登陆注册
37817700000191

第191章 CHAPTER XXXIV A LAW OF ACCELERATION (1904)(1)

IMAGES are not arguments, rarely even lead to proof, but the mind craves them, and, of late more than ever, the keenest experimenters find twenty images better than one, especially if contradictory; since the human mind has already learned to deal in contradictions.

The image needed here is that of a new centre, or preponderating mass, artificially introduced on earth in the midst of a system of attractive forces that previously made their own equilibrium, and constantly induced to accelerate its motion till it shall establish a new equilibrium. A dynamic theory would begin by assuming that all history, terrestrial or cosmic, mechanical or intellectual, would be reducible to this formula if we knew the facts.

For convenience, the most familiar image should come first; and this is probably that of the comet, or meteoric streams, like the Leonids and Perseids; a complex of minute mechanical agencies, reacting within and without, and guided by the sum of forces attracting or deflecting it. Nothing forbids one to assume that the man-meteorite might grow, as an acorn does, absorbing light, heat, electricity -- or thought; for, in recent times, such transference of energy has become a familiar idea; but the ******st figure, at first, is that of a perfect comet -- say that of 1843 -- which drops from space, in a straight line, at the regular acceleration of speed, directly into the sun, and after wheeling sharply about it, in heat that ought to dissipate any known substance, turns back unharmed, in defiance of law, by the path on which it came. The mind, by analogy, may figure as such a comet, the better because it also defies law.

Motion is the ultimate object of science, and measures of motion are many; but with thought as with matter, the true measure is mass in its astronomic sense -- the sum or difference of attractive forces. Science has quite enough trouble in measuring its material motions without volunteering help to the historian, but the historian needs not much help to measure some kinds of social movement; and especially in the nineteenth century, society by common accord agreed in measuring its progress by the coal-output.

The ratio of increase in the volume of coal-power may serve as dynamometer.

The coal-output of the world, speaking roughly, doubled every ten years between 1840 and 1900, in the form of utilized power, for the ton of coal yielded three or four times as much power in 1900 as in 1840. Rapid as this rate of acceleration in volume seems, it may be tested in a thousand ways without greatly reducing it. Perhaps the ocean steamer is nearest unity and easiest to measure, for any one might hire, in 1905, for a small sum of money, the use of 30,000 steam-horse-power to cross the ocean, and by halving this figure every ten years, he got back to 234 horse-power for 1835, which was accuracy enough for his purposes. In truth, his chief trouble came not from the ratio in volume of heat, but from the intensity, since he could get no basis for a ratio there. All ages of history have known high intensities, like the iron-furnace, the burning-glass, the blow-pipe; but no society has ever used high intensities on any large scale till now, nor can a mere bystander decide what range of temperature is now in common use. Loosely guessing that science controls habitually the whole range from absolute zero to 3000º Centigrade, one might assume, for convenience, that the ten-year ratio for volume could be used temporarily for intensity; and still there remained a ratio to be guessed for other forces than heat.

Since 1800 scores of new forces had been discovered; old forces had been raised to higher powers, as could be measured in the navy-gun; great regions of chemistry had been opened up, and connected with other regions of physics.

Within ten years a new universe of force had been revealed in radiation.

Complexity had extended itself on immense horizons, and arithmetical ratios were useless for any attempt at accuracy. The force evolved seemed more like explosion than gravitation, and followed closely the curve of steam; but, at all events, the ten-year ratio seemed carefully conservative. Unless the calculator was prepared to be instantly overwhelmed by physical force and mental complexity, he must stop there.

Thus, taking the year 1900 as the starting point for carrying back the series, nothing was easier than to assume a ten-year period of retardation as far back as 1820, but beyond that point the statistician failed, and only the mathematician could help. Laplace would have found it child's-play to fix a ratio of progression in mathematical science between Descartes, Leibnitz, Newton, and himself. Watt could have given in pounds the increase of power between Newcomen's engines and his own. Volta and Benjamin Franklin would have stated their progress as absolute creation of power. Dalton could have measured minutely his advance on Boerhaave. Napoleon I must have had a distinct notion of his own numerical relation to Louis XIV.

No one in 1789 doubted the progress of force, least of all those who were to lose their heads by it.

Pending agreement between these authorities, theory may assume what it likes -- say a fifty, or even a five-and-twenty-year period of reduplication for the eighteenth century, for the period matters little until the acceleration itself is admitted. The subject is even more amusing in the seventeenth than in the eighteenth century, because Galileo and Kepler, Descartes, Huygens, and Isaac Newton took vast pains to fix the laws of acceleration for moving bodies, while Lord Bacon and William Harvey were content with showing experimentally the fact of acceleration in knowledge; but from their combined results a historian might be tempted to maintain a similar rate of movement back to 1600, subject to correction from the historians of mathematics.

同类推荐
  • 巵林

    巵林

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 武宗外纪

    武宗外纪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 云叟住禅师语录

    云叟住禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 祭义

    祭义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Eighty Years and More

    Eighty Years and More

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 刀魔记

    刀魔记

    我本小人,怎能逆天?一柄来自地狱的染血魔刀,它的到来意味着什么?杀一人为罪,杀千人为雄,杀万人为雄中雄,杀亿亿万为神。五天十地,视我为尊。
  • 绯色缭绕

    绯色缭绕

    她为情跳楼,不想竟穿越到了古代。她想今生一定不会再为情所困,桃花下,我们曾许诺,一世安好……
  • 少年蓝橙怪奇事件薄

    少年蓝橙怪奇事件薄

    诡异离奇的事件,环绕周身的谜团,身陷困境的脆弱之人在等待他的救赎……命运注定了他终是逃不脱,深蓝色的利刃在指引他前往那处世界之外的世界,神圣塔罗的残酷战争即将到来,黑与白的冲撞一触即发。而下一张为他翻开的牌面将是“THESUN”的光辉灿烂,还是“DEATH”的绝望黑暗?
  • 三十而不弃

    三十而不弃

    这是一个关于都市男女在浮华中,努力在工作与生活,理想与现实,友情与爱情之间寻找平衡的治愈系故事。他们中有的社恐,有的失婚,有的心怀教改梦想,有的是小有成就的公司创始人,有的是才刚开始创业的程序员。三十而立,许多人在三十岁左右的时候,渐渐熄灭了心中的火焰,随波逐流,慢慢变成了成熟而麻木的样子。而这群生活在布西湖岸的人们,却做到了三十而不弃,遇见了更好的自己。冷淡陆VS痴汉郭陆原野:我就是社恐加性冷淡,没什么特别的。郭尚北:不是所有社恐都是你。陆原野:你对我是好奇,不是喜欢。郭尚北:我对你,始于好奇,陷于人格。愧疚君VS心机boy赵鑫:原野,我能帮你做什么吗?郭尚北:谢谢,不能!往后余生,不劳费心!失婚女神VS宠友达人施清悦:原原,我把助理发展成了情人,会不会太羞耻。陆原野:不会,你开心最重要!高知女VS野心男郭楠:你爱的到底是我的颜值,还是才华?陈一鸣(深情脸):我爱的是你的心。郭尚北(气极败坏):姐!你别被人卖了还给人数钱!
  • 永远强一线

    永远强一线

    叮,恭喜宿主喜提十八岁成人礼。系统抽奖启动。《无敌系统》:开启即无敌,横扫一切敌,有了我拳打诸天大神,脚踢诸天教主,全都不是事。《魅力系统》:自带满属性魅力光环,同性见了崇拜,异性见了倾心,拥有我,你就是这世上最靓的仔。《好运当头系统》:不要想了,博就是了,走在路上也能捡钱,买彩票必中头奖,有了我,你就是这世上最幸运的幸运星。......看着抽奖界面花里胡哨的系统简介。王泽咽着口水,激动的心,颤抖的手,点击在抽奖选项上。“谢谢惠顾”四个大字清晰出现。“抽你妹啊!能不能在坑点,还有这个选项?”王泽感觉天踏了,我要回家,我要回地球,我要继承我爸的几套房,几台车,几十亩地,我要做咸鱼...宿主倒霉到家,辅助系统启动......我告诫自己猥琐发育不要浪,但我的身体,我的行为不允许啊!!!
  • 乱世逃离

    乱世逃离

    异域公主被迫嫁入皇城,只为护得弟弟和国土安危,谁知错付他人,被利用后惨遭抛弃,她被逼迫走上谋反之路,但真相远没那么简单
  • 人间不归

    人间不归

    小道士不归一命双魂,天生绝脉,幸而得到一线生机,逆天修行,然命途多舛,下山历练,面对红尘中的熙熙攘攘,他又如何坚守本心,能否看透这一世······
  • 耿直女神超有钱

    耿直女神超有钱

    记者:请问作为全民女神您有什么成功的诀窍?白茨:可能……我知道失败是成功之母?记者:请问白女神是如何嫁入豪门的?白茨:大概……我和他门当户对?记者:请问……您未来的打算?白茨:也许……好好拍戏,不然就要回家继承亿万家产?面对如此耿直的回答,记者感到亿千万暴击!注:系统文,女主耿直又有钱,男主傲娇最有钱。
  • 限量版初恋奇缘:左耳的幸福

    限量版初恋奇缘:左耳的幸福

    和他的相遇,才让我知道什么是心动。和他的相处,才让我知道什么是恋爱。在我心里,和他在一起便是限量版的礼物;和他在一起的每一分钟都是幸福。
  • 絮语琉璃

    絮语琉璃

    微风吹过,一些生活一些情调一些故事,都在这里绽放,回忆等不到你就会迷失自己