TO
PROFESSOR LEWIS CAMPBELL.
Glenlair, Dalbeattie, 26th September 1874.
Yours of the 29th instant is
to hand. Whether
your devotion to Michael Angelo has urged you to anticipate
his
day, or whether Time gallops with those who sit to view Necessity, with
her weary pund o' tow massed round her rock, being all the
remains of the stane o' lint with which she was originally endowed,
those
who may be set to construe this sentence will be apt to lose much time.
With regard to atoms, I am
preparing a hash
of them for Baynes of the Britannica. The easiest way of
showing
what atoms can't do is to get some sort of notion of what they can do.
If atoms are finite in number, each of them being of a
certain
weight, then it becomes impossible that the germ from which a man is
developed
should contain (actually, of course, not potentially, for
potentiality
is nonsense in materialism unless it is expressed as
configuration
and motion) gemmules of everything which the man is to inherit, and by
which he is differentiated from other animals
and
men,—his father's temper, his mother's memory, his grandfather's way of
blowing his nose, his arboreal ancestor's arrangement
of hair on his arms, and his more remote littoral ancestor's devotion
to
the tide-swaying moon. Francis Galton, whose mission
it seems to be to ride other men's hobbies to death,
has
invented the felicitous expression "structureless germs." Now, if a
germ,
or anything else, contains in itself a power of
development
into some distinct thing, and if this power is purely physical, arising
from the configuration and motion of parts of the germ, it
is nonsense to call it structureless because the microscope does not
show
the
structure; the germ of a rat must contain
more separable parts and organs than there are drops in the sea. But
if
we are sure that there are not more than a few million molecules in it,
each molecule being composed of component molecules, identical
with
those of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, etc., there is no room
left
for the sort of structure which is required for pangenesis
on purely physical principles. Again, suppose that a
great
many individual atoms take part in a disturbance in my brain, to whom
does
this signify anything? As for the atoms, they have
been
in far worse rows before they became naturalized in my brain, but they
forget the days before, etc.. At any rate the atoms
are
a very tough lot, and can stand a great deal of knocking about, and it
is strange to find a number of them combining to form
a man of feeling.
In your letter you apply the
word imponderable
to a molecule. Don't do that again. It may also be worth
knowing
that the æther cannot be molecular. If it were, it would be a
gas,
and a pint of it would have the same properties as regards
heat, etc., as a pint of air, except that it would not be so heavy.
Under what form (right or
light) can an atom
be imagined? Bezonian! speak or die! Now I must go to post
with
two dogs in the rain. Your afft.
friend