登陆注册
34933700000120

第120章

After the development of those grammatical forms which make definite statementspossible, we do not at first find them used to express anything beyond statementsof a ****** kind. A single subject with a single predicate, accompanied bybut few qualifying terms, are usually all. If we compare, for instance, theHebrew scriptures with writings of modern times, a marked difference of aggregationamong the groups of words, is visible. In the number of subordinate propositionswhich accompany the principal one; in the various complements to subjectsand predicates; and in the numerous qualifying clauses -- all of them unitedinto one complex whole -- many sentences in modern compositions exhibit adegree of integration not to be found in ancient ones. §113. The history of Science presents facts of the same meaning atevery step. Indeed the integration of groups of like entities and like relations,constitutes the most conspicuous part of scientific progress. A glance atthe classificatory sciences, shows that the confused incoherent aggregationswhich the vulgar make of natural objects, are gradually rendered completeand compact, and bound up into groups within groups. While, instead of consideringall marine creatures as fish, shell-fish, and jellyfish, Zoology establishesamong them subdivisions under the heads Vertebrata, Annulosa, Mollusca, Coelenterata,etc.; and while, in place of the wide and vague assemblage popularly describedas "creeping things," it makes the specific classes Annelida, Myiiapoda,Insecta, Arachnida; it simultaneously gives to these an increasing consolidation.

The several species, genera, and orders of which each consists, are arrangedaccording to their affinities and tied together under common definitions;at the same time that, by extended observation and rigorous criticism, thepreviously unknown and undetermined forms are integrated with their respectivecongeners. Nor is the process less clearly displayed in those sciences whichhave for their subject-matter, not classified objects but classified relations.

Under one of its chief aspects, scientific advance is the advance of generalization;and generalizing is uniting into groups all like co-existences and sequencesamong phenomena. The colligation of many concrete relations into a generalizationof the lowest order, exemplifies this process in its ******st form; and itis again exemplified in a more complex form by the colligation of these lowestgeneralizations into higher ones, and these into still higher ones. Yearby year connexions are established among orders of phenomena that appearunallied; and these connexions, multiplying and strengthening, graduallybring the seemingly unallied orders under a common bond. When, for example,Humboldt quotes the observation of the Swiss -- "it is going to rainbecause we hear the murmur of the torrents nearer," -- when he recognizesthe kinship between this and an observation of his own, that the cataractsof the Orinoco are heard at a greater distance by night than by day -- whenhe notes the analogy between these facts and the fact that the unusual visibilityof remote objects is also an indication of coming rain -- and when he pointsout that the common cause of these variations is the smaller hindrance offeredto the passage of both light and sound, by media which are comparativelyhomogeneous, either in temperature or hygrometric state; he helps in bringingunder one generalization certain traits of light and certain traits of sound.

Experiments having shown that light and sound conform to like laws of reflectionand refraction, the conclusion that they are both produced by undulations--though undulations of unlike kinds -- gains probability: there is an incipientintegration of two classes of facts between which no connexion was suspectedin times past. A still more decided integration has been of late taking placebetween the once independent sub-sciences of Electricity, Magnetism, andLight.

The process will manifestly be carried much further. Such propositionsas those set forth in preceding chapters, on "The Persistence of Force,""The Transformation and Equivalence of Forces," "The Directionof Motion," and "The Rhythm of Motion," unite within singlebonds phenomena belonging to all orders of existences. And if there is sucha thing as that which we here understand by Philosophy, there must eventuallybe reached a universal integration. §114. Nor do the industrial and aesthetic Arts fail to supply uswith equally conclusive evidence. The progress from small and ****** tools,to complex and large machines, is a progress in integration. Among what areclassed as the mechanical powers, the advance from the lever to the wheel-and-axleis an advance from a ****** agent to an agent made up of several ****** ones.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 剑关子益禅师语录

    剑关子益禅师语录

    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。
  • 缘藏

    缘藏

    到过西藏的人可谓是不计其数,然而有着在西藏服役的特殊经历,并且凭着一辆单车骑行滇藏线,缘回西藏的军人可以说是凤毛麟角,故事的主人公黄迁龙便是其中之一。
  • 凡人意识

    凡人意识

    什么是意识?是所有生物都拥有意识,还是人类独有?察觉杀气果断反杀,遭遇GANK提前离开,意识存在万物之间。在不断萎缩的世界反面,少年背负起旧神的灵龛,从灰暗的历史中走了出来,决定带给凡人们新生。
  • 秦朝盗墓风云

    秦朝盗墓风云

    盗墓去哪儿——回到秦朝去盗墓。盗墓怎么爽——最刺激的冒险;最别样的体验;最奇妙的世界;最险恶的状况;最神秘的事物。盗墓有什么——有兄弟;有恩情;有妹子;有活宝。当然还有秦朝的同行们!【亡泉妖棺】【紫皇酒陵】【冥渊鬼都】……现正在更新第二卷【紫皇酒陵】【本书起点第三编辑组签约,敬请收藏,诚求推荐,抱拳拱手作揖感谢~】
  • 藉藉无名

    藉藉无名

    莫言君愁我更愁,胜上九霄三重楼,君为足下一片月,我为月下照九州。此书为五言七言古诗,不是现代诗,全书十七首,愿中取之一二,予君于身,如之亲临。
  • 乐贯满盈

    乐贯满盈

    一个穿越女的古代敛财史。一朝穿越,乐姚成了一个没爹疼,没娘爱的孤女。(好吧,她在现代也没爹娘......)靠山没有,没关系,自己找;银子没有,没关系,自己赚;房子没有,没关系,自己买;相公没有,没关系,隔壁的庶子不错,自己拐。可是......努力了一大半,说好的庶子呢?!怎么变成世子了?!原想挖个坑让人跳,怎么自己跳人坑里了......
  • 浮游岛主的成长史

    浮游岛主的成长史

    本想过着佛系的悠哉日常,却没想到意外获得了异世界人的效忠,于是为了带着手下过上更好的日子,青年不得不学习怎样做好一位浮岛岛主。看那天边的浮岛一片片,总有一天我会让它连成片。浮游岛?不,那叫浮游大陆。PS:浮游岛或许叫浮空岛更合适,不过懒得改,就这样吧。
  • 空间之娘子万福

    空间之娘子万福

    于兰一朝穿越到了北宋徽宗年间,她手握一方空间,内有灵泉,还有酿酒的工艺设备,一点儿都不方。开酒楼,卖酒水,做美食,发家致富,她相信自己能够风生水起。可问题是,开局为什么是血溅鸳鸯楼的副本?
  • 情迷契诃夫

    情迷契诃夫

    契诃夫短篇小说述评,希望通过我的努力,可以让名著活起来。
  • 新玄

    新玄

    当一个“四有”青年穿越到异世大陆,在经过漫长的生活融入仙侠世界,并随着时间推移慢慢改变仙侠世界的故事。这里有修行,这里有战争,这里有是非因果,这里有生死轮回,但是这里没有成败,因为这里是新玄。