FROM C. J. MONRO, Esq.
Hadley, Barnet, 3d March 1871.
The Hon. J. W. Strutt, son of
Lord Rayleigh,
and senior wrangler in 1865, has been meddling with your
colours,
and has given occasion also to me to do so again. I send a selection of
Natures containing him and me, and my old contributions of
last year, which, or one of which, you say met Mr. Benson's approval.
Strutt's
last letter ends with a sentence which obliged me to write to him
personally; and I could not help saying, with regard to the
sentence which begins it, p.264, that I thought you would object to
inferences
founded on comparison by contrast, and that the proper way
was to compare by matching recognized browns with a compound.
Listing's paper, mentioned in
p. 102, was to
me rather a paradox,—I had got to regard the subdivisions of
the
colour-scale which are assumed in language, as something so arbitrary.
If you cared to see it, I have that number of Poggendorff;
I think he would hardly agree with your J. J. Müller. I wish you
or
Benson could eradicate the insane trick of reasoning about
colours as identified by their names. People seem to think that blue is
blue, and one blue as good as another. Benson's book I have seen
(since I heard of it from you), but not read. His way of
mixing by means of a prism is very happy. . . . I wish, with your new
set up box, you would just put the prism observations into
relation with the disk ones. It would be very easy. White we have got;
and it would only be strictly necessary to determine two other
standard
colours, such as vermilion or emerald, by reference to the
spectrum primaries. You don't say whether your dwellers in Mesopotamia
and elsewhere agree on the whole better or worse than "J"
and
"K," who, I suppose, agree for better and for worse. To judge by their
case, the discrepancy would be a little diminished by
taking
as units of colour co-ordinates for any given pair of eyes, not
the intensities of the primaries as they appear in the spectrum but
their intensities as they appear in the combination which to that
pair of eyes makes (say) white. This amounts to transforming from
trilinear
to Hamilton's anharmonic co-ordinates with white for the fourth
point,—in
the language of "scientific metaphor." On the other hand,
ought
not all your co-ordinates to be cooked by multiplying by (d . scale,
page
68 ) / ( d . wave-length ) ?
You know where I learnt
scientific metaphor.
I have read the address in Section A more than once with
much
pleasure, and, I hope, profit in proportion. The pleasure, I [378]
confess,
was with me, I found it was with Litchfield, partly that of
recognising an old well-remembered style, and reflecting that here at
least
was something which might be "thought to be beyond the
reach
of change." . . . By the way, Boole is "one of the profoundest
mathematicians
of our time;" but how about "thinkers"? Certainly his expositions of
the
principle of a piece of mathematics are beautiful up to
and,
I don't doubt, beyond my appreciating. But that last chapter of the
Laws,
etc., from which you quote, with Empedocles
and Pseudo-Origen and the rest of them, always seems to me
to
render a sound as of a largish internal cavity; and the whole book,
taken
together with his R.S.E. paper on testimony and least
squares,
presents, I think, too many instances of a particular class of
fallacy—I
know I am speaking blasphemies, but there would be a strike among
the postmen if I put in all the necessary
qualifications—too
many instances to be got over, not in absolute number if they were of
different
kinds, for anybody may make mistakes, but too many of one
kind.
The kind is insufficient interpretation, i.e. letting
your
equations lead you by the nose. The most serious example,—I maintain it
is an example,—is his insisting that his theory
of logic is not founded on quantity, so that it furnishes (he holds) an
independent foundation for probabilities, independent
of the usual quantitative foundation. That this is a fallacy, and that
in particular it is an example of the fallacy of
insufficient
interpretation, is evident surely when you find that, even in the
higher
case of "secondary" propositions, the elective
symbols
represent in his own opinion quantities of "time" after all.
With
regard to the sentence you quote, I am always suspicious of any
inclination
I may feel to find a question too easy; and, independently
of that, your quoting it is itself a staggerer. But the difficulty I
confess
does strike me as a rather artificial one. There is
nothing,
scarcely, in which I think Mill is so right and the Hamiltonians so
wrong
as that question about logic being the laws of thought. Hamilton
says as thought, Mill says as valid, and so does
Boole
and so do you; but if Mill is right, where is the difficulty? Why
should
the conditions of thinking correctly be inviolable in the
sense
of not preventing you from thinking incorrectly, provided they are
inviolable
in the sense of
ensuring that you take the consequences if you do? The laws of
projection
in geometry are inviolable, but nobody ever thought
it
a paradox that it is possible for a picture to be out of drawing in
spite
of them, nor is it a paradox that in unfamiliar classes of
cases a rigorously accurate piece of perspective looks out of drawing.
Perhaps you meant, for I suppose the report in Nature is
incomplete,
that it was a difficulty to say in what sense mathematical
propositions could be said to be certain, considering that one may make
mistakes about them. Perhaps something else, which for the
above reason or others, is hidden from me.
. . . By the
way, I hope it
is true that you
are to profess experimental physics at Cambridge, or what I hope
comes
to the same thing, that you are a candidate.