter, in other words, does not possess real
-spontaneity. As I have shown elsewhere, the law of
-inertia which it is supposed it obeys with inert bodies
-is not special to them. It is applied to the living
-bodies whose apparent spontaneity is only an illusion
-contradicted by physiology as a whole. All the vital
-manifestations are responses to a stimulus of acts
-provoked, and not of spontaneous acts.</p>
-
-<p><i>Generalization of the Law of Inertia in Living
-Bodies. Irritability.</i>—In fact, vulgar prejudice opposes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>
-this view. The opinion of the average man distrusts
-it. It applies the law of inertia only to inert matter.
-This is because the vital response does not always
-immediately succeed the external stimulus, and is not
-always proportional to it. But it is sufficient to have
-seen the flywheel of a steam engine to understand
-that the restitution of a mechanical force cannot be
-instantaneous. It is sufficient to have had a finger
-on the trigger of a firearm to know that there is no
-necessary proportion between the intensity of the
-stimulus and the magnitude of the force produced.
-Things happen in the living just as in the inert
-machine.</p>
-
-<p>The faculty of entering into action when provoked
-by an external stimulus has received, as we have said,
-the name of <i>irritability</i>. The word is not used of
-inert matter. However, the condition of the latter is
-the same. But there is no need to affirm its irritability,
-because no one denies it. We know perfectly
-well that brute matter is inert, that all the manifestations
-of activity of which it is the theatre are provoked.
-Inertia is for it the equivalent of irritability in living
-matter. But while it is not necessary to introduce
-this idea into the physical sciences, where it has
-reigned since the days of Galileo, it was, on the
-contrary, necessary to affirm it in biology, precisely
-because it was in biology that the opposing doctrine
-of vital spontaneity ruled supreme.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the view held by Claude Bernard. He
-never varied on this point. <i>Irritability</i>, said he, is the
-property possessed “by every anatomical element
-(that is to say, the protoplasm which enters into its
-constitution) of being stimulated into activity and of
-reacting in a certain manner under the influence of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>
-the external stimuli.” He could not claim that this
-was a distinguishing characteristic between living
-bodies and brute bodies, and that all the less because
-he always tried to efface on this point the distinctions
-which were current in his time, and which were
-established by Bichat and Cuvier. And so also Le
-Dantec does not seem to have thoroughly grasped
-the ideas of the celebrated physiologist on this point
-when he asserts, as if he were thereby contradicting
-the opinion of Claude Bernard and his school, that
-irritability is not something peculiar to living bodies.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V_3">CHAPTER V.<br />
-
-<small>THE SPECIFIC FORM. ITS ACQUISITION.
-ITS REPARATION.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">§ 1. Specific form not special to living beings—Connected with
-the whole of the material conditions of the body and the
-medium—Is it a property of chemical substance?—§ 2.
-Acquisition and re-establishment of the specific form—Normal
-regeneration—Accidental regeneration in the protozoa
-and the plastids—In the metazoa.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">The Specific Form.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>The Specific Form is not Peculiar to Living Beings.</i>—The
-position of a <i>specific form</i>—the acquisition of
-this typical form progressively realized—the re-establishment
-when some accident has altered it—these
-are the features which we consider distinctive of living
-beings, from the protophytes and the lowest protozoa
-to the highest animals. Nothing gives a better idea
-of the unity and the individuality of the living being
-than the existence of this typical form. We do not
-mean, however, that this characteristic belongs to the
-living being alone, and is by itself capable of defining
-it. We repeat that this is not a case with any
-characteristic. In particular the <i>typical form</i> belongs
-to crystal as well as to living beings.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Specific Form depends on the sum of Material
-Conditions of the Body and the Medium.</i>—The consideration
-of mineral bodies shows us form dependent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>
-on the physico-chemical conditions of the body and
-the medium. The form depends mainly on physical
-conditions in the cases of a drop of water falling from
-a tap, of the liquid meniscus in a narrow tube, of a
-small navel-shaped mass of mercury on a marble
-slab, of a drop of oil “emulsioned” in a solution, and
-of the metal which is hardened by hammering or
-annealed. In the case of crystals the form depends
-more on chemical conditions. It is crystallization
-which has introduced into physics the idea that has
-now become a kind of postulate—namely, that the
-specific form is connected with the chemical composition.
-However, it is sufficient to instance the dimorphism
-of a simple body, such as sulphur, sometimes
-prismatic, sometimes octahedric, to realize that substance
-is only one of the factors of form, and that the
-physical conditions of the body and of the medium
-are other factors quite as influential.</p>
-
-<p><i>Is the Specific Form a Property of the Chemical
-Substance?</i>—How much truer this restriction would
-be if we consider, instead of a given chemical compound,
-an astonishingly complex mixture, such as
-protoplasm or living matter, or the more complex
-organism still—the cell, the plastid.</p>
-
-<p>Are there not great differences between the substance
-of the cellular protoplasm, or cytoplasmic
-substance, and that of the nucleus? Should we not
-distinguish in the former the hyaloplasmic substance;
-the microsomic in the microsomes; the linin between
-its granulations; the centrosomic in the centrosome;
-the archoplasmic in the attraction sphere; not to
-mention the different leucins, the vacuolar juice, and
-the various inclusions? And in the nucleus must we
-not consider the nuclear juice, the substance of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>
-chromosomes, and that of the nucleoles? And is not
-each of these probably a very complex mixture?</p>
-
-<p>However, it is to this mixture that we attribute the
-possession of a form, in virtue of and by extension of
-the principles of crystallization, which definitely teach
-us that these mixtures cannot have form; that form
-is the attribute of pure bodies, and is only obtained
-by the separation of the blended parts—<i>i.e.</i>, by a
-return to homogeneity. There are therefore very
-good reasons for hesitating before we transfer the
-absolute principle of the dependence between
-chemical form and composition, as some philosophical
-biologists have done, from the physical
-sciences—where it is already subject to serious
-restrictions—to the biological sciences.</p>
-
-<p>Le Dantec, however, has made this principle the
-basis of his biological system. He therefore finds in
-the crystal the model of the living being. He thus
-gives a physical basis to life.</p>
-
-<p>Is it a question in this system of explaining this
-incomprehensible, this unfathomable mystery, which
-shows the egg cell attracting to itself materials from
-without and progressively building up that amazing
-structure which is the body of the animal, the body of
-a man, of any given man, of Primus, for example?
-It is said that the substance of Primus is specific.
-His living substance is his own, special to him; and
-that, too, from the beginning of the egg to the end of
-its metamorphosis. It only remains to apply to this
-substance the postulate, borrowed from crystallography,
-of the absolute dependence of the nature of
-substance on the form it assumes. The form of the
-body of the animal, of the man, of Primus, is the
-crystalline form of their living substance. It is the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>
-only form of equilibrium that this substance can
-assume under the given conditions, just as the cube is
-the crystallized form of sea salt, the only state of
-equilibrium of chloride of sodium in slowly evaporated
-sea water. Thus the problem of the living form is
-reduced to the problem of the living substance, which
-seems easier; and at the same time the biological
-mystery is reduced to a physical mystery. It is clear
-that this way of looking at things simplifies prodigiously—and,
-we must add, simplifies far too much—the
-obscure problem of the relation of form to
-substance, simultaneously in the two orders of science.
-This may be summed up in a single sentence:
-There is an established relation between the specific
-form and the chemical composition: the chemical
-composition <i>directs</i> and implies the specific form.</p>
-
-<p>We need not now examine the basis of this opinion.
-If it is nothing but a verbal simplification, a unification
-of the language applied to the two orders of
-phenomena, it implies an assimilation of the mechanisms
-which realize them. To the organogenic forces
-which direct the building up of the living organisms
-it brings into correspondence the crystallogenic forces
-which group, adjust, equilibrate, and harmonize the
-materials of the crystal.</p>
-
-<p>When it is a question of the application of a
-principle such as this, in order to test its legitimacy
-we must always return to the experimental foundations.
-Let us imagine, for example, a simple body,
-such as sulphur, heated and brought to a state of
-fusion—that is to say, homogeneous, isotropic, in an
-undisturbed medium the only change in which will
-be a very gradual cooling down. These are the
-typical crystallogenic conditions. The body would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
-take a given crystalline form. It is from experiments
-such as this that we derive the idea of <i>a specific form
-connected with a chemical constitution</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But in drawing this conclusion our logic is at fault.
-The real interpretation suitable to this case, as in all
-others, is that the specific form is suitable to the
-substance, and also to the physical, chemical, and
-mechanical conditions in which it is placed. And
-the proof is that this same substance, sulphur, which
-takes the prismatic form immediately after fusion,
-will not retain that form, but will pass on to the
-quite different octahedral form.</p>
-
-<p>It is so with the specific form of the living being—that
-is to say, with the assemblage of its constituent
-materials co-ordinated in a given system—in a word,
-with its organization. This is suitable to its substance,
-and to all the material, physical, chemical,
-and mechanical conditions in which it is placed. This
-form is the condition of material equilibrium corresponding
-to a very complex situation, to a sum of
-given conditions. The chemical condition is only
-one of these. And further, it is hardly proper to
-speak of a “chemical substance” when we refer to an
-astonishingly complex mixture which is in addition
-variable from one point to the other of the living
-body. When we thus reduce phenomena to their
-original signification, false analogies disappear. To
-say with Le Dantec that the form of the greyhound
-is the condition of equilibrium of the “greyhound
-chemical substance” is saying much; and too much,
-if it means that the body of the greyhound has a
-substance which behaves in the same way as homogeneous,
-isotropic masses like melted sulphur and
-dissolved salt. It were better to say much less, if it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
-means, as it will in the minds of the physiologists,
-that the body of the greyhound is the condition of
-equilibrium of a heterogeneous, anisotropic, material
-system, subjected to an infinite number of physical
-and chemical conditions.</p>
-
-<p>The idea of connecting form, and by that we mean
-organization, with chemical composition did not arise
-in the minds of chemists or physiologists. Both have
-expressed themselves very clearly on this point.</p>
-
-<p>“We must distinguish,” said Berthelot, “between
-the formation of the chemical substances, the assemblage
-of which constitutes organized beings, and the
-formation of the organs themselves. This last problem
-does not come into the domain of chemistry. No
-chemist will ever claim to have formed in his laboratory
-a leaf, a fruit, a muscle, or an organ.... But chemistry
-has a right to claim that it forms direct principles—that
-is to say, the chemical materials which constitute
-the organs.” And Claude Bernard in the same way
-writes:—“In a word, the chemist in his laboratory,
-and the living organism in its apparatus, work in the
-same way, but each with its own tools. The chemist
-can make the products of the living being, but he
-will never make the tools, because they are the result
-of organic morphology.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">The Acquisition and Re-establishment
-of the Specific Form.</span></h4>
-
-
-<p><i>Acquisition of the Typical Form.</i>—The acquisition
-of the typical form in the living being is the result of
-ontogenic work which cannot be examined here. In
-the elementary being, the plastid, this work is blended<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>
-with the work of nutrition. It is <i>directed nutrition</i>.
-It consists of a simple increase from the moment the
-element is born by the division of an anterior element,
-and of a necessarily restricted differentiation. It is a
-rudimentary embryogeny. In the complex being,
-metazoan or metaphyte, the organism is constituted,
-starting from the egg, by the growth, by the bipartition
-of the elements, and their differentiation, accomplished
-in a certain direction and in conformity with
-a given plan. This, again, is directed nutrition, but
-here the embryogeny is complex. The directing plan
-of operations is no doubt the consequence of the
-material conditions realized each moment in the
-organism.</p>
-
-<p><i>Normal Regeneration.</i>—Not only do living beings
-themselves construct their typical architecture, but
-they re-establish it and continually reconstitute it,
-according as accidents, or even ordinary circumstances,
-tend to destroy it; in a word, they become rejuvenescent.
-This regeneration consists in the reformation
-of the parts that are altered or carried away in the
-normal play of life, or by the accidents which disturb
-its course.</p>
-
-<p>Thus there is a <i>normal physiological regeneration</i>,
-which is, so to speak, the prolongation of the ontogenesis—<i>i.e.</i>,
-of the work of formation of the individual.
-We have examples in the reconstitution of the skin
-of mammals—in the throwing off of the epidermic
-products constantly used up in their superficial and
-distal parts and regenerated in their deeply-seated
-parts; in the loss and the renewal of teeth at the
-first dentition and in certain fish in the fact of
-successive dentitions; in the periodical renewal of
-the integument in the larvæ of insects, and in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>
-crustaceæ; and finally in the destruction and the
-neo-formation of the globules of the blood of vertebrates,
-of the glandular cells, and of the epithelial
-cells of the intestine.</p>
-
-<p><i>Accidental Regeneration in Protozoa and Plastids.</i>—There
-is also an <i>accidental regeneration</i> which more or
-less perfectly renews the parts that are lost. This
-regeneration has its degrees, from the simple cicatrization
-of a wound to the complete reproduction of the
-part cut off. It is very unequally developed in
-zoological groups even when they are connected.
-In the elementary monocellular beings—<i>i.e.</i>, in the
-anatomical elements and in the protozoa,—the experiments
-in merotomy, <i>i.e.</i>, in <i>partial section</i>, enable us
-to appreciate the extent of this faculty of regeneration.
-These experiments, inaugurated by the researches
-of Augustus Waller in 1851, were repeated
-by Gruber in 1885, continued by Nussbaum in 1886,
-Balbiani in 1889, Verworn in 1891, and have been
-reproduced by a large number of observers. They
-have shown that the two fragments cicatrize, and are
-repaired, building up an organism externally similar
-to the primitive organism, but smaller. The two new
-organic units do not, however, behave in the same
-way. That which retains the nucleus possesses the
-faculty of regeneration, and of living as the primitive
-being lived. The protoplasmic fragment, which does
-not contain the nucleus, cannot rebuild this absent
-organ; and though it has functional activity in most
-respects, just as the nucleated fragment, yet it is
-distinguished from it in others of great importance.
-The anucleated fragment of an infusorian behaves as
-the nucleated, and as the whole animal so far as the
-movements of the body, the cilia, prehension of food,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>
-evacuation of fæces, and the rhythmical contraction
-of the pulsatile vesicules are concerned. But
-Balbiani’s researches in 1892 have shown us that
-secretion, complete regeneration, and the faculty of
-reproduction by fission can take place only in the
-nucleated fragment—<i>i.e.</i>, in the nucleus.</p>
-
-<p><i>Accidental Reproduction in the Metazoa.</i>—Among
-multicellular beings the faculty of reproduction is met
-with in the highest degree in plants, where we find it
-in the process of propagation by slips. In animals it
-is the most marked in Cœlenterata. Trembley’s
-experiments are a striking instance. We know that
-when the hydra is cut into tiny pieces it reproduces
-exactly as many complete beings. Among the
-worms, Planaria afford a similar example. Every
-fragment, provided its volume is not less than a tenth
-of that of the whole, can reproduce a complete, entire
-being. The snail can produce a large part of its head,
-including the tentacles and the mouth. Among the
-Tritons and the Salamanders the faculty of regeneration
-reproduces the limbs, the tail, and the eye. In
-the Frog family, on the contrary, the work of regeneration
-does not go beyond cicatrization, and it is
-the same with Birds and Insects.</p>
-
-<p>It is really startling to see in a vertebrate like the
-Triton the stump of an arm with its fragment of
-humerus reproducing the forearm and the hand in all
-their complexity, with their skeleton, blood vessels,
-nerves, and teguments. We say that the limb has
-<i>budded</i>, as if there were a germ of it which develops
-like the seed of a plant, or as if each transverse portion
-of the limb, each slice, so to speak, could re-form the
-slice that follows.</p>
-
-<p>The mechanism of generation and that of regenera<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span>tion
-alike raise problems of the highest importance.
-Does the part become regenerated just as it was
-formed at first? Does the regeneration repeat the
-ontogeny? Is it true that a lost organ is never regenerated
-(the kidney for instance)? Does the
-symmetrical organ enjoy a compensating and hypertrophic
-development, as Ribbert has asserted? And
-further, if the organ be removed and transplanted to
-another position, can it be grafted there, as Y. Delage
-maintains? These are very important questions; but
-if we dwell upon them, we shall be diverted from our
-immediate object. Our task is to look at these facts
-from the point of view of their significant and characteristic
-meaning in vitality. Flourens invoked on
-their behalf the intervention of vital forces, <i>plastic</i>
-and <i>morphoplastic</i>. But, as we shall see later, these
-phenomena of cicatrization, of reparation, of regeneration,
-these more or less complete efforts for
-the re-establishment of the specific form, although
-they are found in all living beings in different degrees,
-are not exclusively confined to them. We find them
-again in some representatives of the mineral world—in
-crystals, for instance.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI_3">CHAPTER VI.<br />
-
-<small>NUTRITION.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">FUNCTIONAL ASSIMILATION. FUNCTIONAL DESTRUCTION.
-ORGANIC DESTRUCTION. ASSIMILATING
-SYNTHESIS.</p>
-
-
-<p class="prel">The extreme importance of nutrition—§ 1. Effect of vital
-activity—Destruction or growth—Distinction between the
-living substance and the reserve-stuff mingled with it—Organic
-destruction—Destruction of reserve-stuff—Destruction
-of living matter—Growth of living matter—§
-2. The two categories of vital phenomena—Foundations
-of the idea of functional destruction—The two kinds of
-phenomena of vitality—Criticism of Claude Bernard—Current
-views—Criticism of Le Dantec’s new theory of
-life.—§ 3. Correlation of the two kinds of vital facts—Law
-of connection—Contradictions in the new theory.—§ 4. The
-characteristics of nutrition—Its definition—Its permanence—Erroneous
-idea of the vital vortex—Formative assimilation
-of reserve-stuff—Formative assimilation of protoplasm—Death,
-real and apparent.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>The Immense Importance of Nutrition.</i>—We now
-come to the important feature of vitality. All other
-characteristics of living matter, its unstable equilibrium,
-its chemical and anatomical organization, the acquisition
-and the maintenance of a typical form, are only
-secondary properties, so to speak, subordinate with
-reference to <i>nutrition</i>. Generation itself is only a
-mode. <i>Nutrition</i> is the essential attribute of life. It
-is life itself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span></p>
-
-<p>Before we define it a few preliminary explanations
-are necessary.</p>
-
-<p>The most striking thing in living matter is its
-<i>growth</i>. An animal, a vegetable, is something which
-is first more or less minute, and which grows. Its
-characteristic is to expand—from the spore, the seed,
-the slip, the egg—it grows.</p>
-
-<p>Whether we are dealing with a cellular element, a
-plastid, or a complex being, their condition is the
-same in this respect. No doubt when the animal or
-plant has reached a certain stage of development its
-growth is stopped, and for a more or less lengthy
-period it remains in the adult stage, in what seems to be
-equilibrium. But even then there is no check in the
-manufacture of living matter; there is only a compensation
-between its production and its destruction.</p>
-
-<p>It is important to reduce to order the ideas on this
-important subject, which at present are confused,
-inconsistent, and contradictory. In biology grievous
-confusion reigns.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">Effect of the Vital Activity.
-Destruction or Growth?</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>Distinction between the Living Substance and the
-Reserve-stuff mingled with it.</i>—The physiology of
-nutrition has given rise to a vast body of research
-during the last half-century. Physiological schools,
-masters and pupils, such as the school at Munich
-under Voit and Pettenkofer, Pflüger’s at Bonn,
-Rubner’s, and those of Zuntz and von Noorden at
-Berlin, and a large number of zootechnical and agricultural
-laboratories through the whole world have for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
-years past been engaged in analyzing ingesta and
-egesta, in drawing up schedules of nutrition, in order
-to determine the course of decomposition and reconstitution
-of the living material.</p>
-
-<p>If I were asked what, in my opinion, is the most
-general result of all this labour, I would reply that it
-has affirmed and corroborated the important distinction
-which must be drawn between <i>living substance,
-properly so called</i>, and <i>reserve-stuff</i>. The latter, the
-<i>reserve-stuff</i> of albuminoids, carbohydrates, and fats,
-are so intimately intermingled with the living substance
-that they are in most cases very difficult to
-distinguish from it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Organic Destruction.</i>—A second point, which is
-placed equally beyond doubt, is that the vital functional
-activity is accompanied by a destruction of the
-immediate principles of the organism, in the direction
-of their simplification. This functional destruction
-cannot be doubted in the case of differentiated organs
-in which the functional activity is evident, intermittent,
-and in some measure distinct from the other
-vital phenomena which take place in them. For
-example, in the case of contracting muscles the
-respiratory carbonic acid and urinary carbon are the
-irrefutable proofs of this destruction: weak in repose,
-abundant during activity, and in proportion to it.
-There can be no doubt on this point. The truth
-laid down by Claude Bernard under the name of
-the <i>law of functional destruction</i> has been doubly
-consecrated by experiment and theory. According
-to the energetic theory, in fact, mechanical and
-thermal energies manifested in the vital functional
-activity can only have their source in the chemical
-energy set free by the destruction of the immediate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
-principles of the organism, reduced to a lower degree
-of complexity.</p>
-
-<p><i>Destruction of Reserve-stuff.</i>—But now the disagreement
-begins. What are these decomposed, destroyed
-principles? Do they belong to the cellular reserve-stuff
-or to the living matter properly so called?
-There is no doubt that most of them belong to the
-reserve-stuff. For example, this is especially true of
-glycogen, which is consumed in muscular contraction
-just as coal is consumed in the furnace of the locomotive;
-and glycogen is a reserve-stuff of muscle.
-These reserve-stuffs destroyed in the functional
-activity can be built up again only during repose.</p>
-
-<p>But it is not yet certain whether the living
-matter itself, the active protoplasm, the muscular
-protoplasm, takes part in this destruction, whether it
-provides it with elements. Experiments have proved
-contradictory. Experimenters have isolated the nitrogenous
-wastes (urea) after muscular labour, and they
-have compared them with the wastes of the period of
-repose. These nitrogenous wastes bear witness to the
-destruction of albuminoid substances, and the latter
-are the constituent principles of living matter. If—under
-conditions of sufficient alimentation—the muscular
-functional activity involves more nitrogenous
-waste, <i>i.e.</i>, a greater destruction of albuminoids, it
-might be supposed that the living material properly
-so called has been used up and destroyed for its
-own purposes. (And here again there might be a
-reserve-stuff of albuminoids, distinct from the living
-protoplasm itself, and more or less incorporated
-with it.)</p>
-
-<p>But experiment so far has not given decisive results.
-The latest experimental researches, such as those of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
-Igo Kaup, of Vienna, which date from 1902, tell us as
-uncertain a tale as their predecessors. The increase
-in the destruction of albumen has not been constant;
-the conditions of the observations do not justify our
-making an assertion either <i>pro</i> or <i>con</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Destruction of Living Matter.</i>—As no certain
-answer is supplied by experiment, theory intervenes
-and gives two conflicting answers. The majority of
-physiologists are inclined to believe in <i>the destruction
-of the living substance as the result of its own functional
-activity</i>. The functional activity would therefore
-destroy not only the reserve-stuff, but also the
-protoplasmic material. This is the current view.
-Only this opinion is strongly challenged by the
-positive teaching of science. It is certain that this
-material, in the muscle, is but little attacked, if it
-is attacked at all. We have seen above that the
-physiologists, with Pflüger and Chauveau, are agreed
-on this point. The vital functional activity in particular
-is destructive to the reserve-stuffs. It does
-not destroy them much; it destroys the organic
-material still less. Both would be repaired in functional
-repose.</p>
-
-<p><i>Growth of Living Matter.</i>—The second assertion is
-diametrically opposed to this. Not only, says Le
-Dantec, is the muscle not destroyed in the functional
-activity, but it grows. Contrary to universal opinion,
-the protoplasmic material increases by activity, and it
-is destroyed in repose. There would thus be a
-general law—<i>the law of functional assimilation</i>. “A
-cell of brewers’ yeast when introduced into a sugared
-must makes this must ferment, and at the same time,
-so far from destroying it, it increases it. Now, the
-fermentation of the must is exactly the same as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
-functional activity of the yeast.” It is, says the same
-author, a mistake to believe that the phenomena of
-functional activity, of <i>vital activity</i>, only takes place
-at the price of organic destruction. Here, then, are
-these two competing views. They are not so very far
-apart as a matter of fact, since the question at issue is
-one of deciding between a slight destruction and a
-slight growth, but theoretically they are strongly
-opposed. Moreover, they are arbitrary, and <i>experiment</i>
-has not decided between them.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. THE TWO CATEGORIES OF VITAL PHENOMENA.</h4>
-
-<p><i>Foundation of the Idea of Functional Destruction.
-Claude Bernard.</i>—The doctrine of functional destruction
-has been laid down with remarkable power
-by Claude Bernard. But the terms in which he has
-expressed it in a measure betray the thoughts of the
-great physiologist, or, at any rate, overstep the
-immediate fact he had in view. “The phenomena
-of destruction are very obvious. When movement is
-produced, when the muscle contracts, when volition
-and sensibility are manifested, when thought is
-exercised, when the gland secretes, then the substance
-of the muscles, of the nerves, of the brain, of
-the glandular tissue, becomes disorganized, destroyed,
-and consumed. So that every manifestation of a
-phenomenon in the living being is necessarily connected
-with an organic destruction.” To Claude
-Bernard organic destruction is a truth. To Le Dantec
-it is an error. Which is right? Clearly Claude
-Bernard. He bases his conviction on the analyses
-of the materials excreted in the process of physio<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>logical
-work. The excreta bear witness to a certain
-organic demolition. Generalizing this teaching of
-experiment the illustrious biologist divined the
-fundamental law of energetics before the idea of
-energetics had made much way in France. Every
-act which expends energy, which produces heat or
-motion, any manifestation whatever that may be
-looked upon as an energetic transformation, necessarily
-expends energy, and that energy is borrowed
-from the substance of the organism. These substances
-are simplified, broken up, and destroyed.
-Now the functional activity of the muscle produces
-heat and movement in warm-blooded as well as in
-cold-blooded animals. The functional activity of
-the glands produces heat, as has been shown by the
-celebrated experiments of C. Ludwig on the salivary
-secretion, and as is also shown by the study of thermal
-topography in the vertebrates. The functional activity
-of the nerves and the brain produces a slight quantity
-of electricity and heat, as most observers have agreed.
-The functional activity of the electrical and of the
-photic apparatus also expends energy. Finally, the
-eye which receives the photic impression destroys the
-purple matter of the retina, and that purple matter,
-as we well know, is recuperated in the dark during
-the repose of the organ. Everything that is expressed
-objectively, everything that is a phenomenon in the
-living being—with the exception of growth and
-formation, which are generally slow phenomena, and
-of which we can only get an idea by the comparison
-of successive states—all these energetic manifestations
-suppose a destruction of organic matter, a chemical
-simplification, the source of the energy manifested.
-And that is why material destruction does not merely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>
-coincide with functional activity, but is its measure
-and expression.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Two Kinds of Phenomena of Vitality.</i>—Another
-point on which Claude Bernard is right and his
-opponent is wrong is not less fundamental. What
-are we to understand by functional phenomena?
-This is the very point at issue. Now, in the mind of
-physiologists, this expression has a perfectly definite
-meaning. It is not so with Le Dantec. Physiologists
-who have studied animals rather high in organization—in
-which the differentiation of phenomena enables
-us to grasp the fundamental distinction—have readily
-recognized that the phenomena of living beings are
-divided into two categories. There are some which
-are intermittent, alternative, which take place, or grow
-stronger at certain moments, but which cannot be
-continuous—they are the <i>functional acts</i>; there are
-others in which this characteristic of explosives,
-energetic expenditure and intermittence, do not
-appear—they are, in general, the <i>nutritive acts</i>. The
-muscle which contracts shows functional activity. It
-has an activity and a repose. During this apparent
-repose we must not say that it is dead; it has a life,
-but that life is obscure as far as the salient fact of
-functional movement is concerned. The salivary
-gland which throws up waves of saliva when the food
-is introduced and masticated in the mouth, or when
-the chord of the tympanum is at work, is in a state of
-functional activity; this is the salient phenomenon.
-But before, though nothing, absolutely nothing, was
-flowing through the glandular canal, yet the gland
-was not reduced to the condition of a dead organ: it
-was living a more obscure, a less evident life. The
-microscopical researches of Kühne, Lea, and Langley,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>
-now universally verified, show us that during this
-time of apparent repose the cells were loading up
-their granulations and getting ready the materials of
-secretion, as just now the muscle at rest was accumulating
-glycogen and the reserve-stuff which are to be
-expended and destroyed in contraction. Similarly,
-with regard to the functional activity of the other
-glands, of the brain, etc. Claude Bernard was, therefore,
-perfectly right, when he took as his model the
-chemists who distinguished between exothermic and
-endothermic reactions, and who classed the phenomena
-of life into two great divisions: those of
-functional activity, and those of functional repose.</p>
-
-<p>1st. <i>The phenomena of functional activity</i> “are
-those which ‘leap to the eyes,’ and by which we
-are inclined to characterize life. They are conditioned
-by the effects of wear and tear, of chemical
-simplication, and of the organic destruction which
-liberates energy.” And it must be so, because these
-functional manifestations expend energy. These
-phenomena, which are the most obvious, are also the
-least specific phenomena of vitality. They form
-part of the general phenomenality.</p>
-
-<p>2nd. The <i>phenomena</i> which accompany <i>functional
-repose</i> correspond to the building up of the reserve-stuff
-destroyed in the preceding period, to the organizing
-synthesis. The latter remains “internal, silent,
-concealed in its phenomenal expression, noiselessly
-gathering together the materials which will be expended.
-We do not see these phenomena of
-organization directly. The histologist and the
-embryogenist alone, following the development of
-the element or of the living being, sees the changes
-and the phases which reveal this silent effort. Here<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>
-is a store of substance; there, the formation of
-an envelope or a nucleus; there, a division or
-multiplication, a renewal.” This type of phenomena
-is the only type which has no direct analogues:
-it is peculiar, special to the living being: what
-is really vital is this evolutive synthesis. Life is
-creation.</p>
-
-<p><i>Criticism of Claude Bernard.</i>—All this is perfectly
-true. Thirty years of the most intensive scientific
-development have run by since these lines were
-written, and have not essentially changed the ideas
-therein expressed. His work in its broad lines
-remains intact. Does that imply, however, that
-everything is perfect in detail and expression, and
-that there is no reason for making it more precise or
-for giving it fresh form? No doubt this is not so.
-Although Claude Bernard contributed to establish
-the essential distinction between the real living
-protoplasm and the materials of reserve-stuff which
-it contains, he has not drawn a sufficiently clear
-distinction between what belongs to each of the
-categories. He has not specified, in relation to
-organic destruction, what bearing it has on the
-organic materials of reserve-stuff. Sometimes he uses
-the term “organic destruction,” which is correct, and
-sometimes “vital destruction,” which is of doubtful
-import. Further, he employs an obscure and
-paradoxical formula to characterize the obvious but
-nevertheless not specific phenomena of organic
-destruction, and he says: “life is death.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Current Views.</i>—Nowadays, if I may express a
-personal opinion on this important distinction between
-functional activity and functional repose, I
-should say that after having distinguished between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span>
-the two categories of phenomena we must try to
-correlate them. We must try to discover, for
-instance, what there is in common between the
-muscle in repose and the muscle in contraction, and
-to perceive in the <i>muscular tonus</i> a kind of bridge
-thrown between these two conditions. The functional
-activity would be uninterrupted, but it would have its
-degrees of activity. The muscular tonus would be
-the permanent condition of an activity which is capable
-only of being considerably raised or lowered.
-Similarly for the glandular functional activity; the
-periods of charge must be connected with the periods
-of discharge. In a word, following the constant path
-of the human mind in scientific knowledge, after
-having drawn the distinctions that are necessary to
-our understanding of things, we must obliterate them.
-After having dug our ditches we must fill them up
-again. After having analyzed we must synthesize.
-The distinction between the phenomena of <i>functional
-activity</i> and the phenomena of <i>functional repose</i> or
-<i>purely vegetative</i> and nutritive <i>activity</i>, though only
-valid in the case of a provisional and approximate
-truth, none the less throws light on the obscure
-regions of biology.</p>
-
-<p>The succession of energy and repose, of sleep and
-awakening, is a universal law, or at least a very
-general law, connected with the laws of energetics.
-The heart, the lungs, the muscles, the glands, the
-brain obey in the most obvious manner this obligation
-of rhythmical activity. The reason is clear. It is
-because the functional activity involves what is
-generally a sudden expenditure of energy, and this
-has to be replaced by what is generally a slow
-process of reparation. Functional activity is an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>
-explosive destruction of a chemical reserve which is
-built up again more or less slowly.</p>
-
-<p><i>Criticism of Le Dantec’s “New Theory of Life.”</i>—Let
-us now examine the antithesis of Claude
-Bernard’s views. There are evidently rudimentary
-organisms in which the differentiation of the two
-categories of phenomena is but little marked; in
-which, apart from the movement, it is impossible to
-recognize intermittent, functional activities clearly
-distinct from morphogenic activity. It is not in this
-domain of the indistinct that we must seek the
-touchstone of physiological distinctions. Clearly, we
-must not choose these elementary plastids to test
-the doctrine of functional assimilation and functional
-destruction. But is not this exactly what Le Dantec
-did when he began his researches on brewers’ yeast?
-When we try to examine things, we must choose the
-conditions under which they are differentiated, and
-not those in which they are confused. And this is
-why, in the significant words of Auguste Comte, “the
-more complex living beings are, the better known
-they are to us.” The philosopher goes still farther
-in this direction, and adds “directly it is a question
-of the characteristics of animality we must start from
-the man, and see how those characteristics are little
-by little degraded, rather than start from the sponge
-and endeavour to discover how these characteristics
-are developed. The animal life of the man assists
-us to understand the life of the sponge, but the
-converse is not true.”</p>
-
-<p>When, moreover, we consider a vegetable organism
-such as yeast, which derives its energy, not from
-itself, not from the potential chemical energy of its
-reserve-stuff, but directly from the medium—that is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
-to say, from the potential chemical energy of the
-compounds which form its medium of culture,—we
-then find ourselves in the worst possible situation for
-the recognition of organic destruction. Further, it is
-doubly wrong to assert that in so ill-chosen a type
-the functional phenomena do not result from an
-organic destruction—for at first there are no very
-distinct functional phenomena here—and, in the second
-place, there certainly is organic destruction. The
-phenomena of the morphogenic vitality detected in
-the yeast are the exact concomitants, or the results,
-of the destruction of an organic compound, which in
-this case is sugar. The yeast destroys an immediate
-principle, and this is the point of departure of its vital
-manifestations; only, it has not, as a preliminary,
-clearly incorporated and assimilated this principle.
-When, therefore, the functional phenomena are
-effaced and disappear, we none the less find phenomena
-of destruction of organic compounds which are
-in a measure, a preface to the phenomena of growth.
-This is what happens in the case of brewers’ yeast:
-and here, again, the two categories of facts exist.
-Once more, we find, in the first place, the phenomena
-of destruction (destruction of sugar, reduced by
-simplification to alcohol and carbonic acid)—phenomena
-which this time no longer respond to obvious
-functional manifestations; and, in the second place,
-the phenomena of chemical and organogenic synthesis,
-corresponding to the growth of the yeast and the
-multiplication of its protoplasm. The former are no
-longer detected, as we have just said, by striking
-manifestations. However, it is not true that everything
-which is visible and which may be isolated
-outside the activity of the yeast is part of those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>
-phenomena. The boiling of the juice or the mash,
-the heat given off by the copper, all this phenomenal
-apparatus is but the consequence of the production of
-the carbonic acid and of its liberations—<i>i.e.</i>, the
-consequence of the act of destruction of the sugar.
-Here is organic destruction with its energetic
-manifestations!</p>
-
-<p>This example of the life of brewers’ yeast, of the
-saccharomyces, specially chosen by Le Dantec as
-being absolutely clear and giving the best illustration
-of his argument, contradicts him at every point. The
-general thesis of this vigorous thinker is that we
-cannot distinguish between the two parts of the vital
-act, organic destruction, and assimilating synthesis;
-that these two acts are not successive; that they give
-rise to phenomenal manifestations equally evident,
-apparent, or striking. Now, in the case of yeast, the
-phenomenon of destruction is clearly distinct from
-that of the assimilating synthesis which multiplies
-the substance of the saccharomyces. In fact, the
-action is realized by means of an alcoholic diastase
-manufactured by the cell; and Büchner succeeded in
-isolating this alcoholic ferment which splits up the
-sugar into alcohol and carbonic acid, and also <i>in vitro</i>
-and <i>in vivo</i>, makes the vat boil and heats the liquid.
-All the yeast is at work at once, says M. Dantec.
-No, and this is the proof.</p>
-
-<p>And, further, Pasteur himself, who had shown the
-relation of the decomposition of the sugar to the fact
-of the growth of the yeast and of the production
-of accessory substances such as succinic acid and
-glycerine, always referred to <i>correlation</i> between these
-phenomena. The destruction of the sugar is the
-<i>correlative</i> of the life of the yeast. This was his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>
-favourite formula. It never entered his head that
-there could be a confusion instead of a correlation,
-and that there might be only one and the same act,
-the phases of which would be indistinguishable.
-This unfortunate idea, which was fated to be so
-rapidly contradicted, is due to Le Dantec. Far
-from it being the case, Pasteur had distinguished
-the <i>ferment function</i> from the life of the yeast.
-According to him, the yeast may exist sometimes as
-a ferment and sometimes otherwise.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 3. <span class="smcap">Correlation of Two Orders of
-Vital Facts.</span></h4>
-
-<p>It is this correlation between acts <i>distinct in themselves</i>
-but <i>usually connected</i> that was announced by
-Claude Bernard. And, <i>mirabile dictu</i>—and this is the
-natural outcome of the perfect sanity of mind of this
-great physiologist—it happens that not only Pasteur’s
-researches, but the development of a new science,
-Energetics, and Büchner’s discovery lend support to
-his views, and that, too, in a field where one would
-have thought they had no application. Le Dantec is
-wrong when he declares that these ideas only apply to
-vertebrates. “It is clear,” he says on several occasions,
-“that the author has in view the metazoa and
-even the vertebrates.” Well! no. All that is general,
-universally applicable, and universally true. So that
-there are two orders of distinct phenomena energetically
-opposed and certainly connected. We need
-only repeat Claude Bernard’s own words quoted by
-Le Dantec in order to confute them.</p>
-
-<p><i>Law of Connection of Two Orders of Vital Facts.</i>—“These
-phenomena [of organic destruction and of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
-assimilating synthesis] are simultaneously produced
-in every living being, in a connection which cannot
-be broken. The disorganization or dissimilation uses
-up living matter [by this we must understand the
-reserve-stuff, as will be seen later on in the quotation]
-in the organs <i>in function</i>: the assimilating synthesis
-regenerates the tissues; it gathers together the reserve-stuff
-which the vital activity must expend.
-These two operations of destruction and renovation,
-inverse the one to the other, are absolutely connected
-and inseparable, in this sense at any rate, that destruction
-is the necessary condition of renovation.
-The phenomena of functional destruction are themselves
-the precursors and the instigators of material
-regeneration, of the formative process which is silently
-going on in the intimacy of the tissues. The losses
-are repaired as they take place; and equilibrium being
-re-established as soon as it tends to be broken, the
-body is maintained in its composition.”</p>
-
-<p>It is perfectly right and wise to say with Claude
-Bernard that the two orders of facts are successive,
-and that one is normally the inciting condition of the
-other. The possibility of the development of the
-yeast when fermentation fails, and the weakness of
-this development on the other hand under these conditions,
-are an excellent proof of this. The one proves
-the essential independence of the two orders of facts,
-the other the inciting and provoking virtue of the first
-relatively to the second. The experimental truth is
-thus expressed with a minimum of uncertainty. We
-know the facts which led Le Dantec to formulate his
-law of functional assimilation—namely, that the
-functional activity is useful or indispensable to the
-growth of the organ; that the organs which are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>
-functionally active grow, and those which do not act
-become atrophied. We are only expressing the facts
-when we say that the organic destructions that go on in
-the living being (whether at the expense of its reserve-stuff
-or at the expense of its medium, or whether it be
-even slightly at the expense of the plastic substance
-itself) are the antecedent, the inciting agent or the
-normal condition of the chemical and organogenic
-syntheses which create the new protoplasm.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, we are wrong if we hold with
-Le Dantec that instead of two chemical operations
-there is only one, that which creates the new protoplasm.
-The obvious destruction is neglected; it is
-deliberately passed over. He does not see that it is
-necessary to liberate the energy employed in the
-construction, by complication, of this highly complex
-substance which is the new protoplasm. He really
-seems to have made up his mind not to analyze the
-phenomenon. If we decline to admit that to the first
-act of functional destruction succeeds a second,
-assimilation or organogenic synthesis, we are looking
-at elementary beings, in which the succession
-cannot be grasped, as we look on brewers’ yeast.
-We not only mean that the morphogenic assimilation
-results from the functional activity; we mean that it
-results from it directly, immediately, that it is the
-functional activity itself. Experiment tells us nothing
-of all this. It shows us the real facts, the facts of the
-destruction of an organic immediate principle, the
-sugar, and the fact that an assimilating synthesis is
-the correlative of this destruction. Besides, if it is
-impossible in examples of this kind to exhibit the
-succession, it is perfectly easy in beings of a higher
-order. It is, then, clearly seen that the preliminary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>
-destruction of a reserve-stuff (and perhaps of a small
-quantity of the living substance) precedes and conditions
-the formation of a greater quantity of this
-living matter—in other words, the growth of the
-protoplasm of the organ.</p>
-
-<p><i>Contradictions in the New Theory.</i>—Moreover, these
-mistakes involve those who make them in a series of
-inextricable contradictions. Here, for example, is
-life; it is found, they say, in three forms:—Life
-manifested, or condition 1º; latent life, or condition
-3º. So far this is the classical theory; but they add
-a condition 2º, which is what might be called <i>pathological
-or incomplete life</i>. This is defined by the
-following characteristic:—That its functional phenomena
-are identical with those in the first form, but
-that they are not accompanied by assimilation and by
-protoplasmic growth, But since, they say, growth is
-the chemical consequence of the functional activity,
-since it is so to speak its metabolic aspect, since it is
-confused with it, and inseparable from it, by the
-argument—then it is contradictory and logically
-absurd to speak of condition 2º. It would be acknowledging
-in the case of the anucleated merozoite,
-for example, a functional activity unaccompanied by
-assimilation, yet identical with the functional activity
-which is accompanied by assimilation in the nucleated
-merozoite. The general movement, that of the cilia,
-the taking of food, the evacuation of the fæces, the
-contraction of the pulsatile vacuoles, are the same.
-And this fact is the best proof that this vital functional
-activity (with the organic destruction which is
-its energetic source) must be distinguished from the
-assimilation which usually follows it, and which in
-exceptional cases may not follow it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span></p>
-
-<p>We shall carry this discussion no farther. We have
-examined at some length Le Dantec’s views, and we
-have contrasted them with the doctrine which has
-been current in general physiology since the time of
-Claude Bernard, and this comparison does not turn
-out quite to their advantage. It was inevitable that
-the experimental and realistic spirit which inspired
-the doctrine of the celebrated physiologist made his
-work really too systematic. His formula, “life is
-death,” and the form he gave his ideas, are not always
-irreproachably correct. They lend themselves at
-times to criticism. Sometimes they require commentary.
-These are errors of detail which Le Dantec
-has summarized somewhat roughly. There is no
-necessity to do this in his own case. We pay our
-tribute to the clearness of his language, although we
-believe the foundations of his system are false and
-ill-founded. Their rigour is purely verbal. Their
-external qualities, their careful arrangement are well
-adapted to the seduction of the systematic mind
-prepared by mathematical teaching. This new theory
-of life is presented with pedagogic talent of the
-highest order. We think we have shown that the
-foundations are entirely fallacious, in particular the
-following:—Vital condition No. 2º; the confusion between
-functional activity and assimilating synthesis;
-the so-called absolute connection between morphogeny
-and chemical composition; the fundamental
-distinction between elementary life and individual life.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 4. <span class="smcap">Characteristics of Nutrition.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>Definition of Nutrition.</i>—As we have just seen, the
-organism is the scene of chemical reactions of two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>
-kinds, the one destructive and simplifying, the other
-synthetic, constructive, or assimilating. This totality
-of reactions constitutes nutrition. Hence the two
-phases that it is convenient to consider in this function—<i>assimilation</i>
-and <i>disassimilation</i>. This twofold
-chemical movement or <i>metabolism</i> corresponding to
-the two categories of vital phenomena, of destruction
-(catabolism) and of synthesis (anabolism) is therefore
-the chemical sign of vitality in all its forms. But it
-is clear that disassimilation or organic destruction,
-which is destined to furnish energy to the organism
-for its different operations, reappears in the plan of
-the general phenomena of nature. It is not specifically
-vital in its principle. Assimilation, on the other
-hand, is in this respect much more characteristic.</p>
-
-<p>To some physiologists nutrition is only assimilation.
-Of the two aspects of metabolism they consider
-only one, the most typical, <i>Ad-similare</i>, to assimilate,
-to restore the substance borrowed from the ambient
-medium, the alimentary substances, <i>similar</i> to living
-matter, to make living matter of them, to increase
-active protoplasm—this is indeed the most striking
-phenomenon of vitality. To grow, to increase, to
-expand, to invade, is the law of living matter.
-Assimilation, nutrition in its essentials, is, according
-to the definition of Ch. Robin, “the production by the
-living being of a substance identical with its own.”
-It is the act by which the living matter, the protoplasm
-of a given being, is created.</p>
-
-<p><i>Permanence in Nutrition.</i>—Nutrition presents one
-quite remarkable character—permanence. It is a vital
-manifestation, a property if we look at it in the cell,
-in the living substance, a function if we consider it in
-the animal or in the plant as a whole, which is never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>
-arrested. Its suspension involves <i>ipso facto</i> the suspension
-of life itself. It is, in the words of Claude
-Bernard, that property of nutrition “which, as long as
-it exists in an element, compels us to believe that this
-element is alive, and which, when it is absent, compels
-us to believe that it is dead. It dominates all others
-by its generality and its importance. In a word, it is
-the absolute test of vitality.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Biological Energetics shows the Importance of
-Nutrition.</i>—We have indicated in advance the reason
-of its importance, showing that its two phases, disassimilation
-and assimilation, are the energetic
-condition of the two kinds of vital phenomena
-which we can distinguish.</p>
-
-<p>Nutrition is a manufacture of protoplasm at the
-expense of the materials of the cellular ambient
-medium, which are assimilated—<i>i.e.</i>, made chemically
-and physically similar to living matter and to the
-reserves it stores up. This operation, which is
-peculiarly chemical, is therefore indicated by the
-borrowing of materials from the external world, a
-borrowing which is always going on, because the
-operation is permanent, and, let me add, because of
-the continual rejection of the waste products of
-this manufacture. Our formula is:—Nutrition is a
-chemistry which persists.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Idea of the Vital Vortex is Erroneous.</i>—Here
-the effect has hidden the cause from the eyes
-of the biologists. They have been struck by the
-incessant entry and exit, by the never-ceasing passage,
-by the <i>cycle</i> of matter through the living being
-without guessing its why and wherefore; and they
-have taken as a picture of the living being a vortex
-in which the essential form is maintained while the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>
-matter, which is accessory, flows on without a check.
-This is Cuvier’s <i>vital vortex</i>. But for what purpose
-is this circulating matter used? They thought that
-it was employed entirely for the reconstitution of
-the living substance, continually and inevitably destroyed
-by the vital Minotaur.</p>
-
-<p><i>Destruction of Reserve-stuff</i>.—Here again there is
-a mistake. Really living substance is but little
-destroyed, and consequently requires very little
-renewal by the functional activity of the animal
-machine. Its metabolism—destruction and renewal—is
-in every case infinitely less than is supposed in
-the classical image of the vital vortex. It is the
-merit of physiologists, and particularly of Pflüger and
-Chauveau, to have worked for nearly forty years
-to establish this truth. They have proved it, at
-least as far as the muscular tissue is concerned.
-Protoplasm, properly so-called, is only destroyed
-as the organs of a steam engine are destroyed—its
-tubes, its boiler, its furnace. And it matters little.
-We know that such an engine uses much coal, and we
-know very little of its machinery and its metallic
-frame. And so it is with the cell, the living machine.
-A very small portion of the food introduced will be
-assimilated in the living substance. By far the
-greater part of it is destined to be worked up by the
-protoplasm and placed in reserve under the form of
-glycogen, albumen, and fat, etc.—<i>i.e.</i>, compounds
-which are not the really living substance, the hereditary
-protoplasm, but the products of its industry, just as
-they are or may be the products of the industry of
-the chemist working in his laboratory. They will be
-expended for the purpose of furnishing the necessary
-energy to the vital functional activity, muscular<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>
-contraction, secretion, heat, etc., just as coal is
-expended to set the steam engine going. The proof
-as far as the muscle is concerned does not stand
-alone. There are other examples. In particular,
-micrographic physiologists who have studied nervous
-phenomena say that the anatomical elements of the
-brain last indefinitely, and that they continue as they
-are, without renewal from birth to death. The
-permanence of the consciousness, be it said in
-passing, is connected by them with the permanence
-of the cerebral element (Marinesco).</p>
-
-<p>Thus destruction is very restricted. There is only
-a very slight disassimilation of the living matter,
-properly so-called, in the course of the vital functional
-activity. We may even go farther than this experimental
-fact. This is what Le Dantec has done
-when he claims that there is even an assimilation, an
-increase of the protoplasm. Strictly speaking, this
-is possible, but there is no certain proof of it; and in
-any case we cannot agree with him when he affirms
-that the increase is the <i>direct result</i> of the functional
-activity and blends with it in one single, unique
-operation. We must, on the contrary, agree with
-Claude Bernard that it is only a <i>consequence</i> of it,
-that it is produced in consequence of the existence of
-a bond of correlation between organic destruction and
-assimilating synthesis.</p>
-
-<p>Why is there this bond? That is easily understood
-if we reflect that the assimilating synthesis, an
-operation of endothermic, chemical complexity, naturally
-requires an exothermic counterpart, the organic
-destruction which will set free this necessary energy.</p>
-
-<p><i>Formative Assimilation of Reserve-stuff. Formative
-Assimilation of Protoplasm.</i>—It follows that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>
-there are in nutritive assimilation itself two distinct
-acts. The one consisting of the manufacture of
-reserve-stuff is the more obvious but the less
-specific; the other, really essential, is assimilation
-properly so-called, the reconstitution of the protoplasm.
-The former is indispensable to the production
-of the most prominent acts of vitality—movement,
-secretion, production of heat. If it is
-suspended, functional activity is arrested. We get
-<i>apparent death</i>, or <i>latent life</i>. But if the real assimilation
-is arrested, we have <i>real death</i>.</p>
-
-<p>According to this there would be a fundamental
-distinction between real and apparent death. The
-former would be characterized by an <i>arrest of the
-protoplasmic assimilation</i> which is externally indicated
-by no sign. On the other hand, apparent death
-would be characterized by <i>the arrest of the formation
-and destruction of reserve-stuff</i>. It would be externally
-manifested by two signs:—The suppression
-of material exchanges with the medium (respiration,
-alimentation) and the suppression of the functional
-acts (production of movement, of heat, of electricity,
-of glandular excretion).</p>
-
-<p>Such would be the most expedient test for apparent
-or real death. The question occurs in the case of
-grains of corn in Egyptian tombs, and also of
-hibernating animals and reviviscent beings, and, in
-general, in the case of what has been called the state
-of <i>latent life</i>. But from the practical point of view
-it is extremely difficult to apply this test and to
-decide if the phenomena which are arrested in the
-grain at maturity, in Leeuwenhoek’s tardigrada,<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>
-and in the dried-up Anguillulidæ<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> of Baker and
-Spallanzani, in the encysted colpoda<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> that a drop of
-warm water will revive, in the animals exposed by
-E. Yung and Pictet to a cold of more than a
-100° C. below zero, are due to the general arrest of
-the two forms of assimilation, or to the arrest of the
-manufacture and utilization of reserve-stuff alone, or
-finally, to the arrest of protoplasmic assimilation
-alone. The latter, which is already very restricted
-in beings in a normal condition whose growth is
-terminated, may fall to the lowest degree in the
-being which, having no functional activity, is assimilating
-nothing. So that, to cut the question short,
-the experimenter who measures the value of the
-exchanges between the being and the medium has
-seldom to do more than decide between little and
-nothing. Hence his perplexity. But if experiment
-hesitates, theory affirms: it admits <i>a priori</i> that the
-movement of protoplasmic assimilation, an essential
-sign of vitality, is neither checked nor renewed, but
-proceeds continuously.</p>
-
-<p><i>Is Nutrition, the Assimilating Synthesis, interrupted?</i>—Nevertheless,
-there are many reasons for
-suspending all judgment as to this interpretation.
-It is questioned by most biologists. According to
-A. Gautier, the preserved grain of corn and the dried
-up rotifera are not really alive; they are like clocks
-in working order, ready to tell the time, but awaiting
-in absolute repose the first vibration which will set
-them going. As for the grain, it is the air, heat, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>
-moisture which supply the first impulse. In other
-words, the organization proper to the manifestation of
-life remains, but there is no life. The so-called
-arrested life is not a life.</p>
-
-<p>It must be said, however, that the majority of
-physiologists refuse to accept this interpretation.
-They believe in an attenuation of the nutritive
-synthesis and not in its complete destruction. They
-think that this total suppression would be contrary
-to current ideas relative to the perpetuity of the
-protoplasm and the limited duration of the living
-element. The natural medium is variable, and even
-the mineral cannot remain eternally fixed. Still less
-is perennity a property of the living being. If
-ordinary life is for each individual of limited duration,
-the arrested life must also be of limited duration.
-We cannot believe that after an indefinitely prolonged
-sleep the grain of corn, or the paste-eel, or the
-colpoda, emerging from their torpor can resume their
-existence, like the Sleeping Beauty, at the point at
-which it was interrupted, and thus pass with a bound,
-as it were, through the centuries.</p>
-
-<p>In fact the maintenance of the vitality of grains
-of corn from the Egyptian tombs and their aptitude
-to germinate after thousands of years are only fables
-or the result of imposture. Maspero, in a letter
-addressed to M. E. Griffon on the 15th July 1901,
-has clearly summed up the situation by saying that
-the grains of corn bought from the fellahs almost
-always germinate, but that this is never the case with
-those that the experimenter himself takes from the
-tombs.</p>
-
-<p>To sum up, we must use the same language of
-nutrition and of life, of their uninterrupted progress,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>
-of their continuity, of their permanence, of their
-activity, and of their slackening. Living matter is
-always growing, much or little, slowly or quickly,
-in its reserve-stuff or in its protoplasm, for expenditure
-or accumulation. This inevitability of growth defines
-it, characterizes it, and sums up its activity. Development
-and the evolution of growth are consequences or
-aspects of nutrition.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_IV">BOOK IV.<br />
-
-
-<small>THE LIFE OF MATTER.</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Summary: Chap. I. Universal life—Opinions of philosophers
-and poets—Continuity between brute and living bodies—Origin
-of this principle.—Chap. II. Origin of brute matter
-in living matter.—Chap. III. Organization and chemical
-composition of brute and living bodies.—Chap. IV. Evolution
-and transformation of brute and living bodies.—Chap.
-V. Possession of a specific form—Living bodies and
-crystals—Cicatrization.—Chap. VI. Nutrition in the living
-body and in the crystal.—Chap. VII. Generation in brute
-and in living bodies—Spontaneous generation.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><i>Apparent Differences between Living and Brute
-Bodies. The Two Kingdoms.</i>—It seems at first
-impossible that there should be any essential
-similarity between an inanimate object and a living
-being. What resemblance can be discovered between
-a stone, a lion, and an oak? A comparison of the
-inert and immovable pebble with the leaping animal,
-and with the plant extending its foliage gives an
-impression of vivid contrast. Between the organic
-and the inorganic worlds there seems to be an abyss.
-The first impressions we receive confirm this view;
-superficial investigation furnishes arguments for it.
-There is thus aroused in the mind of the child, and
-later in that of the man, a sharply marked distinction
-between the natural objects of the mineral kingdom
-on the one hand, and those of the two kingdoms of
-living beings on the other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span></p>
-
-<p>But a more intimate knowledge daily tends to
-throw doubt upon the rigour or the absolute character
-of such a distinction. It shows that brute matter can
-no longer be placed on one side and living beings on
-the other. Scientists deliberately speak of “the life
-of matter,” which seems to the average man a contradiction
-in terms. They discover in certain classes
-of mineral bodies almost all the attributes of life.
-They find in others fainter, but still recognizable
-indications of an undeniable relationship.</p>
-
-<p>We propose to pass in review these analogies and
-resemblances, as has already been done in a fairly
-complete manner by Leo Errera, C. E. Guillaume,
-L. Bourdeau, Ed. Griffon, and others. We will consider
-the fine researches of Rauber, of Ostwald,
-and of Tammann upon crystals and crystalline germs—researches
-which are merely a continuation of those
-of Pasteur and of Gernez. These show that crystalline
-bodies are endowed with the principal attributes
-of living beings—<i>i.e.</i>, a rigorously defined form; an
-aptitude for acquiring it, and for re-establishing it by
-repairing any mutilations that may be inflicted upon
-it; nutritive growth at the expense of the mother
-liquor which constitutes its culture medium; and,
-finally—a still more incredible property—all the
-characteristics of reproduction by generation. Other
-curious facts observed by skilful physicists—W.
-Roberts-Austen, W. Spring, Stead, Osmond, Guillemin,
-Charpy, C. E. Guillaume—show that the immutability
-even of bodies supposed to be the most rigid
-of all, such as glass, the metals, steel, and brass, is
-apparent rather than real. Beneath the surface of the
-metal that seems to us inert there is a swarming
-population of molecules, displacing each other, moving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span>
-about, and arranging themselves so as to form definite
-figures, and assuming forms adapted to the conditions
-of the environment. Sometimes it is years before
-they arrive at the state of ultimate and final equilibrium—which
-is that of eternal rest.</p>
-
-<p>However, in order to understand these facts and
-their interpretations, it is necessary to pass in review
-the fundamental characteristics of living beings. It
-will be shown that these very characteristics are found
-in inanimate matter.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I_4">CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-<small>UNIVERSAL LIFE. OPINIONS OF PHILOSOPHERS
-AND POETS.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">§ 1. Primitive beliefs; the ideas of poets.—§ 2. Opinions of
-philosophers—Transition from brute to living bodies—The
-principle of continuity: continuity by transition: continuity
-by summation—Ideas of philosophers as to sensibility and
-consciousness in brute bodies—The general principle of
-homogeneity—The principle of continuity as a consequence
-of the principle of homogeneity.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">Primitive Beliefs. Ideas of the Poets.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The teaching of science as to the analogies between
-brute bodies and living bodies accords with the conceptions
-of the philosophers and the fancies of the
-poets. The ancients held that all bodies in nature
-were the constituent parts of a universal organism,
-the macrocosm, which they compared to the human
-microcosm. They attributed to it a principle of
-action, the <i>psyche</i>, analogous to the vital principle,
-and this psyche directed phenomena; and also an
-intelligent principle, the <i>nous</i>, analogous to the soul,
-and the <i>nous</i> served for the comprehension of phenomena.
-This universal life and this universal soul
-played an important part in their metaphysical
-systems.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was the same with the poets. Their tendency
-has always been to attribute life to Nature, so as to
-bring her into harmony with our thoughts and feelings.
-They seek to discover the life or soul hidden
-in the background of things.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hark to the voices. Nothing is silent.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Winds, waves, and flames, trees, reeds, and rocks</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">All live; all are instinct with soul.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After making proper allowance for emotional
-exaggeration, ought we to consider these ideas as the
-prophetic divination of a truth which science is only
-just beginning to dimly perceive? By no means. As
-Renan has said, this universal animism, instead of
-being a product of refined reflection, is merely a
-legacy from the most primitive of mental processes,
-a residue of conceptions belonging to the childhood
-of humanity. It recalls the time when men conceived
-of external things only in terms of themselves; when
-they pictured each object of nature as a living being.
-Thus, they personified the sky, the earth, the sea, the
-mountains, the rivers, the fountains, and the fields.
-They likened to animate voices the murmur of the
-forest:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“ ... The oak chides and the birch</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is whispering....</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the beech murmurs....</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The willow’s shiver, soft and faint, sounds like a word.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The pine-tree utters mysterious moans.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>For primitive man, as for the poet of all times,
-everything is alive, and every sound is due to a being
-with feelings similar to our own. The sighing of the
-breeze, the moan of the wave upon the shore, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>
-babbling of the brook, the roaring of the sea, and the
-pealing of the thunder are nothing less than sad,
-joyous, or angry living voices.</p>
-
-<p>These impressions were embodied in ancient
-mythology, the graceful beauty of which does not
-conceal its inadequacy. Then they passed into
-philosophy and approached the realm of science.
-Thales believed that all bodies in nature were
-animate and living. Origen considered the stars as
-actual beings. Even Kepler himself attributed to the
-celestial bodies an internal principle of action, which,
-it may be said in passing, is contrary to the law of
-the inertia of matter, which has been wrongly ascribed
-to him instead of to Galileo. The terrestrial globe
-was, according to him, a huge animal, sensitive to
-astral influences, frightened at the approach of the
-other planets, and manifesting its terror by tempests,
-hurricanes, and earthquakes. The wonderful flux and
-reflux of the ocean was its breathing. The earth had
-its blood, its perspiration, its excretions; it also had
-its foods, among which was the sea water which it
-absorbs by numerous channels. It is only fair to add
-that at the end of his life Kepler retracted these vague
-dreams, ascribing them to the influence of J. C.
-Scaliger. He explained that by the soul of the
-celestial bodies he meant nothing more than their
-motive force.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">Opinion of the Philosophers.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>Transition from Brute to Living Bodies.</i>—The
-lowering of the barrier between brute bodies and
-living bodies began with those philosophers who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
-introduced into the world the great principles of
-continuity and evolution.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Principle of Continuity.</i>—First and foremost
-we must mention Leibniz. According to the teaching
-of that illustrious philosopher, as interpreted by M.
-Fouillée, “there is no inorganic kingdom, only a great
-organic kingdom, of which mineral, vegetable, and
-animal forms are the various developments....
-Continuity exists everywhere throughout the world;
-everywhere is life and organization. Nothing is
-dead; life is universal.” It follows that there is no
-interruption or break in the succession of natural
-phenomena; that everything is gradually developed;
-and finally, that the origin of the organic being must
-be sought in the inorganic. Life, properly so called,
-has not, in fact, always existed on the surface of the
-globe. It appeared at a certain geological epoch, in
-a purely inorganic medium, by reason of favourable
-conditions. The doctrine of continuity compels us,
-however, to admit that it pre-existed on the globe
-under some rudimentary form.</p>
-
-<p>The modern philosophers who are imbued with
-these principles, MM. Fouillée, L. Bourdeau, and A.
-Sabatier, express themselves in similar language.
-“Dead matter and living matter are not two absolutely
-different entities, but represent two forms of
-the same matter, differing only in degree, sometimes
-but slightly.” When it is only a matter of degree, it
-cannot be held that these views are opposed. Inequalities
-must not be interpreted as contrary attributes,
-as when the untrained mind considers heat
-and cold as objective states, qualitatively opposed
-to each other.</p>
-
-<p><i>Continuity by Transition.</i>—The argument which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>
-leads us to remove the barrier between the two kingdoms,
-and to consider minerals as endowed with a
-sort of rudimentary life, is the same as that which
-compels us to admit that there is no fundamental
-difference between natural phenomena. There are
-transitions between what lives and what does not,
-between the animate being and the brute body. And
-in the same way there are transitions between what
-thinks and what does not think, between what is
-thought and what is not thought, between the conscious
-and the unconscious. This idea of insensible
-transition, of a continuous path between apparent
-antitheses, at first arouses an insuperable opposition
-in minds not prepared for it by a long comparison of
-facts. It is slowly realized, and finally is accepted by
-those who, in the world of things, follow the infinity
-of gradations presented by natural phenomena. The
-principle of continuity comes at last to constitute, as
-one may say, a mental habit. Thus the man of science
-may be led, like the philosopher, to entertain the
-idea of a rudimentary form of life animating matter.
-He may, like the philosopher, be guided by this idea;
-he may attribute <i>a priori</i> to brute matter all the really
-essential qualities of living beings. But this must
-be on the condition that, assuming these properties to
-be common, he must afterwards demonstrate them by
-means of observation and experiment. He must show
-that molecules and atoms, far from being inert and
-dead masses, are in reality active elements, endowed
-with a kind of inferior life, which is manifested by all
-the transformations observed in brute matter, by
-attractions and repulsions, by movements in response
-to external stimuli, by variations of state and of
-equilibrium; and finally, by the systematic methods<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>
-according to which these elements group themselves,
-conforming to those definite types of structure by
-means of which they produce different species of
-chemical compounds.</p>
-
-<p><i>Continuity by Summation.</i>—The idea of summation
-leads by another path to the same result. It is
-another form of the principle of continuity. A sum
-total of effects, obscure and indistinct in themselves,
-produces a phenomenon appreciable, perceptible, and
-distinct, apparently, but not really, heterogeneous in
-its components. The manifestations of atomic or
-molecular activity thus become manifestations of vital
-activity.</p>
-
-<p>This is another consequence of the teaching of
-Leibniz. For, according to his philosophical theory,
-individual consciousness, like individual life, is the
-collective expression of a multitude of elementary
-lives or consciousnesses. These elements are inappreciable
-because of their low degree, and the real
-phenomenon is found in the sum, or rather the
-<i>integral</i>, of all these insensible effects. The elementary
-consciousnesses are harmonized, unified,
-integrated into a result that becomes manifest, just
-as “the sounds of the waves, not one of which would
-be heard if by itself, yet, when united together and
-perceived at the same instant, become the resounding
-voice of the ocean.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Ideas of the Philosophers as to Sensibility and Consciousness
-in Brute Bodies.</i>—The philosophers have
-gone still further in the way of analogies, and have
-recognized in the play of the forces of brute matter,
-particularly in the play of chemical forces, a mere
-rudiment of the appetitions and tendencies that regulate,
-as they believe, the functional activity of living<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>
-beings—a trace, as it were, of their sensibility. To
-them reactions of matter indicate the existence of a
-kind of <i>hedonic consciousness</i>—<i>i.e.</i>, a consciousness
-reduced simply to a distinction between comfort and
-discomfort, a desire for good and repulsion from evil,
-which they suppose to be the universal principle of all
-activity. This was the view held by Empedocles in
-antiquity; it was that of Diderot, of Cabanis, and, in
-general, of the modern materialistic school, eager to
-find, even in the lowest representatives of the
-inorganic world, the first traces of the vitality and
-intellectual life which blossom out at the top of the
-scale in the living world.</p>
-
-<p>Similar ideas are clearly seen in the early history of
-all natural sciences. It was this same principle of
-appetition, or of love and of repulsion or hate that,
-under the names of affinity, selection, and incompatibility,
-was thought to direct the transformations of
-bodies when chemistry first began; when Boerhaave,
-for example, compared chemical combinations to
-voluntary and conscious alliances, in which the
-respective elements, drawn together by sympathy,
-contracted appropriate marriages.</p>
-
-<p><i>General Principle of the Homogeneity of the Complex
-and its Components.</i>—The assimilation of brute bodies
-to living bodies, and of the inorganic kingdom to the
-organic, was, in the mind of these philosophers, the
-natural consequence of positing <i>a priori</i> the principles
-of continuity and evolution. There is, however, a
-principle underlying these principles. This principle
-is not expressed explicitly by the philosophers; it is
-not formulated in precise terms, but is more or less
-unconsciously implied; it is everywhere applied. It,
-however, may be clearly seen behind the apparatus of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>
-philosophical argument It is the assertion that no
-arrangement or combination of elements can put
-forth any new activity essentially different from the
-activities of the elements of which it is composed.
-Man is living clay, say Diderot and Cabanis; and,
-on the other hand, he is a thinking being. <i>As it is
-impossible to produce that which thinks from that which
-does not think</i>, the clay must possess a rudiment of
-thought. But is there not another alternative? May
-not the new phenomenon, thought, be the effect of
-the arrangement of this clay? If we exclude this
-alternative, we must then consider arrangement and
-organization as incapable of producing in arranged
-and organized matter a new property different from
-that which it presented before such arrangement.
-Living protoplasm, says another, is merely an
-assemblage of brute elements; “these brute elements
-must therefore possess a rudiment of life.” This is
-the same implied supposition which we have just
-considered; if life is not the basis of each element, it
-cannot result from their simple assemblage.</p>
-
-<p>Man and animals are combinations of atoms, says
-M. le Dantec. It is more natural to admit that
-human consciousness is the result of the elementary
-consciousness of the constituent atoms than to consider
-it as resulting from construction by means
-of elements with no consciousness. “Life,” says
-Haeckel, “is universal; we could not conceive of its
-existence in certain aggregates of matter if it did not
-belong to their constituent elements.” Here the
-postulate is almost expressed.</p>
-
-<p>The argument is always the same; even the same
-words are used: the fundamental hypothesis is the
-same; only it remains more or less unexpressed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
-more or less unperceived. It may be stated as
-follows:—Arrangement, assemblage, construction, and
-aggregation are powerless to bring to light in the
-complex anything new and essentially heterogeneous
-to what already exists in the elements. Reciprocally,
-grouping reveals in a complex a property and
-character which is the gradual development of an
-analogous property and character in the elements.
-It is in this sense that there exists a collective soul in
-crowds, the psychology of which has been discussed
-by M. G. Le Bon. In the same way, many sociologists,
-adopting the views advanced by P. de Lilienfeld
-in 1865, attribute to nations a formal individuality,
-after the type of that possessed by each of their
-constituent members. M. Izolet considers society
-as an organism, which he calls a “hyperzoan.”
-Herbert Spencer has developed the comparison of
-the collective organism with the individual organism,
-insisting on their resemblances and differences. Th.
-Ribot has dwelt, in particular, on the resemblances.</p>
-
-<p>The postulate that we have clearly stated here is
-accepted by many as an axiom. But it is not an
-axiom. When we say that there is nothing in the
-complex that cannot be found in the parts, we think
-we are expressing a self-evident truth; but we are,
-in fact, merely stating an hypothesis. It is assumed
-that arrangement, aggregation, and complicated and
-skilful grouping of elements can produce nothing
-really new in the order of phenomena. And this is
-an assertion that requires verification in each particular
-case.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Principle of Continuity, a Consequence of the
-Preceding.</i>—Let us apply this principle to the beings
-in nature. All beings in nature are, according to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span>
-current ideas, arrangements, aggregates, or groupings
-of the same universal matter, that is to say, of the
-same simple chemical bodies. It results from the
-preceding postulate that their activities can only differ
-in degree and form, and not fundamentally. There
-is no essential difference of nature between the
-activities of various categories of beings, no heterogeneity,
-no discontinuity. We may pass from one to
-another without coming to an hiatus or impassable
-gulf. The law of continuity thus appears as a simple
-consequence of the fundamental postulate. And so
-it is with the law of evolution, for evolution is merely
-continuity of action.</p>
-
-<p>Such are the origins of the philosophical doctrine
-which universalizes life and extends it to all bodies
-in nature.</p>
-
-<p>It may be remarked that this doctrine is not
-confined to any particular school or sect. Leibniz
-was by no means a materialist, and he endowed his
-mundane elements, his <i>monads</i>, not only with a sort
-of life, but even with a sort of soul. Father Boscovitch,
-Jesuit as he was, and professor in the college of
-Rome, did not deny to his <i>indivisible points</i> a kind of
-inferior vitality. St. Thomas, too, the angelical
-doctor, attributed, according to M. Gardair, to
-inanimate substances a certain kind of activity,
-inborn inclinations, and a real appetition towards
-certain acts.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II_4">CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-<small>ORIGIN OF BRUTE MATTER IN LIVING MATTER.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Spontaneous generation: an episode in the history of the
-globe—Verification of the identity between brute and
-living matter—Slow identification—Rapid identification—Contrary
-opinion—Hypothesis of cosmozoa; cosmic
-panspermia—Hypothesis of pyrozoa.</p>
-
-
-<p>There should be two ways of testing the doctrine of
-the essential identity of brute and living matter—one
-slow and more laborious, the other more rapid
-and decisive.</p>
-
-<p><i>Identification of the Two Matters, Brute and
-Living.</i>—The laborious method, which we will be
-obliged to follow, consists in the attentive examination
-of the various activities by which life is
-manifested, and in finding more or less crude
-equivalents for them in all brute beings, or in certain
-of them.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rapid Verification. Spontaneous Generation.</i>—The
-rapid and decisive method, which, unhappily, is
-beyond our resources, would consist in showing unquestionable,
-clearly marked life, the superior life,
-arising from the kind of inferior life that is attributed
-to matter in general. It would be necessary completely
-to construct in all its parts, by a suitable
-combination of inorganic materials, a single living
-being, even the humblest plant or the most rudi<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>mentary
-animal. This would indeed be an irrefutable
-proof that the germs of all vital activity are contained
-in the molecular activity of brute bodies, and that
-there is nothing essential to the latter that is not
-found in the former.</p>
-
-<p>Unhappily this demonstration cannot be given.
-Science furnishes no example of it, and we are forced
-to have recourse to the slow method.</p>
-
-<p>The question here involved is that of spontaneous
-generation. It is well known that the ancients
-believed in spontaneous generation, even for animals
-high in the scale of organization. According to
-Van Helmont, mice could be born by some incomprehensible
-fermentation in dirty linen mixed with
-wheat. Diodorus speaks of animal forms which were
-seen to emerge, partly developed, from the mud of
-the Nile. Aristotle believed in the spontaneous birth
-of certain fishes. This belief, though rejected as to
-the higher forms, was for a long time held with
-regard to the lower forms of animals, and to insects—such
-as the bees which the shepherd of Virgil saw
-coming out from the flanks of the dead bullock—flies
-engendered in putrefying meat, fruit worms and
-intestinal worms; finally, with regard to infusoria
-and the most rudimentary vegetables. The hypothesis
-of the spontaneous generation of the living
-being at the expense of the materials of the ambient
-medium has been successively driven from one
-classificatory group to another. The history of the
-sciences of observation is also a history of the confutation
-of this theory. Pasteur gave it the finishing
-stroke, when he showed that the simplest microorganisms
-obeyed the general law which declares
-that the living being is formed only by <i>filiation</i>—that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span>
-is to say, by the intervention of a pre-existing living
-organism.</p>
-
-<p><i>Spontaneous Generation an Episode in the History
-of the Globe.</i>—Though we have been unable to effect
-spontaneous generation up to the present, it has been
-referred by Haeckel to a more or less distant past, to
-the time when the cooling of the globe, the solidification
-of its crust, and the condensation of aqueous
-vapour upon its surface created conditions compatible
-with the existence of living beings similar to those
-with which we are acquainted. Lord Kelvin has
-fixed these geological events as occurring from twenty
-to forty million years ago. Then circumstances
-became propitious for the appearance of the first
-organisms, whence were successively derived those
-which now people the earth and the waters.</p>
-
-<p>Circumstances favourable to the appearance of the
-first beings apparently occurred only in a far distant
-past; but most physiologists admit that if we knew
-exactly these circumstances, and could reproduce
-them, we might also expect to produce their effect—namely,
-the creation of a living being, formed in all
-its parts, developed from the inorganic kingdom.
-To all those who held this view the impotence of
-experiment at the present time is purely temporary.
-It is comparable to that of primitive men before the
-time of Prometheus; they, not knowing how to
-produce fire, could only get it by transmitting it
-from one to another. It is due to the inadequacy
-of our knowledge and the weakness of our means; it
-does not contradict the possibility of the fact.</p>
-
-<p><i>Contrary Opinion. Life did not Originate on our
-Globe.</i>—But all biologists do not share this opinion.
-Some, and not the least eminent, hold it to be an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>
-established fact that it is impossible for life to arise
-from a concurrence of inorganic materials and forces.
-This was the opinion of Ferdinand Cohn, the great
-botanist; of H. Richter, the Saxon physician, and of
-W. Preyer, a physiologist well known from his
-remarkable researches in biological chemistry.
-According to these scientists, life on the surface of
-the globe cannot have appeared as a result of the
-reactions of brute matter and the forces that continue
-to control it.</p>
-
-<p>According to F. Cohn and PI. Richter, life had no
-beginning on our planet. It was transported to the
-earth from another world, from the cosmic medium,
-under the form of cosmic germs, or <i>cosmozoa</i>, more
-or less comparable to the living cells with which we
-are acquainted. They may have made the journey
-either enclosed in meteorites, or floating in space in
-the form of cosmic dust. The theory in question
-has been presented in two forms:—<i>The Hypothesis of
-Meteoric Cosmozoa</i>, by a French writer, the Count
-de Salles-Guyon; and that of <i>cosmic panspermia</i>
-brought forward in 1865 and 1872 by F. Cohn and
-H. Richter.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hypothesis of the Cosmozoa.</i>—The hypothesis of
-the cosmozoa, living particles, protoplasmic germs
-emanating from other worlds and reaching the earth
-by means of aerolites, is not so destitute of probability
-as one might at first suppose. Lord Kelvin and
-Helmholtz gave it the support of their high authority.
-Spectrum analysis shows in cometary nebulæ the
-four or five lines characteristic of hydro-carbons.
-Cosmic matter, therefore, contains compounds of
-carbon, substances that are especially typical of
-organic chemistry. Besides, carbon and a sort of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>
-humus have been found in several meteorites. To
-the objection that these aerolites are heated while
-passing through our atmosphere, Helmholtz replies
-that this elevation of temperature may be quite
-superficial and may allow micro-organisms to subsist
-in their interior. But other objections retain their
-force:—First, that of M. Verworn, who considers the
-hypothesis of cosmic germs as inconsistent with the
-laws of evolution; and that of L. Errera, who denies
-that the conditions necessary for life exist in interplanetary
-bodies.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hypothesis of Cosmic Panspermia.</i>—Du Bois-Reymond
-has given the name of <i>cosmic panspermia</i>
-to a theory very similar to the preceding, formulated
-by F. Cohn in 1872. The first living germs arrived
-on our globe mingled with the cosmic dust that
-floats in space and falls slowly to the surface of the
-earth. L. Errera observes that if they escape by
-this gentle fall the dangerous heating of meteorites,
-they still remain exposed to the action of the photic
-rays, which is generally destructive to germs.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hypothesis of Pyrozoa.</i>—W. Preyer declined to
-accept this cosmic transmigration of the simplest
-living beings, nor would he allow the intervention of
-other worlds into the history of our own. Life,
-according to him, must have existed from all time,
-even when the globe was an incandescent mass.
-But it was not the same life as at present. Vitality
-must have undergone many profound changes in the
-course of ages. The <i>pyrozoa</i>, the first living beings,
-vulcanians, were very different from the beings of
-the present day that are destroyed by a slight
-elevation of temperature. No doubt this theory of
-pyrozoa, proposed by W. Preyer in 1872, seems<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>
-quite chimerical, and akin to Kepler’s dreamy visions.
-But in a certain way it accords with contemporary
-ideas concerning the life of <i>matter</i>. It is related to
-them by the evolution which it implies in the materials
-of the terrestrial globe.</p>
-
-<p>According to Preyer, primitive life existed in fire.
-Being igneous masses in fusion, the pyrozoa lived
-after their own manner; their vitality, slowly modified,
-assumed the form which it presents to-day. Yet, in
-this profound transformation their number has not
-varied, and the total quantity of life in the universe
-has remained unchanged.</p>
-
-<p>Here we recognize the ideas of Buffon. These
-cosmozoa, these pyrozoa, have a singular resemblance
-to the <i>organic molecules</i> of “live matter” of the
-illustrious naturalist—distributed everywhere, indestructible,
-and forming living structures by their
-concentration.</p>
-
-<p>But we must leave these scientific or philosophical
-theories, and come to arguments based upon facts.</p>
-
-<p>It is in a spirit quite different from that of the
-poets, the metaphysicians, and the more or less
-philosophical scientists that the science of our days
-looks at the more or less obscure vitality of inanimate
-bodies. It claims that we may recognize in them,
-in a more or less rudimentary state, the action
-of the factors which intervene in the case of living
-beings, the manifestation of the same fundamental
-properties.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III_4">CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-<small>ORGANIZATION AND CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF
-LIVING AND BRUTE MATTER.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Laws of the organization and of the chemical composition of
-living beings—Relative value of these laws; vital phenomena
-in crushed protoplasm—Vital phenomena in brute
-bodies.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Enumeration of the Principal Characters of Living
-Beings.</i>—The programme which we have just sketched
-compels us to look in the brute being for the properties
-of living beings. What, then, are, in fact, the
-characteristics of an authentic, complete, living being?
-What are its fundamental properties? We have
-enumerated them above as follows:—A certain
-chemical composition, which is that of living matter;
-a structure or organization; a specific form; an
-evolution which has a duration, that of life, and an
-end, death; a property of growth or nutrition; a
-property of reproduction. Which of these characters
-counts for most in the definition of life? Are they
-all equally necessary? If some of them were wanting,
-would that justify the transference of a being, who
-might possess the rest, from the animate world to
-that of minerals? This is precisely the question that
-is under consideration.</p>
-
-<p><i>Organization and Chemical Composition of Living
-Beings.</i>—All that we know concerning the constitution<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>
-of living matter and its organization is summed up in
-the laws of the <i>chemical unity</i> and the <i>morphological
-unity of living beings</i> (v. Book III.). These laws seem
-to be a legitimate generalization from all the facts
-observed. The first states that the phenomena of
-life are manifested only in and through living matter,
-protoplasm—<i>i.e.</i>, in and through a substance which
-has a certain chemical and physical composition.
-Chemically it is a proteid complexus with a hexonic
-nucleus. Physically it shows a frothy structure
-analogous to that resulting from the mixture of two
-granular, immiscible liquids, of different viscosities.
-The second law states that the phenomena of life
-can only be maintained in a protoplasm which has
-the organization of the complete cell, with its cellular
-body and nucleus.</p>
-
-<p><i>Relative Value of these Laws. Exceptions.</i>—What
-is the signification of these laws of the chemical
-composition and organization of living beings?
-Evidently that life in all its plenitude can only exist
-and be perpetuated under their protection. If these
-laws were absolute, if it were true that no life were
-possible but in and through albuminous protoplasm,
-but in and through the cell, the problem of “the life
-of matter” would be decided in the negative.</p>
-
-<p>May it not happen, however, that fragmentary and
-incomplete vital manifestations, progressive traces
-of a true life, may occur under different conditions;
-for example, in matter which is not protoplasm, and
-in a body which has a structure differing from that
-of a cell—that is to say, in a being which would be
-neither animal nor plant? We must seek the answer
-to this question by an appeal to experiment.</p>
-
-<p>Without leaving the animal and vegetable king<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>doms—<i>i.e.</i>,
-real living beings—we already see less
-rigour in the laws governing chemical constitution
-and cellular organization.</p>
-
-<p>Experiments in merotomy—<i>i.e.</i>, in amputation—carried
-out on the nervous element by Waller, on
-infusoria by Brandt, Gruber, Balbiani, Nussbaum,
-and Verworn, show us the necessity of the presence
-of the cellular body and the nucleus—<i>i.e.</i>, of the integrity
-of the cell. But they also teach us that when
-that integrity no longer exists death does not immediately
-follow. A part of the vital functions continues
-to be performed in denucleated protoplasm, in a cell
-which is mutilated and incomplete.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vital Phenomena in Crushed Protoplasm.</i>—It is
-true also that grinding and crushing suppress the
-greater part of the functions of the cell. But tests
-with pulps of various organs and with those of certain
-yeasts also show that protoplasm, even though ground
-and disorganized, cannot be considered as inert, and
-that it still exhibits many of its characteristic phenomena;
-for example, the production of diastases, the
-specific agents of vital chemistry. Finally, while we
-do not know enough about the actions of which the
-secondary elements of protoplasm—its granulations,
-its filaments—are capable, which this or that method
-of destruction may bring to light, at least we know
-that actions of this kind exist.</p>
-
-<p>To sum up, we are far from being able to deny that
-rudimentary, isolated vital acts may be produced by
-the various bodies that result from the dismemberment
-of protoplasm. The integrity of the cellular
-organization, even the integrity of protoplasm itself,
-are therefore not indispensable for these partial
-manifestations of vitality.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span></p>
-
-<p>Besides, biologists admit that there exist within
-the protoplasm aliquot parts, elements of an
-inferior order, which possess special activities.
-These secondary elements must have the principle
-of their activity within themselves. Such are the
-<i>biophors</i> to which Weismann attributes the vital
-functions of the cell, nutrition, growth, and multiplication.
-If there are biophors within the cell, we
-may imagine them outside the cell, and since they
-carry within themselves the principle of their activity
-they may exercise it in an independent manner.
-Unhappily the biophors, and other constituent elements
-of that kind, are purely hypothetical. They
-are like Darwin’s gemmules, Altmann’s bioblasts, and
-the pangens of De Vries. They have no relation to
-facts of observation and to real existence.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vital Phenomena in Brute Bodies.</i>—There is no
-doubt that certain phenomena of vitality may occur
-outside of the cellular atmosphere. And carrying
-this further, we may admit that they may be produced
-in certain slightly organized bodies (crushed
-cells), and then in certain unorganized bodies in
-certain brute beings. In every case it is certain that
-effects are produced at any rate similar to those which
-are characteristic of living matter. It is for observation
-and experiment to decide as to the degree of similarity,
-and their verdict is that the similarity is complete.
-The crystals and the crystalline germs studied by
-Ostwald and Tammann are the seat of phenomena
-which are quite comparable to those of vitality.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV_4">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-
-<small>EVOLUTION AND MUTABILITY OF LIVING MATTER
-AND BRUTE MATTER.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Supposed immobility of brute bodies—Mobility and mutability
-of the sidereal world.—§ 1. The movement of particles and
-molecules in brute bodies—The internal movements of
-brute bodies—Kinetic conception of molecular motion—Reality
-of the motion of particles—Comparison of the
-activity of particles with vital activity.—§ 2. Brownian
-movement—Its existence—Its character—Its independence
-of the nature of the bodies and of the nature of the environment—Its
-indefinite duration—Its independence of external
-conditions—The Brownian movement must be the first
-stage of molecular motion.—§ 3. Motion of particles—Migration
-of material particles—Migration under the
-action of weight; of diffusion; of electrolysis; of mechanical
-pressure.—§ 4. Internal activity of alloys—Their structure—Changes
-produced by deforming agencies—Slow return to
-equilibrium—Residual effect—Effect of annealing; effect
-of stretching—Nickel steel—Colour photography—Conclusion—Relations
-of the environment to the living or brute
-matter.</p>
-
-
-<p>One of the most remarkable characteristics of a living
-being is its evolution. It undergoes a continuous
-change. It starts from something very small; it
-assumes a configuration and grows; in most cases
-it declines and disappears, having followed a course
-which may be predicted—a sort of ideal trajectory.</p>
-
-<p><i>Supposed Immobility of Brute Bodies.</i>—It may be
-asked whether this evolution, this directed mobility,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span>
-is so exclusively a feature of the living being as it
-appears, and if many brute bodies do not present
-something analogous to it. We may answer in no
-uncertain tones.</p>
-
-<p>Bichat was wrong when he contrasted in this
-respect brute bodies with living bodies. Vital
-properties, he said, are temporary; it is their nature
-to be exhausted; in time they are used up in the
-same body. Physical properties, on the contrary, are
-eternal. Brute bodies have neither a beginning nor
-an inevitable end, neither age, nor evolution; they
-remain as immutable as death, of which they are the
-image.</p>
-
-<p><i>Mobility and Mutability of the Sidereal World.</i>—This
-is not true, in the first place, of the sidereal
-bodies. The ancients held the sidereal world to be
-immutable and incorruptible. The doctrine of the
-incorruptibility of the heavens prevailed up to the
-seventeenth century. The observers who at that
-epoch directed towards the heavens the first telescope,
-which Galileo had just invented, were struck with
-astonishment at discovering a change in that celestial
-firmament which they had hitherto believed incorruptible,
-and at perceiving a new star that appeared
-in the constellation Ophiuchus. Such changes no
-longer surprise us. The cosmogonic system of
-Laplace has become familiar to all cultivated minds,
-and every one is accustomed to the idea of the continual
-mobility and evolution of the celestial world.
-“The stars have not always existed,” writes M. Faye;
-“they have had a period of formation; they will
-likewise have a period of decline, followed by final
-extinction.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus all the bodies of inanimate nature are not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>
-eternal and immutable; the celestial bodies are
-eminently susceptible of evolution, slow indeed with
-that we observe on the surface of our globe; but this
-disproportion, corresponding to the immensity of
-time and of cosmic spaces as compared with terrestrial
-measurements, should not mislead us as to the
-fundamental analogy of the phenomena.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">The Movement of Particles and Molecules
-in Brute Bodies.</span></h4>
-
-<p>It is not only in celestial spaces that we must
-search for that mobility of brute matter which imitates
-the mobility of living matter. In order to find it we
-have only to look about us, or to inquire from
-physicists and chemists.</p>
-
-<p>As far as geologists are concerned, M. le Dantec
-tells us somewhere of one who divided minerals into
-<i>living rocks</i>—rocks capable of change of structure, of
-evolution under the influence of atmospheric causes;
-and <i>dead rocks</i>—rocks which, like clay, have found at
-the end of all their changes a final state of repose.
-Jerome Cardan, a celebrated scientist of the sixteenth
-century, at once mathematician, naturalist, and
-physician, declared not only that stones live, but
-that they suffer from disease, grow old, and die.
-The jewellers of the present day use similar language
-of certain precious stones; the torquoise, for example.</p>
-
-<p>The alchemists carried these ideas to an extreme.
-It is not necessary here to recall the past, to evoke
-the hermetic beliefs and the dreams of the alchemists,
-who held that the different kinds of matter lived,
-developed, and were transmuted into each other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span></p>
-
-<p>I refer to precise and recent data, established by
-the most expert investigators, and related by one of
-them, Charles Edward Guillaume, some years ago,
-before the <i>Société helvétique des Sciences naturelles</i>.
-These data show that determinate forms of matter
-may live and die, in the sense that they may be
-slowly and continuously modified, always in the same
-direction, until they have attained an ultimate and
-definitive state of eternal repose.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Internal Movements of Bodies.</i>—Swift’s reply to
-an idle fellow who spoke slightingly of work is well
-known. “In England,” said the author of <i>Gulliver’s
-Travels</i>, “men work, women work, horses work,
-oxen work, water works, fire works, and beer works;
-it is only the pig who does nothing at all; he must,
-therefore, be the only gentleman in England.” We
-know very well that English gentlemen also work.
-Indeed, everybody and everything works. And the
-great wit was nearer right than he supposed in comparing
-men and things in this respect. Everything
-is at work; everything in nature strives and toils, at
-every stage, in every degree. Immobility and repose
-in the case of natural things are usually deceptive;
-the seeming quietude of matter is caused by our
-inability to appreciate its internal movements. Because
-of their minuteness we do not perceive the
-swarming particles that compose it, and which, under
-the impassible surface of the bodies, oscillate, displace
-each other, move to and fro, and group themselves
-into forms and positions adapted to the conditions
-of the environment. In comparison with these
-microscopic elements we are like Swift’s giant among
-the Lilliputians; and this is far from being a sufficiently
-forcible comparison.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Kinetic Conception of Molecular Motion.</i>—The idea
-of this peculiar form of motion is by no means new to
-us. We were familiarized with it in scientific theories
-during our school days. The atomic theory teaches
-us that matter behaves, from a chemical point of
-view, as if it were divided into molecules and atoms.
-The kinetic theory explains the constitution of gases
-and the effects of heat by supposing that these
-particles are endowed with movements of rotation
-and displacement. The wave theory explains photic
-phenomena by supposing peculiar vibratory movements
-in a special medium—the ether. But these
-are merely hypotheses which are not at all necessary;
-they are the images of things, not the things themselves.</p>
-
-<p><i>Reality of the Motion of Particles.</i>—Here there is
-no question of hypotheses. This internal agitation,
-this interior labour, this incessant activity of matter
-are positive facts, an objective reality. It is true that
-when the chemical or mechanical equilibrium of
-bodies is disturbed it is only restored more or less
-slowly. Sometimes days and years are required
-before it is regained. Scarcely do they attain this
-relative repose when they are again disturbed, for the
-environment itself is not fixed; it experiences variations
-which react in their turn upon the body under
-consideration; and it is only at the end of these
-variations, at the end of their respective periods, that
-they will attain together, in a universal uniformity, an
-eternal repose.</p>
-
-<p>We shall see that metallic alloys undergo continual
-physical and chemical changes. They are
-always seeking a more or less elusive equilibrium.
-Physicists in modern times have given their attention<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span>
-to this internal activity of material bodies, to the
-pursuit of stability. Wiedemann, Warburg, Tomlinson,
-MM. Duguet, Brillouin, Duhem, and Bouasse
-have revived the old experimental researches of
-Coulomb and Wertheim on the elasticity of bodies,
-the effects of pressures and thrusts, the hammering,
-tempering, and annealing of metals.</p>
-
-<p>The internal activity manifested under these circumstances
-presents quite remarkable characteristics
-which cannot but be compared to the analogous
-phenomena presented by living bodies. Thus have
-arisen even in physics, a figurative terminology, and
-metaphorical expressions borrowed from biology.</p>
-
-<p><i>Comparison of the Activity of Particles with Vital
-Activity.</i>—Since Lord Kelvin first spoke of the <i>fatigue</i>
-of metals, or the <i>fatigue</i> of elasticity, Bose has
-shown in these same bodies the fatigue of electrical
-contact. The term <i>accommodation</i> has been employed
-in the study of torsion, and according to Tomlinson
-for the very phenomena which are the inverse of
-those of fatigue. The phenomena presented by glass
-when acted on by an external force which slowly
-bends it, have been called facts of adaptation. The
-manner in which a bar of steel resists wire-drawing
-has been compared to <i>defensive</i> processes against
-threatened rupture. And M. C. E. Guillaume speaks
-somewhere of “the heroic resistance of the bar of
-nickel-steel.” The term “defence” has also been
-applied to the behaviour of chloride or iodide of
-silver when exposed to light.</p>
-
-<p>There has been no hesitation in using the term
-“memory” concurrently with that of hysteresis to
-designate the behaviour of bodies acted on by
-magnetism or by certain mechanical forces. It is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>
-true that M. H. Bouasse protests in the name of the
-physico-mathematicians against the employment of
-these figurative expressions. But has he not himself
-written “a twisted wire is a wound-up watch,” and
-elsewhere, “the properties of bodies depend at every
-moment upon all anterior modifications”? Does not
-this imply that they retain in some manner the
-impression of their past evolution? Powerful deformative
-agencies leave a trace of their action; they
-modify the body’s condition of molecular aggregation,
-and some physicists go so far as to say that they even
-modify its chemical constitution. With the exception
-of M. Duhem, the disciples of the mechanical school
-who have studied elasticity admit that the effect of an
-external force upon a body depends upon the forces
-which have been previously acting on it, and not
-merely upon those which are acting on it at the
-present moment. Its present state cannot be anticipated,
-it is the recapitulation of preceding states.
-The effect of a torsional force upon a new wire will
-be different from that of the same force upon a wire
-previously subjected to torsions and detorsions. It
-was with reference to actions of this kind that
-Boltzmann, in 1876, declared that “a wire that has
-been twisted or drawn out remembers for a certain
-time the deformations which it has undergone.”
-This memory is obliterated and disappears after a
-certain definite period. Here then, in a problem of
-static equilibrium, we find introduced an unexpected
-factor—time.</p>
-
-<p>To sum up, it is the physicists themselves who
-have indicated the correspondence between the condition
-of existence in many brute bodies and that in
-many living bodies. It cannot be expected that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span>
-these analogies will in any way serve as explanations.
-We should rather seek to derive the vital from the
-physical phenomenon. This is the sole ambition of
-the physiologist. To derive the physical from the
-vital phenomenon would be unreasonable. We do
-not attempt to do this here. It is nevertheless true
-that analogies are of service, were it only to shake the
-support which, from the time of Aristotle, has been
-accorded to the division of the bodies of nature into
-<i>psuchia</i> and <i>apsuchia</i>—<i>i.e.</i>, into living and brute
-bodies.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">The Brownian Movement</span>.</h4>
-
-<p><i>The Existence of the Brownian Movement.</i>—The
-simplest way of judging of the working activity of
-matter is to observe it when the liberty of the
-particles is not interfered with by the action of the
-neighbouring particles. We approximate to this
-condition when we watch, through the microscope,
-grains of dust suspended in a liquid, or globules of
-oil suspended in water. Now what we see is well
-known to all microscopists. If the granulations are
-sufficiently small, they seem to be never at rest.
-They are animated by a kind of incessant tremor;
-we see the phenomena called the “Brownian movement.”
-This movement has struck all observers since
-the invention of the magnifying glass or simple
-microscope. But the English botanist, Brown, in
-1827, made it the object of special research and gave
-it his name. The exact explanation of it remained
-for a long time obscure. It was given in 1894 by
-M. Gouy, the learned physicist of the Faculty of
-Lyons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span></p>
-
-<p>The observer who for the first time looks through
-the microscope at a drop of water from the river, from
-the sea, or from any ordinary source—that is to say,
-water not specially purified—is struck with surprise
-and admiration at the motion revealed to him.
-Infusoria, microscopic articulata, and various micro-organisms
-people the microscopic field, and animate
-it by their movements; but at the same time all sorts
-of particles are also agitated, particles which cannot
-be considered as living beings, and which are, in fact,
-nothing but organic detritus, mineral dust, and debris
-of every description. Very often the singular movements
-of these granulations, which simulate up to a
-certain point those of living beings, have perplexed
-the observer or led him to erroneous conclusions, and
-the bodies have been taken for animalcules or for
-bacteria.</p>
-
-<p><i>Characters of this Movement.</i>—But it is as a rule
-quite easy to avoid this confusion. The Brownian
-movement is a kind of oscillation, a stationary,
-dancing to-and-fro movement. It is a Saint Vitus’s
-dance on one and the same spot, and is thus distinguished
-from the movements of displacement
-customary with animate beings. Each particle has
-its own special dance. Each one acts on its own
-account, independently of its neighbour. There is,
-however, in the execution of these individual oscillations
-a kind of common and regular character which
-arises from the fact that their amplitudes differ
-little from each other. The largest particles are
-the slowest; when above four thousandths of a
-millimetre in diameter, they almost cease to be
-mobile. The smallest are the most active. When so
-small as to be barely visible in the microscope, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>
-movement is extremely rapid, and can only occasionally
-be perceived. It is probable that it would be
-still more accelerated in smaller objects; but the latter
-will always escape our observation.</p>
-
-<p><i>Its Independence of the Nature of the Bodies and of the
-Environment.</i>—M. Gouy remarked that the movement
-depends neither on the nature nor on the form
-of the particles. Even the nature of the liquid has
-but little effect. Its degree of viscosity alone comes
-into play. The movements are, indeed, more lively
-in alcohol or ether, which are very mobile liquids;
-they are slow in sulphuric acid and in glycerine. In
-water, a grain one two-thousandth of a millimetre in
-diameter traverses, in a second, ten or twelve times its
-own length.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that the Brownian movement is seen in
-liquors which have been boiled, in acids and in
-concentrated alkalies, in toxic solutions of all degrees
-of temperature, shows conclusively that the phenomenon
-has no vital significance; that it is in no way
-connected with vital activity so called.</p>
-
-<p><i>Its Indefinite Duration.</i>—The most remarkable character
-of this phenomenon is its permanence, its
-indefinite duration. The movement never ceases,
-the particles never attain repose and equilibrium.
-Granitic rocks contain quartz crystals which, at the
-moment of their formation, include within a closed
-cavity a drop of water containing a bubble of gas.
-These bubbles, contemporary with the Plutonian age
-of the globe, have never since their formation ceased
-to manifest the Brownian movement.</p>
-
-<p><i>Its Independence of External Conditions.</i>—What is
-the cause of this eternal oscillation? Is it a tremor
-of the earth? No! M. Gouy saw the Brownian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span>
-movement far away from cities, where the mercurial
-mirror of a seismoscope showed no subterranean
-vibration. It does not increase when the vibrations
-occur and become quite appreciable. Neither is it
-changed by variation in light, magnetism, or electric
-influences; in a word, by any external occurrences.
-The result of observation is to place before us the
-paradox of a phenomenon which is kept up and
-indefinitely perpetuated in the interior of a body
-without known external cause.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Brownian Movement must be the First Stage of
-Molecular Motion.</i>—When we take in our hands a
-sheet of quartz containing a gaseous inclusion, we
-seem to be holding a perfectly inert object. When
-we have placed it upon the stage of the microscope,
-and have seen the agitation of the bubble, we are
-convinced that this seeming inertia is merely an
-illusion.</p>
-
-<p>Repose exists only because of our limited vision.
-We see the objects as we see from afar a crowd of
-people. We perceive them only as a whole, without
-being able to discern the individuals or their movements.
-A visible object is, in the same way, a mass
-of particles. It is a molecular crowd. It gives us
-the impression of an indivisible mass, of a block in
-repose.</p>
-
-<p>But as soon as the lens brings us near to this
-crowd, as soon as the microscope enlarges for us the
-minute elements of the brute body, then they appear
-to us, and we perceive the continual agitation of those
-elements which are less than four thousandths of a
-millimetre in diameter. The smaller the particles
-under consideration, the more lively are their movements.
-From this we infer that if we could perceive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>
-molecules, whose probable dimensions are about one
-thousand times less, their probable velocity would be,
-as required by the kinetic theory, some hundreds of
-metres per second. In the case of objects we can
-only just see, the Brownian velocity is only a few
-thousandths of a millimetre per second. No doubt,
-concludes M. Gouy, the particles that show this
-velocity are really enormous when compared with
-true molecules. From this point of view the
-Brownian movement is but the first degree, and a
-magnified picture of the molecular vibrations assumed
-in the kinetic theory.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 3. <span class="smcap">The Internal Activity of Bodies.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>Migration of Material Particles.</i>—In the Brownian
-movement we take into account only very small,
-isolated masses, small free fragments—<i>i.e.</i>, material
-particles which are not hampered by their relations to
-neighbouring particles. Any one but a physicist
-might believe that in true solids endowed with
-cohesion and tenacity, in which the molecules were
-bound one to the other, in which form and volume
-are fixed, there could be no longer movements or
-changes. This is a mistake. Physics teaches us the
-contrary, and, in late years especially, has furnished
-us characteristic examples. There are real migrations
-of material particles throughout solid bodies—migrations
-of considerable extent. They are accomplished
-through the agency of diverse forces acting externally—pressures,
-thrusts, torsions; sometimes under the
-action of light, sometimes under the action of electricity,
-sometimes under the influence of forces of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span>
-diffusion. The microscopic observation of alloys by
-H. and A. Lechatelier, J. Hopkinson, Osmond, Charpy,
-J. R. Benoit; researches into their physical and
-chemical properties by Calvert, Matthiessen, Riche,
-Roberts Austen, Lodge, Laurie, and C. E. Guillaume;
-experiments on the electrolysis of glass, and the
-curious results of Bose upon electrical contact of
-metals, show in a striking manner the chemical and
-kinetic evolutions which occur in the interior of
-bodies.</p>
-
-<p><i>Migration under the Action of Weight.</i>—An experiment
-by Obermeyer, dating from 1877, furnishes
-a good example of the motions of solid bodies
-through a hardened viscid mass, taking place under
-the influence of weight. The black wax that
-shoemakers and boatbuilders use, is a kind of resin
-extracted from the pine and other resinous trees,
-melted in water, and separated from the more fluid
-part which rises from it. Its colour is due to the
-lampblack produced by the combustion of straw and
-fragments of bark. At an ordinary temperature it is
-a mass so hard that it cannot always be easily
-scratched by the finger-nail; but if it is left to itself
-in a receptacle, it finally yields, spreads out as if it
-were a liquid, and conforms to the shape of the vessel.
-Suppose we place within a cavity hollowed out of a
-piece of wood a portion of this substance, and keep it
-there by means of a few pebbles, having previously
-placed at the bottom of the cavity a few fragments of
-some light substance, such as cork. The piece of wax
-is thus between a light body below and a heavy body
-above. If we wait a few days, this order is reversed—the
-wax has filled the cavity by conforming to it;
-the cork has passed through the wax and appears on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>
-the surface, while the stones are at the bottom. We
-have here the celebrated experiment of the flask with
-the three elements, in which are seen the liquids
-mercury, oil, and water superposed in the order of
-their density, but in this case demonstrated with
-solid bodies.</p>
-
-<p><i>Influence of Diffusion.</i>—Diffusion, which disseminates
-liquids throughout each other, may also cause
-solids to pass through other solids. Of this W.
-Roberts Austen gave a convincing proof. This ingenious
-physicist placed a little cylinder of lead upon
-a disc of gold, and kept the whole at the temperature
-of boiling water. At this temperature both metals
-are perfectly solid, for the melting point of gold is
-1,200° C., and of lead is 330°. Still, after this contact
-has been prolonged for a month and a half, analysis
-shows that the gold has become diffused through the
-top of the cylinder of lead.</p>
-
-<p><i>Influence of Electrolysis.</i>—Electrolysis offers another
-no less remarkable means of transportation. By its
-means we may force metals, such as sodium or lithium,
-through glass walls. The experiment may be performed
-as indicated by M. Charles Guillaume. A
-glass bulb containing mercury is placed in a bath of
-sodium amalgam, and a current is then made to pass
-from within outward. After some time it can be
-shown that the metal has penetrated the wall of the
-bulb, and has become dissolved within it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Influence of Mechanical Pressure.</i>—Mechanical pressure
-is also capable of causing one metal to pass into
-another. We need not recall the well-known experiment
-of Cailletet, who, by employing considerable
-pressure, caused mercury to sweat through a block of
-iron. In a more simple manner W. Spring showed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span>
-that a disc of copper could be welded to a disc of tin
-by pressing them strongly one against the other. Up
-to a certain distance from the surfaces of contact
-a real alloy is formed; a layer of bronze of a certain
-thickness unites the two metals, and this could not
-take place did not the particles of both metals
-mutually interpenetrate.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 4. <span class="smcap">Internal Activity of Alloys.</span></h4>
-
-<p><i>Structure of Alloys.</i>—Metallic alloys have a remarkable
-structure, which is essentially mobile, and
-which we have only now begun to understand by the
-aid of the microscope. Microscopical examination
-justifies to a certain degree Coulomb’s conjecture.
-That illustrious physicist explained the physical properties
-of metals by imagining them to be formed of
-two kinds of elements—integral particles, to which the
-metal owes its elastic properties, and a <i>cement</i> which
-binds the particles, and to which it owes its coherence.
-M. Brillouin has also taken up this hypothesis of
-duality of structure. The metal is supposed to be
-formed of very small, isolated, crystalline grains,
-embedded in an almost continuous network of viscous
-matter. A more or less compact mass surrounding
-more or less distinct crystals is the conception which
-may be formed of an alloy.</p>
-
-<p><i>Changes of Structure produced by Deforming
-Agencies.</i>—It has been shown that profound changes
-of crystalline structure can be produced by various
-mechanical means, such as hammering, and the
-stretching of metallic bars carried to the point of
-rupture. Some of these changes are very slow, and
-it is only after months and years that they are com<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>pleted,
-and the metal attains the definite equilibrium
-corresponding to the conditions to which it is exposed.
-Though there may be discussions concerning the
-extent of the transformations to which it is subjected,
-though some believe they affect the chemical condition
-of the alloy, while others limit its power to
-physical effects, it is nevertheless true—and this
-brings us back to our subject—that the mass of these
-metals is at work, and that it only slowly attains the
-phase of complete repose.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Slow Re-establishment of Equilibrium. Residual
-Effect.</i>—These operations by which the physical
-characters of metals are changed, and by which they
-are adapted to a variety of industrial needs—compression,
-hammering, rolling, stretching, and torsion—have
-an immediate, very apparent effect; but they
-have also a consecutive effect, slowly produced, much
-less marked and less evident. This is the “residual
-effect,” or “Nachwirkung” of the Germans. It is not
-without importance, even in practical applications.</p>
-
-<p>Heat also creates a kind of <i>forced equilibrium</i>.
-This becomes but slowly modified, so that a body
-may remain for a long time in a state which is, however,
-not the most stable for the conditions under
-which it is considered. The number of these bodies
-<i>not in equilibrium</i> is as great as that of the substances
-which have been exposed to fusion. All the Plutonic
-rocks are in this condition. Glass presents a condition
-of the same kind. Thermometers placed in
-melting ice do not always mark the zero Centigrade.
-This displacement of the zero point falsifies all
-records if care is not taken to correct it. The
-correction usually requires prolonged observation.
-The theory of the displacement of the thermometric<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>
-zero is not entirely established; but we may suppose,
-with the author of the <i>Traité de Thermométrie</i>, that in
-glass, as in alloys, are to be found compounds which
-vary according to the temperature. At each temperature
-glass tends to assume a determinate composition
-and a corresponding state of equilibrium;
-but the previous temperature to which it has been
-subjected clearly has an influence on the rapidity
-with which it attains its state of repose. The effect
-of variation is more marked when we observe glass of
-more complicated composition. We can understand
-that those which contain comparable quantities of the
-two alkalies, soda and potash, may be more subject
-to these modifications than those having a more
-simple composition based on a single alkali.</p>
-
-<p><i>Effects of Annealing.</i>—A piece of brass wire that
-has been drawn and then heated is the scene of
-certain very remarkable internal changes, and these
-have been only recently recognized. The violent
-treatment of the metallic thread in forcing it through
-the hole in the die has crushed the crystalline
-particles; the interior state of the wire is that of
-broken crystals embedded in a granular mass.
-Heating changes all that. The crystals separate,
-repair themselves, and are built up again; they are
-then hard, geometrical bodies, in an amorphous,
-relatively soft and plastic mass; their number keeps
-on increasing; equilibrium is not established until the
-entire mass is crystallized. We may imagine how
-many displacements, enormous when compared with
-their dimensions, the molecules have to undergo when
-passing through the resisting mass, and arranging
-themselves in definite places in the crystalline
-structures.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the same way, too, in the manufacture of steel,
-the particles of coal at first applied to the surface
-pass through the iron.</p>
-
-<p>This <i>faculty of molecular displacement</i> enables the
-metal in some cases to modify its state at one point
-or another. The use made of this faculty under
-certain circumstances is very curious, greatly resembling
-the adaptation of an animal to its environment,
-or the methods of defence against agents that
-might destroy it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Effect of Stretching. Hartmann’s Experiment.</i>—When
-a cylindrical rod of metal, held firmly at either
-end—a test-piece, as it is called in metallurgy—is
-pulled sufficiently hard, it often elongates considerably,
-part of the elongation disappearing as soon as
-the strain ceases, and the other part remaining. The
-total elongation is thus the sum of an “elastic
-elongation,” which is temporary, and a “permanent
-elongation.” If we continue the stretching, there
-appears at some point of the rod a local extension
-with contraction of sectional area. It is here that the
-rod will break.</p>
-
-<p>But in place of continuing the stretching, Mr.
-Hartmann suspends it. He stops, as if to give the
-“metal-being” time to rally. During this delay it
-would seem that the molecules hasten to the menaced
-point to reinforce and harden the weak part. In
-fact the metal, which was soft at other points, at
-this spot looks like tempered metal. It is no longer
-extensible.</p>
-
-<p>When the experimenter begins the stretching again
-after this rest, and after the narrowed bar has been
-rolled and become cylindrical again, the local extension
-and sectional contraction is forced to occur at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span>
-another point. If another rest is given at this point
-the metal will also become hardened.</p>
-
-<p>If we repeat the experiment a sufficient number of
-times, we shall find a total transformation of the rod,
-which becomes hardened throughout its entire extent.
-It will break rather than elongate if the stretching is
-sufficiently severe.</p>
-
-<p><i>Nickel Steels—their “Heroic” Resistance.</i>—Nickel
-steels present this phenomena in an exaggerated
-degree. The alternation of operations which we
-have just described, bringing the various parts of an
-ordinary steel rod into a tempered state, is not
-necessary with nickel steel. The effect is produced
-in the course of a single trial. As soon as there is
-any tendency to contraction the alloy hardens at that
-precise place; the contraction is hardly noticeable;
-the movement is stopped at this point to attack
-another weak point, stops there again and attacks a
-third, and so on; and, finally, the paradoxical fact
-appears that a rod of metal which was in a soft state
-and could be considerably elongated has now become
-throughout its whole extent as hard, brittle, and
-inextensible as tempered steel. It is in connection
-with this point that M. C. E. Guillaume spoke of
-“heroic resistance to rupture.” It would seem, in
-fact, as if the ferro-nickel bar had reinforced each
-weak point as it was threatened. It is only at the
-end of these efforts that the inevitable catastrophe
-occurs.</p>
-
-<p><i>Effect of Temperature.</i>—When the temperature
-changes, it is seen that these ferro-nickel bars elongate
-or retract, modifying at the same time their chemical
-constitution. But these effects, like those which occur
-in the glass bulb of a thermometer, do not occur<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>
-at once. They are produced rapidly for one part, and
-more slowly for a small remaining portion. Bars of
-ferro-nickel which have been kept at the same
-temperature change gradually in length in the course
-of a year. Can we find a better proof of internal
-activity occurring in a substance differing so greatly
-from living matter?</p>
-
-<p><i>Nature of the Activity of Particles.</i>—These are
-examples of the internal activity that occurs in brute
-bodies. Besides, these facts that we are quoting
-merely to refute Bichat’s assertion relative to the
-immutability of brute bodies, and to show us their
-activity, also afford us another proof. They show
-that this activity, like that of animals, wards off
-foreign intervention, and that this parrying of the
-attack, again like that of animals, is adapted for the
-defence and preservation of the brute mass. So that
-if we consider of special importance the adaptative,
-teleological characteristic of vital phenomena, a
-characteristic which is so easily made too much of
-in biological interpretations, we may also find it
-again in the inanimate world. To this end we may
-add to the preceding examples one more which is
-no less remarkable. This is the famous case of
-Becquerel’s process for colour-photography.</p>
-
-<p><i>Colour-Photography.</i>—A greyish plate, treated with
-chloride or iodide of silver and exposed to a red light,
-rapidly becomes red. It is then exposed to green
-light, and after passing through dull and obscure
-tints it becomes green. To explain this remarkable
-phenomenon, we cannot improve on the following
-statement:—The silver salt protects itself against
-the light that threatens its existence; that light
-causes it to pass through all kinds of stages of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
-coloration before reducing it; the salt stops at the
-stage which protects it best. It stops at red, if it is
-red light that assails it, because in becoming red by
-reflection it best repels that light—<i>i.e.</i>, it absorbs it
-the least.</p>
-
-<p>It may then be advantageous, for the comprehension
-of natural phenomena, to regard the transformation
-of inanimate matter as manifestations of a
-kind of internal life.</p>
-
-<p><i>Conclusion. Relations of the Surrounding Medium
-to the Living Being and the Brute Body.</i>—Brute
-bodies, then, are not immutable any more than are
-living bodies. Both depend on the medium that
-surrounds them, and they depend upon it in the
-same way. Life brings together, brings into conflict,
-an appropriate organism and a suitable environment.
-Auguste Comte and Claude Bernard have taught
-us that vital phenomena result from the reciprocal
-action of these two factors which are in close correlation.
-It is also from the reciprocal action of the
-environment and the brute body that inevitably
-result the phenomena which that body presents.
-The living body is sometimes more sensitive to
-variations of the ambient medium than is the brute
-body, but at other times the reverse is the case.
-For example, there is no living organism as impressionable
-to any kind of stimulus whatever as the
-bolometer is to the slightest variations of temperature.</p>
-
-<p>There can only be, then, one chemically immutable
-body—namely, the atom of a simple body, since, by
-its very definition, it remains unaltered and intangible
-in combinations. This notion of an unalterable atom
-has, however, itself been attacked by the doctrine of
-the ionization of particles due to Sir J. J. Thomson;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>
-and besides, with very few exceptions—those of
-cadmium, mercury, and the gases of the argon series—the
-atoms of simple bodies cannot exist in a free
-state.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, as in the vital struggle, the ambient medium
-by means of alimentation furnishes to the living being,
-whether whole or fragmentary, the materials of its
-organization and the energies which it brings into play.
-It also furnishes to brute bodies their materials and
-their energies.</p>
-
-<p>It is also said that the ambient medium furnishes
-to the living being a third class of things, the
-<i>stimuli</i> of its activities—<i>i.e.</i>, its “provocation to action.”
-The protozoon finds in the aquatic environment
-which is its habitat the stimuli which provoke it to
-move and to absorb its food. The cells of the
-metazoon encounter in the same way in the lymph,
-the blood, and the interstitial liquids which bathe
-them, the shock, the stimulus which brings their
-energies into play. They do not derive from themselves,
-by a mysterious spontaneity without parallel
-in the rest of nature, the capricious principle which
-sets them in motion.</p>
-
-<p>Vital spontaneity, so readily accepted by persons
-ignorant of biology, is disproved by the whole history
-of the science. Every vital manifestation is a response
-to a stimulus, a provoked phenomenon. It is unnecessary
-to say this is also the case with brute
-bodies, since that is precisely the foundation of the
-great principle of the inertia of matter. It is plain
-that it is also as applicable to living as to inanimate
-matter.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V_4">CHAPTER V.<br />
-
-
-<small><span class="smcap">Specific Form. Living Bodies and Crystals.</span></small></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="prel">§ 1. Specific form and chemical constitution—The wide distribution
-of crystalline forms—Organization of crystals—Law
-of relation between specific form and chemical
-constitution—Value of form as a characteristic of brute
-and living beings—Parentage, living beings and mineral
-parentage—Iso-morphism and the faculty of cross-breeding—Other
-analogies. § 2. Acquisition and re-establishment
-of the specific form—Mutilation and regeneration of crystals—Mechanism
-of reparation.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>§ 1. <i>Specific Form and Chemical Constitution.</i>—In
-the enumeration which we have made of the essential
-features of vitality there are three that are, so to
-speak, of the highest value. They are, in the order of
-their importance:—The possession of a specific form;
-the faculty of growth or nutrition; and finally, the
-faculty of reproduction by generation. By restricting
-our comparison between brute bodies and living
-bodies to these truly fundamental characters we
-sensibly restrict the field, but we shall see that it
-does not disappear.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wide Distribution of Crystalline Forms.</i>—The
-consideration of specific forms shows us that in
-the mineral world we need only consider crystallized
-bodies, as they are almost the only ones that possess
-definite form. In restricting ourselves to this category
-we do not limit our field as much as might be sup<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span>posed.
-Crystalline forms are very widely distributed.
-They are, in a measure, universal. Matter has a
-decided tendency to assume these forms whenever the
-physical forces which it obeys act with order and
-regularity, and when their action is undisturbed by
-accidental occurrences. In the same way, too, living
-forms are only possible in regulated environments,
-under normal conditions, protected from cataclysms
-and convulsions of nature.</p>
-
-<p>The possession of a specific form is the most
-significant feature of an organized being. Its
-tendency, from the time it begins to develop from
-the germ, is toward the acquirement of that form.
-The progressive manner in which it seeks to realize
-its architectural plan in spite of the obstacles and
-difficulties that arise—healing its wounds, repairing
-its mutilations—all this, in the eyes of the philosophical
-biologist, forms what is perhaps the most
-striking characteristic of a living being, that which
-best shows its unity and its individuality. This
-property of organogenesis seems pre-eminently the
-vital property. It is not so, however, for crystalline
-bodies possess it in an almost equal degree.</p>
-
-<p>The parallel between the crystal and a living being
-has been often drawn. I will not reproduce it here
-in detail. My sole desire, after sketching its principal
-features, is to call attention to the new information
-that has been brought out by recent investigations.</p>
-
-<p><i>Organization of Crystals. Views of Haüy, Delafosse,
-Bravais, and of Wallerant.</i>—In botany, zoology,
-and crystallography we understand by form an
-assemblage of material constituents co-ordinated in
-a definite system—<i>i.e.</i>, the organization itself. The
-body of man, for example, is an edifice in which sixty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span>
-trillion cells ought each to find its own predetermined
-place.</p>
-
-<p>In crystallography also we understand by form the
-organization which crystals present. The grouping
-of the elements of crystals is, perhaps, more simple.
-They are none the less organized, in the same sense
-that living bodies are.</p>
-
-<p>Their organization, while more uniform than that
-of living bodies, still shows a considerable amount of
-variation. It should not be assumed that the area of
-a crystal is completely filled, with contiguous parts
-applied one to the other by plane faces, as might be
-supposed from the phenomenon of cleavage which
-dissociates the parts of the crystalline body into
-solids of this kind. In reality, the constituent parts
-are separated from each other by spaces. They are
-arranged in a quincunx, as Haüy put it, or along the
-lines of a network, to use the terms of Delafosse and
-Bravais. The intervals left between them are incomparably
-larger than their diameters. So that in the
-organization of a crystal it is necessary to take into
-account two quite different things:—An element, the
-crystalline particle, which is a certain aggregate of
-chemical molecules having a determinate geometrical
-form; and a more or less regular, parallelopipedic network,
-along the edges of which are arranged in a constant
-and definite manner the aforesaid particles. The
-external form of the crystal indicates the existence
-of the network. Its optical properties depend upon
-the action of the particles, as Wallerant has shown:
-Thus we must distinguish in a crystal between two
-kinds of geometrical figures—that of the network
-and that of the particle—and their characters of
-symmetry may be either concordant or discordant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span></p>
-
-<p>The crystalline particle, the element of the crystal,
-is therefore a certain molecular complex that repeats
-itself identically and is identically placed at the
-nodes of the parallelopipedic network. It has been
-given different names well calculated to produce
-confusion-the crystallographic molecule of Mallard,
-the complex particle of other authors. Some have
-separated this element into subordinate elements
-(the fundamental particles of Wallerant and of
-Lapparent).</p>
-
-<p>These very general outlines will suffice to show
-how complex and adjustable is the organization of
-the crystalline individual, which in spite of its
-geometric regularity and its rigidity, may be compared
-with the still more flexible organization of the
-living element. The mineral individual is more
-stable, more labile—<i>i.e.</i>, less prone to undergo change
-than is the living individual. We may say with
-M. Lapparent that “crystallized matter presents the
-most perfect and stable orderly arrangement of
-which the particles of bodies are susceptible.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Law of Relation of Specific Form to Chemical
-Constitution.</i>—Crystallization is a method of acquiring
-specific form. The geometrical architecture of the
-mineral individual is but little less wonderful or
-characteristic than that of the living individual. Its
-form is the result of the mutual reactions of its
-substances and of the medium in which it is produced;
-it is the condition of material equilibrium
-corresponding to a given situation. This idea of a
-specific form belonging to a given substance under
-given conditions must be borne in mind. We may
-consider it as a kind of principle of nature, an
-elementary law, which may serve as a point of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span>
-departure for the explanation of phenomena. A
-particular substance under identical conditions of
-environment, must always assume a certain form.</p>
-
-<p>This close linking of substance and form, admitted
-as a postulate in physical sciences, has been carried
-into biology by some philosophical naturalists, by
-M. Le Dantec, for instance.</p>
-
-<p>Let us imitate them for a moment. Let us cease
-to seek in the living being for the prototype of the
-crystal; let us, on the contrary, seek in the crystal the
-prototype of the living being. If we succeed in this,
-we shall then have found the physical basis of life.</p>
-
-<p>Let us say, then, with the biologists we have
-mentioned, that the substance of each living being is
-peculiar to it; that it is specific, and that its form—that
-is to say its organization—follows from it. The
-morpholpgy of any being whatever, of an animal—of
-a setter, for example—or even of a determinate
-being—of Peter, of Paul—is the “crystalline form of
-their living matter.” It is the only form of equilibrium
-that can be assumed under the given conditions
-by the substance of the setter, of Peter, or of Paul,
-just as the cube is the crystalline form of sea-salt.
-In this manner these biologists have supposed that
-they could carry back the problem of living form
-to the problem of living substance, and at the same
-time reduce the biological mystery to the physical
-mystery. I have shown above (Chap. V. pp. 199-204)
-how far this idea is legitimate, and how far and with
-what restrictions it may be welcomed and adopted.</p>
-
-<p><i>Value of Form as a Characteristic of Living and
-Brute Beings.</i>—However this may be, we may say,
-without fear of exaggeration, that the crystalline form
-characterizes the mineral with no less precision than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span>
-the anatomical form characterizes the animal and the
-plant. In both cases, form—regarded as a method
-of distribution of the parts—indicates the individual
-and allows us to diagnose it with more or less facility.</p>
-
-<p><i>Parentage of Living Beings and Mineral Parentage.</i>—Still
-another analogy has been noted. In
-animals and plants similarity in form indicates
-similarity in descent, community of origin, and
-proximity in any scheme of classification. In the
-same way identity of crystalline form indicates
-mineral relationship. Substances chemically analogous
-show identical, geometrically superposable
-forms, and are thus arranged in family or generic
-groups recognizable at a glance.</p>
-
-<p><i>Isomorphism and the Faculty of Cross-breeding.</i>—And
-further, the possibility in the case of isomorphous
-bodies, of their replacing each other in the same crystal
-during the process of formation and of thus mingling,
-so to speak, their congenital elements, may be
-compared with the possibility of inter-breeding with
-living beings of the same species. Isomorphism is
-thus a kind of faculty of crossing. And as the
-impossibility of crossing is the touchstone of taxonomic
-relationship, testing it, and separating stocks
-that ought to be separated, so the operation of
-crystallization is also a means of separating from an
-accidental mixture of mineral species the pure forms
-which are blended therein. Crystallization is the
-touchstone of the specific purity of minerals; it is the
-great process in chemical purification.</p>
-
-<p><i>Other Analogies.</i>—The analogies between crystalline
-and living forms have been pushed still further
-even to the verge of exaggeration.</p>
-
-<p>The internal and external symmetry of animals<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>
-and plants has been compared to that of crystals.
-Transitions or intergradations have been sought
-between the rigid and faceted architecture of the
-latter and the flexible structure and curved surface of
-the former; the utricular form of flowers of sulphur
-on the one hand, and the geometrical structure of the
-shells of radiolarians on the other, have shown an
-exchange of typical forms between the two systems.
-An effort has even been made to draw a parallel
-between six of the principal types of the animal
-kingdom and the six crystalline systems. If carried
-as far as this, our thesis becomes puerile. Real
-analogies will suffice. Among these the curious facts
-of crystalline renewal come first.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">Cicatrization in Living Beings and in
-Crystals.</span></h4>
-
-<p>We know that living beings not only possess a
-typical architecture which they have themselves
-constructed, but that they defend it against destructive
-agencies, and that if need arise they repair
-it. The living organism cicatrizes its wounds, repairs
-losses of substance, regenerates more or less perfectly
-the parts that have been removed; in other terms,
-when it has been mutilated it tends to reconstruct
-itself according to the laws of its own morphology.
-This phenomenon of reconstitution or reintegration,
-these more or less successful efforts to re-establish its
-form and its integrity, at first appear to be a characteristic
-feature of living beings. This is not the
-case.</p>
-
-<p><i>Mutilation and Re-integration of Crystals.</i>—Crystals—let
-us say crystalline individuals—show a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span>
-similar aptitude for repairing their mutilations.
-Pasteur, in an early work, discussed these curious
-facts. Other experimenters, Gernez a little later and
-Rauber more recently, took up the same subject, but
-could do no more than extend and confirm his
-observations. Crystals are formed from a primitive
-nucleus, as the animal is formed from an egg; their
-integral particles are disposed according to efficient
-geometrical laws, so as to produce the typical form
-by a constructive process that may be compared to
-the embryogenic process which builds up the body of
-an animal. Now this operation may be disturbed by
-accidents in the surrounding medium or by the
-deliberate intervention of the experimenter. The
-crystal is then mutilated. Pasteur saw that these
-mutilations repaired themselves. “When,” said he,
-“a crystal from which a piece has been broken off is
-replaced in the mother liquor, we see that while it
-increases in every direction by a deposit of crystalline
-particles, activity occurs at the place where it was
-broken off or deformed; and in a few hours this
-suffices not only to build up the regular amount
-required for the increase of all parts of the crystal,
-but to re-establish regularity of form in the mutilated
-part.” In other words, the work of formation of the
-crystal is carried on much more actively at the point
-of lesion than it would have been had there been no
-lesion. The same thing would have occurred with a
-living being.</p>
-
-<p><i>Mechanism of Reparation.</i>—Gernez some years later
-made known the mechanism of this reparation, or, at
-least, its immediate cause. He showed that on the
-injured surface the crystal becomes less soluble than
-on the other facets. This is not, however, an ex<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>ceptional
-phenomenon. It is, on the contrary, quite
-frequently observed that the different faces of a
-crystal show marked differences in solubility. This
-is what happens in every case for the mutilated face
-in comparison with the others; the matter is less
-soluble there. The consequence of this is clear; the
-growth must preponderate on that face, since there
-the mother liquor will become super-saturated before
-being super-saturated for the others. We may
-explain this result in another way. Each face of the
-crystal in contact with the mother liquor is exposed
-to two antagonistic actions: The matter deposited
-upon a surface may be taken away and redissolved if,
-for any reason whatever, such matter becomes more
-soluble than that of the liquid stratum in contact
-with it; in the second place, the matter of this liquid
-stratum may, under contrary conditions, be deposited,
-and thus increase the body of the crystal. There is,
-then, for each point of the crystalline facet, a positive
-operation of deposit which results in a gain, and a
-negative operation of redissolution which results in a
-loss. One or the other effect predominates according
-as the relative solubility is greater or less for the
-matter of the facet under consideration. On the
-mutilated surface it is diminished, deposition then
-prevails.</p>
-
-<p>But this is only the immediate cause of the
-phenomenon; and if we wish to know why the
-solubility has diminished on the mutilated surface
-Ostwald explains it to us by showing that crystallization
-tends to form a polyhedron in which the
-surface energy is a relative minimum.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI_4">CHAPTER VI.<br />
-
-<small>NUTRITION IN THE LIVING BEING AND IN THE
-CRYSTAL.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Assimilation and growth in the crystal.—Methods of growth
-in the crystal and in the living being; intussusception;
-apposition.—Secondary and unimportant character of the
-process of intussusception.</p>
-
-
-<p>I have already stated (Chap. VI. p. 209) that nutrition
-may be considered as the most characteristic and
-essential property of living beings. Such beings are
-in a state of continual exchange with the surrounding
-medium. They assimilate and dissimilate. By assimilation
-the substance of their being increases at
-the expense of the surrounding alimentary material,
-which is rendered similar to that of the being itself.</p>
-
-<p><i>Assimilation and Growth in the Crystal.</i>—There
-exists in the crystal a property analogous to nutrition,
-a kind of nutrility, which is the rudiment of this
-fundamental property of living beings. The development
-of a crystal starts from a primitive nucleus, the
-germ of the crystalline individual that we will
-presently compare to the ovum or embryo of a plant
-or an animal. Placed in a suitable culture-medium—<i>i.e.</i>,
-in a solution of the substance—this germ
-develops. It assimilates the matter in solution,
-incorporates the particles of it, and increases, preserving
-at the same time its form, reproducing its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span>
-specific type or a variety of it. Its growth proceeds
-without interruption. The crystalline individual may
-attain quite a large size if we know how to nourish it
-properly—we might say, to fatten it. Very frequently,
-at a given time, a new particle of the crystal
-serves in its turn as a primitive nucleus, and becomes
-the point of departure for a new crystal engrafted
-upon the first.</p>
-
-<p>Taken from its mother liquor, placed where it
-cannot be nourished, the crystal, arrested in its
-growth, falls into a condition of rest not without
-analogy to that of a seed or of a reviviscent animal.
-Its evolution is resumed with the return of favourable
-conditions—the bath of soluble matter.</p>
-
-<p>The crystal is in a relation of continual exchange
-with the surrounding medium which feeds it. These
-exchanges are regulated by the state of this medium,
-or, more exactly, by the state of the liquid stratum
-which is in immediate contact with the crystals. It
-loses or it gains in substance if, for example, this
-layer becomes heated or cooled more rapidly than the
-crystal. In a general way, it assimilates or dissimilates
-according as its immediate environment is saturated
-or diluted. Here, then, we have a kind of mobile
-equilibrium, comparable, in some measure, to that of
-the living being.</p>
-
-<p><i>Methods of Growth of the Crystal and of the Living
-Being. Intussusception. Apposition.</i>—In truth, there
-seems to be a complete opposition between the crystal
-and the living being as regards their manner of
-nutrition and growth. In the one case the method is
-intussusception; in the other it is apposition. The
-crystalline individual is all surface. Its mass is impenetrable
-to the nutritive materials. Since only the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>
-surface is accessible, the incorporation of similar
-particles is possible only by external juxtaposition,
-and the edifice increases only because a new layer of
-stones has been added to those which were there
-before. On the contrary, the body of an animal is a
-mass essentially penetrable. The cellular elements
-that compose it have more or less rounded and
-flexible forms. Their contact is by no means perfect.
-They have neither the stiffness nor the precision
-of adjustment that the crystalline particles have.
-Liquids and gases can insinuate themselves from
-without and circulate within the meshes of this loose
-construction. Assimilation can therefore take place
-throughout its whole depth, and the edifice increases
-because each stone is itself increasing.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Secondary and Commonplace Character of the
-Process of Intussusception.</i>—The apparent opposition
-of these two processes is doubtless diminished if we
-compare the simple mineral individual with the
-elementary living unit, the crystalline particle with
-the protoplasmic mass of a cell. Without carrying
-analysis so far as this, it is yet easy to see that apposition
-and intussusception are mechanical means
-that living beings employ at one and the same time
-and combine according to their necessities. The hard
-parts of the internal and external skeleton increase
-both by interposition and superposition, at once. It
-is by the last method that bones increase in diameter,
-and the shells of molluscs, the scales of reptiles and
-fishes, and the testae of many radiate animals are
-formed. In these organs, as in crystals, life and
-nutrition occur at the surface.</p>
-
-<p>Apposition and intussusception are then secondary,
-mechanical arrangements having relation to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>
-physical characters of the body—solidity in the
-crystal, semi-fluidity in the cellular protoplasm. If
-we compare the inorganic liquid matter with the
-semi-fluid organized matter, we recognize that the
-addition of substance takes place in the same manner
-in each—<i>i.e.</i>, by interposition. If we add a soluble
-salt to a fluid, the molecules of the salt separate
-themselves and interpose themselves between those
-of the fluid. There is, therefore, nothing especially
-mysterious or particularly vital about the process of
-intussusception. Applied to fluid protoplasm, it is
-merely the diffusion that ordinarily occurs in mixed
-liquids.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII_4">CHAPTER VII.<br />
-
-<small>GENERATION IN BRUTE BODIES AND LIVING
-BODIES. SPONTANEOUS GENERATION.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Protoplasm a substance which continues—Case of the crystal—Characteristics
-of generation in the living being—Property
-of growth—Supposed to be confined to the living being—Fertilization
-of micro-organisms—Fertilization of crystals—Sterilization
-of crystalline and living media—Spontaneous
-generation of crystals—Metastable and labile zones—Glycerine
-crystals—Possible extinction of a crystalline
-species—Conclusion.</p>
-
-
-<p>We have not yet exhausted the analogies between a
-crystal and the living being. The possession of a
-specific form, the tendency to re-establish it by redisintegration
-and the existence of a kind of nutrition
-are not sufficient to constitute complete similarity.
-It still lacks a fundamental character, that of generation.
-Chauffard some time ago, in an attack which
-he made upon the physiological ideas of his day,
-aptly exhibited this weak point. “Let us disregard,”
-he said, “those interesting facts relative to the acquisition
-of a typical form—facts that are common to the
-mineral world as well as to living beings. It is none
-the less true that the crystalline type is in no way
-derived from other pre-existing types, and that
-nothing in crystallization recalls the actions of
-ascendants and the laws of heredity.”</p>
-
-<p>This gap has since been filled. The work of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>
-Gernez, of Violette, of Lecoq de Boisbaudran, the experiments
-of Ostwald and of Tammann, the observations
-of Crookes and of Armstrong—all this series of
-researches, so lucidly summarized by M. Leo Errera
-in his essays in botanical philosophy, had for their
-result the establishment of an unsuspected relation
-between the processes of crystallization and those of
-generation in animals and plants.</p>
-
-<p><i>Protoplasm is a Substance which Continues. The
-Case of the Crystal.</i>—Under present conditions a living
-being of any kind springs from another living being
-similar to itself.</p>
-
-<p>Its protoplasm is always a continuation of the
-protoplasm of an ancestor. It is an atavic substance
-of which we do not see the beginning; we only see it
-continue. The anatomical element comes from a
-preceding anatomical element, and the higher animal
-itself comes from a pre-existing cell of the material
-organism, the ovum. The ladder of filiation reaches
-back indefinitely into the past.</p>
-
-<p>We shall see that there is something analogous to
-this in certain crystals. They are born of a preceding
-individual; they may be considered as the posterity
-of the antecedent crystal. If we speak of the matter
-of a crystal as the matter of a living being is spoken
-of, in cases of this kind we would say that the
-crystalline substance is an atavic substance of which
-we see only the continuation, as in the case of
-protoplasm.</p>
-
-<p><i>Characters of Generation in the Living Being.</i>—Growth
-of the living substance, and consequently of
-the being itself, is the fundamental law of vitality.
-Generation is the necessary consequence of growth
-(p. 210).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span></p>
-
-<p>Living elements or cells cannot subsist indefinitely
-without increasing and multiplying. The time must
-come when the cell divides, either directly or indirectly;
-and then, instead of one cell, there are two.
-This is the method of generation for the anatomical
-element. In a complex individual it is a more or less
-restricted part of the organism, usually a simple
-sexual cell, that takes on the formation of the new
-being, and assures the perpetuity of the protoplasm,
-and therefore of the species.</p>
-
-<p><i>Property of Growth. Its Supposed Restriction to
-Living Beings.</i>—At first it would appear that nothing
-like this occurs in inanimate nature. The physical
-machine, if we furnish it matter and energy, could go
-on working indefinitely, without being compelled to
-increase and reproduce. Here, then, there is an
-entirely new condition peculiar to the organized
-being, a property well adapted, it would seem—and
-this time without any possible doubt—for separating
-living matter from brute matter. It is not so.</p>
-
-<p>It would not be impossible to imagine a system
-of chemical bodies organized like the animal or
-vegetable economy, so that a destruction would be
-compensated for by a growth. The only thing impossible
-is to suppose, with M. le Dantec, a destruction
-that would at the same time be an analysis. And an
-additional perplexity occurs when he supposes that
-in the successive acts exchanges of material may
-occur.</p>
-
-<p>There is no necessity for making this impossible
-chemistry a characteristic of the living being. The
-chemistry of the living being is general chemistry.
-Lavoisier and Berthelot enforced this view. We
-should not lose sight of the teachings of the masters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span></p>
-
-<p>Let us return to generation, properly so called, and
-find in it the characteristics of brute bodies and of
-crystals.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Sowing of Micro-organisms.</i>—When a microbiologist
-wishes to propagate a species of micro-organisms,
-he places in a culture medium a few
-individuals (one is all that is actually necessary), and
-soon observes their rapid multiplication. Usually, if
-only the ordinary microbes in atmospheric dust are
-wanted, the operator need not trouble to charge the
-culture; if the culture tube remains open and the
-medium is suitably chosen, some germ of a common
-species will fall in and the liquid will become
-colonized. This has the appearance of spontaneous
-generation.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Sowing of Crystals.</i>—Concentrated solutions of
-various substances, supersaturated solutions of sodium
-magnesium sulphate, and sodium chlorate are also
-wonderful culture media for certain mineral organic
-units—certain crystalline germs. Ch. Dufour, experimenting
-with water cooled below 0° C., its point
-of solidification; Ostwald, with salol kept below 39°.5,
-its point of fusion; Tammann, with betol, which
-melts at 96°; and, before them, Gernez, with melted
-phosphorus and sulphur—all these physicists have
-shown that liquids in superfusion are also media
-specially appropriate for the culture and propagation
-of certain kinds of crystalline individuals.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these facts have become classic. Lowitz
-showed in 1785 that a solution of sodium sulphate
-could be concentrated by evaporation so as to contain
-more salt than was conformable with the temperature,
-without, however, depositing the excess. But if a
-solid fragment, a crystal of salt, is thrown into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span>
-liquor, the whole of the excess immediately passes
-into the state of a crystallized mass. The first
-crystal has engendered a second similar to itself;
-the latter has engendered a third, and so on from one
-to the other. If we compare this phenomenon with
-that of the rapid multiplication of a species of
-microbes in a suitable culture medium, no difference
-will be perceived. Or perhaps we may note one
-unimportant difference—the rapidity of the propagation
-of the crystalline germs as opposed to the relative
-slowness of the generation of the micro-organisms.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the propagation of crystallization in a supersaturated
-or superfused liquid may be delayed by
-appropriate devices. The crystalline individual gives
-birth, then, to another individual that conforms to its
-own type, or even to varieties of that type when such
-exist. Into the right branch of a U tube filled with
-sulphur in a state of superfusion Gernez dropped
-octahedric crystals of sulphur, and into the left branch
-prismatic crystals. On either side were produced
-new crystals conforming to the type that had been
-sown.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sterilization of Crystalline Media and Living Media.</i>—Ostwald
-varied these experiments by using salol.
-He melted the substance by heating it above 39∙5°C.;
-then, protecting it from crystals of any kind, he let
-the solution stand in a closed tube. The salol remained
-liquid indefinitely—until it was touched with
-a platinum wire that had been in contact with solid
-salol—<i>i.e.</i>, until a crystalline germ was introduced.
-But if the platinum wire has been previously sterilized
-by passing it, as the bacteriologists do, through a
-flame, it can then be introduced into the liquor with
-impunity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>The Dimensions of Crystalline Germs Comparable
-to those of Microbes.</i>—We may dilute the solid
-salol with inert powder—lactin, for example—dilute
-the first mixture with a second, the second with a
-third, and so on; then, throwing into the solution of
-surfused salol a tenth of a milligram from one of
-these various mixtures, we find that the production of
-crystals will not take place if the fragment thrown in
-weighs less than a millionth of a milligram, or
-measures less than ten thousandths of a millimetre
-in length. It would seem, then, that these are the
-dimensions of the crystalline particle or crystallographic
-molecule of salol. In the same way Ostwald
-satisfied himself that the crystalline germ of hyposulphite
-of soda weighs about a thousand-millionth of
-a milligram, and measures a thousandth of a millimetre;
-that of chlorate of soda weighs a ten-millionth
-of a milligram. These dimensions are entirely comparable
-with those of microbes.</p>
-
-<p>All these phenomena have been studied with a
-detail into which it is impossible to enter here, and
-which clearly shows more and more intimate analogies
-between the formation of crystals and the generation
-of micro-organisms.</p>
-
-<p><i>Extension and Propagation of Crystallization.
-Optimum Temperature of Incubation.</i>—Crystallization
-which has commenced around a germ is propagated
-more or less rapidly, and ends by invading the whole
-of the liquor.</p>
-
-<p>The rapidity of this movement of extension depends
-upon the conditions of the medium, especially upon
-its temperature. This is shown very well by
-Tammann’s experiments with betol. This body,
-the salicylic ester of naphthol, fuses at 96° C. If it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>
-is melted in tubes sealed at a temperature of 100° C.,
-it may be cooled to lower and lower temperatures—to
-+ 70°, to + 25°, to + 10°, to-5° without solidifying.
-Let us suppose that by some combination of circumstances
-a few centres of crystallization—that is to
-say, of crystalline germs—have appeared in the
-solution. Solidification will extend slowly at the
-ordinary temperature, at 20° to 25° and thereabouts.
-On the other hand, it will be propagated with great
-rapidity if the liquor is kept at about 70°. This
-point—70°—is the thermal optimum for the propagation
-of germs. It is the most favourable
-temperature for what may be called their incubation.
-As soon as the germs find themselves in a liquor at
-70° they increase, multiply, and show that they are in
-the best conditions for growth.</p>
-
-<p><i>Spontaneous Generation of Crystals. Optimum
-Temperature for the Appearance of Germs.</i>—If we
-consider various supersaturated solutions or liquids
-in superfusion, we shall soon discover that they can
-be arranged in two categories. Some remain indefinitely
-liquid under given conditions unless a
-crystalline germ is introduced into them. Others
-solidify spontaneously without artificial intervention,
-and such crystallization may even be propagated very
-rapidly under determinate conditions. This implies
-that these are conditions favouring the spontaneous
-appearance of germs.</p>
-
-<p>This distinction between substances of crystalline
-generation by filiation and substances of spontaneous
-crystalline generation is not specific. The same
-substance may present the two methods of generation
-according to the conditions in which it is placed.
-Betol furnishes a good example of this. Liquefy it at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span>
-100° in a sealed tube and keep it by means of a stove
-above 30°, and it will remain liquid almost indefinitely.
-On the other hand, lower its temperature and leave it
-for one or two minutes at 10°, and germs will appear
-in the liquor; prolong the exposure to this degree of
-heat and the number of these spontaneously appearing
-germs, appearing in isolation, will rapidly increase.
-On the other hand, you will observe that propagation
-by filiation—that is to say, by extension from one
-to another—is almost absent. The temperature of
-10° is not favourable to that method of generation;
-and we have just seen, in fact, that it is at a temperature
-of about 70° that extension of crystallization
-from one to another is best accomplished. The
-temperature of 70° was the optimum for propagation
-by filiation. Inversely, the temperature of 10° is the
-optimum for spontaneous generation. Above and
-below this optimum the action is slower. We may
-count the centres of crystallization, which slowly
-extend further and further, as in a microbic
-culture one counts the colonies corresponding to
-the germs primitively formed. To sum up, if
-there is an optimum for the formation of
-crystals, there is a different optimum for their rapid
-extension.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Metastable and Labile Zones.</i>—This phenomena
-is general. There is for each substance a set of
-conditions (temperature, degree of concentration,
-volume of the solution) in which the crystalline
-individuals can be produced only by germs or by
-filiation. This is what occurs for betol above the
-temperature of 30°. The body is then in what
-Ostwald has called a <i>metastable</i> zone. There is,
-however, for the same body another set of circum<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>stances
-more or less complete, in which its gems
-appear simultaneously. This is what happens for
-betol at about the temperature of 10°. These circumstances
-are those of the <i>labile zone</i> or zone of
-spontaneous generation.</p>
-
-<p><i>Crystals of Glycerine.</i>—We may go a step further.
-Let us suppose, with L. Errera, that we have a liquid
-in a state of metastable equilibrium, whose labile
-equilibrium is as yet unknown. This is what actually
-occurs for a very widely known body, glycerine.
-We do not know under what conditions glycerine
-crystallizes spontaneously. If we cool it, it becomes
-viscous; we cannot obtain its crystals in that way.
-It was not found in crystals until 1867. In that
-year, in a cask sent from Vienna to London during
-winter, crystallised glycerine was found, and Crookes
-showed these crystals to the Chemical Society of
-London. What circumstances had determined their
-formation? We knew not then, and we know not
-now. It may be observed that this case of spontaneous
-generation of the crystals of glycerine has
-not remained the solitary instance. M. Henninger
-has noted the accidental formation of glycerine
-crystals in a manufactory in St. Denis.</p>
-
-<p>It may be remarked that this crystalline species
-appeared, as living species may have done, at a given
-moment in an environment in which a favourable
-chance combined the necessary conditions for its
-production. It is also quite comparable to the
-creation of a living species; for having once appeared
-we have been able to perpetuate it. The crystalline
-individuals of 1867 have had a posterity. They
-have been sown in glycerine in a state of superfusion,
-and there they reproduced themselves. These<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>
-generations have been sufficiently numerous to
-spread the species throughout a great part of
-Europe. M. Hoogewerf showed a great flask full
-to the Dutch biologists who met at Utrecht in
-1891. M. L. Errera presented others in June 1899,
-to the Society of Medical and Natural Sciences at
-Brussels. To-day the great manufactory of Sarg &amp;
-Co., of Vienna, is engaged in their production on a
-large scale for industrial purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we are able to study this crystalline species
-of glycerine and to determine with precision the
-conditions of its continued existence. It has been
-shown that it does not resist a temperature of 18°, so
-that if precautions were not taken to preserve it,
-a single summer would suffice to annihilate all the
-crystalline individuals existing on the surface of the
-globe, and thus the species would be extinguished.</p>
-
-<p><i>Possible Extinction of a Crystalline Species.</i>—As
-these crystals melt at 18°, this temperature represents
-the point of fusion of solid glycerine or the point of
-solidification of liquid glycerine. But the liquor
-does not solidify at all if its temperature falls below
-18° C., as we well know, for it is at that temperature
-we use it. Nor does it solidify at zero, nor even at
-18° below zero; at 20°, for instance, it merely thickens
-and becomes pasty. We only know glycerine, then, in
-a state of superfusion, a fact which chemists have not
-learned without amazement. Under these conditions,
-so analogous to the appearance of a living species, to
-its unlimited propagation and to its extinction, the
-mineral world offers a quite faithful counterpart to
-the animal world. The living body illustrates here
-the history of the brute body and facilitates its
-exposition. Inversely, the brute body in its turn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>
-throws remarkable light on the subject of the living
-body, and on one of the most serious problems
-relative to its origin, that of spontaneous generation.</p>
-
-<p><i>Conclusion.</i>—These facts lead to one conclusion.
-Until the concourse of propitious circumstances
-favourable to their spontaneous generation was
-brought about, crystals were obtained only by
-filiation. Until the discovery of electro-magnetism,
-magnets were made only by filiation, by means of
-the simple or double application of a pre-existing
-magnet. Before the discovery which fable attributes
-to Prometheus, every new fire was produced only by
-means of a spark from a pre-existing fire. We are
-at the same historical stage as regards the living
-world, and that is why, up to the present, there has
-never been formed a single particle of living matter
-except by filiation, except by the intervention of a
-pre-existing living organism.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_V">BOOK V.<br />
-
-
-<small>SENESCENCE AND DEATH.</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Chap. I. The different points of view from which death may be
-regarded.—Chap. II. Constitution of the organisms—Partial
-death—Collective death.—Chap. III. Physical
-and chemical characteristics of cellular death—Necrobiosis.—
-Chap. IV. Apparent perennity of complex individuals.—Chap. V.
-Immortality of the protozoa and of slightly
-differentiated cells.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>We grow old and we die. We see the beings
-which surround us grow old and disappear. At first
-we see no exceptions to this inexorable law, and we
-consider it as a universal and inevitable law of
-nature. But is this generalization well founded?
-Is it true that no being can escape the cruel fate of
-old age and death, to which we and all the representatives
-of the higher animality are exposed? Or,
-on the other hand, are any beings immortal? Biology
-answers that, in fact, some beings are immortal.
-There are beings to whose life no law assigns a
-limit, and they are the simplest, the least differentiated
-and the least perfect. Death thus appears to be a
-singular privilege attached to organic superiority, the
-ransom paid for a masterly complexity. Above these
-elementary, monocellular, undifferentiated beings,
-which are protected from mortality, we find others,
-higher in their organization, which are exposed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>
-it, but with whom death seems but an accident,
-avoidable in principle if not in fact. The anatomical
-elements of this higher animal are a case in point.
-Flourens once tried to persuade us that the threshold
-of old age might be made to recede considerably, and
-there are biologists in the present day who give us
-some glimpse of a kind of vague immortality. We
-may, therefore, ask our readers to follow us in our
-examination of these re-opened if not novel questions,
-and we shall explain the views of contemporary
-physiology as to the nature of death, its causes, its
-mechanisms, and its signs.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I_5">CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-<small>VARIOUS WAYS OF REGARDING DEATH.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Different meanings of the word death—Physiological distinction
-between elementary and general death—Non-scientific
-opinions—The ordinary point of view—Medical point of
-view.—The signs of death are prognostic signs.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Different Meanings of the Word Death.</i>—An English
-philosopher has asserted that the word we translate
-by “cause” has no less than sixty-four different meanings
-in Plato and forty-eight in Aristotle. The word
-“death” has not so many meanings in modern
-languages, but still it has many. Sometimes it
-indicates an action which is taking place, the action
-of dying, and sometimes a state, the state which
-succeeds the action of dying. The phenomena it
-connotes are in the eyes of many biologists quite
-different, according as we watch them in an animal
-of complex organization, or on the other hand, in
-monocellular beings, protozoa and protophytes.</p>
-
-<p><i>Physiological Distinction between Elementary Death
-and General Death.</i>—We distinguish the death of the
-anatomical elements, <i>elementary death</i>, from the
-death of the individual regarded as a whole, <i>general
-death</i>. Hence we recognize an <i>apparent death</i>, which
-is an incomplete and temporary suspension of the
-phenomena of vitality, and a <i>real death</i>, which is a
-final and total arrest of these phenomena. When<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span>
-we consider it in its essential nature (assumed, but
-not known) we look on it as the <i>contrary of life</i>, as
-did the Encyclopædia, Cuvier, and Bichat; or we
-regard it with others either as the consequence of
-life, or simply as the end of life.</p>
-
-<p><i>Non-scientific Opinions.</i>—What is death to those
-outside the realm of science? First of all we find the
-consoling solution given by those who believe death
-to be the commencement of another life. We next
-find ourselves involved in a confused medley, an
-infinite diversity of philosophical doubt and superstition.
-“A leap into the unknown,” says one.
-“Dreamless and unconscious night,” says another.
-And again, “A sleep which knows no waking.”
-Or, with Horace, “the eternal exile,” or with
-Seneca, annihilation. <i>Post mortem nihil; ipsaque
-mors nihil.</i></p>
-
-<p>The idea which is constantly supervening in the
-midst of this conflict of opinion is that of the
-<i>breaking up</i> of the elements, the union of which
-forms the living being. It has, as we shall see, a
-real foundation which may perhaps receive the
-support of science. We shall not find that the best
-way of defining death is to say that it consists of the
-“dissolution of the society formed by the anatomical
-elements, or again, in the dissolution of the consciousness
-that the individual possesses of himself—<i>i.e.</i>, of
-the existence of this society.” It is the rupture of
-the social bond. The old idea of dispersion is a
-variant of the same notion. But the ancients
-evidently could not understand, as we do, the nature
-of these elements which are associated to form the
-living being, and which are liberated or dispersed
-by death. We, as biologists, can see microscopical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span>
-organic unity with a real objective existence. The
-ancients were thinking of spiritual elements, of
-principles, of entities. To the Romans, who may be
-said to have held that there are three souls, death
-was produced by their separation from the body.
-The first, the breath, the <i>spiritus</i>, mounting towards
-celestial regions (<i>astra petit</i>); the second, the <i>shade</i>,
-regaining on the surface of the earth and wandering
-around the tombs; the third, the <i>manes</i>, descending
-to the lower regions. The belief of the Hindoos was
-slightly different. The body returned to the earth,
-the breath to the winds, the fire of the glance to the
-sun, and the ethereal soul to the world of the pure.
-Such were the ideas of mortal dispersion formed by
-ancient humanity.</p>
-
-<p>Modern science takes a more objective point of
-view. It asks by what facts, by what observable
-events death is indicated. Generally speaking, we
-may say that these facts interrupt an interior state
-of things which was life and to which they put an
-end. Thus death is defined by life. It is the
-cessation of the events and of the phenomena which
-characterize life. We must, therefore, know what
-life is to understand the meaning of death. How
-wise was Confucius when he said to his disciple,
-Li-Kou:—“If we do not know life, how can we
-know death?” According to biology there are two
-kinds of death because there are two kinds of life;
-elementary life and death correspond just as general
-life and death do, and this is where scientific opinion
-diverges from commonly received opinion.</p>
-
-<p>What cares the man who reasons as most human
-beings do, about this life of the anatomical elements
-of his body, the existence and the silent activity of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span>
-which are in no way revealed to him. What does
-their death matter to him? To him there is but one
-poignant question, that of being separated or not
-being separated from the society of his fellows.
-Death is no longer to feel, no longer to think; it is
-the assurance that one will never feel, one will never
-think again. Sleep, dreamless sleep, is already in our
-eyes a kind of transient death; but, when we fall asleep
-we are sure of waking again. There is no awaking
-from the sleep of death. But that is not all. Man
-knows that death, this dreamless sleep that knows no
-waking, will be followed by the dissolution of his
-body. And what a dissolution will there be for the
-body, the object of his continual care! Remember
-the description of Cuvier—the flesh that passes from
-green to blue and from blue to black, the part which
-flows away in putrid venom, the other part which
-evaporates in foul emanations, and finally, the few
-ashes that remain, the tiny pinch of minerals, saline
-or earthy, which are all that is left of that once
-animated masterpiece.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Popular View.</i>—To the man afraid of death
-it seems, in the presence of so great a catastrophe,
-that the patient analysis of the physiologist scrupulously
-noting the succession of phenomena and explaining
-their sequence is uninteresting. He will
-only attach the slightest importance to knowing that
-vestiges of vitality remain in this or that part of his
-body, if they do not re-establish in every part the
-<i>status quo ante</i>. He cares not to hear that a certain
-time after the formal declaration of his death his
-nails and his hair will continue to grow, that his
-muscles will still have the useless faculty of contraction,
-that every organ, every tissue, every element,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span>
-will oppose a more or less prolonged resistance to the
-invasion of death.</p>
-
-<p><i>Medical View.</i>—It is, however, these very facts and
-details, this why and wherefore, which interest the
-physiologist. The state of mind of the doctor in this
-respect, again, is different. When, for instance, the
-doctor declares that such and such a person is dead,
-he is really making not so much a statement of fact
-as a prediction. How many elements are still living
-and will be capable of new birth in this corpse that
-he has before his eyes? That is not what he asks
-himself, nor is it what we should ask of him. He
-knows, besides, that all these partial survivals will be
-extinguished and will never find the conditions
-necessary to reviviscence, and that the organization
-will never be restored to its primal activity; and this
-is what he affirms. The fear of premature burial
-which haunts so many imaginations is the fear of an
-error in the prediction. It is to avoid this that
-practical medicine has devoted so much of its
-attention to the discovery of a <i>certain</i>—and early—sign
-of death. By this we understand the discovery
-of a <i>certain prognostic sign of general death</i>. We
-want a prognostic sign enabling us to assert that the
-life of the brain is now extinguished and will never
-be reanimated. And yet there are in that organism
-many elements which are still alive. Many others
-even may be born anew if we could give them
-suitable conditions which they no longer meet with
-in the animal machine now thrown out of gear.
-What finer example could we give than the experiment
-of Kuliabko, the Russian physiologist, who
-kept a man’s heart working and beating for eighteen
-hours after the official verification of his death.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II_5">CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-<small>THE PROCESS OF DEATH.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Constitution of organisms.—Partial lives.—Collective life.—The
-rôle of apparatus.—Death by lesion of the major apparatus.—The
-vital tripod.—Solidarity of the anatomical
-elements.—Humoral solidarity.—Nervous solidarity.—Independence
-and subordination of the anatomical elements.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Partial Lives.</i> <i>Collective Life.</i>—With the exception
-of the physiologist, no one, neither he who is ignorant
-nor he who is intellectual, nor even the doctor,
-troubles his head about the life or the death of the
-element, although this is the basis, the real foundation,
-of the activity manifested by the social body
-and by its different organs. The life of the individual,
-of the animal, depends on these elementary
-partial lives just as the existence of the State depends
-upon that of its citizens. To the physiologist, the
-organism is a federation of cellular elements unified
-by close association. Goethe compared them to a
-“multitude”; Kant to a “nation”; and others have
-likened them to a populous city the anatomical
-elements of which are the citizens, and which possesses
-an individuality of its own. So that the
-activity of the federated organism may be discussed
-in each of its parts, and then it is <i>elementary life</i>, or
-in its totality, and then it is <i>general life</i>. Paracelsus
-and Bordeu had a glimpse of this truth when they
-considered a life appropriate to each part (<i>vita propria</i>)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span>
-and a collective life, the life of the whole (<i>vita
-communis</i>). In the same way we must distinguish
-the <i>elementary death</i>, which is the cessation of the
-vital phenomena in the isolated cell, from the <i>general
-death</i>, which is the disappearance of the phenomena
-which characterised the collectivity, the totality, the
-federation, the nation, the city, the whole in so far as
-it is a unit.</p>
-
-<p>These comparisons enable us to understand how
-general life depends on the partial lives of each
-anatomical citizen. If all die, the nation, the federation,
-the total being clearly ceases to exist. This
-city has an enormous population—there are thirty
-trillion cellules in the body of man; it is peopled
-with absolutely sedentary citizens, each of which has
-its fixed place, which it never leaves, and in which it
-lives and dies. It must possess a system of more or
-less perfect arrangements to secure the material life
-of each inhabitant. All have analogous requirements:
-they feed very much the same; they breathe
-in the same way; each in fact has its profession,
-industry, talents, and aptitudes by which it contributes
-to social life, and on which, in its turn, it
-depends. But the process of alimentation is the
-same for all. They must have water, nitrogenous
-materials and analogous ternaries; the same mineral
-substances, and the same vital gas, oxygen. It is no
-less necessary that the wastes and the egesta, very
-much alike in every respect, should be carried off and
-borne away in discharges arranged so as to free the
-whole system from the inconvenience, the unhealthiness,
-and the danger of these residues.</p>
-
-<p><i>Secondary Organization in Organs.</i>—That is why,
-as we said above, the secondary organizations of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span>
-economy exist:—the digestive apparatus which prepares
-the food and enables it to pass into the blood,
-into the lymph, and finally into the liquid medium
-which bathes each cell and constitutes its real
-medium; the respiratory apparatus which imports
-the oxygen and exports the gaseous excrement,
-carbonic acid; the heart and the circulatory system
-which distributes through the system the internal
-medium, suitably purified and recuperated. The
-organization is dominated by the necessities of
-cellular life. This is the law of the city, to which
-Claude Bernard has given the name of the <i>law of the
-constitution of organisms</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Death by Lesion of the Major Organs. Vital
-Tripod.</i>—Thus we understand what life is, and at the
-same time what is the death of a complex living
-being. The city perishes if its more or less complicated
-mechanisms which look after its revictualling
-and its discharge are seriously affected at any point.
-The different groups may survive for a more or less
-lengthy period, but progressively deprived of the
-means of food or of discharge, they are finally
-involved in the general ruin. If the heart stops,
-there is a universal famine; if the lungs are seriously
-injured, we are asphyxiated; if the principal organ
-of discharge, the kidney, ceases to perform its allotted
-task, there is a general poisoning by the used-up and
-toxic materials retained in the blood.</p>
-
-<p>We understand how the integrity of the major
-organs,—the heart, the lungs, the kidney,—is indispensable
-to the maintenance of existence. We
-understand that their lesion, by a series of successive
-repercussions, involves universal death. We always
-die, said the doctors of old, because of the failure of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span>
-one of these three organs, the heart, the lungs, or the
-brain. Life, they said in their inaccurate language,
-depends upon these as upon three supports. Hence
-the idea of the <i>vital tripod</i>. But it is not only this
-trio of organs which maintain the organism; the
-kidney and the liver are no less important. In
-different degrees each part exercises its action on the
-rest. Life is based in reality on the immense
-multitude of living cells associated for the formation
-of the body; on the thirty trillion anatomical elements,
-each part is more or less necessary to all the
-rest, according as the bond of solidarity is drawn more
-or less closely in the organism under consideration.</p>
-
-<p><i>Death and the Brain.</i>—There are indeed more noble
-elements charged with higher functions than the rest.
-These are the nervous elements. Those of the brain
-preside over the higher functions of animality, sensibility,
-voluntary movement, and the exercise of the
-intellect. The rest of the nervous system forms an
-instrument of centralization which establishes the
-relations of the parts one with the other and secures
-their solidarity. When the brain is stricken and its
-functions cease, man has lost the consciousness of his
-existence. Life seems to have disappeared. We say
-of a man in this plight that he no longer lives, thus
-confusing general life with the cerebral life which is
-its highest manifestation. But the man or the
-animal without a brain lives what may be called a
-vegetative life. The human anencephalic foetus lives
-for some time, just as the foetus which is properly
-formed. Observation always shows that this existence
-of the other parts of the body cannot be sustained
-indefinitely in the absence of that of the brain.
-By a series of impulses due to the solidarity of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span>
-grouping of the parts, the injury received by the
-brain affects by repercussion the other organs, and
-leads in the long run to the arrest of elementary life
-in all the anatomical elements. The death of the
-whole is then complete.</p>
-
-<p>Doctors have therefore a two-fold reason for saying
-that the brain may cause death. The death of the
-brain suppresses the highest manifestation of life, and,
-in the second place, by a more or less remote counter
-stroke, it suppresses life in all the rest of the system.</p>
-
-<p><i>Death is a Process.</i>—Besides, the fact is general.
-The death of one part always involves the death of
-the rest—<i>i.e.</i>, universal death. A living organism
-cannot be at the same time alive and a cemetery. The
-corpses cannot exist side by side with the living
-elements. The dead contaminates the living, or in
-some other way involves it in its ruin. Death is
-propagated; it is a progressive phenomenon which
-begins at one point and gradually is extended to the
-whole. It has a beginning and a duration. In other
-words, the death of a complex organism is a process.
-And further, the end of a simple organism, of a
-protozoan, of a cell, is itself a process infinitely
-more shortened.</p>
-
-<p>The very perfection of the organism is therefore the
-cause of its fragility. It is the degree of solidarity of
-the parts one with another which involves the one set
-in the catastrophe of the rest, just as in a delicate
-piece of mechanism the derangement of a wheel brings
-nearer and nearer the total breakdown. The important
-parts, the lungs, the heart, the brain, suffer no
-serious alteration without the reflex being felt throughout.
-But there are also wheels less evident, the
-integrity of which is scarcely less necessary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>The Solidarity of the Anatomical Elements.</i>—The
-cause of the mortal process—<i>i.e.</i>, of the extension and
-the propagation of an initial destruction—is therefore
-to be found in the solidarity of the parts of the
-organism. The closer it is the greater do the chances
-of destruction become, for the accident which has
-happened to one will by repercussions affect the
-others.</p>
-
-<p>Now the solidarity of the parts of the organism
-may be carried out in two ways; there is a <i>humoral
-solidarity</i> and a <i>nervous solidarity</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Humoral Solidarity.</i>—Humoral solidarity is realized
-by the mixture of humours. All the liquids of the
-organism which have lodged in the interstices of the
-elements and which soak the tissues, are in contact
-and in relation of exchange one with another, and
-through the permeable wall of the small vessels they
-are in relation with the blood and the lymph.</p>
-
-<p>All the liquid atmospheres which surround the
-cells and form their ambient medium have intercommunication.
-A change having taken place in one
-cellular group, and therefore in the corresponding
-liquid, modifies the medium of the further or nearer
-groups, and therefore these groups themselves.</p>
-
-<p><i>Nervous Solidarity.</i>—But the real instrument of the
-solidarity of the part is the nervous system. Thanks
-to it in the living machine the component activities of
-the cellular multitude restrain and control one another.
-Nervous solidarity makes of the complex being not a
-mob of cells, but a connected system, an individual in
-which the parts are subordinated to the whole and the
-whole to the parts; in which the social organism has
-its rights just as the individual has his rights. The
-whole secret of the vital functional activity of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span>
-complex being is contained in these two factors:—the
-independence and the subordination of the elementary
-lives. General life is the harmony of the elementary
-lives, their symphony.</p>
-
-<p><i>Independence and Subordination of the Anatomical
-Elements.</i>—The independence of the anatomical elements
-results from the fact that they are the real
-depositaries of the vital properties, the really active
-components. On the other hand the subordination of
-the parts to the whole is the very condition of the
-preservation of form in animals and plants. The
-architecture which is characteristic of them, the
-morphological plan which they realize in their
-evolutive development which they are ever preserving
-and repairing, form a striking proof of this. This
-dependence in no way contradicts the autonomy of
-the elements. For when with Claude Bernard and
-Virchow we study the circumstances we see that
-the element accommodates itself to the organic
-plan without violence to its nature. It behaves
-in its natural place as it would behave elsewhere,
-if elsewhere it were to meet around it the
-same liquid medium which at once is a stimulant
-and a food. This at least is the conclusion we
-may draw from experiments on transplanting, or
-on animal and vegetable grafting. Neither the
-neighbouring elements, nor the whole system act on it
-at a distance by a kind of mysterious induction,
-according to the ideas of the vitalists, in order to
-regulate the activity of the element. They contribute
-solely to the composition of the liquid atmosphere
-which bathes it. They intervene in order to provide
-it with a certain environment whose very characteristic
-physical and chemical constitution regulates its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</span>
-activity. This constitution may be some day imitated
-by the devices of experiment. When that result is
-achieved the anatomical element will live in isolation
-exactly as it lives in the organic association, and the
-mysterious bond which causes its solidarity with the
-rest of the economy will become intelligible. In fact,
-we may defer more or less the maturity of this
-prophecy, but there is no doubt that we are daily
-nearing its fulfilment.</p>
-
-<p>The general life of the complex being is therefore
-the more or less perfect synergy, the <i>ordered process</i> of
-elementary lives. General death is the destruction of
-these partial lives. The nervous system, the instrument
-of this harmony of the parts, represents the
-social bond. It keeps most of the partial elements
-under its sway, and is thus the intermediary of their
-relations. The closer this dependence, the higher the
-development of the nervous apparatus, and the better,
-also, is assured the universal solidarity and therefore
-the unity of the organism. Cellular federation
-assumes the characteristic of a unique individuality
-in proportion to the development of this nervous
-centralization. With an ideal perfect nervous system
-the correlation of the parts would also attain perfection.
-As Cuvier said: “None could experience
-change without a change in the rest.”</p>
-
-<p>But no animal possesses this extreme solidarity of
-the parts of the living economy. It is a philosopher’s
-dream. It is the dream of Kant, to whom the perfect
-organism would be “a teleological system,” a system
-of reciprocal ends and means, a sum total of parts
-each existing for and by the rest, for and by the
-whole. An organism so completely connected would
-be unlikely to live. In fact, living organisms show a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</span>
-little more freedom in the interplay of their parts.
-Their nervous apparatus fortunately does not attain
-this imaginary perfection; their unity is not so
-rigorous. The idea of individuality, of individual
-existence, is therefore not absolute but relative.
-There are all degrees of it according to the development
-of the nervous system. What the man in the
-street and the doctor himself understand by death is
-the situation created by the stopping of the general
-wheels, the brain, the heart, and the lungs. If the
-breath leaves no trace on the glass held to the mouth,
-if the beating of the heart is no longer perceptible by
-the hand which touches or the ear which listens, if the
-movement and the reaction of sensitiveness have
-ceased to be manifest, these signs make us conclude
-that it is death. But this conclusion, as we have said
-before, is a prognostic rather than a judgment of fact.
-It expresses the belief that the subject will certainly
-die, and not that it is from this moment dead. To
-the physiologist the subject is only on the way to die.
-The process has started. The only real death is
-when the universal death of all the elements has been
-consummated.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III_5">CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-<small>PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL CHARACTERS OF CELLULAR
-DEATH. NECROBIOSIS. GROWING OLD.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Characteristic of elementary life—Changes produced by death
-in the composition and the death of the cell—Schlemm;
-Loew; Bokorny; Pflüger; A. Gautier; Duclaux—The
-processive character of death—Accidental death—Necrobiosis—Atrophy—Degeneration—So-called
-natural death—Senescence—Metchnikoff’s
-theory of senescence—Objections.</p>
-
-
-<p>Elementary death is nothing but the suppression
-in the anatomical elements of all the phenomena of
-vitality.</p>
-
-<p><i>Characteristics of Elementary Life.</i>—The characteristic
-features of elementary life have been
-sufficiently fixed by science. First of all, there is
-<i>morphological unity</i>. All the living elements have an
-identical morphological composition. That is to say
-that life is only accomplished and sustained in all its
-fulness in organic units possessing the anatomical
-constitution of the cell, with its cytoplasm and its
-nucleus, constituted on the classical type. In the
-second place, there is <i>chemical unity</i>. The constituent
-matter, the matter of which the cell is built up, diverges
-but little from a chemical type—a proteid complex,
-with a hexonic nucleus, and from a physical model
-which is an emulsion of granulous, immiscible liquids,
-of different viscosities. The third character consists in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</span>
-the possession of a <i>specific form</i> acquired, preserved,
-and repaired by the element. The fourth character,
-and perhaps the most essential of all, is <i>the property
-of growth</i> or <i>nutrition</i> with its consequence, namely, a
-relation of exchanges with the external medium,
-exchanges in which oxygen plays considerable part.
-Finally, there is a last property, that of <i>reproduction</i>,
-which in a certain measure is a necessary consequence
-of the preceding,—<i>i.e.</i>, of growth.</p>
-
-<p>These five vital characters of the elements are most
-in evidence in cells living in isolation, in microscopical
-beings formed of a single cell, protophytes and
-protozoa. But we find them also in the associations
-formed by the cells among one another—<i>i.e.</i>, in
-ordinary plants and animals, multicellular complexes,
-called for this reason metaphytes and metazoa. Free
-or associated, the anatomical elements behave in the
-same way—feed, grow, breathe, digest in the same
-manner. As a matter of fact, the grouping of the
-cells, the relations, proximity and contiguity, which
-they assume, introduce some variants into the expression
-of the common phenomena; but these slight
-differences cannot disguise the essential community
-of the vital processes.</p>
-
-<p>The majority of physiologists, following Claude
-Bernard, admit as valent and convincing the proof that
-the illustrious experimenter furnished of this unity
-of the vital processes. There are, however, a few
-voices crying in the wilderness. M. Le Dantec is one.
-In his new theory of life he amplifies and exalts the
-differences which exist between the elementary life of
-the proteids and the associated life of the metazoa.
-In them he can see nothing but contrasts and
-deviations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</span></p>
-
-<p>If this is elementary life, let us ask what is
-<i>elementary death</i>—<i>i.e.</i>, the death of the cell. And in
-this connection let us ask the questions which we have
-to examine in the case of animals high in organization,
-and of man himself. What are the characteristics
-of elementary death? When the cell dies, is its death
-preceded by a growing old or senescence? What are
-the preliminary signs and the acknowledged symptoms?</p>
-
-<p><i>Changes Produced by Death.</i>—The state of death is
-only truly realized when the fundamental properties
-of living matter enumerated above have entirely
-disappeared. We must follow step by step this disappearance
-in all the anatomical elements of the
-metazoan.</p>
-
-<p>Now the properties of the cell are connected with
-the physical and chemical organization of living
-matter. For them to disappear entirely, this organization
-must be destroyed as far as all that is essential
-in it is concerned. We cannot admit with the
-vitalists that there is any material difference between
-the dead and the living, and that only an immaterial
-principle which has escaped into the air distinguishes
-the corpse from the animated being. In fact, the
-external configuration may be almost preserved, and
-the corpse may bear the aspect and the forms of the
-preceding state. But this appearance is deceptive.
-Something in reality has changed. The structure,
-the chemical composition of the living substance,
-have undergone essential changes. What are these
-changes?</p>
-
-<p><i>Physical Changes.</i>—Certain physiologists have
-endeavoured to determine them. Klemm, a botanist,
-pointed out in 1895 the physical changes which
-characterize the death of vegetable cells—loss of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</span>
-turgescence, fragmentation of the protoplasm, the
-formation of granules, and the appearance of vacuoles.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chemical Changes.</i>—O. Loew and Bokorny laid
-great stress in 1886 and 1896 on the chemical changes.
-The living protoplasm according to them is an
-unstable proteid compound. A slight change would
-detach from the albuminoid molecule a nucleus with
-the function of aldehyde, and at the same time would
-transform an amido-group into an amido-group. This
-would suffice for the transition of the protoplasm from
-the living to the dead state. This theory is based on
-the fact that the compounds which exercise a toxic
-action on the living cell, without acting chemically on
-the dead albumin, are easily fixed by the aldehydes;
-and on the fact that many of them, which attack
-simultaneously the living albuminoids and the dead
-albumin, easily combine with the amido-group.</p>
-
-<p>E. Pflüger, a celebrated German scientist, has
-considered living matter as an albumin spontaneously
-decomposable, the essential nucleus of which is formed
-by cyanogen. Its active instability would be due to
-the penetration into the molecule of the oxygen which
-fixes on the carbon and separates it from the nitrogen.
-Armand Gautier has not confirmed this view.
-Duclaux (1898) has stated that the difference between
-the living and the dead albumin would be of a stereochemical
-order.</p>
-
-<p><i>Progressive Character of Death. Accidental Death.</i>—We
-have seen that in general the disappearance of
-the characteristics of vitality is not instantaneous, at
-least in the natural course of things, in complex organisms.
-It is the end of a more or less rapid process. But
-death is not instantaneous in the isolated anatomical
-element any more than it is in the protozoan or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</span>
-protophyte. We must have recourse to very violent
-devices of destruction to kill the cell at a blow, to
-leave absolutely nothing of its organization existing.
-The protoplasm of yeast when violently crushed by
-Büchner still possessed the power of secreting soluble
-ferments. A powerful action, a very high temperature,
-is necessary to obtain the result. <i>A fortiori</i>,
-the difficulty increases in the case of complex organisms,
-all of whose living elements cannot be attacked
-at the same moment by the destructive cause. A
-mechanical action, capable of destroying at one blow
-all the living parts of a complex being, of an animal,
-of a plant, must be of almost inconceivable power.
-The blow of a Nasmyth hammer would not be strong
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>The chemical alteration produced by a very toxic
-substance distributed throughout the blood, and thus
-brought into contact with each element, would produce
-a disorganization which, however rapid it were, could
-not be called instantaneous. And the same holds
-good of physical agents.</p>
-
-<p>But these are not the processes of nature under
-normal circumstances. They are accidents or devices.
-We shall leave on one side their consideration and
-we shall only deal here with the natural processes of
-the organism.</p>
-
-<p>Imagine it placed in a medium appropriate to its
-needs and following out without intervening complications
-the evolution assigned to it by its
-constitution. Experiment tells us that this natural
-evolution in every case known to us ends in death.
-Death supervenes sooner or later. For beings higher
-in organization, which we can bring into closer and
-closer resemblance to man, we find that they die of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</span>
-disease, by accident, or of old age. And as disease
-is an accident, we may naturally ask if what we call
-old age is not also a disease.</p>
-
-<p>However that may be, the mortal process, being
-never instantaneous, has a duration, a beginning, a
-development, an end—in a word, a history. It
-constitutes an intermediary phase between perfect
-life and certain death.</p>
-
-<p><i>Necrobiosis.</i> <i>Atrophy.</i> <i>Degeneration.</i>—The process
-according to the circumstances may be shortened or
-prolonged. When death is the result of violence
-events are precipitated. The physical and chemical
-transformations of the living matter constitute a kind
-of acute alteration called by Schultze and Virchow
-<i>necrobiosis</i>. According to the pathologists, there are
-two kinds of <i>necrobiosis</i>:—that by <i>destruction</i>, by
-<i>simple atrophy</i>, which causes the anatomical elements
-to disappear gradually without undergoing appreciable
-modifications; and <i>necrobiosis by degeneration</i>,
-which transforms the protoplasm into fatty matter
-into calcareous matter, into granulations (fatty degeneration,
-calcification, granulous degeneration).
-There is no disagreement as to the causes of this
-necrobiosis. They are always accidental; they
-originate in external circumstances:—the insufficiency
-of the alimentary materials, of water, of oxygen; the
-presence in the medium of real poisons destroying
-the organized matter; the violent intervention of
-physical agents, heat, electricity; the reflex on the
-composition of the cellular atmosphere of a violent
-attack on some essential organ, the heart, the lungs,
-the kidneys.</p>
-
-<p><i>Senescence.</i> <i>Old Age.</i>—In a second category we
-must place the mortal processes, slow in their move<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</span>ment,
-in which we cannot see the intervention of
-clearly accidental and abnormal disturbing agents.
-Death appears to be the termination of a breaking-up
-proceeding by insensible degrees in consequence of the
-progressive accumulation of very small inappreciable
-perturbations. This slow breaking up is adequately
-expressed by the term—growing old, or senescence.
-The alterations by which it is betrayed in the cell are
-especially <i>atrophic</i>, but they are also accompanied,
-however, by different forms of degeneration. An
-extremely important question arises on this subject,
-and that is whether the phenomena of senility have
-their cause in the cell itself, if they are inevitably
-found in its organization, and therefore if old age and
-death are natural and necessary phenomena. Or, on
-the other hand, should we consider them as due to a
-progressive alteration of the medium, the character of
-which would be accidental although frequent or
-habitual? This, in a word, is the problem which has
-so often engaged the attention of philosophical
-biologists. Are old age and death natural and
-inevitable phenomena?</p>
-
-<p>The recent experiments of Loeb and Calkins, and
-all similar observations, tend to attribute to the
-phenomenon of growing old the character of a
-remediable accident. But the remedy has not been
-found, and the animal finally succumbs to these slow
-transformations of its anatomical elements. We then
-say that it <i>dies of old age</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Metchnikoff’s Theory of Senescence. Objections.</i>—Metchnikoff
-has proposed a theory of the mechanism
-of this general senescence. The elements of the
-conjunctive tissue, phagocytes, macrophages, which
-exist everywhere around the specialized and higher<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</span>
-anatomical elements would destroy and devour them
-as soon as their vitality diminishes, and would take
-their place. In the brain, for example, it would be
-the phagocytes which, attacking the nervous cellules,
-would disorganize the higher elements, incapable of
-defending themselves. This substitution of the conjunctive
-tissue, which only possesses vegetative properties
-of a low order, for the nervous tissues, which
-possesses very high vegetative properties, results in
-an evident breaking-up. The gross element of
-violent and energetic vitality stifles the refined and
-higher element.</p>
-
-<p>This expulsion is a very real fact. It constitutes
-what is called senile sclerosis. But the active <i>rôle</i>
-attributed to it by Metchnikoff in the process of
-degeneration is not so certain. An expert observer
-in the microscopic study of the nervous system, M.
-Marinesco, does not accept this interpretation as far
-as the senescence of the elements of the brain is concerned.
-Diminution of the cell, the decrease in the
-number of its stainable granulations, chromatolysis,
-the formation of inert, pigmented substances—all
-these phenomena which characterize the breaking-up
-of the cerebral cells would be accomplished, according
-to this observer, without the intervention of the
-conjunctive elements, the phagocytes.</p>
-
-<p>The characteristic of extensive and progressive
-process presented by death necessitates in a complex
-organism, which is a prey to it, the existence
-side by side of living and dead cells. Similarly, in
-the organism which is growing old, there are young
-elements and elements of every age side by side with
-senile elements. As long as the disorganization of
-the last has not gone too far, they may be rejuvenated.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</span>
-All we have to do is to restore to them an appropriate
-ambient medium. The whole question is one of
-knowing and being able to realize, for this or that
-part which we wish to reanimate and to rejuvenate,
-the very special or very delicate conditions that this
-medium must fulfil. As we have said, success is
-attained in this respect as far as the heart is concerned,
-and this is why we are able to reanimate and
-to revive the heart of a dead man. It is hoped that
-ideas along these lines will extend with the progress
-of physiology.</p>
-
-<p>After this sketch of the conditions and of the
-varieties of cellular death we must return to the
-essential problem which is engaging the curiosity of
-biologists and philosophers. Is death unavoidable,
-inevitable? Is it the necessary consequence of life
-itself, the inevitable issue, the inevitable end?</p>
-
-<p>There are two ways of endeavouring to solve this
-question of the inevitability of death. The first is to
-examine popular observation, practised, so to speak,
-unintelligently and without special precautions. The
-second is to analyze everything we know relative to
-the conditions of elementary life.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV_5">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-
-<small>THE APPARENT PERENNITY OF COMPLEX
-INDIVIDUALS.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Millenary trees—Plants with a definite rhizome—Vegetables
-reproduced by cuttings—Animal colonies—Destruction due
-to extrinsic causes—Difficulty of interpretation.</p>
-
-
-<p>Popular opinion teaches us that living beings have
-only a transient existence, and as a poet has said:
-“Life is but a flash between two dark nights.” But,
-on the other hand, simple observation shows us, or
-appears to show us, beings whose duration of existence
-is far longer, and practically illimitable.</p>
-
-<p><i>Millenary Trees.</i>—We know of trees of venerable
-antiquity. Among these patriarchs of the vegetable
-world there is a chestnut tree on Mount Etna which
-is ten centuries old, and an ivy in Scotland which is
-said to be thirty centuries old. Trees of 5000 years
-old are not absolutely unknown. We may mention
-among those of that age the famous dragon tree<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> at
-Orotava, in the island of Teneriffe. Two other
-examples are known in California—the pseudo-cedar,
-or <i>Tascodium</i>, at Sacramento, and a <i>Sequoïa gigantea</i>.
-We know that the olive tree may live 700 years.
-There are cedars 800 years old and oaks of the age of
-1,500 years.</p>
-
-<p><i>Plants with a Rhizome.</i>—Vegetable species of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</span>
-almost unlimited duration of life are known to
-botanists. Such, for instance, are plants with a
-definite rhizome, such as colchicum. Autumnal
-colchicum has a subterranean root, the bulb of
-which pushes out every year fresh axes for a new
-bloom; and as each of these new axes stretches out
-an almost constant length, a botanist once set himself
-the singular problem of discovering how long it would
-take such a foot, if suitably directed, to travel round
-the world.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vegetables Reproduced by Cuttings.</i>—Vegetables reproduced
-by slips furnish another example of living
-beings of indefinite duration. The weeping willows
-which adorn the banks of sheets of water in the parks
-and gardens throughout the whole of Europe have
-sprung, directly or indirectly, from slips of the first
-<i>Salix Babylonica</i> introduced to the West. May it not
-be said that they are the permanent fragments of that
-one and the same willow?</p>
-
-<p><i>Animal Colonies.</i>—These examples, as well as those
-furnished to zoologists by the consideration of the
-polypi which have produced by their slow growth the
-reefs, or <i>atolls</i>, of the Polynesian seas, do not, however,
-prove the perennity of living beings. The
-argument is valueless, for it is founded upon a confusion.
-It turns on the difficulty that biologists
-experience in defining the individual. The oak and
-the polypus are not simple individuals, but associations
-of individuals, or, to use Hegel’s expression,
-the nations of which we see the successive generations.
-We give to this succession of generations a
-unique existence, and our reasoning comes to this,
-that we confer on each present citizen of this social
-body the antiquity which belongs to the whole.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Destruction of the Social Individual due to Extrinsic
-Causes.</i>—As for the destruction, the death of this
-social individual, of this hundred-year-old tree, it
-seems indeed that there is no ground for considering
-it a natural necessity. We find the sufficient reason
-of its usual end in the repercussion on the individual
-of external and contingent circumstances. The cause
-of the death of a tree, of an oak many centuries old,
-is to be found in the ambient conditions, and not in
-some internal condition. Cold and heat, damp and
-dryness, the weight of the snow, the mechanical
-action of the rain, of hail, of winds unchained, of
-lightning; the ravages of insects and parasites—these
-are what really work its ruin. And further,
-the new branches, appearing every year and increasing
-the load the trunk has to bear, increase the
-pressure of the parts, and make more difficult the
-motion of the sap. But for these obstacles, external,
-so to speak, to the vegetable being itself, it would
-continue indefinitely to bloom, to fructify, and as
-each spring returned to show fresh buds.</p>
-
-<p><i>Difficulty of Interpretation.</i>—In this as in all other
-examples we must know the nature of the beings that
-we see lasting on and braving the centuries. Is it the
-individual? Is it the species? Is it a living being,
-properly so called, having its unity and its individuality,
-or is it a series of generations succeeding
-one another in time and extending in space? In a
-word, the question is one of knowing if we have to do
-with a real tree or with a genealogical tree. We are
-just as uncertain when we deal with animals. What
-is the being that lasts on—a series of generations or
-an individual? This doubt forbids us to draw any
-conclusion from the observation of complex beings.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</span>
-We must therefore return from them to the <i>elementary
-being</i>; and we must examine it from the point of view
-of perennity or of vital decay. Let us then ask the
-questions that we have already examined with reference
-to animals high in organization and to man
-himself. Is the death of the cell an inevitable characteristic?
-Are there any cells, protophytes, protozoa,
-which are immortal?</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V_5">CHAPTER V.<br />
-
-<small>THE IMMORTALITY OF THE PROTOZOA.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Impossibility of life without evolution—Law of increase and
-division—Immortality of the protozoa—Death, a phenomenon
-of adaptation which has appeared in the course of
-the ages—The infusoria—The death of the infusoria—Two
-kinds of reproduction—The caryogamic rejuvenescence of
-Maupas—Calkins on rejuvenescence—Causes of senescence—Impossibility
-of life without evolution.</p>
-
-
-<p>We take into account, <i>a priori</i>, the conditions that
-must be fulfilled by the monocellular being in order
-to escape the inevitability of evolution, of the succession
-of ages, of old age, and of death. It must be
-able indefinitely to maintain itself in a normal régime,
-without changing, without increasing, maintaining its
-constant morphological and chemical composition, in
-an environment vast enough for it to be unaltered by
-the borrowings or the spendings resulting from its
-nutrition—<i>i.e.</i>, it must remain constant in the presence
-of the constant being. We might conceive of a
-nutrition perfect enough, of exchanges exact enough,
-and regular enough, for the state of things to be
-indefinitely maintained. This would be absolute
-permanence realized in the vital mobility.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Law of Growth and Division.</i>—This model of
-a perfect and invariable machine does not exist in
-nature. Life is incompatible with the absolute per<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</span>manence
-of the dimensions and the forms of the living
-organism.</p>
-
-<p>In a word, it is a rigorous law of living nature that
-the cell can neither live indefinitely without growth,
-nor grow indefinitely without division.</p>
-
-<p>Why is this so? Why is there this impossibility
-of a regular régime in which the cell would be maintained
-in magnitude without diminution or increase?
-Why has nutrition as a necessary consequence the
-growth of the element? This is what we do not
-positively know.</p>
-
-<p>Things are so. It is an irreducible fact, peculiar to
-the protoplasm, a characteristic of the living matter
-of the cell. It is the fundamental basis of the property
-of generation. That is all we can say about it.
-Real living beings have therefore inevitably an evolution.
-They are not unchangeable. In its simple form
-this evolution consists in the fact that the cell grows,
-divides, and diminishes by this division, begins the
-upward march which ends in a new division. And
-so on.</p>
-
-<p><i>Immortality of the Protozoa.</i>—It may happen, and
-it does happen in fact, that this series of acts is
-repeated indefinitely at any rate unless an accidental
-cause should interrupt it. The animal thus describes
-an indefinite curve, constituted by a series of indentations,
-the highest point of which corresponds to the
-maximum of size, and the lowest point to the
-diminution which succeeds the division. This state of
-things has no inevitable end if the medium does not
-change. The being is immortal.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, the compound beings of a single cell, protophytes
-and protozoa, the algae and the unicellular
-mushrooms, at the minimum stage of differentiation,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</span>
-escape the necessity of death. They have not, as
-Weismann remarks, the real immortality of the gods
-of mythology, who were invulnerable. On the contrary,
-they are infinitely vulnerable, fragile, and
-perishable; myriads die every moment. But their
-death is not inevitable. They succumb to accidents,
-never to old age.</p>
-
-<p>Imagine one of these beings placed in a culture
-medium favourable to the full exercise of its activities,
-and, moreover, wide enough in its extent to be unaffected
-by the infinitely small quantities of material
-which the animal may take from it or expel into it.
-Suppose, for example, it is an infusorian in an ocean.
-In this invariable medium the being lives, increases,
-and grows continually. When it has reached the
-limits of a size fixed by its specific law, it divides into
-two parts, which are indistinguishable the one from
-the other. It leaves one of its halves to colonize in its
-neighbourhood, and it begins its evolution as before.
-There is no reason why the fact should not be repeated
-indefinitely, since nothing is changed, either
-in the medium or in the animal.</p>
-
-<p>To sum up. The phenomena which take place in
-the cell of the protozoan do not behave as a cause of
-check. The medium allows the organism to revictual
-and to discharge itself in such a way and with such
-perfection that the animal is always living in a regular
-régime, and, with the exception of its growth and
-later on of its division, there is nothing changed
-in it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Death a Phenomenon of Adaptation—It appeared in
-the Course of the Ages.</i>—This immortality belongs in
-principle to all the protista which are reproduced by
-simple and equal division. If it be remarked that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</span>
-these rudimentary organisms endowed with perennity
-are the first living forms which have shown themselves
-on the surface of the globe, and that they have
-no doubt preceded many others—the multicellular,
-for instance, which are liable, on the contrary, to
-decay—the conclusion is obvious:—Life has long
-existed without death. Death has been a phenomenon
-of adaptation which has appeared in the
-course of the ages in consequence of the evolution of
-species.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Death of Infusoria.</i>—We may ask ourselves at
-what moment in the history of the globe, at what
-period of the evolution of its fauna, this novelty,
-death, made its appearance. The celebrated experiments
-of Maupas on the senescence of the infusoria
-seem to authorize us to give a precise answer to this
-question. By means of these experiments we are
-led to believe that death must have appeared
-at the same time as sexual reproduction. Death
-became possible when this process of generation
-was established, not in all its plenitude, but in its
-humblest beginnings, under the rudimentary forms
-of unequal division and of conjugation. This
-happened when the infusoria began to people the
-waters.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Two Modes of Multiplication.</i>—Infusoria are, in
-fact, capable of multiplication by simple division.
-It is true to say that in addition to this resource, the
-only one which interests us here, because it is the
-only one which confers immortality, they possess
-another. They present and exercise under certain
-circumstances a second mode of reproduction, caryogamic
-conjugation. It is a rather complicated
-process in its detail, but it is definitively summed up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</span>
-as the temporary pairing of two individuals, which
-are otherwise very much alike, and which cannot be
-distinguished as male and female. They become
-closely united on one of their faces; they reciprocally
-exchange a semi-nucleus which passes into the conjoint
-individual; and then they separate. But
-infusoria can be prevented from this conjunction by
-regularly isolating them immediately after their birth.
-Then they grow, and are constrained after a lapse of
-time to divide according to the first method.</p>
-
-<p>Maupas has shown that the infusoria could not
-accommodate themselves to this régime indefinitely;
-they could not go on dividing for ever. After a
-certain number of divisions they show signs of
-degeneration and of evident decay. The size
-diminishes, the nuclear organs become atrophied,
-all the activities fail, and the infusorian perishes.
-It succumbs to this kind of senile atrophy unless it
-is given an opportunity of conjugation with another
-infusorian in the same plight. In this act it then
-derives new strength, it grows larger, attains its
-proper size, and builds up its organs once more.
-Conjugation gives it life, youth, and immortality.</p>
-
-<p><i>Alimentary Rejuvenescence.</i>—Recent observations
-due to Mr. G. N. Calkins, an American biologist,
-and confirmed by other investigators, have shown
-that this method of rejuvenescence is not the only
-one, and is not even the most efficacious. Conjugation
-has no mysterious, specific virtue. The
-infusoria need not be married in order to be
-rejuvenated. It is sufficient to improve their food.
-In the case of the “tailed” paramecium we may
-substitute beef broth and phosphates for conjugation.
-Calkins observed 665 consecutive generations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</span>
-without blemish, without exhaustion, and without
-any sign of old age. Plenty of food and simple
-drugs have successfully resisted senility and the
-train of atrophic degenerations which it involves.</p>
-
-<p><i>Causes of Senescence.</i>—As for the causes of senescence
-which have been remedied with such success,
-they are not exactly known. Calkins thinks that
-senescence results from the progressive losses to the
-organism of some substance essential to life. Conjugation
-or intensive alimentation would act by building
-up again this necessary compound. G. Loisel
-believes on the contrary that it is a matter of the
-progressive accumulation of toxic products due to a
-kind of alimentary auto-intoxication.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI_5">CHAPTER VI.<br />
-
-<small>LETHALITY OF THE METAZOA AND OF
-DIFFERENTIATED CELLS.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">Evolution and death of metazoa.—Possible rejuvenescence of
-the differentiated cells by the conditions of the medium.—Conditions
-of the medium for immortal cells.—The
-immortal elements of metazoa.—The element in accidental
-and remediable death.—Somatic cells and sexual cells.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Evolution and Death of Metazoa.</i>—We have seen
-that the infusoria are no longer animals in which
-material exchanges take place with sufficient perfection,
-and in which cellular division, the consequence
-of growth, is produced with sufficient precision and
-equality for life to be carried on indefinitely in
-a perfect equilibrium in the appropriate medium
-without alteration or check. <i>A fortiori</i> we no
-longer find the perfect regularity of nutritive
-exchange in the classes above them. In a word,
-starting from this inferior group, there are no
-animated beings in the state of existence which
-Le Dantec calls “condition <span class="allsmcap">Iº</span> of manifested life?”
-Living matter, instead of being continually kept
-identical in conditions of identical media, is modified
-in the course of existence. It becomes dependent on
-time. It describes a declining trajectory; it experiences
-evolution, decay, and death. Thus the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</span>
-fundamental condition of invariable youth and
-of immortality fails in all metazoa. The vital
-wastes accumulate in all through the insufficiency
-or the imperfection of nutritive absorption or of
-excretion. Life decays; the organism progressively
-alters, and thus is constituted that state of decrepitude
-by atrophy or chemical modification
-which we call senescence, and which ends in death.
-To sum up, old age and death may be attributed to
-cellular differentiation.</p>
-
-<p><i>Possible Alimentary Rejuvenescence of the Differentiated
-Cells—Conditions of Medium.</i>—We must add,
-however—as the teaching of experiments in general
-and in particular as the teaching of the experiments
-of Loeb and of Calkins—that a slight change of the
-environment, made at the right time, is capable of
-re-establishing equilibrium and of completely rejuvenating
-the infusorian. Senescence has not in
-this case a definitive any more than an intrinsic
-character; a modification in the composition of the
-alimentary medium will successfully resist it. If we
-are allowed to generalize this result, it may be said
-that senescence, the declining trajectory, the evolution
-step by step down to death, are not for the
-cells considered in isolation an inevitable and essentially
-inherent in the organism, and a rigorous consequence
-of life itself. They preserve an accidental
-character. In senescence and death there is no
-really natural, internal cause, inexorable, and irremediable,
-as was claimed in the past by J. Müller,
-and more recently by Cohnheim in Germany and
-Sedgwick Minot in America.</p>
-
-<p><i>Conditions of the Medium for Immortal Cells.</i>—As
-for the cells which are less differentiated, the proto<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</span>phytes
-and the protozoa situated one degree lower in
-the scale than the infusoria, we must admit the
-possibility of that perfect and continuous equilibrium
-which would save them from senile decrepitude.
-And it is quite understood that this privilege remains
-subordinated to the perfect constancy of the
-appropriate medium. If the latter changes, the
-equilibrium is broken, the small insensible perturbations
-of nutrition accumulate, vital activity
-decays, and in sole consequence of the imperfection
-of the extrinsic conditions or of the medium, the
-living being finds itself once more dragged down to
-decay and to death.</p>
-
-<p><i>Immortal Elements of the Metazoa.</i>—All the preceding
-facts and considerations refer to isolated cells,
-to monocellular beings. But, and this is what makes
-these truths so interesting, they may be extended to
-all cells grouped in collectivity—i.e., to all the
-animals and living beings that we know. In the
-complicated edifice of the organism, the anatomical
-elements, at any rate the least differentiated, would
-have a continual brevet of immortality. Generally
-speaking, this would be the case for the egg, for the
-sexual elements, and perhaps, too, for the white
-globules of the blood, the leucocytes. And, further,
-around each of these elements must be realized the
-invariably perfect medium which is the necessary
-condition. This does not take place.</p>
-
-<p><i>Elements in Accidental and Remediable Death.</i>—As
-for the other elements, they are like the infusoria,
-but without the resource of conjugation. The
-ambient medium becomes exhausted and intoxicated
-around each cell, in consequence of the accidents
-which happen to the other cells. Each therefore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</span>
-undergoes progressive decay, and finally they
-perish—the decay and destruction being perhaps
-in principle accidental, but, in fact, they are the
-rule.</p>
-
-<p>The different anatomical elements of the organism
-are more or less sensitive to those perturbations which
-cause senescence, necrobiosis, and death. There are
-some more fragile and more exposed. Some are
-more resisting, and finally, there are some which
-are really immortal. We have just said that the
-sexual cell, the ovum, is one. It follows that the
-metazoan, man for instance, cannot entirely die.
-Let us consider one of these beings. Its ancestors,
-so to speak, have not entirely disappeared; each has
-left the fertile egg, the surviving element from which
-has issued the being of which we speak; and when
-it in its turn has developed, part of that ovum has
-been placed in reserve for a new generation. The
-death of the elements is not therefore universal.
-The metazoan is divided from the beginning into
-two parts. On the one hand are the cells destined
-to form the body, <i>somatic</i> cells. They will die. On
-the other hand are the <i>reproductive</i>, or <i>germinal</i>, or
-<i>sexual</i> cells, capable of living indefinitely.</p>
-
-<p><i>Somatic and Sexual Cells.</i>—In this sense we may
-say with Weismann that there are two things in
-the animal and in man—the one mortal, the <i>soma</i>
-the body, the other immortal, the <i>germen</i>. These
-germinal cells, as in the case of the protozoa we
-mentioned above, possess a conditional immortality.
-They are imperishable, but on the contrary, are
-fragile and vulnerable. Millions of ova are destroyed
-and are disappearing every moment. They may die
-by accident, but never of old age.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</span></p>
-
-<p>We now understand that if the protistae are
-immortal, it is because these living beings, reduced
-to a single cell, accumulate in it the compound
-characters of the somatic cell and germinal cell,
-and enjoy the privilege which is attached to the
-latter.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII_5">CHAPTER VII.<br />
-
-<small>MAN. THE INSTINCT OF LIFE AND THE INSTINCT
-OF DEATH.</small></h3></div>
-
-
-<p class="prel">The miseries of humanity: 1. Disease; 2. Old age.—Old age
-considered as a chronic disease.—Its occasional cause.—3.
-The disharmonies of human nature; 4. The instinct of life
-and the instinct of death.</p>
-
-
-<p>Man’s unhappy plight is the constant theme of
-philosophies and religions. Without referring to its
-moral basis, it has a physical basis due to four
-causes—the physical imperfection or disharmony of
-nature, disease, old age, and death—or rather of
-three, for what we call old age is perhaps a simple
-disease. These are the great sorrows of man, the
-sources of all his woes. Disease attacks him, old age
-awaits him, and death must tear him from all the
-ties which he has formed. All his pleasures are
-poisoned by the certain knowledge that they last
-but for a moment, that they are as precarious as his
-health, his youth, and his life itself.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 1. <span class="smcap">Disease.</span></h4>
-
-<p>Disease, frequent, constant, and inevitable as it is,
-is, however, nothing but a fact outside the natural
-order. Its character is clearly accidental, and it
-interrupts the normal cycle of evolution. Medical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</span>
-observation teaches us, on the other hand, that the
-health of the body reacts on that of the mind; and
-therefore man as a whole, moral and physical, is
-affected by disease. Bacon described a diseased
-body as a jailer to the soul, and the healthy body as
-a host. Pascal recognized in diseases a principle of
-error. “They spoil our judgment and our senses.”</p>
-
-<p>I am not expressing a chimerical hope when I
-predict that science will conquer disease. Medicine
-has at last issued from the contemplative attitude
-of so many centuries; it has engaged in the
-struggle, and signs of victory are already appearing.
-Disease is no longer the mysterious power which it
-was impossible to escape. Pasteur gave to it a body.
-The microbe can be caught. In the words of
-Schopenhauer, an alteration of the atmosphere so
-slight that it is impossible to detect it by chemical
-analysis may bring on cholera, yellow fever, the
-black plague, diseases which carry off thousands of
-men; and a slightly greater alteration might endanger
-all life. The at once mysterious and terrifying spectacle
-of the cholera at Berlin in 1831 had such an
-effect on the philosopher that he fled in terror to
-Frankfort. It has been said that this was the origin
-of his pessimism, and that but for this he would have
-continued to teach idealistic philosophy in some
-Prussian university. L. Hartmann, another celebrated
-leader of contemporary pessimism, has also
-said that disease will always be beyond the resources
-of medicine. Facts have given the lie to these
-sombre prognostics. The microbic origin of most infectious
-diseases has been recognized. The discovery
-of attenuated poisons and serums has diminished
-their gravity. An exact knowledge of methods of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</span>
-contagion has enabled us to erect against them impregnable
-barriers. Cholera, yellow fever, the plague
-knock in vain at our doors. Diphtheria, dreaded by
-every mother, has partially lost its deadly character.
-Puerperal fever and blindness of the new-born child
-are tending to disappear. Legend tells us that
-Buddha in his youth, frightened at the sight of a
-sick man, expressed in his father’s presence the wish
-to be always in perfect health and sheltered from
-disease. The King answered: “My son! you are
-asking the impossible.” But it is towards the
-realization of this impossibility that we are on our
-way. Science is repelling the attacks of disease.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 2. <span class="smcap">Old Age.</span></h4>
-
-<p>Old age is another sorrow of humanity. The
-stage of existence in which the strength grows less
-and never grows greater, and in which a thousand
-infirmities appear, is not, however, a stage universal
-in animals. Most of them die without our perceiving
-in them any apparent signs of senile weakness. On
-the other hand, some vegetables exhibit these signs.
-Some trees are old; but it is in birds and mammals
-that this decay, with the train of evils which accompanies
-it, becomes a very marked phase of existence.
-In man to debility is added a bodily shrinkage, grey
-hairs, withered skin, and the wearing out and loss of
-teeth. The exhausted and atrophied organism offers
-a favourable field to all intercurrent diseases and to
-every cause of destruction. It is this discrepitude
-which makes old age so hateful. All desire to be
-old, said Cicero; and when they are old, they say
-that old age has come quicker than they expected.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</span>
-La Bruyère expresses it in an apothegm, “We want
-to grow old, and we fear old age.” One would like
-longevity without old age.</p>
-
-<p>But can life be prolonged without senility diminishing
-its value? Metchnikoff thinks it can. He
-more or less clearly catches a glimpse of a normal
-evolution of existence which would make it longer
-and nevertheless exempt from senile decay.</p>
-
-<p>It is remarkable that we have so few scientific data
-on the old age of man, and we have still fewer on
-that of animals. The biologist knows no more than
-the layman. The old age of the dog is betrayed by
-its gait. Its coat loses its lustre, just as in disease.
-The hair whitens around the forehead and the
-muzzle. The teeth grow blunt and drop out. The
-character loses its gaiety and becomes gloomy; the
-animal becomes indifferent. He ceases to bark, and
-often becomes blind and deaf.</p>
-
-<p>It is admitted that senile degeneration is due to an
-alteration affecting most of the tissues. The cells,
-the special anatomical elements of the liver, the
-kidney, and the brain are reduced by atrophy and
-degeneration. At the same time, the conjunctive
-woof which serves them as a support develops, on
-the contrary, at the expense in a measure of the
-higher elements. For this reason the tissues harden.
-We know that the flesh of old animals is tough. We
-know in pathology that this is happening to the
-tissues. It is due to growth, to injury to the
-active and important elements, to the elements of
-support of the organs. They form a tissue sometimes
-called packed tissue, to show its secondary rôle
-with reference to the elements which are deposited
-in it. This kind of degeneration of the organs is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</span>
-known as sclerosis. It constitutes the characteristic
-lesion of a certain number of chronic diseases; and
-these diseases are serious, for the stifling of the
-characteristic elements by the less important elements
-of the conjunctive or packed tissue results in
-the more or less complete reduction or suppression
-of the function.</p>
-
-<p>The blood vessels also undergo this transformation,
-and what we may call universal trouble and danger
-ensue. This sclerosis of the arteries, this arterio-sclerosis,
-not only deprives the walls of the blood
-vessels of the suppleness and elasticity which are
-necessary for the proper irrigation of the organs, but
-it makes them more fragile. Thus it becomes a
-cause of hemorrhage, which is a very serious matter
-as far as the brain and lungs are concerned.</p>
-
-<p>It is remarkable that the alteration of the tissues
-during old age should be exactly similar to this.
-This is inferred from the few researches that have
-been made on the subject—from those of Demange
-in 1886, of Merkel in 1891, and finally from the
-researches of Metchnikoff himself. It is a generalized
-sclerosis. As its consequence we have the lowering
-of the proper activity of the organs and the danger
-of cerebral hemorrhage created by arterio-sclerosis.
-The transformations of the tissues in old men are
-therefore summed up in the atrophy of the important
-and specific elements of the tissues, and their replacement
-by the hypertrophied conjunctive tissue. This
-sclerosis is comparable to that of chronic diseases;
-it is a pathological condition. Thus old age, as we
-understand it, is a chronic disease and not a normal
-phase of the vital cycle.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, if we ask ourselves what is the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</span>
-origin of the scleroses which engender chronic
-diseases, we find that they are due to the action of
-various poisons, among which syphilitic poison and
-the immoderate use of alcohol take the first place.
-These are also the usual causes of senile degeneration.
-But there must be some other, some very
-general cause to explain the universality of the
-process of senescence. Metchnikoff thinks that he
-has found this cause in the microbes which swarm in
-man’s digestive tube, particularly in the large intestine.
-Their number is enormous. Strassburger
-has given an approximate calculation, but words fail
-to express it. We have to imagine a figure followed
-by fifteen zeros. This microbic flora is composed of
-“bacilli” and of “cocci,” and comprises a third of
-the rejected matter. It produces slow poisons,
-which, being at once reabsorbed, pass into the blood
-and provoke the constant irritation from which
-results arterio-sclerosis and the universal sclerosis
-of old age. Instead of enjoying a healthy and
-normal old age, in which the faculties of ripening
-years are preserved, we drag out a diminished life,
-a kind of chronic disease, which is ordinary old age.
-This is due, according to Metchnikoff, to the parasitism
-and the symbiosis of microbic flora, lodged in
-a part of the economy in which it finds all the conditions
-favourable to its prolific expansion. Such is
-the specious theory, held to the verge of intrepidity,
-by which this investigator explains the misery of our
-old age, and which inspires him with the idea of a
-remedy. For his observations conclude with a
-régime, a series of prescriptions by which the author
-fancies that life may be lengthened and the evils of
-old age swept from our path. The dangerous flora<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</span>
-must be transformed into a cultivated and selected
-flora. Although the organ in question may be of
-doubtful utility, and although its existence, the
-legacy of atavic heredity, must be considered as a
-disharmony of human nature, Metchnikoff does not
-go so far as to propose that it should be cut away,
-and that we should call in surgery to assist in making
-mankind perfect! But the rational means he proposes
-will be endorsed by the most judicious students
-of hygiene; and their effect, if it is not as wonderful
-as one hopes for, cannot fail to ameliorate the
-conditions of old age and make it more vigorous.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 3. <span class="smcap">Disharmonies in Human Nature.</span></h4>
-
-<p>Another misery in the condition of man is due to
-the dissidencies of his nature—that is to say, to his
-physical imperfections and the discordancies which
-exist between the physiological functions and the
-instincts which should regulate them.</p>
-
-<p>This discordance reigns throughout the physical
-organism. The body of man is not the perfect
-masterpiece it was once supposed to be. It is
-encumbered with annoying inutilities, with rudimentary
-organs that have neither rôle nor function,
-unfinished sketches which nature has left in the
-different parts of his body. Such are the lachrymal
-caruncle, a vestige of the third eyebrow in mammals;
-the extrinsic muscles of the ear; the pineal gland of
-the brain, which is only the rudiment of an ancestral
-organ; the third eye, or the Cyclopean eye of the
-saurians. The list is interminable. Wiedersheim has
-counted in man 107 of these abortive hereditary
-organs, the useless vestiges of organs useful to our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</span>
-remote animal ancestors, atrophied in the course of
-ages in consequence of modifications that have taken
-place in the external medium.</p>
-
-<p>These rudimentary organs are not only useless;
-they are often positively harmful.</p>
-
-<p>But the most serious discordance is that which
-exists between the physiological functions and the
-instincts which regulate them. In a well-regulated
-organism slowly developed by adaptation the instincts
-and the organs alike should be in relation with the
-functions. All really natural acts are solicited by
-an instinct, the satisfaction of which is at once a
-need and a pleasure. The maternal instinct is
-awakened at the proper moment in animals, and it
-disappears as soon as the offspring requires no more
-assistance. A craving for milk is shown in all newborn
-children, and often disappears at an early age.</p>
-
-<p>Nature has endowed man as well as the other
-animals with peculiar instincts, destined to preside
-over the different functions and to ensure their
-accomplishment. And, at the same time, it has
-enabled him in a measure to deceive those instincts
-and to satisfy them by other means than the execution
-of the physiological acts with a view to which
-they exist. Love and the instinct of reproduction
-exist in man before the age of puberty. Canova felt
-the spur of love at the age of five. Dante was in
-love with Beatrice at nine; and Byron, then scarcely
-seven, was already in love with Maria Duff. On the
-other hand, puberty has no necessary relation to the
-general maturity of the organism.</p>
-
-<p>The family instinct is subject to the same aberrations.
-Man limits the number of his children. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</span>
-Turks of to-day follow the ancient Greeks in the
-practice of abortion. Plato approved of the custom,
-and Aristotle sanctioned its general prevalence. In
-the province of Canton the Chinese of the agricultural
-classes kill two-thirds of their girl children,
-and the same is done at Tahiti. All these customs
-co-exist with the perfect love and tender care of the
-living children.</p>
-
-<p>Because of these different discordancies the physical
-life of man is insufficiently regulated by nature.
-Neither the physiological instinct, nor the family
-instinct, nor the social instinct is, in general, sufficiently
-imperative and precise. Hence, since the
-internal impulse has not sufficient power, the necessity
-arises for a rule of conduct exercising its influence
-from without. Philosophies, religions, and legislation
-have provided for this. They have regulated man’s
-hygiene and the carrying out of his different physiological
-functions. Their control has, moreover, had
-its hygienic side. The scientific hygiene of to-day
-has inherited their rôle.</p>
-
-<p>The idea of the fundamental perversity of human
-nature is born of our cognizance of its discordancies,
-unduly amplified and exaggerated. Soul and body
-have been considered as distinctly discordant and
-hostile elements. The body, the shroud of the soul,
-the temporary host, the prison, the present source of
-miseries, has been subjected to every kind of mortification.
-Asceticism has treated the body and all the
-innate instincts as our mortal foes.</p>
-
-<p>This suspicion, this depreciation of human nature
-was the great error of the mystics. This view was
-as fatal as the inverse view of pagan antiquity.
-The model of the perfect life according to Greek<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</span>
-philosophy is a life in conformity with nature. To
-aim at the harmonious development of man was the
-precept of the ancient Academy, formulated by Plato.
-The Stoics and the Epicureans had adopted the same
-principle. Physical nature is considered as good.
-It gives us the type, the rule, and the measure. The
-moral rule itself is exactly appropriate to the physical
-nature. We may say that pagan morality was
-hygiene, the hygiene of the soul and the body alike;
-the <i>mens sana in corpore sano</i> gave individual and
-social direction. The Rationalists, the philosophers
-of the eighteenth century, such as Baron d’Holbach
-and later W. Von Humboldt, Darwin, and Herbert
-Spencer, have adopted analogous views. If these
-views have been contested, it is because of the imperfections
-or aberrations of the natural instincts of
-man. Also, if we wish to base individual family or
-social morality on the natural instincts of man, it
-must be specified that these instincts are to be
-regularized. We must necessarily appeal from the
-imperfect instincts of the present to the perfected
-instincts of the future. Their perfection, moreover,
-will only be a more exact approximation to the real
-nature of man, and he, having avoided by the aid of
-science the accidents which cause disease and senile
-decrepitude, will enjoy a healthy youth and an ideal
-old age.</p>
-
-<p>The reason of the discrepancies between instinct
-and function in man is given by the natural history
-of his development. We know that man has within
-him original sin—his long atavism. He has sprung,
-according to the transformists, from a simian stock.
-He is a cousin, the successful relation, of a type
-of antinomorphic monkeys, the chimpanzees. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</span>
-has “arrived,” they have remained undeveloped.
-Probably he had a common ancestor with them,
-some dryopithecan of an extinct species. From that
-type sprang a new type already on the way to
-progress, the <i>Pithecanthropus erectus</i>. Finally, the
-anthropoid ancestor became one fine day the father
-of a scion, clearly superior to himself, a miraculously
-gifted being, man. Here, then, is no sign of the slow
-evolution and gradual progress, which is the doctrine
-held at present by Transformists. The Dutch
-botanist De Vries has shown us, in fact, that nature
-does leap: <i>natura facit saltus</i>. There would thus be
-crises, as it were, in the life of species. At certain
-critical epochs considerable differences of a specific
-value appear in their offspring. It is at one of these
-critical periods in the simian life that man has
-appeared as the phenomenal child of an anthropoid.
-He was born with a brain and an intellect superior
-to those of his humble parents; and on the other
-hand, he has inherited from them an organization
-which is only inadequately adapted to the new conditions
-of existence created by the development of
-his sensitiveness and his brain power. This intellect
-is not proportioned to his organization, which has
-not developed at the same rate; it protests against
-the discordances which adaptation has not yet had
-time to efface. But it will efface them in the future.</p>
-
-
-<h4>§ 4. <span class="smcap">The Instinct of Life and the Instinct
-of Death.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The greatest discrepancy of this kind is the
-knowledge of inevitable death without the instinct
-which makes it longed for.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</span></p>
-
-<p>There are immortal animals. Man is not of the
-number. He belongs, like all highly organized
-beings, to the class of beings which have an end.
-They die from accident or from disease. They
-perish in the struggle with other animals, or with
-microbes, or with external conditions. There are
-certainly very few, if there are any, which die a
-really natural death. And so it is with man. We
-see old men gradually declining who appear to
-doze gently off into the last sleep, and become
-extinguished without disease, like a lamp whose oil
-is exhausted. But this is in most cases only
-apparently so. Besides the fact that the old age to
-which they seemed to succumb is really a disease,
-a generalized sclerosis, autopsy always reveals some
-lesion more or less directly responsible for the fatal
-issue.</p>
-
-<p>Man, like all the higher animals, is therefore
-subject to the law of lethality. But while animals
-have no idea of death and are not tormented by the
-sentiment of their inevitable end, man knows and
-understands this destiny. He has with the animals
-the instinct of self-preservation, the instinct of life,
-and at the same time the knowledge and the fear of
-death. This contradiction, this discordance, is one
-of the sources of his woes.</p>
-
-<p>Whether it be an accident or the regular term of
-the normal cycle, death always comes too soon. It
-surprises the man at a time when he has not yet
-completed his physiological evolution; hence the
-aversion and the terror it inspires. “We cannot
-fix our eyes on the sun or on death,” said La Rochefoucauld.
-The old man does not regard death with
-less aversion than the young man. “He who is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</span>
-most like the dead dies with most regret.” Man
-knows that he is not getting his full measure.</p>
-
-<p>Further, all the really natural acts are solicited
-by an instinct, the satisfaction of which is a need
-and a joy. The need of death should therefore
-appear at the end of life, just as the need of sleep
-appears at the end of the day. It would appear, no
-doubt, if the normal cycle of existence were fulfilled,
-and if the harmonious evolution were not always
-interrupted by accident. Death would then be
-welcomed and longed for. It would lose its horror.
-The instinct of death would replace at the wished
-for moment the instinct of life. Man would pass
-from the banquet of life with no other desire. He
-would die without regret, “being old and full of
-days,” according to the expression used in the Bible
-in the case of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. No
-doubt there are some analogies to this in the insects
-which only assume the perfect form for the purpose
-of procreation and immediately perish in their full
-perfection. In these animals the approach of death
-is blended with the intoxication of hymen. Thus
-we see some of them, the ephemerae, lose at that
-moment the instinct of life and the instinct of
-self-preservation. They allow themselves to be
-approached, taken, and seized, and make no effort
-at flight.</p>
-
-<p>But what is this full measure of life which is
-imparted to us? Metchnikoff holds that the ages
-attributed to several persons in the Bible are very
-probable. Abraham lived 175 years, Ishmael 137,
-Joseph 110, Moses 120. Buffon believed in the
-existence of a ratio between the longevity of animals
-and the duration of their growth. He fixed it at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</span>
-7:1. The animal whose development lasts two years
-would thus have 14 years of life. This law would
-give us 140 years, but the figure is too high, and
-<a id="Flourens_has_reduced"></a>Flourens has reduced the ratio to that of 5:1, which
-would still give us 100 years. Plato died in the act
-of conversation at 81; Isocrates wrote his <i>Panathenaïcus</i>
-at 94; Gorgias died in the full possession
-of his intellect at 107.</p>
-
-<p>To reach the end of the promised longevity we
-must neither count on the elixir of life nor on the
-potable gold of the alchemists, nor on the stone of
-immortality which did not prevent its inventor,
-Paracelsus, from dying at the age of 58, nor on
-transfusion, nor on Graham’s celestial bed, nor on
-King David’s gerocomy, nor on any nostrum or
-remedy. <i>Contra vim mortis non est medicamen in
-hortis</i>, said the Salernian school. What Feuchtersleben
-said is most true, “The art of prolonging life
-consists in not cutting it short,” and it is a hygiene,
-but a brilliant hygiene, such as that of which
-Metchnikoff traces us the future lines, which will
-realize the desires of nature.</p>
-
-<p>And now shall we find that physiology has solved
-the enigma proposed by the Sphinx, and that it has
-answered these poignant questions:—Whence do
-we come? whither do we go? what is the end of
-life? The end of life is, to the physiologist as well
-as to Herbert Spencer, the tendency towards an
-existence as full and as long as possible, towards a
-life in conformity with real nature freed from the
-discordancies which still remain; it is the accomplishment
-of the harmonious cycle of our normal
-evolution. This ideal human nature, without discordancies,
-no longer vitiated as it is at present but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</span>
-improved, will be the work of time and science.
-Realized at last it will serve as a solid basis for
-individual, family, and social morality. Healthy
-youth fit for action; prolonged, adult age, the
-symbol of strength; normal old age, wise in council,
-these would have their natural places in harmonious
-society. “Great actions,” said one of old, “are not
-achieved by exertions of strength, or speed, or agility,
-but rather by the prudence, the authority, and the
-judgment which are found in a higher degree in old
-age.” The old age of which Cicero here speaks is
-the ideal old age, regular and normal, and not the
-premature, deformed, incapable and egoistic old age
-which results from a pathological condition. At the
-end of this full life, the old man being full of days,
-will crave for the eternal sleep and will resign
-himself to it with joy....</p>
-
-<p>Death, then, “the last enemy that shall be
-destroyed,” to use the expression of St. Paul, will
-yield to the power of science. Instead of being
-“the king of terrors,” it will become after a long
-and healthy life, after a life exempt from morbid
-accidents, a natural and longed for event, a satisfied
-need. Then will be realized the wish of the
-fabulist:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“<i>I should like to leave life at this age, just as one
-leaves a banquet, thanking the host, and departing.</i>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Has this physiological solution of the problem of
-death the virtue attributed to it by Metchnikoff?
-Is it as optimistic as he thinks it is? The instinct
-of death supervening at the end of a normal and
-well-filled cycle will no doubt facilitate to the aged
-their departure on the great voyage. The wrench<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</span>
-will no longer exist for the dead. Will it not exist
-for those who are left behind? And since the
-instinct of death can only exist about the time at
-which death is expected, will the young man and
-the man of ripened years look with less horror than
-to-day at the law which cannot be escaped, when
-they are in full possession of the instinct of life,
-but warned of the inevitability of death?</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="INDEX_OF_AUTHORS">INDEX OF AUTHORS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Altmann, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anaxagoras, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aquinas, St. Thomas, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aristotle, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Armstrong, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Atwater, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Bacon, vi., <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baker, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Balbiani, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>-7, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bang, d’Yvor, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barthez, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beclard, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Becquerel, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beijerinck, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Benoit, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bernard, Claude, vi., <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>,
- <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>-4, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>-1, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>-2, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-218, <a href="#Page_220">220</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bernoulli, John, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bert, Paul, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Berthelot, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>-130, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Berthollet, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Berzelius, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bichat, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-30, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blumenbach, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boë, Sylvius Le, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-6</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boerhaave, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bohr, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>-30</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bokorny, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boltzmann, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bonnet, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bordeu, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Borelli, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boscovitch, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bose, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bossuet, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bouasse, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>-5</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boullier, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bourdeau, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boussingault, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brandt, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bravais, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brillouin, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown, <a href="#Page_266">266</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brücke, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Büchner, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buffon, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bunge, von, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burdon, Sanderson, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Busquet, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bütschli, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>-2, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cabanis, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cailletet, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calkins, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calvert, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Candolle, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cardan, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carnot, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>-3, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charpy, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="indx">Chauffard, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chauveau, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chevreul, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chossat, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cicero, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clausius, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cohn, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cohnheim, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colding, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> <i><a href="#Footnote_4">note</a></i>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colin, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Comte, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>-190, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Confucius, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coulomb, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crookes, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cuvier, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-8, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</span></li>
-
-
-<li class="indx">D’Alembert, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a> <i><a href="#Footnote_4">note</a></i>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dantec, Le, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a> <i><a href="#Footnote_3">note</a></i>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>,
- <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">D’Arsonval, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Darwin, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dastre, A., <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a> <i><a href="#Footnote_16">note</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davy, Sir Humphry, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Delafosse, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Delage, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Demange, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Democritus, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Descartes, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Despretz, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diderot, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drechsel, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dressel, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dubois-Reymond, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> <i><a href="#Footnote_5">note</a></i>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Duclaux, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dufour, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Duguet, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Duhem, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dulong, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dumas, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>-2</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Epicurus, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ehrlich, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Errera, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>-4, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Euclid, v.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Faye, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Feuchterslehen, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flemming, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flourens, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>-1, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fouillée, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fromann, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fuerth, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Galen, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galeotti, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galileo, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gardair, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gautier, A., <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gernez, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glisson, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goethe, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gouy, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grimaud, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gruber, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guignard, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guillaume, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guillemin, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guldberg, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Harbermann, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haeckel, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hales, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haller, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamilton, Sir W. Rowan, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hammarsten, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hartmann, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harvey, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haüy, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hegel, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heidenhain, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>-1</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heitzmann, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Helmholtz, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Helmont, van, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henninger, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heraclitus, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hertwig, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hertz, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hess, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hippocrates, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hirn, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">His, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hlasitwetz, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holbach, d’, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hoogewerf, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hopkinson, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humboldt, W. von, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ingenhousz, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Izolet, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Joule, <a href="#Page_53">53</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>-1, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Kant, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kaup, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kaufmann, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kelvin, Lord, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>-2, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and the idea of energy, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kepler, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Klemm, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Koelliker, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kossel, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-1, <a href="#Page_136">136</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kuhne, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kuhm, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kuliabko, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kunstler, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>-2, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kuppfer, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Lammettrie, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lamarck, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lapparent, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lapicque, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langley, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laplace, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laulanié, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laurie, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">La Rochefoucauld, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lavoisier, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lea, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Le Châtelier, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lechatelier, H. and A., <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lecocq de Boisbaudran, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leeuwenhoek, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lefèvre, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legallois, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leydig, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>-2</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liebermeister, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liebig, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lilienfeld, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Locke, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lodge, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loeb, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loew, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loisel, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lorry, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Longet, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lowitz, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loye, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ludwig, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Mach, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Magendie, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Magy, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Malgaigne, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mallard, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marinesco, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Markel, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maspero, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Matthiesson, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maupas, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maxwell, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mayer, R., <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mering, von, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Metchnikoff, <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miescher, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milne-Edwards, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Minot, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miura, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mori, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Müller, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murato, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Naegeli, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Needham, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newton, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> <i><a href="#Footnote_4">note</a></i>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>-1, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Noorden, van, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nussbaum, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Obermeyer, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Osmond, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ostwald, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Paracelsus, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pascal, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pasteur, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Payen, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Persoz, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Petit, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pettenkofer, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pfeffer, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pflüger, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Philpotts, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pictet, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pitcairn, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plato, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plosz, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poincaré, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poisson, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Preyer, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Priestley, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ptolemy, v.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pythagoras, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Rauber, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Raulin, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Regnault, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reinke, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Renan, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ribbert, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ribot, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riche, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richet, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richter, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rindfleisch, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roberts-Austen, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>-2</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robin, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rosenthal, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rouvier, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roux, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rubner, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rumford, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sabatier, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sachs, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salles-Guyon, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sanderson, Burdon, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scaliger, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schleiden, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schopenhauer, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schwartz, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schultze, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schultzenberger, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Secchi, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seguin, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> <i><a href="#Footnote_4">note</a></i>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Senebier, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Siven, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spallanzani, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spencer, Herbert, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spring, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stahl, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stammreich, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stead, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stohmann, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strassburger, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swann, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swift, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Tait, <a href="#Page_53">53</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tammann, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thales, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thomson, Sir J. J., <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tissot, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tomlinson, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trembley, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tsuboï, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tylor, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Verworn, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Violette, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Virchow, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Voit, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vries, de, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vulpian, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Waage, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waller, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wallerant, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>-3</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warburg, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Watt, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weismann, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wertheim, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitman, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Widersheim, <a href="#Page_351">351</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wiedermann, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wiesner, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Willis, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winternitz, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Yung, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Zuntz, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX_OF_SUBJECTS">INDEX OF SUBJECTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Activity, functional and vital, <a href="#Page_106">106</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aerobia, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Age, old, Book v.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Albumin, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Albuminoids, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alcohol, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alimentation, <a href="#Page_116">116</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alloys, structure of, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anærobia, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Animism, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, Chap. ii., <i>passim</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Annealing, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Apposition, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Archeus, the, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arginin, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Assimilation, law of functional, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Atomicities, satisfied, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Atrophy, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Attraction, energy of position, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Balance, sheet, nutritive, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beliefs, primitive, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bioblasts, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Biophors, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blas, the, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blood, lavage of, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brain, and death, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Butylic ferments, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Butyric ferments, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Calorie, <a href="#Page_125">125</a> <i><a href="#Footnote_10">note</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calorimeter, ice, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bomb, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caprice, of Nature, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cause, final, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cells, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">somatic and sexual, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cellular theory, <a href="#Page_158">158</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Centrosome, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chromosome, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cicatrization, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Complex, homogeneity of the, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conductibility, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Consciousness, in brute bodies, <a href="#Page_244">244</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Continuity, principle of, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Contractility, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Contraction, energy of static and dynamic, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conservation, of energy, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of force, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crystals, <a href="#Page_200">200</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cytoplasm, <a href="#Page_161">161</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Death, apparent, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">senescence of, <a href="#Page_305">305</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cellular, <a href="#Page_321">321</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Decentralization, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Degeneration, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Destruction, functional, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">organic, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of living matter, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Determinism, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Digestion, of plants and animals, <a href="#Page_152">152</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Direction, idea of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dominants, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dyne, the, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Effort, of force, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Electrolysis, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Energetics, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">laws of biological, <a href="#Page_105">105</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">alimentary, <a href="#Page_116">116</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</span></li>
-<li class="indx">Energy, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, Book ii., <i>passim</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of idea of, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">theory of, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the only objective reality, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>-5;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and kinetic conception, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mechanical, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of contraction, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">kinetic, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">potential, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">virtual, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of motion and position, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">thermal, and its measurements, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>-2;</li>
-<li class="isub1">chemical, and its measurements, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-2;</li>
-<li class="isub1">chemical and potential, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">materialization of, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">transformations of, <a href="#Page_85">85</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">luminous, <a href="#Page_86">86</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">conservation of, <a href="#Page_90">90</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">capacity of conversion of, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in biology, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in living beings, <a href="#Page_99">99</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">physical, <a href="#Page_99">99</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">vital, <a href="#Page_99">99</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ether, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Equivalence, law of, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Excitability, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>-7</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Fatigue, of metals, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ferments, butylic and butyric, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Filiation, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Finalism, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Food, a source of energy, <a href="#Page_118">118</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">thermogenic and biothermogenic types of, <a href="#Page_131">131</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dynamogenic type of, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">nitrogenous, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of animals and plants, <a href="#Page_153">153</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Force, directive, <a href="#Page_16">16</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">vital, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">an anthromorphic notion, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and work, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">measurement of, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">plastic, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">plastic and morphoplastic forces, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Form, specific, <a href="#Page_199">199</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fruits, acids of, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Gemmules, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Generation, spontaneous, <a href="#Page_249">249</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Globulin, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glycerine, crystals of, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glycogen, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gramme, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Heat, a mode of motion, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">rôle of animal heat, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mechanical equivalent of, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">an excretum, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">a degraded form of energy, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">converted into work, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heterogeneity, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Histones, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horse-power, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hyaloplasm, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Iatro-chemistry and mechanics, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>-5</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Idioblasts, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Infusoria, death of, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Instability, <a href="#Page_188">188</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Instinct, of life and death, <a href="#Page_345">345</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intussusception, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Invariant, mass the first, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irreversibility, of vital energies, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irritability, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Isodynamism, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Isomorphism, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ka, the, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kilogrammetre, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">per second, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kilowatt, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kinetic theory, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knot, the vital, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Leucines, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leucites, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Life, defined, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">latent, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">physico-chemical theory of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">elementary, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Linin, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Mass, and matter, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Materialism, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Matter, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and mass, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">two kinds of, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">life of, <a href="#Page_236">236</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">brute and living, <a href="#Page_249">249</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">organization and constitution of, <a href="#Page_255">255</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">defined as extension, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">conservation of, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</span></li>
-<li class="indx">“Memory,” of metals, etc., <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Merotomy, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Metabolism, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Metazoa, evolution and death of, <a href="#Page_340">340</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Meteoric cosmozoa, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Micellar theory, <a href="#Page_166">166</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Microcosms, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Micro-organisms, culture of, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mitomes, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mobility of stars, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Modality, twofold, of soul, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Molecules, organic, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monism, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, Chap. iv. <i>passim</i>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montpellier, the school of, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Motion, cause of, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">kinetic conception of molecular, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morphogenesis, idea of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Movements, internal of bodies, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Brownian, <a href="#Page_266">266</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mutability, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of living matter, <a href="#Page_259">259</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of brute bodies, <a href="#Page_259">259</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Necrobiosis, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neo-vitalism, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neurility, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nickel, steels, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nisus <i>formativus</i>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nous, the, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nucleins, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nucleo-albuminoids, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">-proteids, <a href="#Page_177">177</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nucleus, <a href="#Page_163">163</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hexonic, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nutrition, directed, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Organogenesis, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Organs, organization of, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">perfect, <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Pangenes, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Panspermia, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parameter, mass the mechanical, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Phenomena, vital, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">modes of motion, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Photography, colour, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Physiology, general, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cellular, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plants, and immortality, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plasomes, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plurivitalism, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Power, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Principle, vital, <a href="#Page_15">15</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Properties, vital, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Proteids, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Protoplasm, <a href="#Page_109">109</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">life in crushed, <a href="#Page_257">257</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Protozoa, immortality of, <a href="#Page_352">352</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Psyche, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pyrozoa, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Regeneration, normal, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">accidental, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reparation, mechanism of, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Repose, functional, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reserve stuff, <a href="#Page_106">106</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rachidian, soul, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Senescence, <a href="#Page_305">305</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sensibility, in brute bodies, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Solidarity, of anatomical elements, humoral and nervous, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soul, the, <a href="#Page_7">7</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Space, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Specificity, vital, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spireme, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spongioplasm, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">States, initial and final, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swelling, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Synthesis, organizing, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Tagmata, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teleology, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tetanus, bacteria of, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thermogenesis, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Time, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tonus, muscular, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trees, and immortality, <a href="#Page_330">330</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tripod, vital, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Turgescence, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Universe, the, mechanical explanation of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the end of the, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Unity, chemical, of living beings, <a href="#Page_173">173</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">morphological, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</span></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Vacuoles, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vibrion, septic, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vis viva, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vital properties, theory of, <a href="#Page_29">29</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vitalism, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, Chap. iii. <i>passim</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">physico-chemical, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vitality, phenomena of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vortex, vital, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vulcans, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>-7</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Weight, energy of position, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">conservation of, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">movement under action of, <a href="#Page_271">271</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Work, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and force, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">converted into heat, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">physiological, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Xanthic bases, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Zones, metastable and labile, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="center spaced"><span class="fs2">THE WALTER SCOTT PUBLISHING COMPANY, LTD., FELLING-ON-TYNE.</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> In a
-thesis presented in 1742 at Montpellier, Bordeu, then only twenty years
-of age, made game of the tasks imposed by animists on the Soul, “which
-has to moisten the lips when required;” or, “whose anger produces the
-symptoms of certain diseases;” or again, “which is prevented by the
-consequences of original sin from guiding and directing the body.”</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> Reinke, <i>Die Welt als That</i>; Berlin, 1899.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> In an article on the experimental method recently published
-in the <i>Dictionnaire de Physiologie</i>, M. Ch. Richet writes as
-follows:—“We must therefore never cease to carry out comparative
-experiments. I do not hesitate to say that this
-comparison is the basis of the experimental method.” It is in
-fact what was taught by Claude Bernard in maxim and by
-example. It is no exaggeration to assert that nine-tenths of the
-errors which take place in research work are imputable to some
-breach of this method. When an investigator makes a mistake,
-save in the case of material error, it is almost certainly due to the
-fact that he has neglected to carry out one of the comparative
-tests required in the problem before him. The following is
-an instance which happened since the above pages were
-written:—Several years ago a chemist announced the existence
-in the blood serum of a ferment, lipase, capable of
-saponifying fats—that is to say, of extracting from them the fatty
-acid. From this he deduced many consequences relative to the
-mechanism of fermentations. But on the other hand, it has
-been since shown (April 1902) that this lipase of the serum
-does not exist. How did the error arise? The author in
-question had mixed normally obtained serum with oil, and he
-had noted the acidification of the mixture; he assured himself
-of the fact by adding carbonate of soda. He saw the alkalinity
-of the mixture, serum + oil + carbonate of soda, diminish, and he
-drew the conclusion that the acid came from the saponified oil.
-He did not make the comparative test, serum + carbonate of
-soda. If he had done so, he would have ascertained that it also
-succeeded, and that therefore as the acid did not come from
-the saponification of the oil, since there was none, its production
-could not prove the existence of a lipase.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> Le Dantec has objected to this conception of phenomena
-common to different living beings. He insists that all
-phenomena which take place in a given living being are
-proper to him, and differ, however slightly, from those of
-another individual. The objection is more specious than real.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> Mayer’s claim to fame has been disputed. A Scotch physicist,
-P. G. Tait, has investigated the history of the law of the conservation
-of energy, which is the history of the idea of energy.
-The conception has taken time to penetrate the human mind,
-but its experimental proof is of recent date. P. G. Tait finds an
-almost complete expression of the law of the conservation of
-energy in Newton’s third law of motion—namely, “the law of the
-equality of action and reaction,” or rather, in the second explanation
-which Newton gave of that law. In fact, it was from
-this law that Helmholtz deduced it in 1847. He showed that
-the law of the equality of action and reaction, considered as a
-law of nature, involved the impossibility of perpetual motion,
-and the impossibility of perpetual motion is, in another form, the
-conservation of energy.</p>
-
-<p>At a meeting of the Academy of Science, at Berlin, 28th
-March 1878, Du Bois-Reymond violently attacked Tait’s contention.
-The honour of having been the first to conceive of the
-idea of energy and conservation was awarded to Leibniz.
-Newton had no right to it, for he appealed to divine intervention
-to set the planetary system on its path when disturbed by accumulated
-perturbations. On the other hand, Colding claims to
-have drawn his knowledge of the law of conservation from
-d’Alembert’s principle. Whatever may be the theoretical
-foundations of this law, we are here dealing with its experimental
-proof. According to Tait, the proof can no more be
-attributed to R. Mayer than to Seguin. The real modern
-authors of the principle of the conservation of energy, who gave
-an experimental proof of it, are Colding, of Copenhagen, and
-Joule, of Manchester.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> It must be added that the absolute rigour of this law has
-been called in question in recent researches. It would only
-have an approximate value.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> The dyne is the force which applied to the unit of mass
-produces a unit of acceleration.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> These words spoil the statement, for time has nothing to
-do with it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> We therefore notice that the measures of force and work
-bring in mass, space, and time. The typical force, weight, is
-given by w = mg. On the other hand, we have by the laws of
-falling bodies <i>v</i> = <i>gt</i>; <i>s</i> = 1∕2<i>gt<sup>2</sup></i>;
-whence <i>g</i> = 2<i>s</i>∕<i>t<sup>2</sup></i>; <i>w</i> = <i>m</i>(2<i>s</i>∕ <i>t<sup>2</sup></i>); or, if
-F be the force, M the mass, L the space described, and T the
-time, we have F = MLT<sup>-2</sup>, which expresses what are called the
-dimensions of the force—that is to say, the magnitudes with their
-degree, which enter into its expression. We may thus easily
-obtain the dimensions of work:—</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>Work</i> = <i>f</i> × <i>s</i> = <i>mv<sup>2</sup></i>∕2 = ML<sup>2</sup>T<sup>-2</sup>.<br />
-</p>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> The reason is to be found in the large number of indeterminates
-in the problem we have to solve. It will be sufficient
-to enumerate them: the two substances which exist in the
-anatomical element, protoplasm and reserve-stuff, to which
-are attributed contrary roles; the two conditions attributable
-to the protoplasm, of manifested or latent activity; the faculty
-possessed by both of being prolonged for an indeterminate
-period, and of encroaching each on its protagonist when its
-existence is at stake. Here are more elements than are necessary
-to explain the positive or negative results of all the
-experiments in the world.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> There is another reason why the rôle of mechanical energy,
-compared with that of thermal energy, is reduced, in the partition
-of afferent, alimentary energy—at least, in animals which have not
-to do excessive work. The unit of heat, the Calorie, is equivalent
-to 425 units of work—<i>i.e.</i>, to 425 kilogrammetres. In the animal
-at rest, the number of kilogrammetres representing the different
-quantities of work done is small, the number of corresponding
-Calories is 425 times smaller. It becomes almost negligeable in
-comparison with the considerable number of Calories dissipated
-in the form of heat.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> It is not certain, however, that all the precautions taken
-have the desired result. You cannot entirely deprive meat of its
-carbohydrates.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> M. Le Dantec, of whose philosophical and rigorously
-systematic mind I have the highest opinion, has laid down a
-new conception of life, the essential basis of which is this very
-distinction between elementary life and ordinary life; between
-the life of the elements or of the beings formed from a single
-cell, protophytes and protozoa, and the life of ordinary animals
-and plants, which are multicellular complexes, and for that
-reason called <i>metazoa</i> and <i>metaphytes</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Further, in the <i>elementary life</i> peculiar to monocellular
-beings (protozoa and cellular elements), M. Le Dantec distinguishes
-three manners of being:—The first condition, which
-is elementary life manifested in all its perfection, cellular
-health; the second condition is deteriorated elementary life,
-<i>cellular disease</i>; and the third condition, which is <i>latent life</i>.
-I should say at once that in so far as the fundamental distinction
-of the phenomena of <i>elementary life</i> and those of the
-general life of animals and ordinary plants, metazoa or metaphytes
-is concerned, we find it neither justified nor useful.
-And further, <i>manifested elementary life</i>, as M. Le Dantec
-understands it, would only belong to a small number of
-<i>elementary beings</i>—for the protozoa, starting with the infusoria,
-are not among the number—and to a still smaller number of
-<i>anatomical elements</i>, since among the vertebrates we recognize
-as almost the only elements satisfying it, the ovule, and perhaps
-the leucocyte. Physiologists, therefore, do not agree with
-M. Le Dantec as to the utility of adding one condition more to
-those we all admit—namely, manifested animal life and latent
-life.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> Amylolytic ferments change starch and glycogen (<i>amyloses</i>)
-into sugar.—<span class="smcap">Tr.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> Proteolytic ferments change proteids into peptones and
-proteoses.—<span class="smcap">Tr.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> The enzyme known as lipase splits the fat or oil in germinating
-seeds into a fatty acid and glycerine.—<span class="smcap">Tr.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> These ideas are clearly brought to light in a series of
-articles in the <i>Revue Philosophique</i>, published in 1879 under
-the title of “La problème physiologique de la vie,” and endorsed
-by A. Dastre in his commentary on the <i>Phénomènes communs
-aux animaux et aux plantes</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> Bear-animalcules, Sloth-animalcules. An order of Arachnida.—<span class="smcap">Tr.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> Minute thread worms, known as paste-eels and vinegar-eels.—<span class="smcap">Tr.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> Genus of Infusoria. Colpodea cucullus is found in infusions
-of hay.—<span class="smcap">Tr.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> Lately destroyed in a storm. [Tr.]</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
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