Eureka - A Prose Poem
By: Edgar Allan Poe
(1848)
WITH VERY PROFOUND RESPECT,
THIS WORK IS DEDICATED
TO
ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT
PREFACE
To the few who love me and whom I love -- to those who feel rather
than to those who think -- to the dreamers and those who put faith in
dreams as in the only realities -- I offer this Book of Truths, not in
its character of Truth-Teller, but for the Beauty that abounds in
its Truth; constituting it true. To these I present the composition as
an Art-Product alone:- let us say as a Romance; or, if I be not urging
too lofty a claim, as a Poem.
What I here propound is true:- * therefore it cannot die:- or if
by any means it be now trodden down so that it die, it will "rise
again to the Life Everlasting."
Nevertheless it is as a Poem only that I wish this work to be judged
after I am dead.
E. A. P.
EUREKA:
AN ESSAY ON THE MATERIAL AND SPIRITUAL UNIVERSE
IT is with humility really unassumed -- it is with a sentiment even of
awe -- that I pen the opening sentence of this work: for of all
conceivable subjects I approach the reader with the most solemn -- the
most comprehensive -- the most difficult -- the most august.
What terms shall I find sufficiently simple in their sublimity --
sufficiently sublime in their simplicity -- for the mere enunciation
of my theme?
I design to speak of the Physical, Metaphysical and Mathematical --
of the Material and Spiritual Universe:- of its Essence, its Origin,
its Creation, its Present Condition and its Destiny. I shall be so
rash, moreover, as to challenge the conclusions, and thus, in
effect, to question the sagacity, of many of the greatest and most
justly reverenced of men.
In the beginning, let me as distinctly as possible announce -- not the
theorem which I hope to demonstrate -- for, whatever the
mathematicians may assert, there is, in this world at least, no
such thing as demonstration -- but the ruling idea which, throughout
this volume, I shall be continually endeavoring to suggest.
My general proposition, then, is this: -- In the Original Unity of
the First Thing lies the Secondary Cause of All Things, with the
Germ of their Inevitable Annihilation.
In illustration of this idea, I propose to take such a survey of the
Universe that the mind may be able really to receive and to perceive
an individual impression.
He who from the top of AEtna casts his eyes leisurely around, is
affected chiefly by the extent and diversity of the scene. Only by
a rapid whirling on his heel could he hope to comprehend the
panorama in the sublimity of its oneness. But as, on the summit of
AEtna, no man has thought of whirling on his heel, so no man has
ever taken into his brain the full uniqueness of the prospect; and so,
again, whatever considerations lie involved in this uniqueness, have
as yet no practical existence for mankind.
I do not know a treatise in which a survey of the Universe --
using the word in its most comprehensive and only legitimate
acceptation -- is taken at all: -- and it may be as well here to mention
that by the term "Universe," wherever employed without qualification
in this essay, I mean to designate the utmost conceivable expanse
of space, with all things, spiritual and material, that can he
imagined to exist within the compass of that expanse. In speaking
of what is ordinarily implied by the expression, "Universe," I shall
take a phrase of limitation -- "the Universe of stars." Why this
distinction is considered necessary, will be seen in the sequel.
But even of treatises on the really limited, although always assumed
as the un limited, Universe of stars, I know none in which a
survey, even of this limited Universe, is so taken as to warrant
deductions from its individuality. The nearest approach to such a
work is made in the "Cosmos" of Alexander Von Humboldt. He presents
the subject, however, not in its individuality but in its
generality. His theme, in its last result, is the law of each
portion of the merely physical Universe, as this law is related to the
laws of every other portion of this merely physical Universe. His
design is simply synoeretical. In a word, he discusses the
universality of material relation, and discloses to the eye of
Philosophy whatever inferences have hitherto lain hidden behind this
universality. But however admirable be the succinctness with which
he has treated each particular point of his topic, the mere
multiplicity of these points occasions, necessarily, an amount of
detail, and thus an involution of idea, which preclude all
individuality of impression.
It seems to me that, in aiming at this latter effect, and, through
it, at the consequences -- the conclusions -- the suggestions -- the
speculations -- or, if nothing better offer itself, the mere guesses
which may result from it -- we require something like a mental
gyration on the heel. We need so rapid a revolution of all things
about the central point of sight that, while the minutiae vanish
altogether, even the more conspicuous objects become blended into one.
Among the vanishing minutiae, in a survey of this kind, would be all
exclusively terrestrial matters. The Earth would be considered in
its planetary relations alone. A man, in this view, becomes mankind;
mankind a member of the cosmical family of Intelligences.
And now, before proceeding to our subject proper, let me beg the
reader's attention to an extract or two from a somewhat remarkable
letter, which appears to have been found corked in a bottle and
floating on the Mare Tenebrarum - an ocean well described by the
Nubian geographer, Ptolemy Hephestion, but little frequented in modern
days unless by the Transcendentalists and some other divers for
crotchets. The date of this letter, I confess, surprises me even
more particularly than its contents; for it seems to have been written
in the year Two thousand eight hundred and forty-eight. As for the
passages I am about to transcribe, they, I fancy, will speak for
themselves.
"Do you know, my dear friend," says the writer, addressing, no
doubt, a contemporary -- "Do you know that it is scarcely more than
eight or nine hundred years ago since the metaphysicians first
consented to relieve the people of the singular fancy that there exist
but two practicable roads to Truth? Believe it if you can! It
appears, however, that long, long ago, in the night of Time, there
lived a Turkish philosopher called Aries and surnamed Tottle."
[Here, possibly, the letter-writer means Aristotle; the best names are
wretchedly corrupted in two or three thousand years.] "The fame of
this great man depended mainly upon his demonstration that sneezing is
a natural provision, by means of which over-profound thinkers are
enabled to expel superfluous ideas through the nose; but he obtained a
scarcely less valuable celebrity as the founder, or at all events as
the principal propagator, of what was termed the de ductive or a
priori philosophy. He started with what he maintained to be axioms,
or self-evident truths: -- and the now well-understood fact that no
truths are self -evident, really does not make in the slightest
degree against his speculations: -- it was sufficient for his purpose
that the truths in question were evident at all. From axioms he
proceeded, logically, to results. His most illustrious disciples
were one Tuclid, a geometrician," [meaning Euclid] "and one Kant, a
Dutchman, the originator of that species of Transcendentalism which,
with the change merely of a C for a K, now bears his peculiar name.
"Well, Aries Tottle flourished supreme, until the advent of one Hog,
surnamed 'the Ettrick shepherd,' who preached an entirely different
system, which he called the a posteriori or in ductive. His plan
referred altogether to sensation. He proceeded by observing,
analyzing, and classifying facts -- instantiae Naturae, as they were
somewhat affectedly called -- and arranging them into general laws. In a
word, while the mode of Aries rested on noumena, that of Hog
depended on phenomena; and so great was the admiration excited by
this latter system that, at its first introduction, Aries fell into
general disrepute. Finally, however, he recovered ground, and was
permitted to divide the empire of Philosophy with his more modern
rival: -- the savans contenting themselves with proscribing all
other competitors, past, present, and to come; putting an end to all
controversy on the topic by the promulgation of a Median law, to the
effect that the Aristotelian and Baconian roads are, and of right
ought to be, the sole possible avenues to knowledge: -- 'Baconian,'
you must know, my dear friend," adds the letter-writer at this
point, "was an adjective invented as equivalent to Hog-ian, and at the
same time more dignified and euphonious.
"Now I do assure you most positively" -- proceeds the epistle -- "that I
represent these matters fairly; and you can easily understand how
restrictions so absurd on their very face must have operated, in those
days, to retard the progress of true Science, which makes its most
important advances -- as all History will show -- by seemingly intuitive
leaps. These ancient ideas confined investigation to crawling; and I
need not suggest to you that crawling, among varieties of
locomotion, is a very capital thing of its kind; -- but because the
tortoise is sure of foot, for this reason must we clip the wings of
the eagles? For many centuries, so great was the infatuation, about
Hog especially, that a virtual stop was put to all thinking,
properly so called. No man dared utter a truth for which he felt
himself indebted to his soul alone. It mattered not whether the
truth was even demonstrably such; for the dogmatizing philosophers
of that epoch regarded only the road by which it professed to have
been attained. The end, with them, was a point of no moment,
whatever: -- 'the means!' they vociferated -- 'let us look at the means!' --
and if, on scrutiny of the means, it was found to come neither under
the category Hog, nor under the category Aries (which means ram),
why then the savans went no farther, but, calling the thinker a fool
and branding him a 'theorist,' would never, thenceforward, have any
thing to do either with him or with his truths.
"Now, my dear friend," continues the letter-writer, "it cannot be
maintained that by the crawling system, exclusively adopted, men would
arrive at the maximum amount of truth, even in any long series of
ages; for the repression of imagination was an evil not to be
counterbalanced even by absolute certainty in the snail processes.
But their certainty was very far from absolute. The error of our
progenitors was quite analogous with that of the wiseacre who
fancies he must necessarily see an object the more distinctly, the
more closely he holds it to his eyes. They blinded themselves, too,
with the impalpable, titillating Scotch snuff of detail; and thus
the boasted facts of the Hog-ites were by no means always facts -- a
point of little importance but for the assumption that they always
were. The vital taint, however, in Baconianism -- its most
lamentable fount of error -- lay in its tendency to throw power and
consideration into the hands of merely perceptive men -- of those
inter-Tritonic minnows, the microscopical savans -- the diggers and
pedlers of minute facts, for the most part in physical science --
facts all of which they retailed at the same price upon the highway;
their value depending, it was supposed, simply upon the fact of their
fact, without reference to their applicability or inapplicability
in the development of those ultimate and only legitimate facts, called
Law.
"Than the persons" -- the letter goes on to say -- "than the persons
thus suddenly elevated by the Hog-ian philosophy into a station for
which they were unfitted -- thus transferred from the sculleries into
the parlors of Science -- from its pantries into its pulpits -- than these
individuals a more intolerant -- a more intolerable set of bigots and
tyrants never existed on the face of the earth. Their creed, their
text and their sermon were, alike, the one word 'fact' -- but, for the
most part, even of this one word, they knew not even the meaning. On
those who ventured to disturb their facts with the view of putting
them in order and to use, the disciples of Hog had no mercy
whatever. All attempts at generalization were met at once by the words
'theoretical,' 'theory,' 'theorist' -- all thought, to be brief, was
very properly resented as a personal affront to themselves.
Cultivating the natural sciences to the exclusion of Metaphysics,
the Mathematics, and Logic, many of these Bacon-engendered
philosophers -- one-idead, one-sided and lame of a leg -- were more
wretchedly helpless -- more miserably ignorant, in view of all the
comprehensible objects of knowledge, than the veriest unlettered
hind who proves that he knows something at least, in admitting that he
knows absolutely nothing.
"Nor had our forefathers any better right to talk about certainty,
when pursuing, in blind confidence, the a priori path of axioms,
or of the Ram. At innumerable points this path was scarcely as
straight as a ram's-horn. The simple truth is, that the
Aristotelians erected their castles upon a basis far less reliable
than air; for no such things as axioms ever existed or can possibly
exist at all. This they must have been very blind, indeed, not to
see, or at least to suspect; for, even in their own day, many of their
long-admitted 'axioms' had been abandoned: -- 'ex nihilo nihil fit,'
for example, and a 'thing cannot act where it is not,' and 'there
cannot be antipodes,' and 'darkness cannot proceed from light.'
These and numerous similar propositions formerly accepted, without
hesitation, as axioms, or undeniable truths, were, even at the
period of which I speak, seen to be altogether untenable: -- how
absurd in these people, then, to persist in relying upon a basis, as
immutable, whose mutability had become so repeatedly manifest!
"But, even through evidence afforded by themselves against
themselves, it is easy to convict these a priori reasoners of the
grossest unreason -- it is easy to show the futility -- the
impalpability of their axioms in general. I have now lying before me" --
it will be observed that we still proceed with the letter -- "I have now
lying before me a book printed about a thousand years ago. Pundit
assures me that it is decidedly the cleverest ancient work on its
topic, which is 'Logic.' The author, who was much esteemed in his day,
was one Miller or Mill; and we find it recorded of him, as a point
of some importance, that he rode a mill-horse whom he called Jeremy
Bentham: -- but let us glance at the volume itself!
"Ah! -- 'Ability or inability to conceive,' says Mr. Mill very
properly, 'is in no case to be received as a criterion of
axiomatic truth.' Now, that this is a palpable truism no one in his
senses will deny. Not to admit the proposition, is to insinuate a
charge of variability in Truth itself, whose very title is a synonym
of the Steadfast. If ability to conceive be taken as a criterion of
Truth, then a truth to David Hume would very seldom be a truth to
Joe; and ninety-nine hundredths of what is undeniable in Heaven
would be demonstrable falsity upon Earth. The proposition of Mr. Mill,
then, is sustained. I will not grant it to be an axiom; and this
merely because I am showing that no axioms exist; but, with a
distinction which could not have been cavilled at even by Mr. Mill
himself, I am ready to grant that, if an axiom there be, then
the proposition of which we speak has the fullest right to be
considered an axiom -- that no more absolute axiom is -- and,
consequently, that any subsequent proposition which shall conflict
with this one primarily advanced, must be either a falsity in
itself -- that is to say no axiom -- or, if admitted axiomatic, must at
once neutralize both itself and its predecessor.
"And now, by the logic of their own propounder, let us proceed to
test any one of the axioms propounded. Let us give Mr. Mill the
fairest of play. We will bring the point to no ordinary issue. We will
select for investigation no common-place axiom -- no axiom of what,
not the less preposterously because only impliedly, he terms his
secondary class -- as if a positive truth by definition could be
either more or less positively a truth: -- we will select, I say, no
axiom of an unquestionability so questionable as is to be found in
Euclid. We will not talk, for example, about such propositions as that
two straight lines cannot enclose a space, or that the whole is
greater than any one of its parts. We will afford the logician every
advantage. We will come at once to a proposition which he regards as
the acme of the unquestionable -- as the quintessence of axiomatic
undeniability. Here it is: -- 'Contradictions cannot both be true --
that is, cannot coexist in nature.' Here Mr. Mill means, for
instance, -- and I give the most forcible instance conceivable -- that a
tree must be either a tree or not a tree -- that it cannot be at the
same time a tree and not a tree: -- all which is quite reasonable of
itself and will answer remarkably well as an axiom, until we bring
it into collation with an axiom insisted upon a few pages before -- in
other words -- words which I have previously employed -- until we test
it by the logic of its own propounder. 'A tree,' Mr. Mill asserts,
'must be either a tree or not a tree.' Very well: -- and now let me
ask him, why. To this little query there is but one response: -- I
defy any man living to invent a second. The sole answer is this: --
'Because we find it impossible to conceive that a tree can be
anything else than a tree or not a tree.' This, I repeat, is Mr.
Mill's sole answer: -- he will not pretend to suggest another: -- and
yet, by his own showing, his answer is clearly no answer at all; for
has he not already required us to admit, as an axiom, that ability
or inability to conceive is in no case to be taken as a criterion of
axiomatic truth? Thus all -- absolutely his argumentation is at
sea without a rudder. Let it not be urged that an exception from the
general rule is to be made, in cases where the 'impossibility to
conceive' is so peculiarly great as when we are called upon to
conceive a tree both a tree and not a tree. Let no attempt, I say,
be made at urging this sotticism; for, in the first place, there are
no degrees of 'impossibility,' and thus no one impossible conception
can be more peculiarly impossible than another impossible
conception: -- in the second place, Mr. Mill himself, no doubt after
thorough deliberation, has most distinctly, and most rationally,
excluded all opportunity for exception, by the emphasis of his
proposition, that, in no case, is ability or inability to
conceive, to be taken as a criterion of axiomatic truth: -- in the third
place, even were exceptions admissible at all, it remains to be
shown how any exception is admissible here. That a tree can be
both a tree and not a tree, is an idea which the angels, or the
devils, may entertain, and which no doubt many an earthly Bedlamite,
or Transcendentalist, does.
"Now I do not quarrel with these ancients," continues the
letter-writer, "so much on account of the transparent frivolity of
their logic -- which, to be plain, was baseless, worthless and fantastic
altogether -- as on account of their pompous and infatuate
proscription of all other roads to Truth than the two narrow and
crooked paths -- the one of creeping and the other of crawling -- to
which, in their ignorant perversity, they have dared to confine the
Soul -- the Soul which loves nothing so well as to soar in those regions
of illimitable intuition which are utterly incognizant of 'path.'
"By the bye, my dear friend, is it not an evidence of the mental
slavery entailed upon those bigoted people by their Hogs and Rams,
that in spite of the eternal prating of their savans about roads
to Truth, none of them fell, even by accident, into what we now so
distinctly perceive to be the broadest, the straightest and most
available of all mere roads -- the great thoroughfare -- the majestic
highway of the Consistent? Is it not wonderful that they should have
failed to deduce from the works of God the vitally momentous
consideration that a perfect consistency can be nothing but an
absolute truth? How plain -- how rapid our progress since the late
announcement of this proposition! By its means, investigation has been
taken out of the hands of the ground-moles, and given as a duty,
rather than as a task, to the true -- to the only true thinkers -- to
the generally-educated men of ardent imagination. These latter -- our
Keplers -- our Laplaces -- 'speculate' -- 'theorize' -- these are the terms --
can you not fancy the shout of scorn with which they would be received
by our progenitors, were it possible for them to be looking over my
shoulders as I write? The Keplers, I repeat, speculate -- theorize --
and their theories are merely corrected -- reduced -- sifted -- cleared,
little by little, of their chaff of inconsistency -- until at length
there stands apparent an unencumbered Consistency -- a consistency
which the most stolid admit -- because it is a consistency -- to be an
absolute and unquestionable Truth.
"I have often thought, my friend, that it must have puzzled these
dogmaticians of a thousand years ago, to determine, even, by which
of their two boasted roads it is that the cryptographist attains the
solution of the more complicated cyphers -- or by which of them
Champollion guided mankind to those important and innumerable truths
which, for so many centuries, have lain entombed amid the phonetical
hieroglyphics of Egypt. In especial, would it not have given these
bigots some trouble to determine by which of their two roads was
reached the most momentous and sublime of their truths -- the
truth -- the fact of gravitation? Newton deduced it from the laws of
Kepler. Kepler admitted that these laws he guessed -- these laws whose
investigation disclosed to the greatest of British astronomers that
principle, the basis of all (existing) physical principle, in going
behind which we enter at once the nebulous kingdom of Metaphysics.
Yes! -- these vital laws Kepler guessed -- that it is to say, he
imagined them. Had he been asked to point out either the de ductive
or in ductive route by which he attained them, his reply might have
been -- 'I know nothing about routes -- but I do know the machinery of
the Universe. Here it is. I grasped it with my soul -- I reached it
through mere dint of intuition.' Alas, poor ignorant old man!
Could not any metaphysician have told him that what he called
'intuition' was but the conviction resulting from de ductions or
in ductions of which the processes were so shadowy as to have escaped
his consciousness, eluded his reason, or bidden defiance to his
capacity of expression? How great a pity it is that some 'moral
philosopher' had not enlightened him about all this! How it would have
comforted him on his death-bed to know that, instead of having gone
intuitively and thus unbecomingly, he had, in fact, proceeded
decorously and legitimately -- that is to say Hog-ishly, or at least
Ram-ishly -- into the vast halls where lay gleaming, untended, and
hitherto untouched by mortal hand -- unseen by mortal eye -- the
imperishable and priceless secrets of the Universe!
"Yes, Kepler was essentially a theorist; but this title, now
of so much sanctity, was, in those ancient days, a designation of
supreme contempt. It is only now that men begin to appreciate that
divine old man -- to sympathize with the prophetical and poetical
rhapsody of his ever-memorable words. For my part," continues the
unknown correspondent, "I glow with a sacred fire when I even think of
them, and feel that I shall never grow weary of their repetition: --
in concluding this letter, let me have the real pleasure of
transcribing them once again: -- 'I care not whether my work be read
now or by posterity. I can afford to wait a century for readers when
God himself has waited six thousand years for an observer. I
triumph. I have stolen the golden secret of the Egyptians. I will
indulge my sacred fury.'"
Here end my quotations from this very unaccountable and, perhaps,
somewhat impertinent epistle; and perhaps it would be folly to
comment, in any respect, upon the chimerical, not to say
revolutionary, fancies of the writer -- whoever he is -- fancies so
radically at war with the well-considered and well-settled opinions of
this age. Let us proceed, then, to our legitimate thesis, The
Universe.
This thesis admits a choice between two modes of discussion: -- We may
as cend or des cend. Beginning at our own point of view -- at the
Earth on which we stand -- we may pass to the other planets of our
system -- thence to the Sun -- thence to our system considered
collectively -- and thence, through other systems, indefinitely
outwards; or, commencing on high at some point as definite as we can
make it or conceive it, we may come down to the habitation of Man.
Usually -- that is to say, in ordinary essays on Astronomy -- the first of
these two modes is, with certain reservation, adopted: -- this for the
obvious reason that astronomical facts, merely, and principles,
being the object, that object is best fulfilled in stepping from the
known because proximate, gradually onward to the point where all
certitude becomes lost in the remote. For my present purpose,
however, -- that of enabling the mind to take in, as if from afar and at
one glance, a distant conception of the individual Universe -- it is
clear that a descent to small from great -- to the outskirts from the
centre (if we could establish a centre) -- to the end from the beginning
(if we could fancy a beginning) would be the preferable course, but
for the difficulty, if not impossibility, of presenting, in this
course, to the unastronomical, a picture at all comprehensible in
regard to such considerations as are involved in quantity -- that is
to say, in number, magnitude and distance.
Now, distinctness -- intelligibility, at all points, is a primary
feature in my general design. On important topics it is better to be a
good deal prolix than even a very little obscure. But abstruseness
is a quality appertaining to no subject per se. All are alike, in
facility of comprehension, to him who approaches them by properly
graduated steps. It is merely because a stepping-stone, here and
there, is heedlessly left unsupplied in our road to the Differential
Calculus, that this latter is not altogether as simple a thing as a
sonnet by Mr. Solomon Seesaw.
By way of admitting, then, no chance for misapprehension, I
think it advisable to proceed as if even the more obvious facts of
Astronomy were unknown to the reader. In combining the two modes of
discussion to which I have referred, I propose to avail myself of
the advantages peculiar to each -- and very especially of the iteration
in detail which will be unavoidable as a consequence of the plan.
Commencing with a descent, I shall reserve for the return upwards
those indispensable considerations of quantity to which allusion has
already been made.
Let us begin, then, at once, with that merest of words,
"Infinity." This, like "God," "spirit," and some other expressions
of which the equivalents exist in all languages, is by no means the
expression of an idea -- but of an effort at one. It stands for the
possible attempt at an impossible conception. Man needed a term by
which to point out the direction of this effort -- the cloud behind
which lay, forever invisible, the object of this attempt. A word, in
fine, was demanded, by means of which one human being might put
himself in relation at once with another human being and with a
certain tendency of the human intellect. Out of this demand arose
the word, "Infinity;" which is thus the representative but of the
thought of a thought.
As regards that infinity now considered -- the infinity of space -- we
often hear it said that "its idea is admitted by the mind -- is
acquiesced in -- is entertained -- on account of the greater difficulty
which attends the conception of a limit." But this is merely one of
those phrases by which even profound thinkers, time out of mind,
have occasionally taken pleasure in deceiving themselves. The
quibble lies concealed in the word "difficulty." "The mind," we are
told, "entertains the idea of limitless, through the greater
difficulty which it finds in entertaining that of limited, space."
Now, were the proposition but fairly put, its absurdity would become
transparent at once. Clearly, there is no mere difficulty in the
case. The assertion intended, if presented according to its
intention and without sophistry, would run thus: -- "The mind admits the
idea of limitless, through the greater impossibility of entertaining
that of limited, space."
It must be immediately seen that this is not a question of two
statements between whose respective credibilities -- or of two arguments
between whose respective validities -- the reason is called upon to
decide: -- it is a matter of two conceptions, directly conflicting,
and each avowedly impossible, one of which the intellect is supposed
to be capable of entertaining, on account of the greater
impossibility of entertaining the other. The choice is not made
between two difficulties; -- it is merely fancied to be made between
two impossibilities. Now of the former, there are degrees, -- but of
the latter, none: -- just as our impertinent letter-writer has already
suggested. A task may be more or less difficult; but it is either
possible or not possible: -- there are no gradations. It might be more
difficult to overthrow the Andes than an ant-hill; but it can be
no more impossible to annihilate the matter of the one than the
matter of the other. A man may jump ten feet with less difficulty
than he can jump twenty, but the impossibility of his leaping to the
moon is not a whit less than that of his leaping to the dog-star.
Since all this is undeniable: since the choice of the mind is to
be made between impossibilities of conception: since one
impossibility cannot be greater than another: and since, thus, one
cannot be preferred to another: the philosophers who not only
maintain, on the grounds mentioned, man's idea of infinity but, on
account of such supposititious idea, infinity itself -- are plainly
engaged in demonstrating one impossible thing to be possible by
showing how it is that some one other thing -- is impossible too.
This, it will be said, is nonsense; and perhaps it is: -- indeed I think
it very capital nonsense -- but forego all claim to it as nonsense of
mine.
The readiest mode, however, of displaying the fallacy of the
philosophical argument on this question, is by simply adverting to a
fact respecting it which has been hitherto quite overlooked -- the
fact that the argument alluded to both proves and disproves its own
proposition. "The mind is impelled," say the theologians and others,
"to admit a First Cause, by the superior difficulty it experiences
in conceiving cause beyond cause without end." The quibble, as before,
lies in the word "difficulty" -- but here what is it employed to
sustain? A First Cause. And what is a First Cause? An ultimate
termination of causes. And what is an ultimate termination of
causes? Finity -- the Finite. Thus the one quibble, in two processes, by
God knows how many philosophers, is made to support now Finity and now
Infinity -- could it not be brought to support something besides? As for
the quibblers -- they, at least, are insupportable. But -- to dismiss
them: -- what they prove in the one case is the identical nothing
which they demonstrate in the other.
Of course, no one will suppose that I here contend for the
absolute impossibility of that which we attempt to convey in the
word "Infinity." My purpose is but to show the folly of endeavoring to
prove Infinity itself, or even our conception of it, by any such
blundering ratiocination as that which is ordinarily employed.
Nevertheless, as an individual, I may be permitted to say that I
cannot conceive Infinity, and am convinced that no human being
can. A mind not thoroughly self-conscious -- not accustomed to the
introspective analysis of its own operations -- will, it is true,
often deceive itself by supposing that it has entertained the
conception of which we speak. In the effort to entertain it, we
proceed step beyond step -- we fancy point still beyond point; and so
long as we Continue the effort, it may be said, in fact, that we are
tending to the formation of the idea designed; while the strength of
the impression that we actually form or have formed it, is in the
ratio of the period during which we keep up the mental endeavor. But
it is in the act of discontinuing the endeavor -- of fulfilling (as we
think) the idea -- of putting the finishing stroke (as we suppose) to
the conception -- that we overthrow at once the whole fabric of our
fancy by resting upon some one ultimate and therefore definite
point. This fact, however, we fail to perceive, on account of the
absolute coincidence, in time, between the settling down upon the
ultimate point and the act of cessation in thinking. -- In attempting,
on the other hand, to frame the idea of a limited space, we merely
converse the processes which involve the impossibility.
We believe in a God. We may or may not believe in finite or in
infinite space; but our belief, in such cases, is more properly
designated as faith, and is a matter quite distinct from that belief
proper -- from that intellectual belief -- which presupposes the
mental conception.
The fact is, that, upon the enunciation of any one of that class
of terms to which "Infinity" belongs -- the class representing thoughts
of thought -- he who has a right to say that he thinks at all,
feels himself called upon, not to entertain a conception, but simply
to direct his mental vision toward some given point, in the
intellectual firmament, where lies a nebula never to be resolved. To
solve it, indeed, he makes no effort; for with a rapid instinct he
comprehends, not only the impossibility, but, as regards all human
purposes, the inessentiality, of its solution. He perceives that the
Deity has not designed it to be solved. He sees, at once, that it
lies out of the brain of man, and even how, if not exactly
why, it lies out of it. There are people, I am aware, who, busying
themselves in attempts at the unattainable, acquire very easily, by
dint of the jargon they emit, among those thinkers-that-they-think
with whom darkness and depth are synonymous, a kind of cuttle-fish
reputation for profundity; but the finest quality of Thought is its
self-cognizance; and, with some little equivocation, it may be said
that no fog of the mind can well be greater than that which, extending
to the very boundaries of the mental domain, shuts out even these
boundaries themselves from comprehension.
It will now be understood that, in using the phrase, "Infinity of
Space," I make no call upon the reader to entertain the impossible
conception of an absolute infinity. I refer simply to the "utmost
conceivable expanse" of space -- a shadowy and fluctuating domain,
now shrinking, now swelling, in accordance with the vacillating
energies of the imagination.
Hitherto, the Universe of stars has always been considered as
coincident with the Universe proper, as I have defined it in the
commencement of this Discourse. It has been always either directly
or indirectly assumed -- at least since the dawn of intelligible
Astronomy -- that, were it possible for us to attain any given point
in space, we should still find, on all sides of us, an interminable
succession of stars. This was the untenable idea of Pascal when making
perhaps the most successful attempt ever made, at periphrasing the
conception for which we struggle in the word "Universe." "It is a
sphere," he says, "of which the centre is everywhere, the
circumference, nowhere." But although this intended definition is,
in fact, no definition of the Universe of stars, we may accept it,
with some mental reservation, as a definition (rigorous enough for all
practical purposes) of the Universe proper -- that is to say, of the
Universe of space. This latter, then, let us regard as "a sphere of
which the centre is everywhere, the circumference nowhere." In
fact, while we find it impossible to fancy an end to space, we
have no difficulty in picturing to ourselves any one of an infinity of
beginnings.
As our starting point, then, let us adopt the Godhead. Of this
Godhead, in itself, he alone is not imbecile -- he alone is not
impious who propounds -- nothing. "Nous ne connaissons rien," says the
Baron de Bielfeld -- "Nous ne connaissons rien de la nature ou de
l'essence de Dieu: -- pour savoir ce qu'il est, il faut etre Dieu
meme." -- "We know absolutely nothing of the nature or essence of God: --
in order to comprehend what he is, we should have to be God
ourselves."
"We should have to be God ourselves!" -- With a phrase so
startling as this yet ringing in my ears, I nevertheless venture to
demand if this our present ignorance of the Deity is an ignorance to
which the soul is everlastingly condemned.
By Him, however -- now, at least, the Incomprehensible -- by Him --
assuming him as Spirit -- that is to say, as not Matter -- a
distinction which, for all intelligible purposes, will stand well
instead of a definition -- by Him, then, existing as Spirit, let us
content ourselves, to-night, with supposing to have been created, or
made out of Nothing, by dint of his Volition -- at some point of Space
which we will take as a centre -- at some period into which we do not
pretend to inquire, but at all events immensely remote -- by Him, then
again, let us suppose to have been created -- what? This is a
vitally momentous epoch in our considerations. What is it that we
are justified -- that alone we are justified in supposing to have
been, primarily and solely, created?
We have attained a point where only Intuition can aid us: -- but now
let me recur to the idea which I have already suggested as that
alone which we can properly entertain of intuition. It is but the
conviction arising from those inductions or deductions of which the
processes are so shadowy as to escape our consciousness, elude our
reason, or defy our capacity of expression. With this
understanding, I now assert -- that an intuition altogether
irresistible, although inexpressible, forces me to the conclusion that
what God originally created -- that that Matter which, by dint of his
Volition, he first made from his Spirit, or from Nihility, Could
have been nothing but Matter in its utmost conceivable state of --
what? -- of Simplicity?
This will be found the sole absolute assumption of my Discourse. I
use the word "assumption" in its ordinary sense; yet I maintain that
even this my primary proposition, is very, very far indeed, from being
really a mere assumption. Nothing was ever more certainly -- no human
conclusion was ever, in fact, more regularly -- more rigorously
de duced: -- but, alas! the processes lie out of the human analysis -- at
all events are beyond the utterance of the human tongue.
Let us now endeavor to conceive what Matter must be, when, or if, in
its absolute extreme of Simplicity. Here the Reason flies at once to
Imparticularity -- to a particle -- to one particle -- a particle of one
kind -- of one character -- of one nature -- of one size -- of one form --
a particle, therefore, "without form and void" -- a particle
positively a particle at all points -- a particle absolutely unique,
individual, undivided, and not indivisible only because He who
created it, by dint of his Will, can by an infinitely less energetic
exercise of the same Will, as a matter of course, divide it.
Oneness, then, is all that I predicate of the originally created
Matter; but I propose to show that this Oneness is a principle
abundantly sufficient to account for the constitution, the existing
phaenomena and the plainly inevitable annihilation of at least the
material Universe.
The willing into being the primordial particle, has completed the
act, or more properly the Conception, of Creation. We now proceed to
the ultimate purpose for which we are to suppose the Particle created --
that is to say, the ultimate purpose so far as our considerations
yet enable us to see it -- the constitution of the Universe from it,
the Particle.
This constitution has been effected by forcing the originally
and therefore normally One into the abnormal condition of Many. An
action of this character implies reaction. A diffusion from Unity,
under the conditions, involves a tendency to return into Unity -- a
tendency ineradicable until satisfied. But on these points I will
speak more fully hereafter.
The assumption of absolute Unity in the primordial Particle includes
that of infinite divisibility. Let us conceive the Particle, then,
to be only not totally exhausted by diffusion into Space. From the one
Particle, as a centre, let us suppose to be irradiated spherically -- in
all directions -- to immeasurable but still to definite distances in the
previously vacant space -- a certain inexpressibly great yet limited
number of unimaginably yet not infinitely minute atoms.
Now, of these atoms, thus diffused, or upon diffusion, what
conditions are we permitted -- not to assume, but to infer, from
consideration as well of their source as of the character of the
design apparent in their diffusion? Unity being their source, and
difference from Unity the character of the design manifested in
their diffusion, we are warranted in supposing this character to be at
least generally preserved throughout the design, and to form a
portion of the design itself: -- that is to say, we shall be warranted
in conceiving continual differences at all points from the uniquity
and simplicity of the origin. But, for these reasons, shall we be
justified in imagining the atoms heterogeneous, dissimilar, unequal,
and inequidistant? More explicitly -- are we to consider no two atoms
as, at their diffusion, of the same nature, or of the same form, or of
the same size? -- and, after fulfilment of their diffusion into Space,
is absolute inequidistance, each from each, to be understood of all of
them? In such arrangement, under such conditions, we most easily and
immediately comprehend the subsequent most feasible carrying out to
completion of any such design as that which I have suggested -- the
design of variety out of unity -- diversity out of sameness --
heterogeneity out of homogeneity -- complexity out of simplicity -- in a
word, the utmost possible multiplicity of relation out of the
emphatically irrelative One. Undoubtedly, therefore, we should
be warranted in assuming all that has been mentioned, but for the
reflection, first, that supererogation is not presumable of any Divine
Act; and, secondly, that the object supposed in view, appears as
feasible when some of the conditions in question are dispensed with,
in the beginning, as when all are understood immediately to exist. I
mean to say that some are involved in the rest, or so instantaneous
a consequence of them as to make the distinction inappreciable.
Difference of size, for example, will at once be brought about
through the tendency of one atom to a second, in preference to a
third, on account of particular inequidistance; which is to be
comprehended as particular inequidistances between centres of
quantity, in neighboring atoms of different form -- a matter not at all
interfering with the generally-equable distribution of the atoms.
Difference of kind, too, is easily conceived to be merely a result
of differences in size and form, taken more or less conjointly: -- in
fact, since the Unity of the Particle Proper implies absolute
homogeneity, we cannot imagine the atoms, at their diffusion,
differing in kind, without imagining, at the same time, a special
exercise of the Divine Will, at the emission of each atom, for the
purpose of effecting, in each, a change of its essential nature: -- so
fantastic an idea is the less to be indulged, as the object proposed
is seen to be thoroughly attainable without such minute and
elaborate interposition. We perceive, therefore, upon the whole,
that it would be supererogatory, and consequently unphilosophical,
to predicate of the atoms, in view of their purposes, any thing more
than difference of form at their dispersion, with particular
inequidistance after it -- all other differences arising at once out
of these, in the very first processes of mass-constitution: -- We thus
establish the Universe on a purely geometrical basis. Of course,
it is by no means necessary to assume absolute difference, even of
form, among the atoms irradiated -- any more than absolute
particular inequidistance of each from each. We are required to
conceive merely that no neighboring atoms are of similar form -- no
atoms which can ever approximate, until their inevitable reunition
at the end.
Although the immediate and perpetual tendency of the disunited
atoms to return into their normal Unity, is implied, as I have said,
in their abnormal diffusion; still it is clear that this tendency will
be without consequence -- a tendency and no more -- until the diffusive
energy, in ceasing to be exerted, shall leave it, the tendency, free
to seek its satisfaction. The Divine Act, however, being considered as
determinate, and discontinued on fulfilment of the diffusion, we
understand, at once, a reaction -- in other words, a satisfiable
tendency of the disunited atoms to return into One.
But the diffusive energy being withdrawn, and the reaction having
commenced in furtherance of the ultimate design -- that of the utmost
possible Relation -- this design is now in danger of being
frustrated, in detail, by reason of that very tendency to return which
is to effect its accomplishment in general. Multiplicity is the
object; but there is nothing to prevent proximate atoms, from
lapsing at once, through the now satisfiable tendency -- before
the fulfilment of any ends proposed in multiplicity -- into absolute
oneness among themselves: -- there is nothing to impede the
aggregation of various unique masses, at various points of space: --
in other words, nothing to interfere with the accumulation of
various masses, each absolutely One.
For the effectual and thorough completion of the general design,
we thus see the necessity for a repulsion of limited capacity -- a
separate something which, on withdrawal of the diffusive Volition,
shall at the same time allow the approach, and forbid the junction, of
the atoms; suffering them infinitely to approximate, while denying
them positive contact; in a word, having the power -- up to a certain
epoch -- of preventing their Coalition, but no ability to interfere
with their Coalescence in any respect or degree. The repulsion,
already considered as so peculiarly limited in other regards, must
be understood, let me repeat, as having power to prevent absolute
coalition, only up to a certain epoch. Unless we are to conceive
that the appetite for Unity among the atoms is doomed to be
satisfied never; -- unless we are to conceive that what had a
beginning is to have no end -- a conception which cannot really be
entertained, however much we may talk or dream of entertaining it --
we are forced to conclude that the repulsive influence imagined, will,
finally -- under pressure of the Uni-tendency collectively applied,
but, never and in no degree until, on fulfilment of the Divine
purposes, such collective application shall be naturally made -- yield
to a force which, at that ultimate epoch, shall be the superior
force precisely to the extent required, and thus permit the
universal subsidence into the inevitable, because original and
therefore normal, One. -- The conditions here to be reconciled are
difficult indeed: -- we cannot even comprehend the possibility of
their conciliation; -- nevertheless, the apparent impossibility is
brilliantly suggestive.
That the repulsive something actually exists, we see. Man
neither employs, nor knows, a force sufficient to bring two atoms into
contact. This is but the well-established proposition of the
impenetrability of matter. All Experiment proves -- all Philosophy
admits it. The design of the repulsion -- the necessity for its
existence -- I have endeavored to show; but from all attempt at
investigating its nature have religiously abstained; this on account
of an intuitive conviction that the principle at issue is strictly
spiritual -- lies in a recess impervious to our present understanding --
lies involved in a consideration of what now -- in our human state -- is
not to be considered -- in a consideration of Spirit in itself. I
feel, in a word, that here the God has interposed, and here only,
because here and here only the knot demanded the interposition of
the God.
In fact, while the tendency of the diffused atoms to return into
Unity, will be recognized, at once, as the principle of the
Newtonian Gravity, what I have spoken of as a repulsive influence
prescribing limits to the (immediate) satisfaction of the tendency,
will be understood as that which we have been in the practice of
designating now as heat, now as magnetism, now as electricity;
displaying our ignorance of its awful character in the vacillation
of the phraseology with which we endeavor to circumscribe it.
Calling it, merely for the moment, electricity, we know that all
experimental analysis of electricity has given, as an ultimate result,
the principle, or seeming principle, heterogeneity. Only where
things differ is electricity apparent; and it is presumable that
they never differ where it is not developed at least, if not
apparent. Now, this result is in the fullest keeping with that which I
have reached unempirically. The design of the repulsive influence I
have maintained to be that of preventing immediate Unity among the
diffused atoms; and these atoms are represented as different each from
each. Difference is their character -- their essentiality -- just as
no-difference was the essentiality of their course. When we say,
then, that an attempt to bring any two of these atoms together would
induce an effort, on the part of the repulsive influence, to prevent
the contact we may as well use the strictly convertible sentence
that an attempt to bring together any two differences will result in a
development of electricity. All existing bodies, of course, are
composed of these atoms in proximate contact, and are therefore to
be considered as mere assemblages of more or fewer differences; and
the resistance made by the repulsive spirit, on bringing together
any two such assemblages, would be in the ratio of the two sums of the
differences in each: -- an expression which, when reduced, is equivalent
to this: -- The amount of electricity developed on the approximation of
two bodies, is proportional to the difference between the respective
sums of the atoms of which the bodies are composed. That no two
bodies are absolutely alike, is a simple corollary from all that has
been here said. Electricity, therefore, existing always, is
developed whenever any bodies, but manifested only when bodies
of appreciable difference, are brought into approximation.
To electricity -- so, for the present, continuing to call it -- we may
not be wrong in referring the various physical appearances of light,
heat and magnetism; but far less shall we be liable to err in
attributing to this strictly spiritual principle the more important
phaenomena of vitality, consciousness and Thought. On this topic,
however, I need pause here merely to suggest that these
phaenomena, whether observed generally or in detail, seem to proceed
at least in the ratio of the heterogeneous.
Discarding now the two equivocal terms, "gravitation" and
"electricity," let us adopt the more definite expressions,
"attraction" and "repulsion." The former is the body; the latter
the soul: the one is the material; the other the spiritual,
principle of the Universe. No other principles exist. All phaenomena
are referable to one, or to the other, or to both combined. So
rigorously is this the case -- so thoroughly demonstrable is it that
attraction and repulsion are the sole properties through which we
perceive the Universe -- in other words, by which Matter is manifested
to Mind -- that, for all merely argumentative purposes, we are fully
justified in assuming that matter exists only as attraction and
repulsion -- that attraction and repulsion are matter: -- there being no
conceivable case in which we may not employ the term "matter" and
the terms "attraction" and "repulsion," taken together, as equivalent,
and therefore convertible, expressions in Logic.
I said, just now, that what I have described as the tendency of
the diffused atoms to return into their original unity, would be
understood as the principle of the Newtonian law of gravity: and, in
fact, there can be but little difficulty in such an understanding,
if we look at the Newtonian gravity in a merely general view, as a
force impelling matter to seek matter; that is to say, when we pay
no attention to the known modus operandi of the Newtonian force. The
general coincidence satisfies us; but, upon looking closely, we see,
in detail, much that appears in coincident, and much in regard to
which no coincidence, at least, is established. For example; the
Newtonian gravity, when we think of it in certain moods, does not
seem to be a tendency to oneness at all, but rather a tendency of
all bodies in all directions -- a phrase apparently expressive of a
tendency to diffusion. Here, then, is an in coincidence. Again;
when we reflect on the mathematical LA0 governing the Newtonian
tendency, we see clearly that no coincidence has been made good, in
respect of the modus operandi, at least, between gravitation as
known to exist and that seemingly simple and direct tendency which I
have assumed.
In fact, I have attained a point at which it will be advisable to
strengthen my position by reversing my processes. So far, we have gone
on a priori, from an abstract consideration of Simplicity, as that
quality most likely to have characterized the original action of
God. Let us now see whether the established facts of the Newtonian
Gravitation may not afford us, a posteriori, some legitimate
inductions.
What does the Newtonian law declare? -- That all bodies attract each
other with forces proportional to their quantities of matter and
inversely proportional to the squares of their distances. Purposely, I
have here given, in the first place, the vulgar version of the law;
and I confess that in this, as in most other vulgar versions of
great truths, we find little of a suggestive character. Let us now
adopt a more philosophical phraseology: -- Every atom, of every body,
attracts every other atom, both of its own and of every other body,
with a force which varies inversely as the squares of the distances
between the attracting and attracted atom. -- Here, indeed, a flood
of suggestion bursts upon the mind.
But let us see distinctly what it was that Newton proved --
according to the grossly irrational definitions of proof
prescribed by the metaphysical schools. He was forced to content
himself with showing how thoroughly the motions of an imaginary
Universe, composed of attracting and attracted atoms obedient to the
law he announced, coincide with those of the actually existing
Universe so far as it comes under our observation. This was the amount
of his demonstration -- that is to say, this was the amount of it,
according to the conventional cant of the "philosophies." His
successes added proof multiplied by proof -- such proof as a sound
intellect admits -- but the demonstration of the law itself, persist
the metaphysicians, had not been strengthened in any degree. "Ocular,
physical proof," however, of attraction, here upon Earth, in
accordance with the Newtonian theory, was, at length, much to the
satisfaction of some intellectual grovellers, afforded. This proof
arose collaterally and incidentally (as nearly all important truths
have arisen) out of an attempt to ascertain the mean density of the
Earth. In the famous Maskelyne, Cavendish and Bailly experiments for
this purpose, the attraction of the mass of a mountain was seen, felt,
measured, and found to be mathematically consistent with the
immortal theory of the British astronomer.
But in spite of this confirmation of that which needed none -- in
spite of the so-called corroboration of the "theory" by the
so-called "ocular and physical proof" -- in spite of the character
of this corroboration -- the ideas which even really philosophical men
cannot help imbibing of gravity -- and, especially, the ideas of it
which ordinary men get and contentedly maintain, are seen to have
been derived, for the most part, from a consideration of the principle
as they find it developed -- merely in the planet upon which they
stand.
Now, to what does so partial a consideration tend -- to what species
of error does it give rise? On the Earth we see and feel, only
that gravity impels all bodies towards the centre of the Earth. No
man in the common walks of life could be made to see or feel
anything else -- could be made to perceive that anything, anywhere,
has a perpetual, gravitating tendency in any other direction than to
the centre of the Earth; yet (with an exception hereafter to be
specified) it is a fact that every earthly thing (not to speak now
of every heavenly thing) has a tendency not only to the Earth's
centre but in every conceivable direction besides.
Now, although the philosophic cannot be said to err with the
vulgar in this matter, they nevertheless permit themselves to be
influenced, without knowing it, by the sentiment of the vulgar idea.
"Although the Pagan fables are not believed," says Bryant, in his very
erudite "Mythology," "yet we forget ourselves continually and make
inferences from them as from existing realities." I mean to assert
that the merely sensitive perception of gravity as we experience
it on Earth, beguiles mankind into the fancy of Concentralization or
especiality respecting it -- has been continually biasing towards this
fancy even the mightiest intellects -- perpetually, although
imperceptibly, leading them away from the real characteristics of
the principle; thus preventing them, up to this date, from ever
getting a glimpse of that vital truth which lies in a diametrically
opposite direction -- behind the principle's essential
characteristics -- those, not of concentralization or especiality -- but
of universality and diffusion. This "vital truth" is Unity as
the source of the phaenomenon.
Let me now repeat the definition of gravity: -- Every atom, of
every body, attracts every other atom, both of its own and of every
other body, with a force which varies inversely as the squares of the
distances of the attracting and attracted atom.
Here let the reader pause with me, for a moment, in contemplation of
the miraculous -- of the ineffable -- of the altogether unimaginable
complexity of relation involved in the fact that each atom attracts
every other atom -- involved merely in this fact of the attraction,
without reference to the law or mode in which the attraction is
manifested -- involved merely in the fact that each atom attracts
every other atom at all, in a wilderness of atoms so numerous that
those which go to the composition of a cannon-ball, exceed,
probably, in mere point of number, all the stars which go to the
constitution of the Universe.
Had we discovered, simply, that each atom tended to some one
favorite point -- to some especially attractive atom -- we should still
have fallen upon a discovery which, in itself, would have sufficed
to overwhelm the mind: -- but what is it that we are actually called
upon to comprehend? That each atom attracts -- sympathizes with the most
delicate movements of every other atom, and with each and with all
at the same time, and forever, and according to a determinate law of
which the complexity, even considered by itself solely, is utterly
beyond the grasp of the imagination of man. If I propose to
ascertain the influence of one mote in a sunbeam upon its
neighboring mote, I cannot accomplish my purpose without first
counting and weighing all the atoms in the Universe and defining the
precise positions of all at one particular moment. If I venture to
displace, by even the billionth part of an inch, the microscopical
speck of dust which lies now upon the point of my finger, what is
the character of that act upon which I have adventured? I have done
a deed which shakes the Moon in her path, which causes the Sun to be
no longer the Sun, and which alters forever the destiny of the
multitudinous myriads of stars that roll and glow in the majestic
presence of their Creator.
These ideas -- conceptions such as these -- unthought-like thoughts --
soul-reveries rather than conclusions or even considerations of the
intellect: -- ideas, I repeat, such as these, are such as we can alone
hope profitably to entertain in any effort at grasping the great
principle, Attraction.
But now, -- with such ideas -- with such a vision of the
marvellous complexity of Attraction fairly in his mind -- let any person
competent of thought on such topics as these, set himself to the
task of imagining a principle for the phaenomena observed -- a
condition from which they sprang.
Does not so evident a brotherhood among the atoms point to a
common parentage? Does not a sympathy so omniprevalent, so
ineradicable, and so thoroughly irrespective, suggest a common
paternity as its source? Does not one extreme impel the reason to
the other? Does not the infinitude of division refer to the
utterness of individuality? Does not the entireness of the complex
hint at the perfection of the simple? It is not that the atoms, as
we see them, are divided or that they are complex in their
relations -- but that they are inconceivably divided and unutterably
complex: -- it is the extremeness of the conditions to which I now
allude, rather than to the conditions themselves. In a word, not
because the atoms were, at some remote epoch of time, even more
than together -- is it not because originally, and therefore
normally, they were One -- that now, in all circumstances -- at all
points -- in all directions -- by all modes of approach -- in all
relations and through all conditions -- they struggle back to this
absolutely, this irrelatively, this unconditionally one?
Some person may here demand: -- "Why -- since it is to the One that
the atoms struggle back -- do we not find and define Attraction 'a
merely general tendency to a centre?' -- why, in especial, do not your
atoms -- the atoms which you describe as having been irradiated from a
centre -- proceed at once, rectilinearly, back to the central point of
their origin?"
I reply that they do; as will be distinctly shown; but that the
cause of their so doing is quite irrespective of the centre as such.
They all tend rectilinearly towards a centre, because of the
sphereicity with which they have been irradiated into space. Each
atom, forming one of a generally uniform globe of atoms, finds more
atoms in the direction of the centre, of course, than in any other,
and in that direction, therefore, is impelled -- but is not thus
impelled because the centre is the point of its origin. It is not to
any point that the atoms are allied. It is not any locality,
either in the concrete or in the abstract, to which I suppose them
bound. Nothing like location was conceived as their origin. Their
source lies in the principle, Unity. This is their lost parent.
This they seek always -- immediately -- in all directions -- wherever it
is even partially to be found; thus appeasing, in some measure, the
ineradicable tendency, while on the way to its absolute satisfaction
in the end. It follows from all this, that any principle which shall
be adequate to account for the LA0 or modus operandi, of the
attractive force in general, will account for this law in particular: --
that is to say, any principle which will show why the atoms should
tend to their general centre of irradiation with forces inversely
proportional to the squares of the distances, will be admitted as
satisfactorily accounting, at the same time, for the tendency,
according to the same law, of these atoms each to each: -- for the
tendency to the centre is merely the tendency each to each, and
not any tendency to a centre as such. -- Thus it will be seen, also,
that the establishment of my propositions would involve no necessity
of modification in the terms of the Newtonian definition of Gravity,
which declares that each atom attracts each other atom and so forth,
and declares this merely; but (always under the supposition that
what I propose be, in the end, admitted) it seems clear that some
error might occasionally be avoided, in the future processes of
Science, were a more ample phraseology adopted: -- for instance: --
"Each atom tends to every other atom &c. with a force &c.: the
general result being a tendency of all, with a similar force, to a
general centre."
The reversal of our processes has thus brought us to an identical
result; but, while in the one process intuition was the
starting-point, in the other it was the goal. In commencing the former
journey I could only say that, with an irresistable intuition, I
felt Simplicity to have been the characteristic of the original
action of God: -- in ending the latter I can only declare that, with
an irresistible intuition, I perceive Unity to have been the source of
the observed phaenomena of the Newtonian gravitation. Thus,
according to the schools, I prove nothing. So be it: -- I design but
to suggest-and to Convince through the suggestion. I am proudly
aware that there exist many of the most profound and cautiously
discriminative human intellects which cannot help being abundantly
content with my -- suggestions. To these intellects -- as to my own -- there
is no mathematical demonstration which Could bring the least
additional TRue proof of the great TRuth which I have advanced --
the truth of Original Unity as the source -- as the principle of the
Universal Phaenomena. For my part, I am not sure that I speak and
see -- I am not so sure that my heart beats and that my soul lives: --
of the rising of to-morrow's sun -- a probability that as yet lies in
the Future -- I do not pretend to be one thousandth part as sure -- as I
am of the irretrievably by-gone Fact that All Things and All
Thoughts of Things, with all their ineffable Multiplicity of Relation,
sprang at once into being from the primordial and irrelative One.
Referring to the Newtonian Gravity, Dr. Nichol, the eloquent
author of "The Architecture of the Heavens," says: -- "In truth we
have no reason to suppose this great Law, as now revealed, to be the
ultimate or simplest, and therefore the universal and
all-comprehensive, form of a great Ordinance. The mode in which its
intensity diminishes with the element of distance, has not the
aspect of an ultimate principle; which always assumes the simplicity
and self-evidence of those axioms which constitute the basis of
Geometry."
Now, it is quite true that "ultimate principles," in the common
understanding of the words, always assume the simplicity of
geometrical axioms -- (as for "self-evidence," there is no such
thing) -- but these principles are clearly not "ultimate;" in other
terms what we are in the habit of calling principles are no
principles, properly speaking -- since there can be but one principle,
the Volition of God. We have no right to assume, then, from what we
observe in rules that we choose foolishly to name "principles,"
anything at all in respect to the characteristics of a principle
proper. The "ultimate principles" of which Dr. Nichol speaks as having
geometrical simplicity, may and do have this geometrical turn, as
being part and parcel of a vast geometrical system, and thus a
system of simplicity itself -- in which, nevertheless, the TRuly
ultimate principle is, as we know, the consummation of the
complex -- that is to say, of the unintelligible -- for is it not the
Spiritual Capacity of God?
I quoted Dr. Nichol's remark, however, not so much to question its
philosophy, as by way of calling attention to the fact that, while all
men have admitted some principle as existing behind the Law of
Gravity, no attempt has been yet made to point out what this principle
in particular is: -- if we except, perhaps, occasional fantastic
efforts at referring it to Magnetism, or Mesmerism, or
Swedenborgianism, or Transcendentalism, or some other equally
delicious ism of the same species, and invariably patronized by
one and the same species of people. The great mind of Newton, while
boldly grasping the Law itself, shrank from the principle of the
Law. The more fluent and comprehensive at least, if not the more
patient and profound, sagacity of Laplace, had not the courage to
attack it. But hesitation on the part of these two astronomers it
is, perhaps, not so very difficult to understand. They, as well as all
the first class of mathematicians, were mathematicians solely: --
their intellect, at least, had a firmly-pronounced
mathematico-physical tone. What lay not distinctly within the domain
of Physics, or of Mathematics, seemed to them either Non-Entity or
Shadow. Nevertheless, we may well wonder that Leibnitz, who was a
marked exception to the general rule in these respects, and whose
mental temperament was a singular admixture of the mathematical with
the physico-metaphysical, did not at once investigate and establish
the point at issue. Either Newton or Laplace, seeking a principle
and discovering none physical, would have rested contentedly in
the conclusion that there was absolutely none; but it is almost
impossible to fancy, of Leibnitz, that, having exhausted in his search
the physical dominions, he would not have stepped at once, boldly
and hopefully, amid his old familiar haunts in the kingdom of
Metaphysics. Here, indeed, it is clear that he must have
adventured in search of the treasure: -- that he did not find it after
all, was, perhaps, because his fairy guide, Imagination, was not
sufficiently well-grown, or well-educated, to direct him aright.
I observed, just now, that, in fact, there had been certain vague
attempts at referring Gravity to some very uncertain isms. These
attempts, however, although considered bold and justly so
considered, looked no farther than to the generality -- the merest
generality -- of the Newtonian Law. Its modus operandi has never, to
my knowledge, been approached in the way of an effort at
explanation. It is, therefore, with no unwarranted fear of being taken
for a madman at the outset, and before I can bring my propositions
fairly to the eye of those who alone are competent to decide upon
them, that I here declare the modus operandi of the Law of Gravity
to be an exceedingly simple and perfectly explicable thing -- that is to
say, when we make our advances towards it in just gradations and in
the true direction -- when we regard it from the proper point of view.
Whether we reach the idea of absolute Unity as the source of All
Things, from a consideration of Simplicity as the most probable
characteristic of the original action of God; -- whether we arrive at it
from an inspection of the universality of relation in the
gravitating phaenomena; -- or whether we attain it as a result of the
mutual corroboration afforded by both processes; -- still, the idea
itself, if entertained at all, is entertained in inseparable
connection with another idea -- that of the condition of the Universe of
stars as we now perceive it -- that is to say, a condition of
immeasurable diffusion through space. Now a connection between these
two ideas -- unity and diffusion -- cannot be established unless through
the entertainment of a third idea -- that of irradiation. Absolute
Unity being taken as a centre, then the existing Universe of stars
is the result of irradiation from that centre.
Now, the laws of irradiation are known. They are part and parcel
of the sphere. They belong to the class of indisputable geometrical
properties. We say of them, "they are true -- they are evident." To
demand why they are true, would be to demand why the axioms are true
upon which their demonstration is based. Nothing is demonstrable,
strictly speaking; but if anything be, then the properties -- the
laws in question are demonstrated.
But these laws -- what do they declare? Irradiation -- how -- by what
steps does it proceed outwardly from a centre?
From a luminous centre, Light issues by irradiation; and the
quantities of light received upon any given plane, supposed to be
shifting its position so as to be now nearer the centre and now
farther from it, will be diminished in the same proportion as the
squares of the distances of the plane from the lumimous body, are
increased; and will be increased in the same proportion as these
squares are diminished.
The expression of the law may be thus generalized: -- the number of
light-particles (or, if the phrase be preferred, the number of
light-impressions) received upon the shifting plane, will be
inversely proportional with the squares of the distances of the
plane. Generalizing yet again, we may say that the diffusion -- the
scattering -- the irradiation, in a word -- is directly proportional
with the squares of the distances.
For example: at the distance B, from the luminous centre A, a
certain number of particles are so diffused as to occupy the surface B
(see illustration). Then at double the distance -- that is to say at
C -- they will be so much farther diffused as to occupy four such
surfaces: -- at treble the distance, or at D, they will be so much
farther separated as to occupy nine such surfaces: -- while, at
quadruple the distance, or at E, they will have become so scattered as
to spread themselves over sixteen such surfaces -- and so on forever.
In saying, generally, that the irradiation proceeds in direct
proportion with the squares of the distances, we use the term
irradiation to express the degree of the diffusion as we proceed
outwardly from the centre. Conversing the idea, and employing the word
"concentralization" to express the degree of the drawing together as
we come back toward the centre from an outward position, we may say
that concentralization proceeds inversely as the squares of the
distances. In other words, we have reached the conclusion that, on the
hypothesis that matter was originally irradiated from a centre and
is now returning to it, the concentralization, in the return, proceeds
exactly as we know the force of gravitation to proceed.
Now here, if we could be permitted to assume that
concentralization exactly represented the force of the tendency to
the centre -- that the one was exactly proportional to the other, and
that the two proceeded together -- we should have shown all that is
required. The sole difficulty existing, then, is to establish a direct
proportion between "concentralization" and the force of
concentralization; and this is done, of course, if we establish such
proportion between "irradiation" and the force of irradiation.
A very slight inspection of the Heavens assures us that the stars
have a certain general uniformity, equability, or equidistance, of
distribution through that region of space in which, collectively,
and in a roughly globular form, they are situated: -- this species of
very general, rather than absolute, equability, being in full
keeping with my deduction of inequidistance, within certain limits,
among the originally diffused atoms, as a corollary from the evident
design of infinite complexity of relation out of irrelation. I
started, it will be remembered, with the idea of a generally uniform
but particularly un uniform distribution of the atoms; -- an idea, I
repeat, which an inspection of the stars, as they exist, confirms.
But even in the merely general equability of distribution, as
regards the atoms, there appears a difficulty which, no doubt, has
already suggested itself to those among my readers who have borne in
mind that I suppose this equability of distribution effected through
irradiation from a centre. The very first glance at the idea,
irradiation, forces us to the entertainment of the hitherto
unseparated and seemingly inseparable idea of agglomeration about a
centre, with dispersion as we recede from it -- the idea, in a word,
of in equability of distribution in respect to the matter irradiated.
Now, I have elsewhere ("Murders in the Rue Morgue.") observed that it is by just such
difficulties as the one now in question -- such roughnesses -- such
peculiarities -- such protuberances above the plane of the ordinary --
that Reason feels her way, if at all, in her search for the True. By
the difficulty -- the "peculiarity" -- now presented, I leap at once to
the secret -- a secret which I might never have attained but for the
peculiarity and the inferences which, in its mere character of
peculiarity, it affords me.
The process of thought, at this point, may be thus roughly
sketched: -- I say to myself -- "Unity, as I have explained it, is a
truth -- I feel it. Diffusion is a truth -- I see it. Irradiation, by
which alone these two truths are reconciled, is a consequent truth --
I perceive it. Equability of diffusion, first deduced a priori and
then corroborated by the inspection of phaenomena, is also a truth --
I fully admit it. So far all is clear around me: -- there are no
clouds behind which the secret -- the great secret of the
gravitating modus operandi -- can possibly lie hidden; -- but this
secret lies hereabouts, most assuredly; and were there but a cloud
in view, I should be driven to suspicion of that cloud." And now, just
as I say this, there actually comes a cloud into view. This cloud is
the seeming impossibility of reconciling my truth, irradiation, with
my truth, equability of diffusion. I say now: -- "Behind this
seeming impossibility is to be found what I desire." I do not say
"real impossibility;" for invincible faith in my truths assures me
that it is a mere difficulty after all -- but I go on to say, with
unflinching confidence, that, when this difficulty shall be
solved, we shall find, wrapped up in the recess of solution, the key
to the secret at which we aim. Moreover -- I feel that we shall
discover but one possible solution of the difficulty; this for the
reason that, were there two, one would be supererogatory -- would be
fruitless -- would be empty -- would contain no key -- since no duplicate
key can be needed to any secret of Nature.
And now, let us see: -- Our usual notions of irradiation -- in fact
our distinct notions of it -- are caught merely from the process
as we see it exemplified in Light. Here there is a Continuous
outpouring of ray-streams, and with a force which we have at
least no right to suppose varies at all. Now, in any such irradiation
as this -- continuous and of unvarying force -- the regions nearer the
centre must inevitably be always more crowded with the irradiated
matter than the regions more remote. But I have assumed no such
irradiation as this. I assumed no Continuous irradiation; and
for the simple reason that such an assumption would have involved,
first, the necessity of entertaining a conception which I have shown
no man can entertain, and which (as I will more fully explain
hereafter) all observation of the firmament refutes -- the conception of
the absolute infinity of the Universe of stars -- and would have
involved, secondly, the impossibility of understanding a reaction --
that is, gravitation -- as existing now -- since, while an act is
continued, no reaction, of course, can take place. My assumption,
then, or rather my inevitable deduction from just premises -- was that
of a determinate irradiation -- one finally dis continued.
Let me now describe the sole possible mode in which it is
conceivable that matter could have been diffused through space, so
as to fulfil the conditions at once of irradiation and of generally
equable distribution.
For convenience of illustration, let us imagine, in the first place,
a hollow sphere of glass, or of anything else, occupying the space
throughout which the universal matter is to be thus equally
diffused, by means of irradiation, from the absolute, irrelative,
unconditional particle, placed in the centre of the sphere.
Now, a certain exertion of the diffusive power (presumed to be the
Divine Volition) -- in other words, a certain force -- whose measure
is the quantity of matter -- that is to say, the number of atoms --
emitted; emits, by irradiation, this certain number of atoms;
forcing them in all directions outwardly from the centre -- their
proximity to each other diminishing as they proceed -- until, finally,
they are distributed, loosely, over the interior surface of the
sphere.
When these atoms have attained this position, or while proceeding to
attain it, a second and inferior exercise of the same force -- or a
second and inferior force of the same character -- emits, in the same
manner -- that is to say, by irradiation as before -- a second stratum
of atoms which proceeds to deposit itself upon the first; the number
of atoms, in this case as in the former, being of course the measure
of the force which emitted them; in other words the force being
precisely adapted to the purpose it effects -- the force and the
number of atoms sent out by the force, being directly proportional.
When this second stratum has reached its destined position -- or while
approaching it -- a third still inferior exertion of the force, or a
third inferior force of a similar character -- the number of atoms
emitted being in cases the measure of the force -- proceeds to
deposit a third stratum upon the second: -- and so on, until these
concentric strata, growing gradually less and less, come down at
length to the central point; and the diffusive matter,
simultaneously with the diffusive force, is exhausted.
We have now the sphere filled, through means of irradiation, with
atoms equably diffused. The two necessary conditions -- those of
irradiation and of equable diffusion -- are satisfied; and by the sole
process in which the possibility of their simultaneous satisfaction is
conceivable. For this reason, I confidently expect to find, lurking in
the present condition of the atoms as distributed throughout the
sphere, the secret of which I am in search -- the all-important
principle of the modus operandi of the Newtonian law. Let us
examine, then, the actual condition of the atoms.
They lie in a series of concentric strata. They are equably diffused
throughout the sphere. They have been irradiated into these states.
The atoms being equably distributed, the greater the superficial
extent of any of these concentric strata, or spheres, the more atoms
will lie upon it. In other words, the number of atoms lying upon the
surface of any one of the concentric spheres, is directly proportional
with the extent of that surface.
But, in any series of concentric spheres, the surfaces are directly
proportional with the squares of the distances from the centre. (Succinctly -- The surfaces of spheres are as the squares of their
radii.)
Therefore the number of atoms in any stratum is directly
proportional with the square of that stratum's distance from the
centre.
But the number of atoms in any stratum is the measure of the force
which emitted that stratum -- that is to say, is directly proportional
with the force.
Therefore the force which irradiated any stratum is directly
proportional with the square of that stratum's distance from the
centre: -- or, generally,
The force of the irradiation has been directly proportional with
the squares of the distances.
Now, Reaction, as far as we know any thing of it, is Action
conversed. The general principle of Gravity being, in the first
place, understood as the reaction of an act -- as the expression of a
desire on the part of Matter, while existing in a state of
diffusion, to return into the Unity whence it was diffused; and, in
the second place, the mind being called upon to determine the
character of the desire -- the manner in which it would, naturally, be
manifested; in other words, being called upon to conceive a probable
law, or modus operandi, for the return; could not well help arriving
at the conclusion that this law of return would be precisely the
converse of the law of departure. That such would be the case, any
one, at least, would be abundantly justified in taking for granted,
until such time as some person should suggest something like a
plausible reason why it should not be the case -- until such a
period as a law of return shall be imagined which the intellect can
consider as preferable.
Matter, then, irradiated into space with a force varying as the
squares of the distances, might, a priori, be supposed to return
towards its centre of irradiation with a force varying inversely
as the squares of the distances: and I have already shown * that any
principle which will explain why the atoms should tend, according to
any law, to the general centre, must be admitted as satisfactorily
explaining, at the same time, why, according to the same law, they
should tend each to each. For, in fact, the tendency to the general
centre is not to a centre as such, but because of its being a point in
tending towards which each atom tends most directly to its real and
essential centre, Unity -- the absolute and final Union of all. (See previous paragraph, "I reply that they do; as will be
distinctly...")
The consideration here involved presents to my own mind no
embarrassment whatever -- but this fact does not blind me to the
possibility of its being obscure to those who may have been less in
the habit of dealing with abstractions: -- and, upon the whole, it may
be as well to look at the matter from one or two other points of view.
The absolute, irrelative particle primarily created by the
Volition of God, must have been in a condition of positive
normality, or rightfulness -- for wrongfulness implies relation.
Right is positive; wrong is negative -- is merely the negation of right;
as cold is the negation of heat -- darkness of light. That a thing may
be wrong, it is necessary that there be some other thing in relation
to which it is wrong -- some condition which it fails to satisfy; some
law which it violates; some being whom it aggrieves. If there be no
such being, law, or condition, in respect to which the thing is wrong --
and, still more especially, if no beings, laws, or conditions exist at
all -- then the thing cannot be wrong and consequently must be
right. Any deviation from normality involves a tendency to return to
it. A difference from the normal -- from the right -- from the just -- can
be understood as effected only by the overcoming a difficulty; and
if the force which overcomes the difficulty be not infinitely
continued, the ineradicable tendency to return will at length be
permitted to act for its own satisfaction. Upon withdrawal of the
force, the tendency acts. This is the principle of reaction as the
inevitable consequence of finite action. Employing a phraseology of
which the seeming affectation will be pardoned for its expressiveness,
we may say that Reaction is the return from the condition of as it is
and ought not to be into the condition of as it was, originally, and
therefore ought to be: -- and let me add here that the absolute force
of Reaction would no doubt be always found in direct proportion with
the reality -- the truth -- the absoluteness -- of the originality -- if
ever it were possible to measure this latter: -- and, consequently,
the greatest of all conceivable reactions must be that produced by the
tendency which we now discuss -- the tendency to return into the
absolutely original -- into the supremely primitive. Gravity,
then, must be the strongest of forces -- an idea reached a priori
and abundantly confirmed by induction. What use I make of the idea,
will be seen in the sequel.
The atoms, now, having been diffused from their normal condition
of Unity, seek to return to -- what? Not to any particular point,
certainly; for it is clear that if, upon the diffusion, the whole
Universe of matter had been projected, collectively, to a distance
from the point of irradiation, the atomic tendency to the general
centre of the sphere would not have been disturbed in the least: --
the atoms would not have sought the point in absolute space from
which they were originally impelled. It is merely the Condition, and
not the point or locality at which this condition took its rise,
that these atoms seek to re-establish; -- it is merely that condition
which is their normality, that they desire. "But they seek a centre,"
it will be said, "and a centre is a point." True; but they seek this
point not in its character of point -- (for, were the whole sphere moved
from its position, they would seek, equally, the centre; and the
centre then would be a new point) -- but because it so happens, on
account of the form in which they collectively exist -- (that of the
sphere) -- that only through the point in question -- the sphere's
centre -- they can attain their true object, Unity. In the direction
of the centre each atom perceives more atoms than in any other
direction. Each atom is impelled towards the centre because along
the straight line joining it and the centre and passing on to the
circumference beyond, there lie a greater number of atoms than along
any other straight line -- a greater number of objects that seek it, the
individual atom -- a greater number of tendencies to Unity -- a greater
number of satisfactions for its own tendency to Unity -- in a word,
because in the direction of the centre lies the utmost possibility
of satisfaction, generally, for its own individual appetite. To be
brief, the Condition, Unity, is all that is really sought; and if
the atoms seem to seek the centre of the sphere, it is only
impliedly, through implication -- because such centre happens to
imply, to include, or to involve, the only essential centre, Unity.
But on account of this implication or involution, there is no
possibility of practically separating the tendency to Unity in the
abstract, from the tendency to the concrete centre. Thus the
tendency of the atoms to the general centre is, to all practical
intents and for all logical purposes, the tendency each to each; and
the tendency each to each is the tendency to the centre; and the one
tendency may be assumed as the other; whatever will apply to the one
must be thoroughly applicable to the other; and, in conclusion,
whatever principle will satisfactorily explain the one, cannot be
questioned as an explanation of the other.
In looking carefully around me for rational objection to what I have
advanced, I am able to discover nothing; -- but of that class of
objections usually urged by the doubters for Doubt's sake, I very
readily perceive three; and proceed to dispose of them in order.
It may be said, first: "The proof that the force of irradiation
(in the case described) is directly proportional to the squares of the
distances, depends upon an unwarranted assumption -- that of the
number of atoms in each stratum being the measure of the force with
which they are emitted."
I reply, not only that I am warranted in such assumption, but that I
should be utterly un warranted in any other. What I assume is,
simply, that an effect is the measure of its cause -- that every
exercise of the Divine Will will be proportional to that which demands
the exertion -- that the means of Omnipotence, or of Omniscience, will
be exactly adapted to its purposes. Neither can a deficiency nor an
excess of cause bring to pass any effect. Had the force which
irradiated any stratum to its position, been either more or less
than was needed for the purpose -- that is to say, not directly
proportional to the purpose -- then to its position that stratum
could not have been irradiated. Had the force which, with a view to
general equability of distribution, emitted the proper number of atoms
for each stratum, been not directly proportional to the number, then
the number would not have been the number demanded for the equable
distribution.
The second supposable objection is somewhat better entitled to an
answer.
It is an admitted principle in Dynamics that every body, on
receiving an impulse, or disposition to move, will move onward in a
straight line, in the direction imparted by the impelling force, until
deflected, or stopped, by some other force. How then, it may be asked,
is my first or external stratum of atoms to be understood as
discontinuing their movement at the circumference of the imaginary
glass sphere, when no second force, of more than an imaginary
character, appears, to account for the discontinuance?
I reply that the objection, in this case, actually does arise out of
"an unwarranted assumption" -- on the part of the objector -- the
assumption of a principle, in Dynamics, at an epoch when no
"principles," in anything, exist: -- I use the word "principle," of
course, in the objector's understanding of the word.
"In the beginning" we can admit -- indeed we can comprehend -- but one
First Cause -- the truly ultimate Principle -- the Volition of God.
The primary act -- that of Irradiation from Unity -- must have been
independent of all that which the world now calls "principle" -- because
all that we so designate is but a consequence of the reaction of
that primary act: -- I say "primary" act; for the creation of the
absolute material particle is more properly to be regarded as a
Conception than as an "act" in the ordinary meaning of the term.
Thus, we must regard the primary act as an act for the establishment
of what we now call "principles". But this primary act itself is to be
considered as Continuous Volition. The Thought of God is to be
understood as originating the Diffusion -- as proceeding with it -- as
regulating it -- and, finally, as being withdrawn from it upon its
completion. Then commences Reaction, and through Reaction,
"Principle," as we employ the word. It will be advisable, however,
to limit the application of this word to the two immediate results
of the discontinuance of the Divine Volition -- that is, to the two
agents, Attraction and Repulsion. Every other Natural agent
depends, either more or less immediately, upon these two, and
therefore would be more conveniently designated as sub -principle.
It may be objected, thirdly, that, in general, the peculiar mode
of distribution which I have suggested for the atoms, is "an
hypothesis and nothing more."
Now, I am aware that the word hypothesis is a ponderous
sledge-hammer, grasped immediately, if not lifted, by all very
diminutive thinkers, upon the first appearance of any proposition
wearing, in any particular, the garb of a theory. But "hypothesis"
cannot be wielded here to any good purpose, even by those who
succeed in lifting it -- little men or great.
I maintain, first, that only in the mode described is it
conceivable that Matter could have been diffused so as to fulfil at
once the conditions of irradiation and of generally equable
distribution. I maintain, secondly, that these conditions themselves
have been imposed upon me, as necessities, in a train of ratiocination
as rigorously logical as that which establishes any demonstration
in Euclid; and I maintain, thirdly, that even if the charge of
"hypothesis" were as fully sustained as it is, in fact, unsustained
and untenable, still the validity and indisputability of my result
would not, even in the slightest particular, be disturbed.
To explain: The Newtonian Gravity -- a law of Nature -- a law whose
existence as such no one out of Bedlam questions -- a law whose
admission as such enables us to account for nine-tenths of the
Universal phaenomena -- a law which, merely because it does so enable us
to account for these phaenomena, we are perfectly willing, without
reference to any other considerations, to admit, and cannot help
admitting, as a law -- a law, nevertheless, of which neither the
principle nor the modus operandi of the principle, has ever yet been
traced by the human analysis -- a law, in short, which, neither in its
detail nor in its generality, has been found susceptible of
explanation at all -- is at length seen to be at every point
thoroughly explicable, provided we only yield our assent to -- what?
To an hypothesis? Why if an hypothesis -- if the merest hypothesis -- if
an hypothesis for whose assumption -- as in the case of that pure
hypothesis the Newtonian law itself -- no shadow of a priori reason
could be assigned -- if an hypothesis, even so absolute as all this
implies, would enable us to perceive a principle for the Newtonian
law -- would enable us to understand as satisfied, conditions so
miraculously -- so ineffably complex and seemingly irreconcileable as
those involved in the relations of which Gravity tells us, -- what
rational being Could so expose his fatuity as to call even this
absolute hypothesis an hypothesis any longer -- unless, indeed, he
were to persist in so calling it, with the understanding that he did
so, simply for the sake of consistency in words?
But what is the true state of our present case? What is the
fact? Not only that it is not an hypothesis which we are required
to adopt, in order to admit the principle at issue explained, but
that it is a logical conclusion which we are requested not to
adopt if we can avoid it -- which we are simply invited to deny if we
can: -- a conclusion of so accurate a logicality that to dispute it
would be the effort -- to doubt its validity beyond our power: -- a
conclusion from which we see no mode of escape, turn as we will; a
result which confronts us either at the end of an in ductive
journey from the phaenomena of the very Law discussed, or at the close
of a de ductive career from the most rigorously simple of all
conceivable assumptions -- the assumption, in a word, of Simplicity
itself.
And if here, for the mere sake of cavilling, it be urged, that
although my starting-point is, as I assert, the assumption of absolute
Simplicity, yet Simplicity, considered merely in itself, is no
axiom; and that only deductions from axioms are indisputable -- it is
thus that I reply: --
Every other science than Logic is the science of certain concrete
relations. Arithmetic, for example, is the science of the relations of
number -- Geometry, of the relations of form -- Mathematics in general, of
the relations of quantity in general -- of whatever can be increased
or diminished. Logic, however, is the science of Relation in the
abstract -- of absolute Relation -- of Relation considered solely in
itself. An axiom in any particular science other than Logic is,
thus, merely a proposition announcing certain concrete relations which
seem to be too obvious for dispute -- as when we say, for instance, that
the whole is greater than its part: -- and, thus again, the principle of
the Logical axiom -- in other words, of an axiom in the abstract --
is, simply, obviousness of relation. Now, it is clear, not only that
what is obvious to one mind may not be obvious to another, but that
what is obvious to one mind at one epoch, may be anything but obvious,
at another epoch, to the same mind. It is clear, moreover, that
what, to-day, is obvious even to the majority of mankind, or to the
majority of the best intellects of mankind, may to-morrow be, to
either majority, more or less obvious, or in no respect obvious at
all. It is seen, then, that the axiomatic principle itself is
susceptible of variation, and of course that axioms are susceptible of
similar change. Being mutable, the "truths" which grow out of them are
necessarily mutable too; or, in other words, are never to be
positively depended upon as truths at all -- since Truth and
Immutability are one.
It will now be readily understood that no axiomatic idea -- no idea
founded in the fluctuating principle, obviousness of relation -- can
possibly be so secure -- so reliable a basis for any structure erected
by the Reason, as that idea -- (whatever it is, wherever we can find
it, or if it be practicable to find it anywhere) -- which is
ir relative altogether -- which not only presents to the
understanding no obviousness of relation, either greater or less, to
be considered, but subjects the intellect, not in the slightest
degree, to the necessity of even looking at any relation at all.
If such an idea be not what we too heedlessly term "an axiom," it is
at least preferable, as a Logical basis, to any axiom ever propounded,
or to all imaginable axioms combined: -- and such, precisely, is the
idea with which my deductive process, so thoroughly corroborated by
induction, commences. My particle proper is but absolute
Irrelation. To sum up what has been advanced: -- As a starting point
I have taken it for granted, simply, that the Beginning had nothing
behind it or before it -- that it was a Beginning in fact -- that it was a
beginning and nothing different from a beginning -- in short, that
this Beginning was -- that which it was. If this be a "mere
assumption" then a "mere assumption" let it be.
To conclude this branch of the subject: -- I am fully warranted in
announcing that the Law which we have been in the habit of calling
Gravity exists on account of Matter's having been irradiated, at its
origin, atomically, into a limited ("Limited sphere" -- A sphere is necessarily limited. I prefer
tautology to a chance of misconception.)sphere of Space, from one,
individual, unconditional, irrelative, and absolute Particle Proper,
by the sole process in which it was possible to satisfy, at the same
time, the two conditions, irradiation, and generally-equable
distribution throughout the sphere -- that is to say, by a force varying
in direct proportion with the squares of the distances between the
irradiated atoms, respectively, and the Particular centre of
Irradiation.
I have already given my reasons for presuming Matter to have been
diffused by a determinate rather than by a continuous or infinitely
continued force. Supposing a continuous force, we should be unable, in
the first place, to comprehend a reaction at all; and we should be
required, in the second place, to entertain the impossible
conception of an infinite extension of Matter. Not to dwell upon the
impossibility of the conception, the infinite extension of Matter is
an idea which, if not positively disproved, is at least not in any
respect warranted by telescopic observation of the stars -- a point to
be explained more fully hereafter; and this empirical reason for
believing in the original finity of Matter is unempirically confirmed.
For example: -- Admitting, for the moment, the possibility of
understanding Space filled with the irradiated atoms -- that is to
say, admitting, as well as we can, for argument's sake, that the
succession of the irradiated atoms had absolutely no end -- then it is
abundantly clear that, even when the Volition of God had been
withdrawn from them, and thus the tendency to return into Unity
permitted (abstractly) to be satisfied, this permission would have
been nugatory and invalid -- practically valueless and of no effect
whatever. No Reaction could have taken place; no movement toward Unity
could have been made; no Law of Gravity could have obtained.
To explain: -- Grant the abstract tendency of any one atom to any
one other as the inevitable result of diffusion from the normal
Unity: -- or, what is the same thing, admit any given atom as
proposing to move in any given direction -- it is clear that, since
there is an infinity of atoms on all sides of the atom proposing
to move, it never can actually move toward the satisfaction of its
tendency in the direction given, on account of a precisely equal and
counter-balancing tendency in the direction diametrically opposite. In
other words, exactly as many tendencies to Unity are behind the
hesitating atom as before it; for it is a mere sotticism to say that
one infinite line is longer or shorter than another infinite line,
or that one infinite number is greater or less than another number
that is infinite. Thus the atom in question must remain stationary
forever. Under the impossible circumstances which we have been
merely endeavoring to conceive for argument's sake, there could have
been no aggregation of Matter -- no stars -- no worlds -- nothing but a
perpetually atomic and inconsequential Universe. In fact, view it as
we will, the whole idea of unlimited Matter is not only untenable, but
impossible and preposterous.
With the understanding of a sphere of atoms, however, we perceive,
at once, a satisfiable tendency to union. The general result of
the tendency each to each, being a tendency of all to the centre,
the general process of condensation, or approximation, commences
immediately, by a common and simultaneous movement, on withdrawal of
the Divine Volition; the individual approximations, or
coalescences-not coalitions -- of atom with atom, being subject to
almost infinite variations of time, degree, and condition, on
account of the excessive multiplicity of relation, arising from the
differences of form assumed as characterizing the atoms at the
moment of their quitting the Particle Proper; as well as from the
subsequent particular inequidistance, each from each.
What I wish to impress upon the reader is the certainty of there
arising, at once, (on withdrawal of the diffusive force, or Divine
Volition,) out of the condition of the atoms as described, at
innumerable points throughout the Universal sphere, innumerable
agglomerations, characterized by innumerable specific differences of
form, size, essential nature, and distance each from each. The
development of Repulsion (Electricity) must have commenced, of course,
with the very earliest particular efforts at Unity, and must have
proceeded constantly in the ratio of Coalescence -- that is to say,
in that of Condensation, or, again, of Heterogeneity.
Thus the two Principles Proper, Attraction and Repulsion -- the
Material and the Spiritual -- accompany each other, in the strictest
fellowship, forever. Thus The Body and The Soul walk hand in hand.
If now, in fancy, we select any one of the agglomerations
considered as in their primary stages throughout the Universal sphere,
and suppose this incipient agglomeration to be taking place at that
point where the centre of our Sun exists -- or rather where it did
exist originally; for the Sun is perpetually shifting his position -- we
shall find ourselves met, and borne onward for a time at least, by the
most magnificent of theories -- by the Nebular Cosmogony of Laplace: --
although "Cosmogony" is far too comprehensive a term for what he
really discusses -- which is the constitution of our solar system alone --
of one among the myriad of similar systems which make up the
Universe Proper -- that Universal sphere -- that all-inclusive and
absolute Kosmos which forms the subject of my present Discourse.
Confining himself to an obviously limited region -- that of our
solar system with its comparatively immediate vicinity -- and merely
assuming -- that is to say, assuming without any basis whatever,
either deductive or inductive -- much of what I have been just
endeavoring to place upon a more stable basis than assumption;
assuming, for example, matter as diffused (without pretending to
account for the diffusion) throughout, and somewhat beyond, the
space occupied by our system -- diffused in a state of heterogeneous
nebulosity and obedient to that omniprevalent law of Gravity at
whose principle he ventured to make no guess; -- assuming all this
(which is quite true, although he had no logical right to its
assumption) Laplace has shown, dynamically and mathematically, that
the results in such case necessarily ensuing, are those and those
alone which we find manifested in the actually existing condition of
the system itself.
To explain: -- Let us conceive that particular agglomeration of
which we have just spoken -- the one at the point designated by our
Sun's centre -- to have so far proceeded that a vast quantity of
nebulous matter has here assumed a roughly globular form; its centre
being, of course, coincident with what is now, or rather was
originally, the centre of our Sun; and its periphery extending out
beyond the orbit of Neptune, the most remote of our planets: -- in other
words, let us suppose the diameter of this rough sphere to be some
6000 millions of miles. For ages, this mass of matter has been
undergoing condensation, until at length it has become reduced into
the bulk we imagine; having proceeded gradually, of course, from its
atomic and imperceptible state, into what we understand of visible,
palpable, or otherwise appreciable nebulosity.
Now, the condition of this mass implies a rotation about an
imaginary axis -- a rotation which, commencing with the absolute
incipiency of the aggregation, has been ever since acquiring velocity.
The very first two atoms which met, approaching each other from points
not diametrically opposite, would, in rushing partially past each
other, form a nucleus for the rotary movement described. How this
would increase in velocity, is readily seen. The two atoms are
joined by others: -- an aggregation is formed. The mass continues to
rotate while condensing. But any atom at the circumference has, of
course, a more rapid motion than one nearer the centre. The outer
atom, however, with its superior velocity, approaches the centre;
carrying this superior velocity with it as it goes. Thus every atom,
proceeding inwardly, and finally attaching itself to the condensed
centre, adds something to the original velocity of that centre -- that
is to say, increases the rotary movement of the mass.
Let us now suppose this mass so far condensed that it occupies
precisely the space circumscribed by the orbit of Neptune, and
that the velocity with which the surface of the mass moves, in the
general rotation, is precisely that velocity with which Neptune now
revolves about the Sun. At this epoch, then, we are to understand that
the constantly increasing centrifugal force, having gotten the
better of the non-increasing centripetal, loosened and separated the
exterior and least condensed stratum, or a few of the exterior and
least condensed strata, at the equator of the sphere, where the
tangential velocity predominated; so that these strata formed about
the main body an independent ring encircling the equatorial
regions: -- just as the exterior portion thrown off, by excessive
velocity of rotation, from a grindstone, would form a ring about the
grindstone, but for the solidity of the superficial material: were
this caoutchouc, or anything similar in consistency, precisely the
phaenomenon I describe would be presented.
The ring thus whirled from the nebulous mass, revolved, of course,
as a separate ring, with just that velocity with which, while the
surface of the mass, it rotated. In the meantime, condensation still
proceeding, the interval between the discharged ring and the main body
continued to increase, until the former was left at a vast distance
from the latter.
Now, admitting the ring to have possessed, by some seemingly
accidental arrangement of its heterogeneous materials, a
constitution nearly uniform, then this ring, as such, would never
have ceased revolving about its primary; but, as might have been
anticipated, there appears to have been enough irregularity in the
disposition of the materials, to make them cluster about centres of
superior solidity; and thus the annular form was destroyed. (Laplace assumed his nebulosity heterogeneous, merely that he might
be thus enabled to account for the breaking up of the rings; for had
the nebulosity been homogeneous, they would not have broken. I reach
the same result -- heterogeneity of the secondary masses immediately
resulting from the atoms -- purely from an a priori consideration of
their general design -- Relation.) No
doubt, the band was soon broken up into several portions, and one of
these portions, predominating in mass, absorbed the others into
itself; the whole settling, spherically, into a planet. That this
latter, as a planet, continued the revolutionary movement which
characterized it while a ring, is sufficiently clear; and that it took
upon itself, also, an additional movement in its new condition of
sphere, is readily explained. The ring being understood as yet
unbroken, we see that its exterior, while the whole revolves about the
parent body, moves more rapidly than its interior. When the rupture
occurred, then, some portion in each fragment must have been moving
with greater velocity than the others. The superior movement
prevailing, must have whirled each fragment round -- that is to say,
have caused it to rotate; and the direction of the rotation must, of
course, have been the direction of the revolution whence it arose.
the fragments having become subject to the rotation described,
must, in coalescing, have imparted it to the one planet constituted by
their coalescence. -- This planet was Neptune. Its material continuing
to undergo condensation, and the centrifugal force generated in its
rotation getting, at length, the better of the centripetal, as
before in the case of the parent orb, a ring was whirled also from the
equatorial surface of this planet: this ring, having been ununiform in
its constitution, was broken up, and its several fragments, being
absorbed by the most massive, were collectively spherified into a
moon. Subsequently, the operation was repeated, and a second moon
was the result. We thus account for the planet Neptune, with the two
satellites which accompany him.
In throwing of a ring from its equator, the Sun re-established
that equilibrium between its centripetal and centrifugal forces
which had been disturbed in the process of condensation; but, as
this condensation still proceeded, the equilibrium was again
immediately disturbed, through the increase of rotation. By the time
the mass had so far shrunk that it occupied a spherical space just
that circumscribed by the orbit of Uranus, we are to understand that
the centrifugal force had so far obtained the ascendency that new
relief was needed: a second equatorial band was, consequently,
thrown off, which, proving ununiform, was broken up, as before in
the case of Neptune; the fragments settling into the planet Uranus;
the velocity of whose actual revolution about the Sun indicates, of
course, the rotary speed of that Sun's equatorial surface at the
moment of the separation. Uranus, adopting a rotation from the
collective rotations of the fragments composing it, as previously
explained, now threw off ring after ring; each of which, becoming
broken up, settled into a moon: -- three moons, at different epochs,
having been formed, in this manner, by the rupture and general
spherification of as many distinct ununiform rings.
By the time the Sun had shrunk until it occupied a space just that
circumscribed by the orbit of Saturn, the balance, we are to
suppose, between its centripetal and centrifugal forces had again
become so far disturbed, through increase of rotary velocity, the
result of condensation, that a third effort at equilibrium became
necessary; and an annular band was therefore whirled off, as twice
before; which, on rupture through ununiformity, became consolidated
into the planet Saturn. This latter threw off, in the first place,
seven uniform bands, which, on rupture, were spherified respectively
into as many moons; but, subsequently, it appears to have
discharged, at three distinct but not very distant epochs, three rings
whose equability of constitution was, by apparent accident, so
considerable as to present no occasion for their rupture; thus they
continue to revolve as rings. I use the phrase "apparent
accident;" for of accident in the ordinary sense there was, of course,
nothing: -- the term is properly applied only to the result of
indistinguishable or not immediately traceable.
Shrinking still farther, until it occupied just the space
circumscribed by the orbit of Jupiter, the Sun now found need of
farther effort to restore the counterbalance of its two forces,
continually disarranged in the still continued increase of rotation.
Jupiter, accordingly, was now thrown off; passing from the annular
to the planetary condition; and, on attaining this latter, threw off
in its turn, at four different epochs, four rings, which finally
resolved themselves into so many moons.
Still shrinking, until its sphere occupied just the space defined by
the orbit of the Asteroids, the Sun now discarded a ring which appears
to have had eight centres of superior solidity, and, on breaking up,
to have separated into eight fragments no one of which so far
predominated in mass as to absorb the others. All therefore, as
distinct although comparatively small planets, proceeded to revolve in
orbits whose distances, each from each, may be considered as in some
degree the measure of the force which drove them asunder: -- all the
orbits, nevertheless, being so closely coincident as to admit of our
calling them one, in view of the other planetary orbits.
Continuing to shrink, the Sun, on becoming so small as just to
fill the orbit of Mars, now discharged this planet -- of course by the
process repeatedly described. Having no moon, however, Mars could have
thrown off no ring. In fact, an epoch had now arrived in the career of
the parent body, the centre of the system. The de crease of its
nebulosity, which is the in crease of its density, and which again is
the de crease of its condensation, out of which latter arose the
constant disturbance of equilibrium -- must, by this period, have
attained a point at which the efforts for restoration would have
been more and more ineffectual just in proportion as they were less
frequently needed. Thus the processes of which we have been speaking
would everywhere show signs of exhaustion -- in the planets, first,
and secondly, in the original mass. We must not fall into the error of
supposing the decrease of interval observed among the planets as we
approach the Sun, to be in any respect indicative of an increase of
frequency in the periods at which they were discarded. Exactly the
converse is to be understood. The longest interval of time must have
occurred between the discharges of the two interior; the shortest,
between those of the two exterior, planets. The decrease of the
interval of space is, nevertheless, the measure of the density, and
thus inversely of the condensation, of the Sun, throughout the
processes detailed.
Having shrunk, however, so far as to fill only the orbit of our
Earth, the parent sphere whirled from itself still one other body -- the
Earth -- in a condition so nebulous as to admit of this body's
discarding, in its turn, yet another, which is our Moon; -- but here
terminated the lunar formations.
Finally, subsiding to the orbits first of Venus and then of Mercury,
the Sun discarded these two interior planets; neither of which has
given birth to any moon.
Thus from his original bulk -- or, to speak more accurately, from
the condition in which we first considered him -- from a partially
spherified nebular mass, certainly much more than 5,600 millions
of miles in diameter -- the great central orb and origin of our
solar-planetary-lunar system, has gradually descended, by
condensation, in obedience to the law of Gravity, to a globe only
882,000 miles in diameter; but it by no means follows, either that its
condensation is yet complete, or that it may not still possess the
capacity of whirling from itself another planet.
I have here given -- in outline of course, but still with all the
detail necessary for distinctness -- a view of the Nebular Theory as its
author himself conceived it. From whatever point we regard it, we
shall find it beautifully true. It is by far too beautiful,
indeed, not to possess Truth as its essentiality -- and here I am very
profoundly serious in what I say. In the revolution of the
satellites of Uranus, there does appear something seemingly
inconsistent with the assumptions of Laplace; but that one
inconsistency can invalidate a theory constructed from a million of
intricate consistencies, is a fancy fit only for the fantastic. In
prophecying, confidently, that the apparent anomaly to which I
refer, will, sooner or later, be found one of the strongest possible
corroborations of the general hypothesis, I pretend to no especial
spirit of divination. It is a matter which the only difficulty seems
not to foresee. (I am prepared to show that the anomalous revolution of the
satellites of Uranus is a simply perspective anomaly arising from
the inclination of the axis of the planet.)
The bodies whirled off in the processes described, would exchange,
it has been seen, the superficial rotation of the orbs whence they
originated, for a revolution of equal velocity about these orbs as
distant centres; and the revolution thus engendered must proceed, so
long as the centripetal force, or that with which the discarded body
gravitates toward its parent, is neither greater nor less than that by
which it was discarded; that is, than the centrifugal, or, far more
properly, than the tangential, velocity. From the unity, however, of
the origin of these two forces, we might have expected to find them as
they are found -- the one accurately counterbalancing the other. It
has been shown, indeed, that the act of whirling-off is, in every
case, merely an act for the preservation of the counterbalance.
After referring, however, the centripetal force to the omniprevalent
law of Gravity, it has been the fashion with astronomical treatises,
to seek beyond the limits of mere Nature -- that is to say, of
Secondary Cause -- a solution of the phaenomenon of tangential
velocity. This latter they attribute directly to a First Cause -- to
God. The force which carries a stellar body around its primary they
assert to have originated in an impulse given immediately by the
finger -- this is the childish phraseology employed -- by the finger of
Deity itself. In this view, the planets, fully formed, are conceived
to have been hurled from the Divine hand, to a position in the
vicinity of the suns, with an impetus mathematically adapted to the
masses, or attractive capacities, of the suns themselves. An idea so
grossly unphilosophical, although so supinely adopted, could have
arisen only from the difficulty of otherwise accounting for the
absolutely accurate adaptation, each to each, of two forces so
seemingly independent, one of the other, as are the gravitating and
tangential. But it should be remembered that, for a long time, the
coincidence between the moon's rotation and her sidereal revolution --
two matters seemingly far more independent than those now
considered -- was looked upon as positively miraculous; and there was
a strong disposition, even among astronomers, to attribute the
marvel to the direct and continual agency of God -- who, in this case,
it was said, had found it necessary to interpose, specially, among his
general laws, a set of subsidiary regulations, for the purpose of
forever concealing from mortal eyes the glories, or perhaps the
horrors, of the other side of the Moon -- of that mysterious
hemisphere which has always avoided, and must perpetually avoid, the
telescopic scrutiny of mankind. The advance of Science, however,
soon demonstrated -- what to the philosophical instinct needed no
demonstration -- that the one movement is but a portion -- something more,
even, than a consequence -- of the other.
For my part, I have no patience with fantasies at once so
timorous, so idle, and so awkward. They belong to the veriest
Cowardice of thought. That Nature and the God of Nature are
distinct, no thinking being can long doubt. By the former we imply
merely the laws of the latter. But with the very idea of God,
omnipotent, omniscient, we entertain, also, the idea of the
infallibility of his laws. With Him there being neither Past nor
Future -- with Him all being Now -- do we not insult him in supposing
his laws so contrived as not to provide for every possible
contingency? -- or, rather, what idea can we have of any possible
contingency, except that it is at once a result and a manifestation of
his laws? He who, divesting himself of prejudice, shall have the
rare courage to think absolutely for himself, cannot fail to arrive,
in the end, at the condensation of LA0 into LA0 -cannot fail of
reaching the conclusion that each law of Nature is dependent at all
points upon all other laws, and that all are but consequences of
one primary exercise of the Divine Volition. Such is the principle
of the Cosmogony which, with all necessary deference, I here venture
to suggest and to maintain.
In this view, it will be seen that, dismissing as frivolous, and
even impious, the fancy of the tangential force having been imparted
to the planets immediately, by "the finger of God," I consider this
force as originating in the rotation of the stars: -- this rotation as
brought about by the in-rushing of the primary atoms, towards their
respective centres of aggregation: -- this in-rushing as the consequence
of the law of Gravity: -- this law as but the mode in which is
necessarily manifested the tendency of the atoms to return into
imparticularity: -- this tendency to return as but the inevitable
reaction of the first and most sublime of Acts -- that act by which a
God, self-existing and alone existing, became all things at once,
through dint of his volition, while all things were thus constituted a
portion of God.
The radical assumptions of this Discourse suggest to me, and in fact
imply, certain important modifications of the Nebular Theory as
given by Laplace. The efforts of the repulsive power I have considered
as made for the purpose of preventing contact among the atoms, and
thus as made in the ratio of the approach to contact -- that is to
say, in the ratio of condensation. (See previous paragraph, "With the understanding of a sphere of
atoms...")In other words, Electricity,
with its involute phaenomena, heat, light and magnetism, is to be
understood as proceeding as condensation proceeds, and, of course,
inversely as density proceeds, or the cessation to condense. Thus
the Sun, in the process of its aggregation, must soon, in developing
repulsion, have become excessively heated -- perhaps incandescent: and
we can perceive how the operation of discarding its rings must have
been materially assisted by the slight incrustation of its surface
consequent on cooling. Any common experiment shows us how readily a
crust of the character suggested, is separated, through heterogeneity,
from the interior mass. But, on every successive rejection of the
crust, the new surface would appear incandescent as before; and the
period at which it would again become so far encrusted as to be
readily loosened and discharged, may well be imagined as exactly
coincident with that at which a new effort would be needed, by the
whole mass, to restore the equilibrium of its two forces,
disarranged through condensation. In other words: -- by the time the
electric influence (Repulsion) has prepared the surface for rejection,
we are to understand that the gravitating influence (Attraction) is
precisely ready to reject it. Here, then, as everywhere, the Body and
the Soul walk hand in hand.
These ideas are empirically confirmed at all points. Since
condensation can never, in any body, be considered as absolutely at an
end, we are warranted in anticipating that, whenever we have an
opportunity of testing the matter, we shall find indications of
resident luminosity in the stellar bodies -- moons and planets
as well as suns. That our Moon is strongly self-luminous, we see at
her every total eclipse, when, if not so, she would disappear. On
the dark part of the satellite, too, during her phases, we often
observe flashes like our own Auroras; and that these latter, with
our various other so-called electrical phaenomena, without reference
to any more steady radiance, must give our Earth a certain
appearance of luminosity to an inhabitant of the Moon, is quite
evident. In fact, we should regard all the phaenomena referred to,
as mere manifestations, in different moods and degrees, of the Earth's
feebly-continued condensation.
If my views are tenable, we should be prepared to find the newer
planets -- that is to say, those nearer the Sun -- more luminous than
those older and more remote: -- and the extreme brilliancy of Venus
(on whose dark portions, during her phases, the Auroras are frequently
visible) does not seem to be altogether accounted for by her mere
proximity to the central orb. She is no doubt vividly self-luminous,
although less so than Mercury: while the luminosity of Neptune may
be comparatively nothing.
Admitting what I have urged, it is clear that, from the moment of
the Sun's discarding a ring, there must be a continuous diminution
both of his heat and light, on account of the continuous
encrustation of his surface; and that a period would arrive -- the
period immediately previous to a new discharge -- when a very material
decrease of both light and heat, must become apparent. Now, we know
that tokens of such changes are distinctly recognizable. On the
Melville islands -- to adduce merely one out of a hundred examples -- we
find traces of UL0 vegetation -- of plants that never could
have flourished without immensely more light and heat than are at
present afforded by our Sun to any portion of the surface of the
Earth. Is such vegetation referable to an epoch immediately subsequent
to the whirling-off of Venus? At this epoch must have occurred to us
our greatest access of solar influence; and, in fact, this influence
must then have attained its maximum: -- leaving out of view, of
course, the period when the Earth itself was discarded -- the period
of its mere organization.
Again: -- we know that there exist non-luminous suns -- that is to
say, suns whose existence we determine through the movements of
others, but whose luminosity is not sufficient to impress us. Are
these suns invisible merely on account of the length of time elapsed
since their discharge of a planet? And yet again: -- may we not -- at
least in certain cases -- account for the sudden appearances of suns
where none had been previously suspected, by the hypothesis that,
having rolled with encrusted surfaces throughout the few thousand
years of our astronomical history, each of these suns, in whirling off
a new secondary, has at length been enabled to display the glories
of its still incandescent interior? -- To the well-ascertained fact of
the proportional increase of heat as we descend into the Earth, I need
of course, do nothing more than refer: -- it comes in the strongest
possible corroboration of all that I have said on the topic now at
issue.
In speaking, not long ago, of the repulsive or electrical influence,
I remarked that "the important phaenomena of vitality,
consciousness, and thought, whether we observe them generally or in
detail, seem to proceed at least in the ratio of the heterogeneous. "
(See previous paragraph, "To electricity -- so, for the present,
continuing to call it...") I mentioned, too, that I would recur to the suggestion: -- and this is
the proper point at which to do so. Looking at the matter, first, in
detail, we perceive that not merely the manifestation of vitality,
but its importance, consequences, and elevation of character, keep
pace, very closely, with the heterogeneity, or complexity, of the
animal structure. Looking at the question, now, in its generality, and
referring to the first movements of the atoms towards
mass-constitution, we find that heterogeneousness, brought about
directly through condensation, is proportional with it forever. We
thus reach the proposition that the importance of the development
of the terrestrial vitality proceeds equably with the terrestrial
condensation.
Now this is in precise accordance with what we know of the
succession of animals on the Earth. As it has proceeded in its
condensation, superior and still superior races have appeared. Is it
impossible that the successive geological revolutions which have
attended, at least, if not immediately caused, these successive
elevations of vitalic character -- is it improbable that these
revolutions have themselves been produced by the successive
planetary discharges from the Sun -- in other words, by the successive
variations in the solar influence on the Earth? Were this idea
tenable, we should not be unwarranted in the fancy that the
discharge of yet a new planet, interior to Mercury, may give rise to
yet a new modification of the terrestrial surface -- a modification from
which may spring a race both materially and spiritually superior to
Man. These thoughts impress me with all the force of truth -- but I
throw them out, of course, merely in their obvious character of
suggestion.
The Nebular Theory of Laplace has lately received far more
confirmation than it needed, at the hands of the philosopher,
Compte. These two have thus together shown -- not, to be sure, that
Matter at any period actually existed as described, in a state of
nebular diffusion, but that, admitting it so to have existed
throughout the space and much beyond the space now occupied by our
solar system, and to have commenced a movement towards a centre --
it must gradually have assumed the various forms and motions which are
now seen, in that system, to obtain. A demonstration such as this -- a
dynamical and mathematical demonstration, as far as demonstration
can be -- unquestionable and unquestioned -- unless, indeed, by that
unprofitable and disreputable tribe, the professional questioners -- the
mere madmen who deny the Newtonian law of Gravity on which the results
of the French mathematicians are based -- a demonstration, I say, such
as this, would to most intellects be conclusive -- and I confess that it
is so to mine -- of the validity of the nebular hypothesis upon which
the demonstration depends.
That the demonstration does not prove the hypothesis, according to
the common understanding of the word "proof," I admit, of course. To
show that certain existing results -- that certain established facts --
may be, even mathematically, accounted for by the assumption of a
certain hypothesis, is by no means to establish the hypothesis itself.
In other words: -- to show that, certain data being given, a certain
existing result might, or even must, have ensued, will fail to prove
that this result did ensue, FR until such time as it
shall be also shown that there are, and can be, no other data from
which the result in question might equally have ensued. But, in
the case now discussed, although all must admit the deficiency of what
we are in the habit of terming "proof," still there are many
intellects, and those of the loftiest order to which no proof
could bring one iota of additional Conviction. Without going into
details which might impinge upon the Cloud-Land of Metaphysics, I
may as well here observe that the force of conviction, in cases such
as this, will always, with the right-thinking, be proportional to
the amount of Complexity intervening between the hypothesis and
the result. To be less abstract: -- The greatness of the complexity
found existing among cosmical conditions, by rendering great in the
same proportion the difficulty of accounting for all these
conditions at once, strengthens, also in the same proportion, our
faith in that hypothesis which does, in such manner, satisfactorily
account for them: -- and as no complexity can well be conceived
greater than that of the astronomical conditions, so no conviction can
be stronger -- to my mind at least -- than that with which I am
impressed by an hypothesis that not only reconciles these
conditions, with mathematical accuracy, and reduces them into a
consistent and intelligible whole, but is, at the same time, the
sole hypothesis by means of which the human intellect has been
ever enabled to account for them at all.
A most unfounded opinion has been latterly current and even in
scientific circles -- the opinion that the so-called Nebular Cosmogony
has been overthrown. This fancy has arisen from the report of late
observations made, among what hitherto have been termed the "nebulae,"
through the large telescope of Cincinnati, and the world-renowned
instrument of Lord Rosse. Certain spots in the firmament which
presented, even to the most powerful of the old telescopes, the
appearance of nebulosity, or haze, had been regarded for a long time
as confirming the theory of Laplace. They were looked upon as stars in
that very process of condensation which I have been attempting to
describe. Thus it was supposed that we "had ocular evidence" -- an
evidence, by the way, which has always been found very questionable --
of the truth of the hypothesis; and, although certain telescopic
improvements, every now and then, enabled us to perceive that a
spot, here and there, which we had been classing among the nebulae,
was, in fact, but a cluster of stars deriving its nebular character
only from its immensity of distance -- still it was thought that no
doubt could exist as to the actual nebulosity of numerous other
masses, the strong-holds of the nebulists, bidding defiance to every
effort at segregation. Of these latter the most interesting was the
great "nebulae" in the constellation Orion: -- but this, with
innumerable other miscalled "nebulae," when viewed through the
magnificent modern telescopes, has become resolved into a simple
collection of stars. Now this fact has been very generally
understood as conclusive against the Nebular Hypothesis of Laplace;
and, on announcement of the discoveries in question, the most
enthusiastic defender and most eloquent popularizer of the theory, Dr.
Nichol, went so far as to "admit the necessity of abandoning" an
idea which had formed the material of his most praiseworthy book. ( "Views of the Architecture of the Heavens." A letter, purporting
to be from Dr. Nichol to a friend in America, went the rounds of our
newspapers, about two years ago, I think, admitting "the necessity" to
which I refer. In a subsequent Lecture, however, Dr. N. appears in
some manner to have gotten the better of the necessity, and does not
quite renounce the theory, although he seems to wish that he could
sneer at it as "a purely hypothetical one." What else was the Law of
Gravity before the Maskelyne experiments? and who questioned the Law
of Gravity, even then?)
Many of my readers will no doubt be inclined to say that the
result of these new investigations has at least a strong
tendency to overthrow the hypothesis; while some of them, more
thoughtful, will suggest that, although the theory is by no means
disproved through the segregation of the particular "nebulae"
alluded to, still a failure to segregate them, with such telescopes,
might well have been understood as a triumphant Corroboration of the
theory: -- and this latter class will be surprised, perhaps, to hear
me say that even with them I disagree. If the propositions of this
Discourse have been comprehended, it will be seen that, in my view,
a failure to segregate the "nebulae" would have tended to the
refutation, rather than to the confirmation, of the Nebular
Hypothesis.
Let me explain: -- The Newtonian Law of Gravity we may, of course,
assume as demonstrated. This law, it will be remembered, I have
referred to the reaction of the first Divine Act -- to the reaction of
an exercise of the Divine Volition temporarily overcoming a
difficulty. This difficulty is that of forcing the normal into the
abnormal -- of impelling that whose originality, and therefore whose
rightful condition, was One, to take upon itself the wrongful
condition of Many. It is only by conceiving this difficulty as
temporarily overcome, that we can comprehend a reaction. There could
have been no reaction had the act been infinitely continued. So long
as the act LA0 no reaction, of course, could commence; in
other words, no gravitation could take place -- for we have considered
the one as but the manifestation of the other. But gravitation has
taken place; therefore the act of Creation has ceased: and gravitation
has long ago taken place; therefore the act of Creation has long ago
ceased. We can no more expect, then, to observe the primary
processes of Creation; and to these primary processes the condition
of nebulosity has already been explained to belong.
Through what we know of the propagation of light, we have direct
proof that the more remote of the stars have existed, under the
forms in which we now see them, for an inconceivable number of
years. So far back at least, then, as the period when these stars
underwent condensation, must have been the epoch at which the
mass-constitutive processes began. That we may conceive these
processes, then, as still going on in the case of certain "nebulae,"
while in all other cases we find them thoroughly at an end, we are
forced into assumptions for which we have really no basis
whatever -- we have to thrust in, again, upon the revolting Reason,
the blasphemous idea of special interposition -- we have to suppose
that, in the particular instances of these "nebulae," an unerring
God found it necessary to introduce certain supplementary regulations --
certain improvements of the general law -- certain retouchings and
emendations, in a word, which had the effect of deferring the
completion of these individual stars for centuries of centuries beyond
the aera during which all the other stellar bodies had time, not
only to be fully constituted, but to grow hoary with an unspeakable
old age.
Of course, it will be immediately objected that since the light by
which we recognize the nebulae now, must be merely that which left
their surfaces a vast number of years ago, the processes at present
observed, or supposed to be observed, are, in fact, not processes
now actually going on, but the phantoms of processes completed long in
the Past -- just as I maintain all these mass-constitutive processes
must have been.
To this I reply that neither is the now-observed condition of the
condensed stars their actual condition, but a condition completed long
in the Past; so that my argument drawn from the relative condition
of the stars and the "nebulae," is in no manner disturbed. Moreover,
those who maintain the existence of nebulae, do not refer the
nebulosity to extreme distance; they declare it a real and not
merely a perspective nebulosity. That we may conceive, indeed, a
nebular mass as visible at all, we must conceive it as very near
us in comparison with the condensed stars brought into view by the
modern telescopes. In maintaining the appearances in question, then,
to be really nebulous, we maintain their comparative vicinity to our
point of view. Thus, their condition, as we see them now, must be
referred to an epoch far less remote than that to which we may refer
the now-observed condition of at least the majority of the stars. --
In a word, should Astronomy ever demonstrate a "nebula," in the
sense at present intended, I should consider the Nebular Cosmogony --
not, indeed, as corroborated by the demonstration -- but as thereby
irretrievably overthrown.
By way, however, of rendering unto Caesar no more than the
things that are Caesar's, let me here remark that the assumption of
the hypothesis which led him to so glorious a result, seems to have
been suggested to Laplace in great measure by a misconception -- by
the very misconception of which we have just been speaking -- by the
generally prevalent misunderstanding of the character of the
nebulae, so mis-named. These he supposed to be, in reality, what their
designation implies. The fact is, this great man had, very properly,
an inferior faith in his own merely perceptive powers. In respect,
therefore, to the actual existence of nebulae -- an existence so
confidently maintained by his telescopic contemporaries -- he depended
less upon what he saw than upon what he heard.
It will be seen that the only valid objections to his theory, are
those made to its hypothesis as such -- to what suggested it -- not to
what it suggests; to its propositions rather than to its results.
His most unwarranted assumption was that of giving the atoms a
movement towards a centre, in the very face of his evident
understanding that these atoms, in unlimited succession, extended
throughout the Universal space. I have already shown that, under
such circumstances, there could have occurred no movement at all;
and Laplace, consequently, assumed one on no more philosophical ground
than that something of the kind was necessary for the establishment of
what he intended to establish.
His original idea seems to have been a compound of the true
Epicurean atoms with the false nebulae of his contemporaries; and thus
his theory presents us with the singular anomaly of absolute truth
deduced, as a mathematical result, from a hybrid datum of ancient
imagination intertangled with modern inacumen. Laplace's real strength
lay, in fact, in an almost miraculous mathematical instinct: -- on
this he relied; and in no instance did it fail or deceive him: -- in the
case of the Nebular Cosmogony, it led him, blindfolded, through a
labyrinth of Error, into one of the most luminous and stupendous
temples of Truth.
Let us now fancy, for the moment, that the ring first thrown off
by the Sun -- that is to say, the ring whose breaking-up constituted
Neptune -- did not, in fact, break up until the throwing-off of the ring
out of which Uranus arose; that this latter ring, again, remained
perfect until the discharge of that out of which sprang Saturn; that
this latter, again, remained entire until the discharge of that from
which originated Jupiter -- and so on. Let us imagine, in a word, that
no dissolution occurred among the rings until the final rejection of
that which gave birth to Mercury. We thus paint to the eye of the mind
a series of coexistent concentric circles; and looking as well at
them as at the processes by which, according to Laplace's
hypothesis, they were constructed, we perceive at once a very singular
analogy with the atomic strata and the process of the original
irradiation as I have described it. Is it impossible that, on
measuring the forces, respectively, by which each successive
planetary circle was thrown off -- that is to say, on measuring the
successive excesses of rotation over gravitation which occasioned
the successive discharges -- we should find the analogy in question more
decidedly confirmed? Is it improbable that we should discover these
forces to have varied -- as in the original radiation -- proportional to
the squares of the distances?
Our solar system, consisting, in chief, of one sun, with sixteen
planets certainly, and possibly a few more, revolving about it at
various distances, and attended by seventeen moons assuredly, but
very probably by several others -- is now to be considered as an
example of the innumerable agglomerations which proceeded to take
place throughout the Universal Sphere of atoms on withdrawal of the
Divine Volition. I mean to say that our solar system is to be
understood as affording a generic instance of these
agglomerations, or, more correctly, of the ulterior conditions at
which they arrived. If we keep our attention fixed on the idea of the
utmost possible Relation as the Omnipotent design, and on the
precautions taken to accomplish it through difference of form, among
the original atoms, and particular inequidistance, we shall find it
impossible to suppose for a moment that even any two of the
incipient agglomerations reached precisely the same result in the end.
We shall rather be inclined to think that no two stellar bodies in
the Universe -- whether suns, planets or moons -- are particularly,
while are generally, similar. Still less, then, can we imagine
any two assemblages of such bodies -- any two "systems" -- as having
more than a general resemblance. (It is not impossible that some unlooked-for optical
improvement may disclose to us, among innumerable varieties of
systems, a luminous sun, encircled by luminous and non-luminous rings,
within and without and between which, revolve luminous and
non-luminous planets, attended by moons having moons -- and even these
latter again having moons.)Our telescopes, at this point,
thoroughly confirm our deductions. Taking our own solar system,
then, as merely a loose or general type of all, we have so far
proceeded in our subject as to survey the Universe under the aspect of
a spherical space, throughout which, dispersed with merely general
equability, exist a number of but generally similar systems.
Let us now, expanding our conceptions, look upon each of these
system as in itself an atom; which in fact it is, when we consider
it as but one of the countless myriads of systems which constitute the
Universe. Regarding all, then, as but colossal atoms, each with the
same ineradicable tendency to Unity which characterizes the actual
atoms of which it consists -- we enter at once upon a new order of
aggregations. The smaller systems, in the vicinity of a larger one,
would, inevitably, be drawn into still closer vicinity. A thousand
would assemble here; a million there -- perhaps here, again, even a
billion -- leaving, thus, immeasurable vacancies in space. And if,
now, it be demanded why, in the case of these systems -- of these merely
Titanic atoms -- I speak, simply, of an "assemblage," and not, as in the
case of the actual atoms, of a more or less consolidated
agglomeration: -- if it be asked, for instance, why I do not carry
what I suggest to its legitimate conclusion, and describe, at once,
these assemblages of system-atoms as rushing to consolidation in
spheres -- as each becoming condensed into one magnificent sun -- my reply
is that mellonta tauta -- I am but pausing, for a moment, on the awful
threshold of the Future. For the present, calling these
assemblages "clusters," we see them in the incipient stages of their
consolidation. Their absolute consolidation is to come.
We have now reached a point from which we behold the Universe as a
spherical space, interspersed, unequably, with clusters. It will
be noticed that I here prefer the adverb "unequably" to the phrase
"with a merely general equability," employed before. It is evident, in
fact, that the equability of distribution will diminish in the ratio
of the agglomerative processes -- that is to say, as the things
distributed diminish in number. Thus the increase of in equability --
an increase which must continue until, sooner or later an epoch will
arrive at which the largest agglomeration will absorb all the
others -- should be viewed as, simply, a corroborative indication of the
tendency to One.
And here, at length, it seems proper to inquire whether the
ascertained facts of Astronomy confirm the general arrangement which
I have thus, deductively, assigned to the Heavens. Thoroughly, they
do. Telescopic observation, guided by the laws of perspective,
enables us to understand that the perceptible Universe exists as a
cluster of clusters, irregularly disposed.
The "clusters" of which this Universal "cluster of clusters"
consists, are merely what we have been in the practice of
designating "nebulae" -- and, of these "nebulae," one is of
paramount interest to mankind. I allude to the Galaxy, or Milky Way.
This interests us, first and most obviously, on account of its great
superiority in apparent size, not only to any one other cluster in the
firmament, but to all the other clusters taken together. The largest
of these latter occupies a mere point, comparatively, and is
distinctly seen only with the aid of a telescope. The Galaxy sweeps
throughout the Heaven and is brilliantly visible to the naked eye. But
it interests man chiefly, although less immediately, on account of its
being his home; the home of the Earth on which he exists; the home
of the Sun about which this Earth revolves; the home of that
"system" of orbs of which the Sun is the centre and primary -- the Earth
one of sixteen secondaries, or planets -- the Moon one of seventeen
tertiaries, or satellites. The Galaxy, let me repeat, is but one of
the clusters which I have been describing -- but one of the mis-called
"nebulae" revealed to us -- by the telescope alone, sometimes -- as
faint hazy spots in various quarters of the sky. We have no reason
to suppose the Milky Way really more extensive than the least of
these "nebulae". Its vast superiority in size is but an apparent
superiority arising from our position in regard to it -- that is to say,
from our position in its midst. However strange the assertion may at
first appear to those unversed in Astronomy, still the astronomer
himself has no hesitation in asserting that we are in the midst of
that inconceivable host of stars -- of suns -- of systems -- which
constitute the Galaxy. Moreover, not only have we -- not only has
our Sun a right to claim the Galaxy as its own especial cluster,
but, with slight reservation, it may be said that all the distinctly
visible stars of the firmament -- all the stars visible to the naked
eye -- have equally a right to claim it as their own.
There has been a great deal of misconception in respect to the
shape of the Galaxy; which, in nearly all our astronomical
treatises, is said to resemble that of a capital Y. The cluster in
question has, in reality, a certain general -- very general
resemblance to the planet Saturn, with its encompassing triple ring.
Instead of the solid orb of that planet, however, we must picture to
ourselves a lenticular star-island, or collection of stars; our Sun
lying excentrically -- near the shore of the island -- on that side of
it which is nearest the constellation of the Cross and farthest from
that of Cassiopeia. The surrounding ring, where it approaches our
position, has in it a longitudinal gash, which does in fact, cause
the ring, in our vicinity, to assume, loosely, the appearance of a
capital Y.
We must not fall into the error, however, of conceiving the somewhat
indefinite girdle as at all remote, comparatively speaking, from the
also indefinite lenticular cluster which it surrounds; and thus, for
mere purpose of explanation, we may speak of our Sun as actually
situated at that point of the Y where its three component lines unite;
and, conceiving this letter to be of a certain solidity -- of a
certain thickness, very trivial in comparison with its length -- we
may even speak of our position as in the middle of this thickness.
Fancying ourselves thus placed, we shall no longer find difficulty
in accounting for the phaenomena presented -- which are perspective
altogether. When we look upward or downward -- that is to say, when we
cast our eyes in the direction of the letter's thickness -- we look
through fewer stars than when we cast them in the direction of its
length, or either of the three component lines. Of course,
in the former case, the stars appear scattered -- in the latter,
crowded. -- To reverse this explanation: -- An inhabitant of the Earth,
when looking, as we commonly express ourselves, at the Galaxy, is
then beholding it in some of the directions of its length -- is
looking the lines of the Y -- but when, looking out into the
general Heaven, he turns his eyes FR the Galaxy, he is then
surveying it in the direction of the letter's thickness; and on this
account the stars seem to him scattered; while, in fact, they are as
close together, on an average, as in the mass of the cluster. No
consideration could be better adapted to convey an idea of this
cluster's stupendous extent.
If, with a telescope of high space-penetrating power, we carefully
inspect the firmament, we shall become aware of a belt of
clusters -- of what we have hitherto called "nebulae" -- a band, of
varying breadth, stretching from horizon to horizon, at right angles
to the general course of the Milky Way. This band is the ultimate
cluster of clusters. This belt is The Universe. Our Galaxy is
but one, and perhaps one of the most inconsiderable, of the clusters
which go to the constitution of this ultimate, Universal belt or
band. The appearance of this cluster of clusters, to our eyes,
as a belt or band, is altogether a perspective phaenomenon of the
same character as that which causes us to behold our own individual
and roughly-spherical cluster, the Galaxy, under guise also of a belt,
traversing the Heavens at right angles to the Universal one. The shape
of the all-inclusive cluster is, of course generally, that of each
individual cluster which it includes. Just as the scattered stars
which, on looking FR the Galaxy, we see in the general sky, are,
in fact, but a portion of that Galaxy itself, and as closely
intermingled with it as any of the telescopic points in what seems the
densest portion of its mass -- so are the scattered "nebulae" which,
on casting our eyes FR the Universal belt, we perceive at all
points of the firmament -- so, I say, are these scattered "nebulae" to
be understood as only perspectively scattered, and as part and
parcel of the one supreme and Universal sphere.
No astronomical fallacy is more untenable, and none has been more
pertinaciously adhered to, than that of the absolute illimitation of
the Universe of Stars. The reasons for limitation, as I have already
assigned them, a priori, seem to me unanswerable; but, not to
speak of these, observation assures us that there is, in numerous
directions around us, certainly, if not in all, a positive limit --
or, at the very least, affords us no basis whatever for thinking
otherwise. Were the succession of stars endless, then the background
of the sky would present us an uniform luminosity, like that displayed
by the Galaxy -- since there could be absolutely no point, in all
that background, at which would not exist a star. The only mode,
therefore, in which, under such a state of affairs, we could
comprehend the voids which our telescopes find in innumerable
directions, would be by supposing the distance of the invisible
background so immense that no ray from it has yet been able to reach
us at all. That this may be so, who shall venture to deny? I
maintain, simply, that we have not even the shadow of a reason for
believing that it is so.
When speaking of the vulgar propensity to regard all bodies on the
Earth as tending merely to the Earth's centre, I observed that,
"with certain exceptions to be specified hereafter, every body on
the Earth tended not only to the Earth's centre, but in every
conceivable direction besides." (See prevous paragraph, "Now, to what does so partial a
consideration tend...") The "exceptions" refer to those
frequent gaps in the Heavens, where our utmost scrutiny can detect not
only no stellar bodies, but no indications of their existence: --
where yawning chasms, blacker than Erebus, seem to afford us glimpses,
through the boundary walls of the Universe of Stars, into the
illimitable Universe of Vacancy, beyond. Now as any body, existing
on the Earth, chances to pass, either through its own movement or
the Earth's, into a line with any one of these voids, or cosmical
abysses, it clearly is no longer attracted in the direction of that
void, and for the moment, consequently, is "heavier" than at any
period, either after or before. Independently of the consideration
of these voids however, and looking only at the generally unequable
distribution of the stars, we see that the absolute tendency of bodies
on the Earth to the Earth's centre, is in a state of perpetual
variation.
We comprehend, then, the insulation of our Universe. We perceive the
isolation of that -- of that which we grasp with the senses.
We know that there exists one cluster of clusters -- a collection
around which, on all sides, extend the immeasurable wildernesses of
a Space to all human perception untenanted. But because upon the
confines of this Universe of Stars we are compelled to pause,
through want of farther evidence from the senses, is it right to
conclude that, in fact, there is no material point beyond that which
we have thus been permitted to attain? Have we, or have we not, an
analogical right to the inference that this perceptible Universe -- that
this cluster of clusters -- is but one of a series of clusters of
clusters, the rest of which are invisible through distance -- through
the diffusion of their light being so excessive, ere it reaches us, as
not to produce upon our retinas a light-impression -- or from there
being no such emanation as light at all, in these unspeakably
distant worlds -- or, lastly, from the mere interval being so vast, that
the electric tidings of their presence in Space, have not yet -- through
the lapsing myriads of years -- been enabled to traverse that interval?
Have we any right to inferences -- have we any ground whatever for
visions such as these? If we have a right to them in any degree,
we have a right to their infinite extension.
The human brain has obviously a leaning to the "Infinite," and
fondles the phantom of the idea. It seems to long with a passionate
fervor for this impossible conception, with the hope of intellectually
believing it when conceived. What is general among the whole race of
Man, of course no individual of that race can be warranted in
considering abnormal; nevertheless, there may be a class of superior
intelligences, to whom the human bias alluded to may wear all the
character of monomania.
My question, however, remains unanswered: -- Have we any right to
infer -- let us say, rather, to imagine -- an interminable succession of
the "clusters of clusters," or of "Universes" more or less similar?
I reply that the "right," in a case such as this, depends absolutely
upon the hardihood of that imagination which ventures to claim the
right. Let me declare, only, that, as an individual, I myself feel
impelled to the fancy -- without daring to call it more -- that there
does exist a limitless succession of Universes, more or less
similar to that of which we have cognizance -- to that of which
we shall ever have cognizance -- at the very least until the
return of our own particular Universe into Unity. If such clusters
of clusters exist, however -- and they do -- it is abundantly clear
that, having had no part in our origin, they have no portion in our
laws. They neither attract us, nor we them. Their material -- their
spirit is not ours -- is not that which obtains in any part of our
Universe. They could not impress our senses or our souls. Among them
and us -- considering all, for the moment, collectively -- there are no
influences in common. Each exists, apart and independently, in the
bosom of its proper and particular God.
In the conduct of this Discourse, I am aiming less at physical
than at metaphysical order. The clearness with which even material
phaenomena are presented to the understanding, depends very little,
I have long since learned to perceive, upon a merely natural, and
almost altogether upon a moral, arrangement. If then I seem to step
somewhat too discursively from point to point of my topic, let me
suggest that I do so in the hope of thus the better keeping unbroken
that chain of graduated impression by which alone the intellect of
Man can expect to encompass the grandeurs of which I speak, and, in
their majestic totality, to comprehend them.
So far, our attention has been directed, almost exclusively, to a
general and relative grouping of the stellar bodies in space. Of
specification there has been little and whatever ideas of quantity
have been conveyed -- that is to say, of number, magnitude, and
distance -- have been conveyed incidentally and by way of preparation
for more definitive conceptions. These latter let us now attempt to
entertain.
Our solar system, as has been already mentioned, consists, in chief,
of one sun and sixteen planets certainly, but in all probability a few
others, revolving around it as a centre, and attended by seventeen
moons of which we know, with possibly several more of which as yet
we know nothing. These various bodies are not true spheres, but oblate
spheroids -- spheres flattened at the poles of the imaginary axes
about which they rotate: -- the flattening being a consequence of the
rotation. Neither is the Sun absolutely the centre of the system;
for this Sun itself, with all the planets, revolves about a
perpetually shifting point of space, which is the system's general
centre of gravity. Neither are we to consider the paths through
which these different spheroids move -- the moons about the planets, the
planets about the Sun, or the Sun about the common centre -- as
circles in an accurate sense. They are, in fact, ellipses -- one of the
foci being the point about which the revolution is made. An ellipse
is a curve, returning into itself, one of whose diameters is longer
than the other. In the longer diameter are two points, equidistant
from the middle of the line, and so situated otherwise that if, from
each of them a straight line be drawn to any one point of the curve,
the two lines, taken together, will, be equal to the longer diameter
itself. Now let us conceive such an ellipse. At one of the points
mentioned, which are the foci, let us fasten an orange. By an
elastic thread let us connect this orange with a pea; and let us place
this latter on the circumference of the ellipse. Let us now move the
pea continuously around the orange -- keeping always on the
circumference of the ellipse. The elastic thread, which, of course,
varies in length as we move the pea, will form what in geometry is
called a radius vector. Now, if the orange be understood as the Sun,
and the pea as a planet revolving about it, then the revolution should
be made at such a rate -- with a velocity so varying -- that the radius
vector may pass over equal areas of space in equal times. The
progress of the pea should be -- in other words, the progress of the
planet is, of course, -- slow in proportion to its distance from the
Sun -- swift in proportion to its proximity. Those planets, moreover,
move the more slowly which are the farther from the Sun; the
squares of their periods of revolution having the same proportion to
each other, as have to each other the cubes of their mean distances
from the Sun.
The wonderfully complex laws of revolution here described,
however, are not to be understood as obtaining in our system alone.
They everywhere prevail where Attraction prevails. They control the
Universe. Every shining speck in the firmament is, no doubt, a
luminous sun, resembling our own, at least in its general features,
and having in attendance upon it a greater or less number of
planets, greater or less, whose still lingering luminosity is not
sufficient to render them visible to us at so vast a distance, but
which, nevertheless, revolve, moon-attended, about their starry
centres, in obedience to the principles just detailed -- in obedience to
the three omniprevalent laws of revolution the three immortal laws
guessed by the imaginative Kepler, and but subsequently demonstrated
and accounted for by the patient and mathematical Newton. Among a
tribe of philosophers who pride themselves excessively upon
matter-of-fact, it is far too fashionable to sneer at all
speculation under the comprehensive sobriquet, "guess-work." The
point to be considered is, who guesses. In guessing with Plato, we
spend our time to better purpose, now and then, than in hearkening
to a demonstration by Alcmaeon.
In many works on Astronomy I find it distinctly stated that the laws
of Kepler are the basis of the great principle, Gravitation. This
idea must have arisen from the fact that the suggestion of these
laws by Kepler, and his proving them a posteriori to have an
actual existence, led Newton to account for them by the hypothesis
of Gravitation, and, finally, to demonstrate them a priori, as
necessary consequences of the hypothetical principle. Thus so far from
the laws of Kepler being the basis of Gravity, Gravity is the basis of
these laws -- as it is, indeed, of all the laws of the material Universe
which are not referable to Repulsion alone.
The mean distance of the Earth from the Moon -- that is to say, from
the heavenly body in our closest vicinity -- is 237,000 miles.
Mercury, the planet nearest the Sun, is distant from him 37 millions
of miles. Venus, the next, revolves at a distance of 68 millions: -- the
Earth, which comes next, at a distance of 95 millions: -- Mars, then, at
a distance of 144 millions. Now come the eight Asteroids (Ceres, Juno,
Vesta, Pallas, Astraea, Flora, Iris, and Hebe) at an average
distance of about 250 millions. Then we have Jupiter, distant 490
millions; then Saturn, 900 millions; then Uranus, 19 hundred millions;
finally Neptune, lately discovered, and revolving at a distance, say
of 28 hundred millions. Leaving Neptune out of the account -- of which
as yet we know little accurately and which is, possibly, one of a
system of Asteroids -- it will be seen that, within certain limits,
there exists an order of interval among the planets. Speaking
loosely, we may say that each outer planet is twice as far from the
Sun as is the next inner one. May not the order here mentioned -- may
not the law of Bode -- be deduced from consideration of the analogy
suggested by me as having place between the solar discharge of rings
and the mode of the atomic irradiation?
The numbers hurriedly mentioned in this summary of distance, it is
folly to attempt comprehending, unless in the light of abstract
arithmetical facts. They are not practically tangible ones. They
convey no precise ideas. I have stated that Neptune, the planet
farthest from the Sun, revolves about him at a distance of 28
hundred millions of miles. So far good: -- I have stated a
mathematical fact; and, without comprehending it in the least, we
may put it to use -- mathematically. But in mentioning, even, that the
Moon revolves about the Earth at the comparatively trifling distance
of 237,000 miles, I entertained no expectation of giving any one to
understand -- to know -- to feel -- how far from the Earth the Moon actually
is. 237,000 miles! There are, perhaps, few of my readers who
have not crossed the Atlantic ocean; yet how many of them have a
distinct idea of even the 3,000 miles intervening between shore and
shore? I doubt, indeed, whether the man lives who can force into his
brain the most remote conception of the interval between one milestone
and its next neighbor upon the turnpike. We are in some measure aided,
however, in our consideration of distance, by combining this
consideration with the kindred one of velocity. Sound passes through
1100 feet of space in a second of time. Now were it possible for an
inhabitant of the Earth to see the flash of a cannon discharged in the
Moon, and to hear the report, he would have to wait, after
perceiving the former, more than 13 entire days and nights before
getting any intimation of the latter.
However feeble be the impression, even thus conveyed, of the
Moon's real distance from the Earth, it will, nevertheless, effect a
good object in enabling us more clearly to see the futility of
attempting to grasp such intervals as that of the 28 hundred
millions of miles between our Sun and Neptune; or even that of the
95 millions between the Sun and the Earth we inhabit. A cannon-ball,
flying at the greatest velocity with which a ball has ever been
known to fly, could not traverse the latter interval in less than 20
years; while for the former it would require 590.
Our Moon's real diameter is 2160 miles; yet she is comparatively
so trifling an object that it would take nearly 50 such orbs to
compose one as great as the Earth.
The diameter of our own globe is 7912 miles -- but from the
enunciation of these numbers what positive idea do we derive?
If we ascend an ordinary mountain and look around us from its
summit, we behold a landscape stretching, say 40 miles, in every
direction; forming a circle 250 miles in circumference; and
including an area of 5000 square miles. The extent of such a prospect,
on account of the successiveness with which its portions necessarily
present themselves to view, can be only very feebly and very partially
appreciated: -- yet the entire panorama would comprehend no more than
one 40,000th part of the mere surface of our globe. Were this
panorama, then, to be succeeded, after the lapse of an hour, by
another of equal extent; this again by a third, after the lapse of
another hour; this again by a fourth after lapse of another hour --
and so on, until the scenery of the whole Earth were exhausted; and
were we to be engaged in examining these various panoramas for
twelve hours of every day; we should nevertheless, be 9 years and 48
days in completing the general survey.
But if the mere surface of the Earth eludes the grasp of the
imagination, what are we to think of its cubical contents? It embraces
a mass of matter equal in weight to at least 2 sextillions, 200
quintillions of tons. Let us suppose it in a state of quiescence;
and now let us endeavor to conceive a mechanical force sufficient to
set it in motion! Not the strength of all the myriads of beings whom
we may conclude to inhabit the planetary worlds of our system -- not the
combined physical strength of these beings -- even admitting all
to be more powerful than man -- would avail to stir the ponderous mass a
single inch from its position.
What are we to understand, then, of the force, which under similar
circumstances, would be required to move the LA0 of our planets,
Jupiter? This is 86,000 miles in diameter, and would include within
its periphery more than a thousand orbs of the magnitude of our own.
Yet this stupendous body is actually flying around the Sun at the rate
of 29,000 miles an hour -- that is to say, with a velocity 40 times
greater than that of a cannon-ball! The thought of such a
phaenomenon cannot well be said to startle the mind: -- it palsies and
appals it. Not unfrequently we task our imagination in picturing the
capacities of an angel. Let us fancy such a being at a distance of
some hundred miles from Jupiter -- a close eye-witness of this planet as
it speeds on its annual revolution. Now can we, I demand, fashion
for ourselves any conception so distinct of this ideal being's
spiritual exaltation, as that involved in the supposition that, even
by this immeasurable mass of matter, whirled immediately before his
eyes, with a velocity so unutterable, he -- an angel -- angelic though
he be -- is not at once struck into nothingness and overwhelmed?
At this point, however, it seems proper to suggest that, in fact, we
have been speaking of comparative trifles. Our Sun -- the central and
controlling orb of the system to which Jupiter belongs, is not only
greater than Jupiter, but greater by far than all the planets of the
system taken together. This fact is an essential condition, indeed, of
the stability of the system itself. The diameter of Jupiter has been
mentioned: -- it is 86,000 miles: -- that of the Sun is 882,000 miles.
An inhabitant of the latter, traveling 90 miles a day, would be more
than 80 years in going round a great circle of its circumference. It
occupies a cubical space of 681 quadrillions, 472 trillions of
miles. The Moon, as has been stated, revolves about the Earth at a
distance of 237,000 miles -- in an orbit, consequently, of nearly a
million and a half. Now, were the Sun placed upon the Earth, centre
over centre, the body of the former would extend, in every
direction, not only to the line of the Moon's orbit, but beyond it,
a distance of 200,000 miles.
And here, once again, let me suggest that, in fact, we have
still been speaking of comparative trifles. The distance of the
planet Neptune from the Sun has been stated: -- it is 28 hundred
millions of miles; the circumference of its orbit, therefore, is about
17 billions. Let this be borne in mind while we glance at some one
of the brightest stars. Between this and the star of our system,
(the Sun,) there is a gulf of space, to convey any idea of which we
should need the tongue of an archangel. From our system, then, and
from our Sun, or star, the star at which we suppose ourselves
glancing is a thing altogether apart: -- still, for the moment, let us
imagine it placed upon our Sun, centre over centre, as we just now
imagined this Sun itself placed upon the Earth. Let us now conceive
the particular star we have in mind, extending, in every direction,
beyond the orbit of Mercury -- of Venus -- of the Earth: -- still on,
beyond the orbit of Mars -- of Jupiter -- of Uranus -- until, finally, we
fancy it filling the circle -- 17 billions of miles in
circumference -- which is described by the revolution of Leverrier's
planet. When we have conceived all this, we shall have entertained
no extravagant conception. There is the very best reason for believing
that many of the stars are even far larger than the one we have
imagined. I mean to say that we have the very best empirical basis
for such belief: -- and, in looking back at the original, atomic
arrangements for diversity, which have been assumed as a part of the
Divine plan in the constitution of the Universe, we shall be enabled
easily to understand, and to credit, the existence of even far
vaster disproportions in stellar size than any to which I have
hitherto alluded. The largest orbs, of course, we must expect to
find rolling through the widest vacancies of Space.
I remarked, just now, that to convey an idea of the interval between
our Sun and any one of the other stars, we should require the
eloquence of an archangel. In so saying, I should not be accused of
exaggeration; for, in simple truth, these are topics on which it is
scarcely possible to exaggerate. But let us bring the matter more
distinctly before the eye of the mind.
In the first place, we may get a general, relative conception of the
interval referred to, by comparing it with the inter-planetary spaces.
If, for example, we suppose the Earth, which is, in reality, 95
millions of miles from the Sun, to be only one foot from that
luminary; then Neptune would be 40 feet distant; and the star Alpha
Lyrae, at the very least, 159.
Now I presume that, in the termination of my last sentence, few of
my readers have noticed anything especially objectionable --
particularly wrong. I said that the distance of the Earth from the Sun
being taken at one foot, the distance of Neptune would be 40 feet,
and that of Alpha Lyrae, 159. The proportion between one foot and 159,
has appeared, perhaps, to convey a sufficiently definite impression of
the proportion between the two intervals -- that of the Earth from the
Sun and that of Alpha Lyrae from the same luminary. But my account
of the matter should, in reality, have run thus: -- The distance of
the Earth from the Sun being taken at one foot, the distance of
Neptune would be 40 feet, and that of Alpha Lyrae, 159 -- miles: -- that
is to say, I had assigned to Alpha Lyrae, in my first statement of the
case, only the 5280th part of that distance which is the least
distance possible at which it can actually lie.
To proceed: However distant a mere PL0,0, is, yet when we look
at it through a telescope, we see it under a certain form -- of a
certain appreciable size. Now I have already hinted at the probable
bulk of many of the stars; nevertheless, when we view any one of them,
even through the most powerful telescope, it is found to present us
with no form, and consequently with no magnitude whatever. We
see it as a point and nothing more.
Again; -- Let us suppose ourselves walking, at night, on a highway. In
a field on one side of the road, is a line of tall objects, say trees,
the figures of which are distinctly defined against the background
of the sky. This line of objects extends at right angles to the
road, and from the road to the horizon. Now, as we proceed along the
road, we see these objects changing their positions, respectively,
in relation to a certain fixed point in that portion of the
firmament which forms the background of the view. Let us suppose
this fixed point -- sufficiently fixed for our purpose -- to be the rising
moon. We become aware, at once, that while the tree nearest us so
far alters its position in respect to the moon, as to seem flying
behind us, the tree in the extreme distance has scarcely changed at
all its relative position with the satellite. We then go on to
perceive that the farther the objects are from us, the less they alter
their positions; and the converse. Then we begin, unwittingly, to
estimate the distances of individual trees by the degrees in which
they evince the relative alteration. Finally, we come to understand
how it might be possible to ascertain the actual distance of any given
tree in the line, by using the amount of relative alteration as a
basis in a simple geometrical problem. Now this relative alteration is
what we call "parallax;" and by parallax we calculate the distances of
the heavenly bodies. Applying the principle to the trees in
question, we should, of course, be very much at a loss to comprehend
the distance of that tree, which, however far we proceeded along the
road, should evince no parallax at all. This, in the case described,
is a thing impossible; but impossible only because all distances on
our Earth are trivial indeed: -- in comparison with the vast cosmical
quantities, we may speak of them as absolutely nothing.
Now, let us suppose the star Alpha Lyrae directly overhead; and
let us imagine that, instead of standing on the Earth, we stand at one
end of a straight road stretching through Space to a distance
equalling the diameter of the Earth's orbit -- that is to say, to a
distance of 190 millions of miles. Having observed, by means of
the most delicate micrometrical instruments, the exact position of the
star, let us now pass along this inconceivable road, until we reach
its other extremity. Now, once again, let us look at the star. It is
precisely where we left it. Our instruments, however delicate,
assure us that its relative position is absolutely -- is identically the
same as at the commencement of our unutterable journey. No parallax --
none whatever -- has been found.
The fact is, that, in regard to the distance of the fixed stars --
of any one of the myriads of suns glistening on the farther side of
that awful chasm which separates our system from its brothers in the
cluster to which it belongs -- astronomical science, until very
lately, could speak only with a negative certainty. Assuming the
brightest as the nearest, we could say, even of them, only that
there is a certain incomprehensible distance on the hither side of
which they cannot be: -- how far they are beyond it we had in no case
been able to ascertain. We perceived, for example, that Alpha Lyrae
cannot be nearer to us than 19 trillions, 200 billions of miles;
but, for all we knew, and indeed for all we now know, it may be
distant from us the square, or the cube, or any other power of the
number mentioned. By dint, however, of wonderfully minute and cautious
observations, continued, with novel instruments, for many laborious
years, Bessel, not long ago deceased, has lately succeeded in
determining the distance of six or seven stars; among others, that
of the star numbered 61 in the constellation of the Swan. The distance
in this latter instance ascertained, is 670,000 times that of the Sun;
which last it will be remembered, is 95 millions of miles. The star 61
Cygni, then, is nearly 64 trillions of miles from us -- or more than
three times the distance assigned, as the least possible, for
Alpha Lyrae.
In attempting to appreciate this interval by the aid of any
considerations of velocity, as we did in endeavoring to estimate the
distance of the moon, we must leave out of sight, altogether, such
nothings as the speed of a cannon ball, or of sound. Light, however,
according to the latest calculations of Struve, proceeds at the rate
of 167,000 miles in a second. Thought itself cannot pass through
this interval more speedily -- if, indeed, thought can traverse it at
all. Yet, in coming from 61 Cygni to us, even at this inconceivable
rate, light occupies more than ten years; and, consequently, were
the star this moment blotted out from the Universe, still, for ten
years, would it continue to sparkle on, undimmed in its paradoxical
glory.
Keeping now in mind whatever feeble conception we may have
attained of the interval between our Sun and 61 Cygni, let us remember
that this interval, however unutterably vast, we are permitted to
consider as but the average interval among the countless host of
stars composing that cluster, or "nebula," to which our system, as
well as that of 61 Cygni, belongs. I have, in fact, stated the case
with great moderation we have excellent reason for believing 61
Cygni to be one of the nearest stars, and thus for concluding, at
least for the present, that its distance from us is less than the
average distance between star and star in the magnificent cluster of
the Milky Way.
And here, once again and finally, it seems proper to suggest that
even as yet we have been speaking of trifles. Ceasing to wonder at the
space between star and star in our own or in any particular cluster,
let us rather turn our thoughts to the intervals between cluster and
cluster, in the all comprehensive cluster of the Universe.
I have already said that light proceeds at the rate of 167,000 miles
in a second -- that is, about 10 millions of miles in a minute, or about
600 millions of miles in an hour: -- yet so far removed from us are some
of the "nebulae" that even light, speeding with this velocity, could
not and does not reach us, from those mysterious regions, in less than
3 millions of years. This calculation, moreover, is made by the
elder Herschel, and in reference merely to those comparatively
proximate clusters within the scope of his own telescope. There
are "nebulae," however, which, through the magical tube of Lord
Rosse, are this instant whispering in our ears the secrets of a
million of ages by-gone. In a word, the events which we behold
now -- at this moment -- in those worlds -- are the identical events which
interested their inhabitants ten hundred thousand centuries ago.
In intervals -- in distances such as this suggestion forces upon the
soul -- rather than upon the mind -- we find, at length, a fitting
climax to all hitherto frivolous considerations of quantity.
Our fancies thus occupied with the cosmical distances, let us take
the opportunity of referring to the difficulty which we have so
often experienced, while pursuing the beaten path of astronomical
reflection, in accounting for the immeasurable voids alluded to --
in comprehending why chasms so totally unoccupied and therefore
apparently so needless, have been made to intervene between star and
star -- between cluster and cluster -- in understanding, to be brief, a
sufficient reason for the Titanic scale, in respect of mere Space,
on which the Universe is seen to be constructed. A rational cause
for the phaenomenon, I maintain that Astronomy has palpably failed
to assign: -- but the considerations through which, in this Essay, we
have proceeded step by step, enable us clearly and immediately to
perceive that Space and Duration are one. That the Universe might
endure throughout an aera at all commensurate with the grandeur of
its component material portions and with the high majesty of its
spiritual purposes, it was necessary that the original atomic
diffusion be made to so inconceivable an extent as to be only not
infinite. It was required, in a word, that the stars should be
gathered into visibility from invisible nebulosity -- proceed from
nebulosity to consolidation -- and so grow grey in giving birth and
death to unspeakably numerous and complex variations of vitalic
development it was required that the stars should do all this --
should have time thoroughly to accomplish all these Divine purposes --
during the period in which all things were effecting their return
into Unity with a velocity accumulating in the inverse proportion of
the squares of the distances at which lay the inevitable End.
Throughout all this we have no difficulty in understanding the
absolute accuracy of the Divine adaptation. The density of the
stars, respectively, proceeds, of course, as their condensation
diminishes; condensation and heterogeneity keep pace with each
other; through the latter, which is the index of the former, we
estimate the vitalic and spiritual development. Thus, in the density
of the globes, we have the measure in which their purposes are
fulfilled. As density proceeds -- as the divine intentions are
accomplished -- as less and still less remains to be accomplished --
so -- in the same ratio -- should we expect to find an acceleration of
the End: -- and thus the philosophical mind will easily comprehend
that the Divine designs in constituting the stars, advance
mathematically to their fulfilment: -- and more; it will readily
give the advance a mathematical expression; it will decide that this
advance is inversely proportional with the squares of the distances of
all created things from the starting-point and goal of their creation.
Not only is this Divine adaptation, however, mathematically
accurate, but there is that about it which stamps it as divine, in
distinction from that which is merely the work of human
constructiveness. I allude to the complete mutuality of
adaptation. For example; in human constructions a particular cause has
a particular effect; a particular intention brings to pass a
particular object; but this is all; we see no reciprocity. The
effect does not re-act upon the cause; the intention does not change
relations with the object. In Divine constructions the object is
either design or object as we choose to regard it -- and we may take
at any time a cause for an effect, or the converse -- so that we can
never absolutely decide which is which.
To give an instance: -- In polar climates the human frame, to maintain
its animal heat, requires, for combustion in the capillary system,
an abundant supply of highly azotized food, such as train-oil. But
again: -- in polar climates nearly the sole food afforded man is the oil
of abundant seals and whales. Now, whether is oil at hand because
imperatively demanded, or the only thing demanded because the only
thing to be obtained? It is impossible to decide. There is an absolute
reciprocity of adaptation.
The pleasure which we derive from any display of human ingenuity
is in the ratio of the approach to this species of reciprocity. In
the construction of plot, for example, in fictitious literature, we
should aim at so arranging the incidents that we shall not be able
to determine, of any one of them, whether it depends from any one
other or upholds it. In this sense, of course, perfection of
PL0, is really, or practically, unattainable -- but only because it is
a finite intelligence that constructs. The plots of God are perfect.
The Universe is a plot of God.
And now we have reached a point at which the intellect is forced,
again, to struggle against its propensity for analogical inference --
against its monomaniac grasping at the infinite. Moons have been
seen revolving about planets; planets about stars; and the
poetical instinct of humanity -- its instinct of the symmetrical, if the
symmetry be but a symmetry of surface: -- this instinct, which the
Soul, not only of Man but of all created beings, took up, in the
beginning, from the geometrical basis of the Universal
irradiation -- impels us to the fancy of an endless extension of this
system of cycles. Closing our eyes equally to de duction and
in duction, we insist upon imagining a revolution of all the orbs
of the Galaxy about some gigantic globe which we take to be the
central pivot of the whole. Each cluster in the great cluster of
clusters is imagined, of course, to be similarly supplied and
constructed; while, that the "analogy" may be wanting at no point,
we go on to conceive these clusters themselves, again, as
revolving about some still more august sphere; -- this latter, still
again, with its encircling clusters, as but one of a yet more
magnificent series of agglomerations, gyrating about yet another orb
central to them -- some orb still more unspeakably sublime -- some
orb, let us rather say, of infinite sublimity endlessly multiplied
by the infinitely sublime. Such are the conditions, continued in
perpetuity, which the voice of what some people term "analogy" calls
upon the Fancy to depict and the Reason to contemplate, if possible,
without becoming dissatisfied with the picture. Such, in general,
are the interminable gyrations beyond gyration which we have been
instructed by Philosophy to comprehend and to account for, at least in
the best manner we can. Now and then, however, a philosopher proper --
one whose frenzy takes a very determinate turn -- whose genius, to speak
more reverentially, has a strongly-pronounced washer-womanish bias,
doing every thing up by the dozen -- enables us to see precisely
that point out of sight, at which the revolutionary processes in
question do, and of right ought to, come to an end.
It is hardly worth while, perhaps, even to sneer at the reveries
of Fourrier -- but much has been said, latterly, of the hypothesis of
Madler -- that there exists, in the centre of the Galaxy, a stupendous
globe about which all the systems of the cluster revolve. The period
of our own, indeed, has been stated -- 117 millions of years.
That our Sun has a motion in space, independently of its rotation,
and revolution about the system's centre of gravity, has long been
suspected. This motion, granting it to exist, would be manifested
perspectively. The stars in that firmamental region which we were
leaving behind us, would, in a very long series of years, become
crowded; those in the opposite quarter, scattered. Now, by means of
astronomical History, we ascertain, cloudily, that some such
phaenomena have occurred. On this ground it has been declared that our
system is moving to a point in the heavens diametrically opposite
the star Zeta Herculis: -- but this inference is, perhaps, the maximum
to which we have any logical right. Madler, however, has gone so far
as to designate a particular star, Alcyone in the Pleiades, as being
at or about the very spot around which a general revolution is
performed.
Now, since by "analogy" we are led, in the first instance, to
these dreams, it is no more than proper that we should abide by
analogy, at least in some measure, during their development; and
that analogy which suggests the revolution, suggests at the same
time a central orb about which it should be performed -- so far the
astronomer was consistent. This central orb, however, should,
dynamically, be greater than all the orbs, taken together, which
surround it. Of these there are about 100 millions. "Why, then," it
was of course demanded, "do we not see this vast central sun -- at
least equal in mass to 100 millions of such suns as ours -- why do we
not see it -- we, especially, who occupy the mid region of the
cluster -- the very locality near which, at all events, must be
situated this incomparable star?" The reply was ready -- "It must be
non-luminous, as are our planets." Here, then, to suit a purpose,
analogy is suddenly let fall. "Not so," it may be said -- "we know
that non-luminous suns actually exist." It is true that we have reason
at least for supposing so; but we have certainly no reason whatever
for supposing that the non-luminous suns in question are encircled
by luminous suns, while these again are surrounded by non-luminous
planets and it is precisely all this with which Madler is called
upon to find any thing analogous in the heavens -- for it is precisely
all this which he imagines in the case of the Galaxy. Admitting the
thing to be so, we cannot help here picturing to ourselves how sad a
puzzle the why is it so must prove to all a priori philosophers.
But granting, in the very teeth of analogy and of every thing
else, the non-luminosity of the vast central orb, we may still inquire
how this orb, so enormous, could fail of being rendered visible by the
flood of light thrown upon it from the 100 millions of glorious suns
glaring in all directions about it. Upon the urging of this
question, the idea of an actually solid central sun appears, in some
measure, to have been abandoned; and speculation proceeded to assert
that the systems of the cluster perform their revolutions merely about
an immaterial centre of gravity common to all. Here again then, to
suit a purpose, analogy is let fall. The planets of our system
revolve, it is true, about a common centre of gravity; but they do
this in connexion with, and in consequence of, a material sun whose
mass more than counterbalances the rest of the system.
The mathematical circle is a curve composed of an infinity of
straight lines. But this idea of the circle -- an idea which in view
of all ordinary geometry, is merely the mathematical, as
contradistinguished from the practical, idea -- is, in sober fact, the
practical conception which alone we have any right to entertain in
regard to the majestic circle with which we have to deal, at least
in fancy, when we suppose our system revolving about a point in the
centre of the Galaxy. Let the most vigorous of human imaginations
attempt but to take a single step towards the comprehension of a sweep
so ineffable! It would scarcely be paradoxical to say that a flash
of lightning itself, travelling forever upon the circumference of
this unutterable circle, would still, forever, be travelling in a
straight line. That the path of our Sun in such an orbit would, to any
human perception, deviate in the slightest degree from a straight
line, even in a million of years, is a proposition not to be
entertained: -- yet we are required to believe that a curvature has
become apparent during the brief period of our astronomical history --
during a mere point -- during the utter nothingness of two or three
thousand years.
It may be said that Madler has really ascertained a curvature in
the direction of our system's now well-established progress through
Space. Admitting, if necessary, this fact to be in reality such, I
maintain that nothing is thereby shown except the reality of this fact
the fact of a curvature. For its thorough determination, ages will
be required; and, when determined, it will be found indicative of some
binary or other multiple relation between our Sun and some one or more
of the proximate stars. I hazard nothing however, in predicting, that,
after the lapse of many centuries, all efforts at determining the path
of our sun through Space, will be abandoned as fruitless. This is
easily conceivable when we look at the infinity of perturbation it
must experience, from its perpetually-shifting relations with other
orbs, in the common approach of all to the nucleus of the Galaxy.
But in examining other "nebulae" than that of the Milky Way -- in
surveying, generally, the clusters which overspread the heavens -- do we
or do we not find confirmation of Madler's hypothesis? We do not.
The forms of the clusters are exceedingly diverse when casually
viewed; but on close inspection, through powerful telescopes, we
recognize the sphere, very distinctly, as at least the proximate
form of all: -- their constitution, in general, being at variance with
the idea of revolution about a common centre.
"It is difficult," says Sir John Herschel, "to form any conception
of the dynamical state of such systems. On one hand, without a
rotary motion and a centrifugal force, it is hardly possible not to
regard them as in a state of progressive collapse. On the other,
granting such a motion and such a force, we find it no less
difficult to reconcile their forms with the rotation of the whole
system [meaning cluster] around any single axis, without which
internal collision would appear to be inevitable."
Some remarks lately made about the "nebulae" by Dr. Nichol, in
taking quite a different view of the cosmical conditions from any
taken in this Discourse -- have a very peculiar applicability to the
point now at issue. He says:
"When our greatest telescopes are brought to bear upon them, we find
that those which were thought to be irregular, are not so; they
approach nearer to a globe. Here is one that looked oval; but Lord
Rosse's telescope brought it into a circle.... Now there occurs a very
remarkable circumstance in reference to these comparatively sweeping
circular masses of nebulae. We find they are not entirely circular,
but the reverse; and that all around them, on every side, there are
volumes of stars, stretching out apparently as if they were rushing
towards a great central mass in consequence of the action of some
great power." (I must be understood as denying, especially, only the
revolutionary portion of Madler's hypothesis. Of course, if no great
central orb exists now in our cluster, such will exist hereafter.
Whenever existing, it will be merely the nucleus of the
consolidation.)
Were I to describe, in my own words, what must necessarily be the
existing condition of each nebula on the hypothesis that all matter
is, as I suggest, now returning to its original Unity, I should simply
be going over, nearly verbatim, the language here employed by Dr.
Nichol, without the faintest suspicion of that stupendous truth
which is the key to these nebular phaenomena.
And here let me fortify my position still farther, by the voice of a
greater than Madler -- of one, moreover, to whom all the data of
Madler have long been familiar things, carefully and thoroughly
considered. Referring to the elaborate calculations of Argelander -- the
very researches which form Madler's basis -- Humboldt, whose
generalizing powers have never, perhaps been equalled, has the
following observation:
"When we regard the real, proper, or non-perspective motions of
the stars, we find many groups of them moving in opposite
directions; and the data as yet in hand render it not necessary, at
least, to conceive that the systems composing the Milky Way, or the
clusters, generally, composing the Universe, are revolving about any
particular centre unknown, whether luminous or non-luminous. It is but
Man's longing for a fundamental First Cause, that impels both his
intellect and fancy to the adoption of such an hypothesis." (Betrachtet man die nicht perspectivischen eigenen Bewegungen der
Sterne, so scheinen viele gruppenweise in ihrer Richtung
entgegengesetzt; und die bisher gesammelten Thatsachen machen es auf's
wenigste nicht nothwendig, anzunehmen, dass alle Theile unserer
Sternenschicht oder gar der gesammten Sterneninseln, welche den
Weltraum fullen, sich um einen grossen, unbekannten, leuchtenden
oder dunkeln Centralkorper bewegen. Das Streben nach den letzten und
hochsten Grundursachen macht freilich die reflectirende Thatigkeit des
Menschen, wie seine Phantasie, zu einer solchen Annahme geneigt.)
The phaenomenon here alluded to -- that of "many groups moving in
opposite directions" -- is quite inexplicable by Madler's idea; but
arises, as a necessary consequence, from that which forms the basis of
this Discourse. While the merely general direction of each atom --
of each moon, planet, star, or cluster -- would, on my hypothesis, be,
of course, absolutely rectilinear; while the general path of all
bodies would be a right line leading to the centre of all; it is
clear, nevertheless, that this general rectilinearity would be
compounded of what, with scarcely any exaggeration, we may term an
infinity of particular curves -- an infinity of local deviations from
rectilinearity -- the result of continuous differences of relative
position among the multudinous masses as each proceeded on its own
proper journey to the End.
I quoted, just now, from Sir John Herschel, the following words,
used in reference to the clusters: -- "On one hand, without a rotary
motion and a centrifugal force, it is hardly possible not to regard
them as in a state of progressive collapse." The fact is, that, in
surveying the "nebulae" with a telescope of high power, we shall
find it quite impossible, having once conceived this idea of
"collapse," not to gather, at all points, corroboration of the idea. A
nucleus is always apparent, in the direction of which the stars seem
to be precipitating themselves; nor can these nuclei be mistaken for
merely perspective phaenomena: -- the clusters are really denser
near the centre -- sparser in the regions more remote from it. In a
word, we see every thing as we should see it were a collapse
taking place; but, in general, it may be said of these clusters,
that we can fairly entertain, while looking at them, the idea of
orbitual movement about a centre, only by admitting the possible
existence, in the distant domains of space, of dynamical laws with
which we are unacquainted.
On the part of Herschel, however, there is evidently a
reluctance to regard the nebulae as in "a state of progressive
collapse." But if facts -- if even appearances justify the supposition
of their being in this state, why, it may well be demanded, is he
disinclined to admit it? Simply on account of a prejudice; -- merely
because the supposition is at war with a preconceived and utterly
baseless notion -- that of the endlessness -- that of the eternal
stability of the Universe.
If the propositions of this Discourse are tenable, the "state of
progressive collapse" is precisely that state in which alone we
are warranted in considering All Things; and, with due humility, let
me here confess that, for my part, I am at a loss to conceive how
any other understanding of the existing condition of affairs,
could ever have made its way into the human brain. "The tendency to
collapse" and "the attraction of gravitation" are convertible phrases.
In using either, we speak of the reaction of the First Act. Never
was necessity less obvious than that of supposing Matter imbued with
an ineradicable quality forming part of its material nature -- a
quality, or instinct, forever inseparable from it, and by dint of
which inalienable principle every atom is perpetually impelled to
seek its fellow-atom. Never was necessity less obvious than that of
entertaining this unphilosophical idea. Going boldly behind the vulgar
thought, we have to conceive, metaphysically, that the gravitating
principle appertains to Matter temporarily -- only while diffused --
only while existing as Many instead of as One -- appertains to it by
virtue of its state of irradiation alone -- appertains, in a word,
altogether to its Condition, and not in the slightest degree to
itself. In this view, when the irradiation shall have returned
into its source -- when the reaction shall be completed -- the gravitating
principle will no longer exist. And, in fact, astronomers, without
at any time reaching the idea here suggested, seem to have been
approximating it, in the assertion that "if there were but one body in
the Universe, it would be impossible to understand how the
principle, Gravity, could obtain": -- that is to say, from a
consideration of Matter as they find it, they reach a conclusion at
which I deductively arrive. That so pregnant a suggestion as the one
quoted should have been permitted to remain so long unfruitful, is,
nevertheless, a mystery which I find it difficult to fathom.
It is, perhaps, in no little degree, however, our propensity for the
continuous -- for the analogical -- in the present case more
particularly for the symmetrical which has been leading us astray.
And, in fact, the sense of the symmetrical is an instinct which may be
depended upon with an almost blindfold reliance. It is the poetical
essence of the Universe -- OF0,0 which, in the supremeness
of its symmetry, is but the most sublime of poems. Now symmetry and
consistency are convertible terms: -- thus Poetry and Truth are one. A
thing is consistent in the ratio of its truth -- true in the ratio of
its consistency. A Perfect consistency, I repeat, can be nothing
but a absolute truth. We may take it for granted, then, that Man
cannot long or widely err, if he suffer himself to be guided by his
poetical, which I have maintained to be his truthful, in being his
symmetrical, instinct. He must have a care, however, lest, in pursuing
too heedlessly the superficial symmetry of forms and motions, he leave
out of sight the really essential symmetry of the principles which
determine and control them.
That the stellar bodies would finally be merged in one -- that, at
last, all would be drawn into the substance of one stupendous central
orb already existing -- is an idea which, for some time past, seems,
vaguely and indeterminately, to have held possession of the fancy of
mankind. It is an idea, in fact, which belongs to the class of the
excessively obvious. It springs, instantly, from a superficial
observation of the cyclic and seemingly gyrating, or vorticial
movements of those individual portions of the Universe which come most
immediately and most closely under our observation. There is not,
perhaps, a human being, of ordinary education and of average
reflective capacity, to whom, at some period, the fancy inquestion has
not occurred, as if spontaneously, or intuitively, and wearing all the
character of a very profound and very original conception. This
conception, however, so commonly entertained, has never, within my
knowledge, arisen out of any abstract considerations. Being, on the
contrary, always suggested, as I say, by the vorticial movements about
centres, a reason for it, also, -- a cause for the ingathering of
all the orbs into one, imagined to be already existing, was
naturally sought in the same direction -- among these cyclic movements
themselves.
Thus it happened that, on announcement of the gradual and
perfectly regular decrease observed in the orbit of Enck's comet, at
every successive revolution about our Sun, astronomers were nearly
unanimous in the opinion that the cause in question was found -- that
a principle was discovered sufficient to account, physically, for that
final, universal agglomeration which, I repeat, the analogical,
symmetrical or poetical instinct of Man had predetermined to
understand as something more than a simple hypothesis.
This cause -- this sufficient reason for the final ingathering -- was
declared to exist in an exceedingly rare but still material medium
pervading space; which medium, by retarding, in some degree, the
progress of the comet, perpetually weakened its tangential force; thus
giving a predominance to the centripetal; which, of course, drew the
comet nearer and nearer at each revolution, and would eventually
precipitate it upon the Sun.
All this was strictly logical -- admitting the medium or ether; but
this ether was assumed, most illogically, on the ground that no
other mode than the one spoken of could be discovered, of accounting
for the observed decrease in the orbit of the comet: -- as if from the
fact that we could discover no other mode of accounting for it, it
followed, in any respect, that no other mode of accounting for it
existed. It is clear that innumerable causes might operate, in
combination, to diminish the orbit, without even a possibility of
our ever becoming acquainted with one of them. In the meantime, it has
never been fairly shown, perhaps, why the retardation occasioned by
the skirts of the Sun's atmosphere, through which the comet passes
at perihelion, is not enough to account for the phaenomenon. That
Enck's comet will be absorbed into the Sun, is probable; that all
the comets of the system will be absorbed, is more than merely
possible; but, in such case, the principle of absorption must be
referred to eccentricity of orbit -- to the close approximation to the
Sun, of the comets at their perihelia; and is a principle not
affecting, in any degree, the ponderous spheres, which are to be
regarded as the true material constituents of the Universe. --
Touching comets, in general, let me here suggest, in passing, that
we cannot be far wrong in looking upon them as the
lightning-flashes of the cosmical Heaven.
The idea of a retarding ether and, through it, of a final
agglomeration of all things, seemed at one time, however, to be
confirmed by the observation of a positive decrease in the orbit of
the solid moon. By reference to eclipses recorded 2500 years ago, it
was found that the velocity of the satellite's revolution then was
considerably less than it is now; that on the hypothesis that its
motions in its orbit is uniformly in accordance with Kepler's law, and
was accurately determined then -- 2500 years ago -- it is now in advance
of the position it should occupy, by nearly 9000 miles. The increase
of velocity proved, of course, a diminution of orbit; and
astronomers were fast yielding to a belief in an ether, as the sole
mode of accounting for the phaenomenon, when Lagrange came to the
rescue. He showed that, owing to the configurations of the
spheroids, the shorter axes of their ellipses are subject to variation
in length; the longer axes being permanent; and that this variation is
continuous and vibratory -- so that every orbit is in a state of
transition, either from circle to ellipse, or from ellipse to
circle. In the case of the moon, where the shorter axis is
de creasing, the orbit is passing from circle to ellipse, and,
consequently, is de creasing too; but, after a long series of ages,
the ultimate eccentricity will be attained; then the shorter axis will
proceed to in crease, until the orbit becomes a circle; when the
process of shortening will again take place; -- and so on forever. In
the case of the Earth, the orbit is passing from ellipse to circle.
The facts thus demonstrated do away, of course, with all necessity for
supposing an ether, and with all apprehension of the system's
instability -- on the ether's account.
It will be remembered that I have myself assumed what we may term
an ether. I have spoken of a subtle influence which we know to
be ever in attendance upon matter, although becoming manifest only
through matter's heterogeneity. To this influence -- without daring to
touch it at all in any effort at explaining its awful nature -- I have
referred the various phaenomena of electricity, heat, light,
magnetism; and more -- of vitality, consciousness, and thought -- in a
word, of spirituality. It will be seen, at once, then, that the
ether thus conceived is radically distinct from the ether of the
astronomers; inasmuch as theirs is matter and mine not.
With the idea of material ether, seems, thus, to have departed
altogether the thought of that universal agglomeration so long
predetermined by the poetical fancy of mankind: -- an agglomeration in
which a sound Philosophy might have been warranted in putting faith,
at least to a certain extent, if for no other reason than that by this
poetical fancy it had been so predetermined. But so far as
Astronomy -- so far as mere Physics have yet spoken, the cycles of the
Universe are perpetual -- the Universe has no conceivable end. Had an
end been demonstrated, however, from so purely collateral a cause as
an ether, Man's instinct of the Divine capacity to adapt, would have
rebelled against the demonstration. We should have been forced to
regard the Universe with some such sense of dissatisfaction as we
experience in contemplating an unnecessarily complex work of human
art. Creation would have affected us as an imperfect PL0, in a
romance, where the denoument is awkwardly brought about by
interposed incidents external and foreign to the main subject; instead
of springing out of the bosom of the thesis -- out of the heart of the
ruling idea -- instead of arising as a result of the primary
proposition -- as inseparable and inevitable part and parcel of the
fundamental conception of the book.
What I mean by the symmetry of mere surface -- will now be more
clearly understood. It is simply by the blandishment of this
symmetry that we have been beguiled into the general idea of which
Madler's hypothesis is but a part -- the idea of the vorticial indrawing
of the orbs. Dismissing this nakedly physical conception, the symmetry
of principle sees the end of all things metaphysically involved in the
thought of a beginning; seeks and finds in this origin of all things
the rudiment of this end; and perceives the impiety of supposing
this end likely to be brought about less simply -- less directly -- less
obviously -- less artistically -- than through the reaction of the
originating Act.
Recurring, then, to a previous suggestion, let us understand the
systems -- let us understand each star, with its attendant planets -- as
but a Titanic atom existing in space with precisely the same
inclination for Unity which characterized, in the beginning, the
actual atoms after their irradiation throughout the Universal
sphere. As these original atoms rushed towards each other in generally
straight lines, so let us conceive as at least generally
rectilinear, the paths of the system-atoms towards their respective
centres of aggregation: -- and in this direct drawing together of the
systems into clusters, with a similar and simultaneous drawing
together of the clusters themselves while undergoing consolidation, we
have at length attained the great Now -- the awful Present -- the
Existing Condition of the Universe.
Of the still more awful Future a not irrational analogy may guide us
in framing an hypothesis. The equilibrium between the centripetal
and centrifugal forces of each system, being necessarily destroyed
upon attainment of a certain proximity to the nucleus of the cluster
to which it belongs, there must occur, at once, a chaotic or seemingly
chaotic precipitation, of the moons upon the planets, of the planets
upon the suns, and of the suns upon the nuclei; and the general result
of this precipitation must be the gathering of the myriad now-existing
stars of the firmament into an almost infinitely less number of almost
infinitely superior spheres. In being immeasurably fewer, the worlds
of that day will be immeasurably greater than our own. Then, indeed,
amid unfathomable abysses, will be glaring unimaginable suns. But
all this will be merely a climacic magnificence foreboding the great
End. Of this End the new genesis described, can be but a very
partial postponement. While undergoing consolidation, the clusters
themselves, with a speed prodigiously accumulative, have been
rushing towards their own general centre -- and now, with a thousandfold
electric velocity, commensurate only with their material grandeur
and with the spiritual passion of their appetite for oneness, the
majestic remnants of the tribe of Stars flash, at length, into a
common embrace. The inevitable catastrophe is at hand.
But this catastrophe -- what is it? We have seen accomplished the
ingathering of the orbs. Henceforward, are we not to understand one
material globe of globes as constituting and comprehending the
Universe? Such a fancy would be altogether at war with every
assumption and consideration of this Discourse.
I have already alluded to that absolute reciprocity of
adaptation which is the idiosyncrasy of the divine Art -- stamping it
divine. Up to this point of our reflections, we have been regarding
the electrical influence as a something by dint of whose repulsion
alone Matter is enabled to exist in that state of diffusion demanded
for the fulfilment of its purposes: -- so far, in a word, we have been
considering the influence in question as ordained for Matter's sake --
to subserve the objects of matter. With a perfectly legitimate
reciprocity, we are now permitted to look at Matter, as created
solely for the sake of this influence -- solely to serve the objects
of this spiritual Ether. Through the aid -- by the means -- through the
agency of Matter, and by dint of its heterogeneity -- is this Ether
manifested -- is Spirit individualized. It is merely in the
development of this Ether, through heterogeneity, that particular
masses of Matter become animate -- sensitive -- and in the ratio of
their heterogeneity; -- some reaching a degree of sensitiveness
involving what we call Thought and thus attaining Conscious
Intelligence.
In this view, we are enabled to perceive Matter as a Means -- not as
an End. Its purposes are thus seen to have been comprehended in its
diffusion; and with the return into Unity these purposes cease. The
absolutely consolidated globe of globes would be objectless: --
therefore not for a moment could it continue to exist. Matter, created
for an end, would unquestionably, on fulfilment of that end, be Matter
no longer. Let us endeavor to understand that it would disappear,
and that God would remain all in all.
That every work of Divine conception must coexist and coexpire
with its particular design, seems to me especially obvious; and I make
no doubt that, on perceiving the final globe of globes to be
objectless, the majority of my readers will be satisfied with my
"therefore it cannot continue to exist." Nevertheless, as the
startling thought of its instantaneous disappearance is one which
the most powerful intellect cannot be expected readily to entertain on
grounds so decidedly abstract, let us endeavor to look at the idea
from some other and more ordinary point of view: -- let us see how
thoroughly and beautifully it is corroborated in an a posteriori
consideration of Matter as we actually find it.
I have before said that "Attraction and Repulsion being undeniably
the sole properties by which Matter is manifested to Mind, we are
justified in assuming that Matter exists only as Attraction and
Repulsion -- in other words that Attraction and Repulsion are
Matter; there being no conceivable case in which we may not employ the
term Matter and the terms 'Attraction' and 'Repulsion' taken together,
as equivalent, and therefore convertible, expressions of Logic." (See previous paragraph, "Discarding now the two equivocal
terms...")
Now the very definition of Attraction implies particularity -- the
existence of parts, particles, or atoms; for we define it as the
tendency of "each atom &c. to every other atom," &c. according to a
certain law. Of course where there are no parts -- where there is
absolute Unity -- where the tendency to oneness is satisfied -- there
can be no Attraction: -- this has been fully shown, and all Philosophy
admits it. When, on fulfilment of its purposes, then, Matter shall
have returned into its original condition of One -- a condition
which presupposes the expulsion of the separative ether, whose
province and whose capacity are limited to keeping the atoms apart
until that great day when, this ether being no longer needed, the
overwhelming pressure of the finally collective Attraction shall at
length just sufficiently predominate ("Gravity, therefore, must be the strongest of forces." See previous section, "Now, although the philosophic cannot be said to...") and expel it: -- when, I say, Matter, finally, expelling the Ether, shall have returned into
absolute Unity, -- it will then (to speak paradoxically for the
moment) be Matter without Attraction and without Repulsion -- in other
words, Matter without Matter -- in other words, again, Matter no more.
In sinking into Unity, it will sink at once into that Nothingness
which, to all Finite Perception, Unity must be -- into that Material
Nihility from which alone we can conceive it to have been evoked -- to
have been created by the Volition of God.
I repeat then -- Let us endeavor to comprehend that the final globe of
globes will instantaneously disappear, and that God will remain all in
all.
But are we here to pause? Not so. On the Universal agglomeration and
dissolution, we can readily conceive that a new and perhaps totally
different series of conditions may ensue -- another creation and
irradiation, returning into itself -- another action and reaction of the
Divine Will. Guiding our imaginations by that omniprevalent law of
laws, the law of periodicity, are we not, indeed, more than
justified in entertaining a belief -- let us say, rather, in indulging a
hope -- that the processes we have here ventured to contemplate will
be renewed forever, and forever, and forever; a novel Universe
swelling into existence, and then subsiding into nothingness, at every
throb of the Heart Divine?
And now -- this Heart Divine -- what is it? It is our own.
Let not the merely seeming irreverence of this idea frighten our
souls from that cool exercise of consciousness -- from that deep
tranquillity of self-inspection -- through which alone we can hope to
attain the presence of this, the most sublime of truths, and look it
leisurely in the face.
The phaenomena on which our conclusions must at this point depend,
are merely spiritual shadows, but not the less thoroughly substantial.
We walk about, amid the destinies of our world-existence,
encompassed by dim but ever present Memories of a Destiny more vast --
very distant in the bygone time, and infinitely awful.
We live out a Youth peculiarly haunted by such dreams; yet never
mistaking them for dreams. As Memories we know them. During our
Youth the distinction is too clear to deceive us even for a moment.
So long as this Youth endures, the feeling that we exist, is the
most natural of all feelings. We understand it thoroughly. That
there was a period at which we did not exist -- or, that it might so
have happened that we never had existed at all -- are the
considerations, indeed, which during this youth, we find
difficulty in understanding. Why we should not exist, is, up to the
epoch of Manhood, of all queries the most unanswerable. Existence --
self-existence -- existence from all Time and to all Eternity -- seems, up
to the epoch of Manhood, a normal and unquestionable condition: --
seems, because it is.
But now comes the period at which a conventional World-Reason
awakens us from the truth of our dream. Doubt, Surprise and
Incomprehensibility arrive at the same moment. They say: -- "You live
and the time was when you lived not. You have been created. An
Intelligence exists greater than your own; and it is only through this
Intelligence you live at all." These things we struggle to
comprehend and cannot: -- cannot, because these things, being
untrue, are thus, of necessity, incomprehensible.
No thinking being lives who, at some luminous point of his life of
thought, has not felt himself lost amid the surges of futile efforts
at understanding, or believing, that anything exists greater than his
own soul. The utter impossibility of any one's soul feeling itself
inferior to another; the intense, overwhelming dissatisfaction and
rebellion at the thought; -- these, with the omniprevalent aspirations
at perfection, are but the spiritual, coincident with the material,
struggles towards the original Unity -- are, to my mind at least, a
species of proof far surpassing what Man terms demonstration, that
no one soul is inferior to another -- that nothing is, or can be,
superior to any one soul -- that each soul is, in part, its own God -- its
own Creator: -- in a word, that God -- the material and spiritual God --
now exists solely in the diffused Matter and Spirit of the Universe;
and that the regathering of this diffused Matter and Spirit will be
but the re-constitution of the purely Spiritual and Individual God.
In this view, and in this view alone, we comprehend the riddles of
Divine Injustice -- of Inexorable Fate. In this view alone the existence
of Evil becomes intelligible; but in this view it becomes more -- it
becomes endurable. Our souls no longer rebel at a Sorrow which we
ourselves have imposed upon ourselves, in furtherance of our own
purposes -- with a view -- if even with a futile view -- to the extension of
our own Joy.
I have spoken of Memories that haunt us during our youth. They
sometimes pursue us even in our Manhood: -- assume gradually less and
less indefinite shapes: -- now and then speak to us with low voices,
saying:
"There was an epoch in the Night of Time, when a still-existent
Being existed -- one of an absolutely infinite number of similar
Beings that people the absolutely infinite domains of the absolutely
infinite space. (See previous paragraph, 'I reply that the "right," in a case
such as this...')
It was not and is not in the power of this Being -- any more than it
is in your own -- to extend, by actual increase, the joy of his
Existence; but just as it is in your power to expand or to
concentrate your pleasures (the absolute amount of happiness remaining
always the same) so did and does a similar capability appertain to
this Divine Being, who thus passes his Eternity in perpetual variation
of Concentrated Self and almost Infinite Self-Diffusion. What you call
The Universe is but his present expansive existence. He now feels
his life through an infinity of imperfect pleasures -- the partial and
pain-intertangled pleasures of those inconceivably numerous things
which you designate as his creatures, but which are really but
infinite individualizations of Himself. All these creatures --
those which you term animate, as well as those to whom you deny life
for no better reason than that you do not behold it in operation --
these creatures have, in a greater or less degree, a capacity
for pleasure and for pain: -- but the general sum of their sensations
is precisely that amount of Happiness which appertains by right to the
Divine Being when concentrated within Himself. These creatures are
all too, more or less conscious Intelligences; conscious, first, of
a proper identity; conscious, secondly and by faint indeterminate
glimpses, of an identity with the Divine Being of whom we speak -- of an
identity with God. Of the two classes of consciousness, fancy that the
former will grow weaker, the latter stronger, during the long
succession of ages which must elapse before these myriads of
individual Intelligences become blended -- when the bright stars
become blended -- into One. Think that the sense of individual
identity will be gradually merged in the general consciousness -- that
Man, for example, ceasing imperceptibly to feel himself Man, will at
length attain that awfully triumphant epoch when he shall recognize
his existence as that of Jehovah. In the meantime bear in mind that
all is Life -- Life -- Life within Life -- the less within the greater,
and all within the Spirit Divine.
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