TO PROFESSOR W. G. ADAMS.
Natural Science Tripos,
3d December 1873.
I got Professor Guthrie's
circular some time
ago. I do not approve of the plan of a physical society considered
as
an instrument for the improvement of natural knowledge. If it is to
publish
papers on physical subjects which would not find
their
place in the transactions of existing societies, or in scientific
journals,
I think the progress towards dissolution will be very
rapid.
But if there is sufficient liveliness and leisure among persons
interested
in experiments to maintain a series of stated
meetings
to show experiments, and talk about them as some of the Ray Club do
here,
then I wish them all joy; only the manners and customs of London, and
the
distances at which people live from any convenient centre,
are very much against the vitality of such sociability.
To make the meeting a dinner
supplies that
solid ground to which the formers of societies must trust if they
would
build for aye. A dinner has the advantage over mere scientific
communications,
that it can always be had when certain conditions are
satisfied,
and that no one can doubt its existence. On the other hand, it
completely
excludes any scientific matter which cannot be expressed in
the form of conversation with your two chance neighbours,
or
else by a formal speech on your legs; and during its whole continuance
it reduces the Society to the form of
a closed curve, the elements of which are
incapable of changing their relative position.
For the evolution of science
by societies the
main requisite is the perfect freedom of communication between
each
member and any one of the others who may act as a reagent.
The gaseous condition is
exemplified in the
soiree, where the members rush about confusedly, and the
only
communication is during a collision, which in some instances may be
prolonged
by button-holing.
The opposite condition, the
crystalline, is
shown in the lecture, where the members sit in rows, while science
flows
in an uninterrupted stream from a source which we take as the origin.
This
is radiation of science.
Conduction takes place along
the series of
members seated round a dinner table, and fixed there for several
hours,
with flowers in the middle to prevent any cross currents.
The condition most favourable
to life is an
intermediate plastic or colloïdal condition, where the order of
business
is
(1) Greetings and confused talk;
(2) A short communication from one who has something to say and to
show;
(3) Remarks on the communication addressed to the Chair, introducing
matters irrelevant to the communication but interesting to
the members;
(4) This lets each member see who is interested in his special hobby,
and who is likely to help him; and leads to
(5) Confused conversation and examination of objects on the table.
I have not indicated how this
programme is
to be combined with eating. It is more easily carried out in a
small
town than in London, and more easily in Faraday's young days (see his
life
by B. Jones) than now. It might answer in some London
district where there happen to be several clubbable senior men who
could
attract the juniors from a distance.