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Cornell University Library


HM101 .S74
Progress : its law and cause :

3 1924 030 238 376


olin
Cornell University
Library

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PROGRESS:
ITS LAW AND CAUSE.
WITH OTHER DISQUISITIONS.

BY

HERBERT SPENCER
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No. 1. Science for lieisure ing Conduct The Physical View The Biological
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Hours A series of Familiar Essays on Scien- View the Psychological View the Sociological
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tific By Richard .A. Proctor, F.R.A.S, View; Criticisms and E:Cplanations Relativity of
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Contents (in part) :— Ttie Earth a Magnet the Pains and Pleasures Egoism 7>s. Altruism; Al- ; ;

Secret of the Nortli Pole Our Chief Timepiece truism zis. Egoism Trial and Compromise'f Con-
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Losing Time Tornadoes Influence of Marriage, ciliation Absolute Ethics and Relative Ethics
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Kain, etc., etc, « tion to IvXusiCa By Prof. Pieteo Blaserna, of
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tecture of Snow The Motion of Glaciers Icicles
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;

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Nos. 11 and 12. The Naturalist on th«
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Nature. By Thomas Huxley, F.R.S. (illus- Professor of Logic in the University of Abet*
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Contents —The Natural History of the Manlike Contents :—The Question Stated Connection <A
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in the Street the Stones in the Wall


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the Fire the Lime in the Mortar the Slates on the Moon, etc., etc.
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the Roof.
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Correlation of Nervous and Mental Forces.
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of Speaking the Art of Writing Mental Culture ;
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Spencer. of Mr. Darwin's Great Work,


Contents : —Conduct in General ; Evolution of No, IT. Progress : Its I,aw and Causes
Conduct ; (jood and Bad Conduct ; Ways of Judg- with other disquisitions. By Herbert Spencer! -
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112

PEOGEESS:
ITS LAW AND CAUSE
WITH OTHEE DISQUISITIONS, ¥IZ.:

THE PHYSIOL0GT OF LAUGHTER— ORIGIN AND FUNCTION OF MUSIC-


THE SOCIAL ORGANISM— USE AND BEAUTY-THE
USE OF ANTHROPOMORPHISM.

BY

HERBERT SPENCER.

much the reality of progress as'its^/saeom*


PROGKESS : ITS LAW AITO CAUSE.

paniments not so much the substance as tba
shadow. That progiess in intelligence seeo .

The current cnnception of progress is during the growth of the child into the man.
somewhat shiflinsr and indefinite. Some- or the savage into the pliilosopher, is conii-
times it comprehends little more than simple monly regarded as consisting in (lie g-reatef

growth as of a nation in the number of its number of facts known and laws uctder-
members and the extent of territory over stood whereas the actual progress consists
:

_ which it has spread. Sometimes it has ref- in those internal modiflcatious of which this
erence to quantity of material products— as increased knowledge is tlie expression.
when the advance of aericuiture and manu- Social progress is supposed to consist ia the
factures is the topic. Sometimes the superioi produce of a greater quaaitity and variety of
quality 0^ these products is contemplated the articles required for satisfying men's
:

and sometimes the new or improved appli- Wants; in the increasing security of person
ances by which they are produced. "When, and property in widening freedom of ;

again, we speaitof moral or intellectual prog- action whereas, rightly understood, social i

ress, we refer to the state of the individual prDgress consists in those changes of struc-
or people exhibiting it while, when the ture in the social organisjn which have!
;

progress of knowledge, of science, of art, is entailed these consequences. The current


commented upon, we have in view certain conception is a telcological one. The phe-
abstract results of human thought and action. nomena are contemplated solely as bearing
Not only, however, is the current conception on human happiness. Only those changes
of progress more or less vague, but it is in are held to constitute progress which directly
great measure erroneous. It takes in not so or indirectly tend to heighten human hapj)i-
PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

nesa. Avci tlipy are thought to constitute itation of its atoms there resulted a gradual
simph' because XUey tend to bei^ht-
proE;rt'3-i concentration. By the hypotht'sis, the solar
on iuirnan happinuss. But rijrhtly to under- system in its nascent state existed as an in-
Bliin.l progress, we tnupt inquire wliat is the definitely extended and nearly hom-...geuoous
nature of these chantres, cimsiiiered apsirt medium — a medium almost homogeneous in
from our interests. Ceasing, for example, to density, in temperatuie. and in oilier physi-
legard the successive ge(iiogical modifica- cal attributes. The first advance tuvtiud
tions that liave talieii place m
llie earlli, as consolidation resulted in adiffereiilialion be
'mudificiUions that have gradually filled it for tween the occupied space which lUenel)ulous
iths habitation of man, and as tJierefm-e a mass still filled, and the unoccupied space
jgeolugiciil progiess, we must seek to deter- which it previously filled. There smiullane-
imine the character common to these modifi- ously resulted a contrast in density and a
(walioTis— (he law to which Ihey all conform. contrast in temperatuie, between the interior
.And similarly in every othf-r case. Leaving and the exterior of this mass. And at the
•out of sipht concomitants and beneficial con- same time tliere arose throughout it lotiitory
.fwquences, let us ask what progress is in movements, whose velocities varied accord-
.itsplf. ing to their distances from its ceutre. These
In respect to that progress which individ- dififerentiationa increased in number and de-
iTial oriranisms display in the course of their gree until there was evolved the organized
evolution, this question has been ansvrered group of sun, planets, and satellites, which
we now know— a group which
r

by the (4ermans.
I The investigations of presents
'Wolff, Goethe, and Von Baer have estab- numerous contrasts of structure and action
nished the truth that the series of changes among its members. There are the immense
pone through during the development of a contrasts between the sun and planets, in
I Becd into a tree, or an ovum into an animal, bulk and in weight as well as the subordi-
;

coMliliite an advance from homogeneity of nate contrasts between one planet and
1 slructiKc to heterogeneity of structure. In another, and between the planets and their
its primary stage, cveiy germ consists of a satellites. There is the similarly marked
dubslance that "is uniform throughout, both contrast between the sun as alm.ist station-
in texture and chemical composition. The ary, and the planets as moving round him
tiist step is the appearance of a difference with great velocity while lliere are the sec-
;

helween two parts of this substance or, as ; ondary contrasts between the velocities and
the phenomenon is called in physiological periods of the several planets, and between
laiiaiiage, a dilferentialion. Ea'-h of tliese their simple revolutions and the double ones
.dilterentiated divisions presently begins itself of their satellites, which have to move round
to e.thibil some contrast of parts and by ;
their primaries while moving round llie sun.
; and by these secondary differentiations be- There is the yet further strong com a-^t be- i

« come as detinile as the original one. This tween the sun and the planets in respecl of

process is continuously repeated is simul- Cemperature and there is reason to suppose
;

taneously going on in all parts of the grow- that the planets and satellites differ trom
ing embryo and by endless such' diffcreu-
;
each other in their proper heat, as well as in
laLions there is finally produced that complex file heat they receive from the sun.
combination of tissues and organs constitut- When we bear in mind that,' in addition to
: in^ the adult animal or plant. This is the liese various contrasts, the planets and satel-
I liisiory of all organisms whatever. It is set- Hles also differ in respect to their distances
lied beyond dispute that organic progress from each other and their primary in re- —
TTonsist.s in a change from the homogeneous spect to the inclinations of their oibits, the
^So the lieterogeneous. inclinations of their axes, their times of rota-
Now, we propose in the first place to tion on their axes, their specific gravities,
».'4iow, that this law of organic progress is the and their physical copstitutions we see —
V .aw of all progress! Whether it be in the what a high degree of heterogentitythe solar
• ilevelopineni of the earth, in the develop- system exhibits, when compared with the
1 ment of life upon its surface, in the develop- almost complete homogeneity of the nebu-
.' tnent of society, of government, of manufac- lous mass out of which it is supposed tohav-
( tores, of commerce, of language, literature. originated.
Science, art, this same evolution of the simple Passing from this hypothetical illustration,
Into the complB.f, through successive dif- which must be taken for what it is worth,
ferentiations, holds throughout. From the without prejudice to the geneial argument,
earliest traceable cosmical changes down to let us descend to a more certain order of evi-
the West results of civilization, we shall find dence. It is now generally agreed among
that the transformation of the homogeneous geologists that tlie earth was at first a mass
into tlie heterogeneous, is that in which prog- of molten matter and that il is still fiuid and
;

ress essentially consists. incandescent at the distance of a few miles


With lire view of showing that if the beneath its surface. Originally, then, it was
nebular hypothesis be true, the genesis of homogeneous in consistence, and, in virtue
the solar system supplies one illustration of of the circulation that takes place in heated
tills law, let us assume that the matter of fluids, must have been comparatively homo-
i^liioh the sun and planets consist was once geneous in temperature and it must have
;

iu a diSused form and that from the grav-


; been surrounded by an atmosphere consisting

PEOGRESS: ITS LA"W AND CAUSE, 336

parii/ 'f the elements of nir and water, and snow, regions where winter and summer
jiiij : f limse vari>>ua other elements which
. aUeruately luign for periods varying accoid-
iiisi.. 1 !- f^a^eous form at hit'.hltniperalures. ing to tbe latiiudCj and regions where .sum-
Tna: w
cooling by radiiitiou which is still
fc mer follows summer with scarcely an appre-
guiii-' u at aoinappreciaulerute, and which, ciable variation. At the same time the suc-
Uiui.Li.i originally fiir more nipid than now, cessive elevations and subsidences of differ-
iKCi,--ai ily ri.qiured an immense time to pro- ent portions of the earth's crust, tending as
diic; any decided cliange, m\)st ultimately they have done to the present irregular dis-
have resulted in itie solidificatiou of the por- tribution of land and sea, have entailed vaii-
tion most able to patt with its heat namely, — ous modifications of climate beyond those
the surface. In the thin crust thus formed dependent on latitude while a yet fuither
;

we havy the firtt marked diffeienliation. A series of such modifications have been pro-
PI ill tufllirr cooling, a consequent thickening duced by increasing differences of elevation
of this; crust, and an accompanying deposi- in the land, which have in sundry places
tion of all soliditiaOlu elements tontaiucd in brought arctic, temperate, and tropical cli-
the atmosphere, must tonally ha've been fol- mates to within a few miles of each other.
lowed by the condensation of the water pre- A nd the general result of these changes ia,
viously existing as vapor. second marked A that not only has every extensive region its
diffeienliation must thus have arisen and as : own meteorologic conditions, but that every
the condensation must have taken place on locality in each region differs more or less
the coolest paits of the surface namelj', — from others in those conditions, as in its
about ibe poles— there must thus have re- structure, its contour, its soil. Thus, be-
sulted the fiifct geographical distinction of tween our existing earth, the phenomena of
paits. To these illustrations of growing whose varied crust neither geographers, geol-
heterogeneity, which, though deduced from ogists, mineralogists, nor meteorologists have
the ku.iwn laws of matter, may be regarded yet enumerated, and the molten globe out of
as moie or less hypothetical, geology adds an which it was evolved, the contrast in lielero-
extensive series that have been inductively geneily is sufficiently striking.
established. Its investigations show that the When from the earth itself we turn to the
earth has been contiimal'y becoming more ptants and animals (hat have lived, or still
heterogeneous in virtue of the multiplication live, upon its surface, we find ourselves in
of thj strata which form its crust further, ; some difBcully from lack of facts. 'J'hat
that it has been becoming more heterogene- every existing org.mism has been developed
ous in respect of the composition of these out of the simple into the complex, is indeed
strata, the latter of which, being made from the first established truth of all ; and that
the detritus of the older ones, are many of every organism thathas existed was similarly
them rendered highly complex by the mix- developed is an inference which no phvsir,!-
ture of materials they contain and that this ; ogist will hesitate to draw. But when we
heterogeneity has been vastly increased by pass from individual forms of lite to life iu
the ac:ion of the earth's still molten nucleus general, and inquiie whether the same lavr
upon its envelope, whence have resulted not is seen in the ensemble of its manifestations
only a gieat variety of igneous rocks, but whether modein plants and animals are of
the tilting up of sedimentary strata at all more heterogeneous structure than ancient
angles, the formati(m of faidts and metallic ones, and whether the earth's present Flora
veins, the production of endless dislocations and Fauna are more heterogeneous than tho
and irregularities. Yet again, geologists Flora and Fauna of the past we find the —
teach us that the earth's surface has been evidence so fragmentary that every conclu-
growing more varied in elevation— that the sion is open to dispute. Two thirds of the
most ancient mountain systems are the small, earth's surface being covered by water a ;

est, and the Andes and Himalayas the most great part of the exposed land being inacces-
modern while in all probabUity there have
; sible to, or untravelled by, the geologist ; the
been corresponding changes in the bed of the greater part of the remainder having been
ocean. As a consequence of these ceaseless scarcely more than glanced at and even the
;

differentiations, we now
find that no consid- most famdiar portions, as Kugland, having
erable portion of the earth's exposed surface been so imperfectly explored that a new
is like any other portion, either in contour, series of strata has been added within these
in geologic structure, or in chemical competi- —
four years it is manifestly impossible for us
tion and that in most parts it changes from
;
to say with any certainty what creatures
mile to mile in all these characteiistics. have, and what have not, existed at any
Moreover, it must not be forgotten that particular period. Considering the perishable
there has been simultaneous!}' going on a nature of many of the lower organic forms,
gradual differentiation of climates. As fast the metamorphosis of many sedimentary
as the earth cooled and its crust solidified, strata, and the gaps that occur among the
there arose appreciable differences in tem- rest, we shall see further reason for distrust-
perature between those parts of its surface in(5 our deductions. On the one hand, the
most exposed to the sun and those less ex- repealed discovery of vertebrate remains in
posed. Gradually, as the cooling progressed, strata previously supposed to contain none
theso differences became more pronounced ; — of leptileswhere only fish were thought to
Until there linally resulted those marked con- exist —
of mammals where it was believed
trasts between regions of perpetual ice and there were no creatures higher than reptiles

336 PROGr.ESS: IT 5 L.VW AXD CAUSE.

—renders it daily more mnnifpEt iicw small malian remains in the tertiary formations
is llie VLilue of Uft;nfn e evidence. than in the secondary formations. Did we
On tlie otiier hand, the wtirtliletsness of wish me ely to make out the best case, wo
tlie assumption tliat we Lave discovered the might dwell upon the opinion of Dr. Carpen-
eailiesi, or anything oiganic
lil;e tlie earliest, ter, who says that " the general facts of Pa-
rt mains, is becoming equally clear. That ls mtology appear to sanction the belief that
the, oldest knovi?n sedimentary rucks have tlie same plan may be tiaced out in what may
betn greatly changed by igneous action, and be called the general life of the globe, as in the
Ihiit still older ones have been totally trans- iiidiviciaal life of every one of the forms of
formed l»y it, is becoming undeniable. And organized beings which now people it." Or
the fact that sedimenlary strata earlier than we might quote,as decisive, the judgment of
f:ey we 1 now have been melted up, being Professor Owen, who holds
that the earlier
aclrailled, it must also he admitted that we examples of each gioup of creatuies sever-
cuunntsay liowfar back in tiuielliib destruc- ally departed less widely from archetypal
tion of sedimentary strata has been going —
generality than the later ones were severally
nil Tims it is manifest that the title, J'a- less unlike the fundamental form common to
Ixnzoic, as applied to the earliest known fos- the group as a whole that is to say consti-
; —
siliferous strata, involves a pelitio princvpii ; tuted a less heterogeneous group of creat-
and that, for aught we know to Iho con- ures and who further upholds the doctrine
;

trary, only the last few chapters of the of a biological progression. But in defer-
earth's biological history may have come ence to an authority for whom we have the
down to us. On neither side, tlierefore, is highest respect, wlio considers that the evi-
the evidence conclusive. Nevertheless we dence at present obtained does not justify a
cannot but tliink. that, scanty as they are, verdict either way, we are content to leave
the facts, taken altogether, tend to show the question open.
both that the more heterogeneous organisms Whether an advance from the homogene-
have been evolved in the later geologic ous to the heterogeneous Is or is not displayed
periods, and that life in general has been in the biological history of the globe, it is
more lieterogeneously manifested as time clearly enough displayed in the progress of
had ailvanced. Letuscite, in illustration, the the latest and most heterogeneous creature
one case of the vsrtebrata. The earliest known man. It is alike true that, during the period
vertebrate remains ate those of fishes and ; in which the earth has been peopled, the
fishes are the most homogeneous of the ver- human organism has grown more heterogene-
tebrata, Later and more heterogeneous are ous among the civilized divisions of the
rt'ptil 's. Later still, and more heterogeneous species and that the species, as a whole,
;

still, are 'mammals and birds. If it be said, has been growing more heterogeneous in
as it may fairly ne said, that the Palaeozoic virtue of the multiplication of races and the
nut being estuary deposits, are not
d«iposits,' diSereutiation of these races from each otlier.
hkely to contain the remains of terrestrial In proof of the first of these positions we may
vtrtebrata, which may nevertheless have ex- cite the fact that, in the relative developmenl
isted at tliat era, we reply that we are merely of the limbs, thei civilized man departs more
pointiiigto the leading facts, mch as they are. widely from the general type of the placental
But to avoid any such criticism, let us take mammalia than do the lower human races.
the mammalian sibdivisiononly. The earli- While often possessing well-developed body
est known remains of mammals are those of and arnis, the Papuan has extremely small
small marsupials, which are the lowest of the legs thus reminding us of the quadrumaua,
:

mammalian type while, conversely, the


;
in which there is no great contrast in size
highest of the mammalian type man is the — — between the hind and fore limbs. But in
most recent. The evidence that the verte- the European, the greater length and mass-
brate fauna, as a whole, has become more iveness of the legs has become very marked
heterogeneous, is considerably stronger. To
the arijuraent that the vertebrate fauna of the
— the fore and hind limbs are relatively
more heterogeneous. Again, the greater ratio
Pala3ozoic period, consisting, so far as we
which the ci'anial bones bear to the facial
know, entirely of fishes, was less heterogene- bones illustrates the same truth. Among the
ous than the modern vertebrate fauna, which
Vertebrata in general, progress is marked by
Lncludes reptiles, birds, and mammals, of
an increasing heterogeneity in the vertebral
multitudinous genera, it may be replied, as
column, and more especially in the verte-
iiefore, that estuary deposits of the Palaeozoic
br£e constituting the skull : the higher
period, could we find them, might contain
forms being distinguished by the relatively
other orders, of vertebrata. But no such larger size of the bones which cover the
reply can be made to the argument that
brain, and the relatively smaller size of those
whereas the marine vertebrata of the Palaeo-
which form the jaw, etc. Now, this char-
zoic period consisted entirely of cartilaginous
acteristic, which is stronger in man than in
fishes, the marine vertebrata of later periods
any other creature, is stronger in the Euro-
include numerous genera of osseous fishes ; pean than in the savage. Moreover, judging
and that, therefore, the later marine verte-
from the greater extent and variety of faculty
brate faunas are more heterogeneous than
he exhibits, we may infer that the civilized
the oldest known one. Nor, again, can any man has also a more complex or heterogene-
such reply be made to the fact that there are
ous nervous system than the unciviiiBed
fer more numerous orders and genera of mam-
;

PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE. 237

man : and indeed the factis in part visible strongest makes itself felt among a body ot
iu llie increased ratio wliicli Uis cerebrum savages as in a herd of animals or a posse of
bears to the sabjacenl ganglia. schoolboys. At first, however, it is indefi-
KI'urtlier elucidation be needed, we may iiite,uncertain is shared by others of scarcely
;

find it in every nursery. Tlie infant Euro- inferior power ; and is unaccompanied by
pean has sundry marked points of resem- any difference in Occupation or style of liT-
blance to the lower human races as in the ; ing : the first ruler kills his own game, makes
flatness of the alaeof the nose, the depression his own weapons, builds his own but, and
of its bridge, the divergence and forwaid economii:aUy considered, does not differ from
opening of the nostrils, the form of the lips, others of his tribe. Gradually, as the tribe
the aliseiice of a frontal sinus, the widlli be- progresses, the contrast between the govern-
tween the eyes, the smalluess of the legs. ing and the governed grows more decided.
Now, as the dtvelopmental process by which Supreme power becomes hereditary in ona
these tiaits are turned into those of iLie adult family the head cf that family, ceasing to
;

European, is a coulinuation of that change provide for his own wants, is served by
from the homogeneous to the heteroeeneous others and he begins to assume the Bote
;

displajed during the previous evolution of office ot ruling.


the tmbryi), which every physiologist will At tlie same lime there has been arising a
admit it foil ,W3 that the parallel develop-
; co-ordinate species cf government that of —
mental process by which the like traits of the religion. As all ancient lecords and tradi-
]id)barous races have been turned into those tions prove, tbe earliest rulers are regarded
cf the civilized races, has also been a con- as divine personages. The maxims and
tinuation ut the change from the humcgene- commands they uttered during their lives are
0U3 to the heterogeneous. Tlietiuthof the held sacred after thtir deaths, and are en-

second position that mankind, as a whole, forced by their divinely-descended succea.
have bfe-oome more heterogeneous is so obvi- — sors ; who in their tuins are promoted to
ous as scarcely to need illustration. Every the pantheon of the race, tliere to be wor-
woik on Ethnology, by its divisions and sub- shipped and propitiated along with thftir pred-
divisions of races, bears testimony to it. ecessors the mott ancient if whom is the
:

Even were we to admit the hypothesis that supreme god, and the rest subordinate gods.
mankind originated from several separate For a long time these connate forms of
stocks, it would still remain true, that as, —
government civil and religious continue —
from each of these stocks, thtre have sprung closely associated. For many generations
many n'lw widely diifeicnt tribes, which are the king continues In belhe chief priest, and
'

prosed by philological evidence tj have had the priesthood to bo members of the royal
a common origin, the race as a "whole is far race. For manj' ages religious law continues
less hrmogcneous than it once was. Add to to contain more or less of civil regulation,
whicli, that we have in the Anglo-Ameri- and civil law to possess more or less of relig-
cans an example of a new vaiiely arising ious sanction and even among ibe most ad.
;

within these few generations; and that, if vauced nations these two controlling agen-
ive may trust to the descrrption of observers, cies are by no means completely -differen-
we are likely soon to have another such ex- tiated from eacli other.
ample in Australia. Having a common root with these, and
On passing from humanity under its indi- gradually diverging from them, 'we find yet
vidual foim, to humanity as socially em- another controlling agency that ot manners —
! bodrcd, we find tbe general law still more or ceremonial usages. AH titles of honor
; variously exemplified. The change from the are originally tbe names of the god-king
h'lmogeneous to the heterogeneous is dis- afterward of God and the king still later of ;

played equally in tbe progress of civilization persons of high rank and finally come, ;

as a v/hole, anrl in the pt ogress of every tribe some of them, to be used between man and
or nation and is still going on with increas-
; man. All forms of complimentary ad-
. ing rapidity. As we see in existing barbarous drpss v/ere at first the expressions of submis-
tribes, society in its first and lowest form is sion from prisoners to their conqueror, or
u homogeneous aggregation of individuals from subjicts to their ruler, either human
having like powers and like functions: the —
or divine expressions that were afteiwaid
only marked difference of function being used to propitiate subcrrtinato aulhoiities,
liiat wliich accompanies difference of sex. and slowly descended into oidinary inter-
Every man is warrior, hunter, fisherman, course. All modes of salutation were once
tool-maker, builder; every woman performs obeisances made before the monarch and
the same drudgeries every family is self-
;
used worship of him after his dcalli. Prcs-
in
sufficing, and save fur purposes of aggression inily others of the god-descended race wera
and defence, might as well live apait from simihuly saluted and by degrees some of the
;

Ilie rest. Veiy early, however, in the pio- salutations have become the due of all.
ress of social evolution, we find an incipient Thus, no sooner does the originally homo-
differentiation belween the governing and genenus social mass differentiate into the gov-
tlie governed. Some kind of chieftainship erned and the governing paits, tlian this last
seems coeval with the first advance from tho exhibits an incipient difiertutiation into re-
^late of fppai ate wandering famiiicss to that ligious and secular Church and —
fc;aate :

of a nomadic tribe" The authority of Itiii while ut the same time theie begins to b«
differentiated from both, that leuS definite
.

PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSK


species of government which rules onr daily classe.'!of workers, there is still little or nn

intercourse a. species of Ko^^ernmenl wliicli, division of labor among the widtly separated
as wo may see iu heralds' colleges, in hjoks pal ts of the community ; tlie nation continues
of the peeraijje, in maslers of cerem(jnies, is comparatively homogeneous iu the nspect
nut without a cer^lain embodiment of its own. that lu each district the same occupations
_Ei]eh of these is Itself suhiect to successive are pursued. But when loads and other
diHerentiations. Iu the course r,f apes there means of transit becouie numcious and goofl,
xiiscs, lis amoDE; ourselves, a higlily com- the different districts begin to assume differ-
ik'X political oriranizaliou of monarch, min- ent fuoctijns, and to become mutually de-
isters, lords and C(jiuuioq8, with tiieir subor- pendent. Toe calico manufacture locates
dinate administrative departments, courts of itself in this county, the woollen-clotii man.
luslice, revenue offices, etc., supplemeuted ufacture iu tliat ; silks are produced here,
in the proviuces by municipal governments, lace there ; stockings in one place, shoes in
county governments, parish or union govern- another; pottery, hardware, cutlery, como

ments all of themmoieor less elaborated. to have their special towns ; and ultimately
"By its side there grows up a highly complex every locality becomes more or less distin-y
religious oiganization, with its various grades guished from the rest by the leading occujoa-/
of otfleials, from archbishops down to sex- tion carried on in it. Nay, mote : this suboP
tons, its colleges, convocations, ecclesiastical vision of functions shows itself not only
courts, etc. to all which must be added the
;
among the different parts of the same nation,
ever-mulliplying independent seels, each but among different nations. That exchauge
with its general and local authorities. And of commodities which free-trade promises so
at the same time there is developed a highly greatly to increase will ultimately have the
complex aggregation of customs, manners, effect of specializiug, iu a greater or less de-
and temporary fashion?, enforced by society gree, the industry of each people. Bo thafj
at large, and serving to control those minor beginning w^ith a barbarous tribe, almost if
transactions between man and man vi'hioh are not quite homogeneous in the functions of
not regulated by civil and religious law. its members, tlie progress has beeu, and still
Moreover it is to be observed that this ever- is, toward an economic aggregation of the
increasing heterogeneity in the governmental whole human race gruvviug ever more
;

appliances of each nation lias been accom- heterogeneous in respect of the separate
panied by an increasing heterogeneity in the functions assumed by separate nations, the
govenmenlal appliances of different nations ; separate fnnctious assumed by the local
all of which arc moie or less unlike in their sections of each nation, the separate func-
political systems and legislatiou, in their tions assumed by the many kinds of makers
creeds and religious institutions, in their cus- and traders in each town, and the separato
_toms and ceremoniil usages. functions assumed by the workers united in
Simultaneously iliere has been going on a producing tach commodity. r
second ditfetentiatiau of a more familiar Not only is the luw thus clearly exempli-
liind; that, nanuly, by which the mass of fied in the evolution of the social organism,
the community has been segregated into dis- but it is txemplified with equal clearness in
tinct classes and orders of workers. While the evoluticm of all products of human
the governing part has undergone the com- thought and action, whether concrete or ab-
plex development above detaded, the gov- stract, real or ideal. Let us take Language
erned pait has undergone an equally com- as our fiist illustration.
plex development, wliichhas resulted m that The lowest foim of language is the ex-
jniuute division of labor characterizing ad- clamation, by which an cntiieiilea is vaguely
vanced nations. It is needless to trace out conveyed through a single sound as among
;

this progress from its first, stages, up through the lower animals. That human lauguage
the caste divisions of the East and the incor- ever consisted solely of exclamations, and so
porated guilds of Europe, to the elaborate was strictly homogeneous in respect cf its
producing and distributing organization tx- parts of speech, we have no evidence. But
isting among ourselves. Political economists that lauguage can be tiaced down to a foim
have Jung since described the evolution in which nouns and verbs are its only ele-
which, beginning with a tribe whose meni- ments, is an established fact. In the gradual
bets severally perform the same actions each multiplication of parts of speech out of these
for himself, ends with a civilized community primary ones— in the diffeicntiation cf verbs
whose members severally perform different into active and passive, of nouns into ab-
actions for each other and they have
;

further pointed out the changes through


stract and concrete — in the rise of distinc-
tions of mood, tense, person, of number and
which the solitary producer of any one com-
modity is transformed into a combination of

case in the formation of auxiliary verbs, of
au,iectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions,
produceis who, united under a master, take articles— in the divergence of those orders,
separate parts in the manufacture of such genera, species, and varieties of parts of
commodity. But there aie jet other and speech by which civilized races express mi-
higher phases of this advance from the ho- nute modifications cf meaning— we see a
mogeneous to the heleiojieneuusinlhe iudus- ctiange from the homogeneous to the hetero-
trial organization of so( ieli
geneous. And it may be remarked, in pass-
Long after considerable progress has been ing, tbat it is more especially in viitueof
made in thodivisiouof labor among dittereut having carried this subdivision of fuuctioa
— :

PROGRESS; ITS LAW AND CAUSE. 239

to a g:rcater extent and completeness,


lliat tbe ernmental appliances in virtue of Tppresent-
English superior to all others.
luuguiij^tf is ing the woiship of the god, the triuuii.hs of
Aiiolhcr H'pect under -which we may trace the gr,d king, the submission of his rabjects,
tho devt-lopm^nt of 'anguuge is the diltt'rcn- and the punii-hrncnt (f the lebeliou,.!. And
1i;iti;ju <jf woids of aliieii meauings. Phi- yet again Uiey wtie govemmental, ati Tbeing
Ijlogv ea.'ly disci osod flie trulh that in all the prijducls tf r.n "ait leveitnccd lay the
Vjnguage.s \v; v.U m:iy be grouped into fami- people as a sacud mystery. Firm the halil-
lies having a conimyn ancestrj'. Anuborig- ual use cf this pict(.nal icpiesi illation thi re
inul ni.nie applied indiscrinuiia'cly to each naturally grew up ihe btit tlighllymoriificd
of an c.^tcnsii-e and ill-defiiipd class of things practice of piclure-wiiting— apincticc vshich
or acli.)n=, presently undergoes nndificati.)n3 was found still extant among the Mtxicana
by which the hicf divisi' ns of tlie class are
(
at, the time they weie discovered. By abbre-
txpres-sed. These several names springing viations analogous to those still rni.ig on in
from t lie primitive root, themselves become our own wiitten and tpcken larsoage, the
the paiems of other names still further mud- most familiar of these ] iclund figuuswere
itird. And by the aid of those systematic successi\ely simplified and oliin.ately therfe
;

modes Ti hicli presently arise, of making de- grew up H system e,f f-ymbols, me st of which
rivatitus and toimii g compound teims ex- had but a distant les-emblance to the things
pressing still smaller distinctions, tlieie is for which they stood. Tliejnffrence thai
finally developeil a tribe of words so hetero- the hieroglyphics of the Egyptiima weTe thus
geneous in fcoimd and meaning th.at to the produced is contiimed by the fae;t that the
uaiuit'.atcdit teems iucrc.iible that they picture-writing of the Mexicans was found to
should have hud n comnnm origin. 5Uan- have given bulh to a like family of ideo-
while frim other roots there are beingevul ved graphic forms and among thcni, as am< ng
;

other such tribes, until there results a lan- the Egyptians, these had been pailially oif-
guage of some sixty thnusand or more unlike fercnliated m\o Ihe htiriolocjical ov imitative,
words, signifying as many unlike objects, and Ihe tropical, or symbolic: whieh \\m\
qualities, acts. however, used tcgethcr in the same ucord.
Yet another way in which language in In Egypt, written language undeiwent a
general advances Irom the hi.>raugeueous to further differentiation whene'C icsulttd the
:

the heterugenecus, is in the inultiplicatirm of hieratic and the epistolographic or enchorial


languages. "Whether, as Max Milller and both of which are derived from theciiginaJ
Bunsea think, all languages liavegi own from hieroglyphic. At the same time we find that
one stock, or wbetuer, as some philolgists for the expression of proper names which
say, they haie g.own from two or more could not be otherwise convejed, pbemetio
stocks, it is clear ihat since large families of symbols were employed and though it ia
;

languages, as the Indo-Euiopean, aie cf one alleged that the Egyptians never actually
parentage, they have become distinctlhrough achieved complete alphabetic writing, yet it
a process of continuous divergence. The can scarcely be doubted that these plieiietic
same diffusion uverthe earth'ssurface which symbols occasionally used in aid of their idee
has led LL) the difEeieuliation of the rate, has graphic ones, were the geims out of which
simultaneously led to a differentiation of alphabetic writing grew. Once having be-
Ihtir speech a truth which we see further ii-
; come separate from hieroglyphics, alphabetic
lustrated in each nation by the peculiarities of wilting ibself nndeiwent numeroua diffeien-
dialect found in several disliicts. Thus the tiations —multiplied alphabets weie pro-
progress of language conforms to the general duced between most of which, however,
;

law, alike in the evolution of languages, in ui'ii-o or less connection can still be traced.
the evolution of families of words, and in the Z.iirl in each civilized nation there has now
evolution of parts of speech. grownup, for tlie lepreseiitati'in of cne set
On passing from spoken to written lan- of sounds, several sets of wiitten signs used
guage, we come upon seveial classes of facts, for (lislinct purposes.- Finally, through a yet
all having similar
^
implications. Written more important differentiation came piint-
language is connate with painting and sculp- ing ; which, unifeim in kind as it was at
ture and at first all three aie appendiige.i cf
; first, has since become multiform.
aicbiteciure, and have a direct connection While written language was paFtiag
with the primary form cf all goveinmmt through its stages of development,
earlier
he theocratic. Merely noting by the way the mural decoration which foimed its lOot
the fact that sundry wild races, as for ix- was being differentiated into painting and
ample the Australians and the tribes of South sculpture. The gods, king.", men, aiui ani-
Africa, are given to depicting peist cages and mals represented were originally marked by
events r/pon the walls of cavts, which aie indented outlines and colored. In most cafes
probably regarded as sacred places, ki us these outlines were of such depth, and the
pass to the case of the Egyptians. Among object they circumscribed sofarroundeel and
them, as also among th-e Assyrians, we find marked out iu its leading pans, as to fnim a
mural paintings used to dccoiale the Itrnple species of woik intermediate between in-
of the gild and the palace of the king (which taglio and bas-relief. In ether eases we
were, indeed, originally idtntical) and as ; see an advance upon this the raiseel fpaces
:

such Ihey were govtrnmenlal apiliaEcesin between the figures being chi.selled off', and
the same sense that f-t;ite-pageants and relig- the figures themselves appropriately tinted, a
ious feasts were. Fiiilhti iLey weie gov-
, painted bas-relief was produced. The le-

S40 PROGRESS; ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

stored Assyrian architecture at SydeDhara sculpture become entirely secular arts. Only
exhibits this slyle ot art rarried to greater within these few centuries has painting been
perfection —the persons and things n-pre- divided into historical, landscape, marine,
Bented, though still barbarously colored, ara architectural, genre, animal, still-life, etc.,
carved out with more truth and in s;reater and sculpture grown heterogeneous in re-
detail and in the winged lions and bulla
:
spect ot the variety ot real and ideal subjects
used for the angles of galewa.ys, we may see with which it occupies itself.
a considerable advance lowaid a completely Strange as it seems, tlien, we find it no less
sculptured tiguie ; wbich, nevertheltas, is true, that all forma of written language, of
btill coliired, and still forms part of tlie build- painting, and of sculpture, have a common
ing. But while in Assyiia the production root in the politicoreligious decorations of
of a statue proper seems to have been liltle, ancient temples and palaces. Little resem-
if at all, attempted, we may trace in Egyp- blance as they now liave, the bust that stands
tian art the gradual sepaiatioa ot the sculp- on the console, the landscape th.at hangs
tured figure from the wail. A walk through against the wall, and the copy of the Tirrwa
the collection in the British Museum will lying upon the table, are remotely akin not ;

clearly show this ;while it will at tlie same only in nature, but by extraction. The
time afford an opportunity of observing the brazen face of the knocker which the post-
evident traces which the independent statues man has just lifted, is related not only to
bear of their derivation from bas-relief : see- the woodcuts of the lUuntraied London News
lag that nearly all ot them not only display which he is delivering, but to the characters
that union of the limbs with the body which of the billet-doux which accompanies it. Be-
is the characteristic of bas-relief, but have tween the painted window, the prayer-book
the back of the statue united from head to on which its light falls, and the adjacent
foot with a block which stands in place uf m niiraent there is consangunitj'. The elfi-
the original wall. Greece repeated the lead- gies on our coins, tlie signs over shops, the
ing stages of this progress. As in Egypt figures that fill every ledger, the coals-ot-
and Assyria, these twin arts were at first arms outside the carnage panel, and the pla-
united with each other and with their parent, cards inside the omnibus, are, in common
architecture, and were the aids of religion with dolls, blue-books, paper-hangings, line-
and government. On the friezes of Greek ally descended from the lude sculpture-paint-
temples we see colored bas-reliefs represent- ings in which the Egyptians represented the
ing sacrifice?, battles, processions, games triumphs and worship of their god-kings.
all in some sort religious. ()n the pediments Perhaps no example can be given which
we see painted sculptures more or less united more vividly illusi rates the multiplicity and
with the tympanum, and having for subjects heterogeneity of the products that in course
the triumphs of gods or heroes. Even when of time may arise by successive differentia-
we come to statues that are definitely sep- tions from a common stock.
arated from the buildings to which they per- Before passing to other classes of facts, it
tain, we still find them colored ; and only in shoulcl be observed that the evolution ot the
the later periods of Greek civilization does homogeneous into the heterogeneous is dis-
the dillerentiation of sculpture from painting played not only in the scpaiatiou of painting
appear to hape become complete. and sculpture from archiltclure and from
In Christian art we may clearly trace a each other, and in the greater variety of sub-
parallel regenesis. All early paintings and jects they embody, but it is further shown in
sculptures throughout Europe were religious the structure of each work. A
modern pic-

in sui)ject represented Christs, crucifixions, ture or statue is of far more heterogeneous
virgins, holy families, apostles, saints. They nature than an ancient one. An Egyptian
formed integral parts of church architecture, sculpture-fresco represents all its figures as on
and were among the means of exciting wor- —
one plane that is, at the samedrstance from
ship ; as in Roman Catholic countries they the eye ; and so is less heterogeneous than ,

still are. Moreover, the early sculptures of painting that represents Ihein as at variou
Christ on the cross, ot virgins, of saints, distances from the eye. It exhibits all object
were colored and it needs but to cafl to
: as exposed to the same degree of light and s( ;

mind the painted madonnas and crucifixes is less heterogeneous than a painting which
Btill abundant in continental churches and exhibits different objects and different parts of
highways, to perceive the significant fact each object as in dititrenl degrees of light. It
that painting and sculpture continue ia uses scarcely any but the primary colors, and
closest connection with each other where these in their full intensity and so is less
;

they continue in closest connection with their heterogeneous than a painting which, intro-
parent. Even when Christian sculpture was ducing the primary colors but sparingly,
pretty clearly differentiated from painting it employs an endless variety ot intermediate
was still religious and governmental in its tints, each of heterogeneous composition, and

subjects was used for tombs in churches differing from the rest not only in quality
und statues of kings while, at the same time,
:
but in intensity. Moreover, we see in these
painting, where not purely ecclesiastical, earliest works a great uniformity of concep-
was ai)plied to the decoration of palaces, and tion. The same arrangement of figures is
besides representing royal personages, was
almost wholly devoted to sacred legends.
perpetually reproduced — the same actions,
attitudes, fac*s, dresses. In Egypt the
Only in quite recent times have painting and modes of representation were so fixed that it
PROGRESS: ITS LAW AXD CAUSS. 24'

as sacrilege to introduce a novelty ; and


Moses on the defeat of the Egyptians w«i
Indeed it coul.l liave been only iu conse-
quence oC a fixed mode of repiesenlalion sung to an accompaniment of dancing and
tliat a sj'slem of liieroglyphics became pijssi-
timbrels. The Israelites danced and suni'
" at the inauguintion of the golden calf.
l)le. Tlie Assyiian biis-rel el's display paial-
lel characters, lieitie:', kings, attendants,
And as it is geneially agreed that this repre-
winned figures and animals, are severally sentation of the Deity wiis boirowed fior-
dei)icttd iu like pr.silions, lioldmg lilie iui-
the mysteries uf Apis, it is probable that th
pUmi nls, doing like things, and wuh lilie ex- dancing was copied from (hat of the Egyptian,
pression or nuu-expiessian of face. If a
on those occasions." Time was an dunua'
palm-gTuve is introduced, all the trees aie of dance in Sliiloh on the sacied festival am: ;

the same height, have the same number of Dnsvid danced before the ark. Again, iu
leaves, and aie equidistant. When water is Greece the like relation is everywhere seen :
imitated, each wave is a counteipart of the the oiiginal type being there, iis probably in
re-t and the fish, almost alwajs of one other cases, a simultaneous chanting an«i
;

kind, are evenly distributed over the suiface. mimetic representation of the life and advec-
The beaidsof the kings, the gods, and Iho tures of the god. The Spartan dances wei«
winged figures, are evirywhere siriiilav : as accompanied by hymns and songs and in ;

are the manes of the lions, and equally so geneia! the Greeks liad " nofestiijalsor relig-
i.nis assemblies but wha*. were accompanied
those of the horses. Hair is repiesinted
throughout by one form of cuil. The king's —
with songs and dances" both cf them
I'.eing tonus of worship used before altars.
beard is quite archilecturally built up of
compound liers of uniform cuils, alltinating Amyng the Roman*, too, there were sacred
with twisted tiers placed in a tiansveise dances : the Salian and lupercaliaa being
direction, audananged with perfect leguUir-
nameel as of that kiniJ. Aiid even in Chris-
tian countries, as at Linogcr-, in compara-
ity ; and the terminal tufts of the bulls' tails
tively recent limes, Iho people have danced
are lepresented in exactly the same manner.
Without tracing out analogous facts in early in the cUi ir in honorof j saint, Tlio incipi-
ent separation of these ones u»rled arts from
Christian art, m
which, though less striking,
each olhtr and from religion, V'a". eailj' vis-
they are sliU visible, the advance in hetero-
ible in Greece. Probably div<;rging from
geneity will be sufficiently manifest on re-
membering that in the pictures of our own dances jiartly religious, partly warlike, aa
the Cor.vbantian, came th." ivar dances
aay the composition is endlessly vatied the;

proper, of which theie were various kinds


attitudes, faces, expressions unlike ; the sub- ;

ordinate objecis different in size, form, posi-


and from these resulted seeulaf dances.
and more or less of contrast Meanwhile music and poetry, (l.ough sliil
tion, textuie ;
united, came to have an cxislenc? .separata
even in the smallest details. Or, if we com-
pare an Egyptian slalue, seated bolt upright
frim dancing. 1 heaboiigioai Grt.'k poerns,
religious in suliject, weie not leciied, liut
on a block, with hands un knees, fingeis out-
chanted and though at first li:ccb:ait of the
spread and parallel, eyes looking straight ;

poet was accjmpanied by the d.'u^e cf the


forward, and the two sides perfectly sym-
chorus, it idtimal'el3'"gfew iuloindepcradence.
metrical in every particular, with a statue of
Later still, wlien the poem iiad been diilcr-
the advanced Greek or the modem school,
which is as symmetrical iu respect of the entiateel into epic and lytic — wlieu it becama
the custom to sing the lyric and recite the
position of the head, the body, tlie limbs, the
eiiic— poetry proper was boi.'. As duiiug
anangement of the hair, dress, appendages,
the same period musical iusliumeril!= weie
and in its relations to neighboring objects,
being multiplied, we may presume tliaimusia
we shnll see the change ficra the homogene- came to have an existence! apart frorj.v words.
ous to the heterogeneous clearly manifested.
In tlie co-ordinate origin and gradual dif-
And both of them were begiunimj to assume
other forms besides the religious. Facts
ferentiation of poetry, music, and dancing,
having like implicalionu might be cited fiom
we have another series of illustrations. the liistories of later times aud peoples as
Rhythm in speech, rhythm in sound, and the practicesof our own early u instreb, whi>
;

jhj'thm in motion, were in the beginning


sang to the harp heroic naiiative* ver.sifitd
paits of the same thing, and have only in
by thein-clves to music of their own cumpo-
process of lime become .separate tilings.
silion thus uniting the now stparal'.; '.fficcs
Among various existing baibarous tribes ue :

of poet, C(;mpeiser, vocalist, aud instrumen-


find them still united. The dances of sav- talist But, without further illu'^iralioQ, tlja
ages are accompanied by some kind of mo-
nolon'ius chani, the clapping of hands, the
common origin and giadual difCoientiatinn
of dancing, poetry, and music will be sufii-
slrjkingof ludeinslrumtnts there aie meas-
:
ciently manifest.
ured movemeuls, measured woids, and meas-
The advance from the homogeneous to
ured tones aud the whole ceremony, usually
;
the heterogeneous is displayed not only in
Laving reference to war or sacrifice, is of
the separation of these arts from each other
goveinmenlul character. In the eailyiec-
and flora religion, but also in the multiplied
ords of the hi.Jtuiic laces we similarly find
diffeientiatiuus which each of them after-
these three foims of nietiical action uiiiiid in
w.id undeigoes. Not t" dwell upon tha
religious festivals. In the Hebrew writings
numberless kinds of dancing that have. Id
we read that the triumphal ode composed by
;

243 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

course of time, come into use and not to


;
sibly first suggested by a niistake— for the
occupy space in detailing tlie progress of second choir to commence before the first
poetry, aa seen in tlie development of the had ceased thus producing a fugue.
;

various forms of metre, of rhyme, and of With the simple airs then in use, a par-
general organization, let us confine our at- tially harmonious fugue might not improb-
tention to music as a type of the group. As ably thus result and a very partially bar-
:

argued L>y Dr. Burney, and as implied by monious fugue satisfied the ears of that age,
the customs of still extant barbarous races, as we know from still preserved examples.
the first musical instruments were, without The idea having once been given, the com-

doubt, peicussive sticl<s,\ calabashes, tom- posing of airs productive of fugal harmony

toms and were used simply to murk the would naturally grow up as in some way
;

time of tlie dance and in this constant rep-


;
it did grow up out of this alternate choir.
etition of the same sound we see music in singing. And from the fugue to concerted
its most homogeneous form. music of two, three, four, and more parts,
The Egyptians had a lyre with three the transition was easy. Without piintinac
strings. The early lyre of the Greeks had out in detail the increasing complexity that
four, constituting their tetrachord. lu resulted from from introducing uotcs o? vari-
course of some centuries lyres of seven and ous lengths, from the multiplicatiiin r.f keys,
eight strings were employed. And, by the from the use of accidentals, from varieties of
expiration of a thousand years, they had ad- time, and so forth, it needs but to contrast
vanced to their " great system" of the double music as it is with music as it was, to se«
octane. Through all which changes there of how immense is the iuereaFO of heterogene-
course arose a greater heterogeneity of mel- ity. We see this if, looking ^t music in its
ody. Similitaneously there came into use the ensemble, we enumerate its ragny different
different modes — Dorian, Ionian, Phrygian, —
genera and species it we consider the divi-
jEolian, and Lydlan^answering to our keys ;
sions into vocal, iristiumsntal, and mixed ;

and of these were there ultimately fifteen. and their subdivisions into music for differ-
As yel, however, there was but little hetero- ent voices and different instruments— if wo
geneity in. the time of their music. observe the many forma of sacred music,
Instrumental music during this period from the simple hymn, the chant, the canon,
being merely the accompaniment of vocal motet, anthem, etc. up to the oratorio and;

music, and vocal music being completely the still more numerous forms of secular
subordinated to woids, the singer being also music, from the ballad up to the serenata,
the poet, chanting his own conipositions and from the instrumental solo up to the sym-
making the lengths of his notes agree with phony.
the feet of his verses, there unavoidably Again, the same truth is seen on compar-
arose a tiresome uniformity of measure, ing any one sample of aboriginal music with
which, as Dr. Burney says, " no resources —
a sample of modern music even an ordinary
of melody could disguise." Lacking the song for the piano which we find to bo
;

complex rhythm obtained by our equal bars relatively highly heterogeneous, not only iu
Rud unequal n.ites, the only rhythm was that respect of the varieties in the pilch and in
produced by the quantity of the syllables, the length of the notes, the number of differ-
aad was of necessity comparatively monoto- ent notes sounding at the same instant in
n»us. And further, it may he observed that company with the voice, and the variations
thechant thus resulting, being like recita- of strength with which they ore sounded and
tive,was much less clearly differentiated sung, but in respect of the changes of key,
from ordinary speech than is our modern tl e changes of time, the changes of Umire of
song. the voice, and the many othtr modifications
Nevertheless, in virtue of the extended of expression. While between the old mo-
range of notes in use, the variety of modes, notonous dance-chant and a grand opera of
the occasional variations of time consequent our own day, with its enifless orchestral
on changes of metre, and the multiplication complexities and vocal combiualious, the
of instruments, music had, toward the close contrast in heterogeneity is so extreme that
of Greek civilization, attained to consider- it seems scarcely credible that the one should

able heterogeneity not indeed as compared have been the ancestor of the other.
with our music, but as compared with that Weie they needed, many fuithci illustra-
whicli preceded it. As yet, however, there tions might be cited. Gt.ing back to the
existed uothing but melody ; harmony was early lime when the deeds of the god-king,
unknown. It was not until Christian church- chanted and mimetically represented in
music had reached some development that dances round his altar, were fuillicr narrated
music in. parts was evolved ;and then it in picture-writings on the wails of temples
came into existence through a very unob- and palaces, and so constituted a rude litera-
trusive differentialiun. Di'liicult as it may ture, we might trace the tleveKipracnt of lit-'
be to conceive J priori how the advance from erature through phases in wbicti, as in the
melody to harmony could take place without Hebrew Scriptures, it presents in cue work
II sudden leap, it is none the less true that it theology, cosmogony, histoiy, biography,
did so. The circumstance which prepared civil law, ethics, poetry through other
the way for it was the employment of two
;

phases in which as in the Iliad, the religious,


choirs singing alternately the same air. martial, historical, the epic, diamatic, and

Aiterward it became the practice very pos- lyric elements are similarly commiugled
PROGRESS: ITS LAW AITO CAUSE. 313

lowQ to its present heterogeneous flevelop- able as the cause of each of the groups of
nent, in which its divisions and subdivisions phenomena formulated in the foregoing
re so numerous and varied as to defy com- pages. We
may bo able to affiliate ail these
lete classification. Or -we might trace out varied and complex evolutions of the homo-
lie evolution of science ; beginning with the geneous into the heterogeneous, upon certain
ira in which it was not jet differentiated simple facts of immediate experience, which,
rom art, and was, in union with ait, the in virtue of endless repetition, we regard as
andmaid of religion ; passing thiough the necessary.
'lu in which the scienw'S weie so few and The probability of a common cause, and
udimentary as to l)e simultaneously culti- the possibility of formulating it, being
'ated by the same philosophers ; and ending granted, it will be well, before goingfarlher,
vith the eia in which the genera and species to consider what must be the gxrieral ehar-
re so numerous that few can enumerate acteristics of such cause, and in what direc-
hem, and no one can adequately grasp even tion we ought to look for it. Wecan with
iQB genus. Or we might do the like with certainty predict that it has a high dcgice of
-.rchitecture, with the drama, with dress. generality seeing that it is common to such
;

But doubtless the reader is already weary infinitely varied phenomena just in piopor-
.

if illustrations ;and our promise has been tion to the universality of ils applicalion
imply fullllied. We believe we have shown must be the abstractness of ils cLaiacter.
'•eyond quesliim, that that which Ijie Geiman We need not expect to see in it au obvious
hysiiiloL'-ifcts have found to be'jlie law oF| solution of this or that form of prrgiess ;
.rganic di. vclopmeut is the law of all devel- becauseit equally refers to forms of pu.gresB
pmtnt. The advance from the simple to healing little apparent resemblance to thtni :

.he cumpiex, through a process of si-.ccessive its association wilh multiform oidtrs of facts
iiflerenlialions, is seen alike in the earliest involves its dissociation fum any particular
hauiics of the universe to which we can order of facts. Being that which delcniiines
eas'^u ourway back and in the earliest
; progress of every kind — aslicni.niic, geo-
harjges which we can inductively establish ];gic, organic, clhnologic, social, econcmic,

;

t seen in !he geologic and climatic evolu-


is etc.
artistic, it must be concerned with
ion iif the caith, and of every single organ- some fundamental alliibule possessed in
^m r,n Us surface it is seen in Iheevolulion
; common by these and must be expressible
;

f buiiianily, whether conlempliiled in the in terms of this fundamenlal altiibute. Tlio


ivilized individuar w
in the aggi egation of only obvious respect in which all kinds of
aces-; it is sien in the evolution of society piogress are alike, is, that the^y are modes of
a respect alike of its political, its religious, change ; and hence, in somecharacleiistie of
ud its economical organization and it is ; chaLges in geneial, the desired solution will
een in Ihe evolution of all these endless con- probably be found. We may suspect d
rete and alijiract products of human activ- some law of change lies the ex-
jiriori that in
y wli;ch constitute the environment of our planation of this universal transformation of
laily liie. Fmm the remotest pust which the liomogeueous into the heleiogeneous.
icrence can fathom, up to the novelties of Thus much premised, we pass at once to the
/estetday, that in which progress essentially statement of the law, which is this Eicery :

onsi.-ls, IS ilie t.ansfoinialion 1,1 Ihs liomo-j actite fuYM prodvci smore than, one cliange —
feueous into the heterogeneous. ^f every cause produces moi'e tlian one effect.
Before this law can be duly comprehended,
And now. from this uniformity of proced- a few examples must be looked at. When
rre, may we not infer some fundamental one body is struck against auolhcr, tiiat
lecessity whence it results? May we not wliich we usually regard as the effect is a
ationally seek for some all-iiervading prin- change of position or motion in one or both
iple which determines this all-pervading bodies. But n moment's thought shows us
rocess of things ? Does not the universality that this is a careless and very incomplete
.f the law imply a uuiversal cause f view of the matter. Besides the visible
That we can fathom such cause, noume- mechanical result, sound is produced or, to ;

'!ally consideied, is not to be supposed. To speak accurately, a vibration in one or bolh


(Jo this would be to solve that uliimate mys- bodies, and in the surrounding air and ;

tery which must ever transcend human intel under some circumstances we call this tlie
ligence. But it still may be possible for us effect. Moreover, the air has not only beea
) reduce the law of all ijrogress, above estab- made to vibrate, but has had sundry currents
'ished, from condition of an empirical
llie caused in it by the transit of the bodies.
cneialization, to the condition of a rational Further, there is a disarrangement of the par-
eneializalion. Just as it was possible to ticles of the two bodies in the neighborhood
nterpi et Kepler's laws as necessary conse- of their point of collision, amounting in
luences of the law of gravitation so it may ;
some cases to a visible condensation. Yet
lie possible to interpret this law of prcgiess, more, this condensation accompanied by
is
in its multiform manifestations, as the neces- the disengagement of heat. In some cases a
lary consequence of some similarly universal — —
spark that is, light results, from the in-
principle. As gravitation was assignable as candescence of a portion struck off and ;

rhe cauieof each of the groups of phenumena sometimes this incandescence is associated
.'hicli Kepler formulated so may some
; with chemical conihination.
quaily simple attribute of things be assign- Thus, by the ori;;iual mechanical force ex-
244 PROGRESS: ITS LA"W AND CAUSE.

pended in the collision, at least fire, and Without committing ourselves tn it


often more, different kinds of changes liave more than a speculation, though a highly
been produced. Talco, again, tlie ligbting of prol)able one, let us again commence with the
a candle. Piimarily this is a chemical evolution of the solar system out of a nebu.
cliange consequent on a lise of temperature. lous medium.f From the mutual attraction
The process of combination Iiaviiig onco been of the atoms of a diffused mass whoso fornil
set going Ijy extraneous heat, theic is a con- is unsymmeliical, theie results not only con-!
tinued formation of oarbouio acid, water, etc. densatiju but rotation : gravitation simul-
— iu itself a result more complex than the ex- taneously geuerales both the centripetal and
traneous heat that flist caused it.- But ac- thecentiilugal forces. While tlie condensa-
cjmp;u)yiug this process of conibinatioa tion and the rate of rotation are progressively
there is a production of heat ; theie is a pro- increasing, the approach of the atoms neces-j
ducliun of liglU there is an ascending col-
; sarily generates a progressively increasing'
umn of hot gases generated there aie cur-; temperature. As this temperature rises, light
rents established in the surrounding air. begins to be evolved aud ultimately there
;

Moreover, the decomposition of one force into results a revol\iag spheie of fluid matter
m:iny forct's does not end here each of the : —
radiating intense heat and light a sun.
several chaoses produced becjmes the parent There are good reasons for believing thati
of fun her cliHtiges. The caibonic acid given in consequence of the high tangential veiocs.
off v,-ill by and by combine wilii s^me base ;
ity, and consequent centrifugal force, ac-
or uu ier llie iniiucnce cf sunshine give up quired by the outer parts of the condensinl^
its Ciirhon to the leaf of a plant. The water nebulous mass, there must be a periodic^;;
will modify the liygrometric state of the air detachment of lotaliug rings ; and that, from
a;ouad or, if the current of hot gases cou-
; the breaking up of these nebulous rings,
taiaiag it cjma against a old body, will be there must ni ise masses which in the coursu
ondeii.-sed :allerifig the temperature, and of tlieir condensation repeat the actions ot-
perhaps tlie elutmieal slate, of the surface it tbe parent mass, and so produce planets and
cov^ r3. Tlie heat given out molts the sut)- their Fatellites— an inference strongly sup-
JHcent tallow, and expands whatever it poited by the slill extant rings of Saturn.
wamis. Tue light, falling on vaiious sul)- Should it beitafttr be s^atisiactorily shown
slances, calls fov.th from them reactions by that planets and salcUites were thus gener-
which it is modilied aud so divers colors
; ated, a striking illustration will be affordL
are produced. Similarly even with these of the Iiighly heterogeneous ffftcts produccn
secjudary actions, which may be traced out by the primary homogeneous cause but it ;

into ever-multiplying ramifications, until they will serve our present purpose to point to the
become too minute to be appreciated. And fact that from the mutual attiaclicn of the
thus it is with all changes whatever. No particks of an irregular nebulous mass there
case can be named in which an active force result cr-ndensation, rotation, heat, and light.
docs not ev jIvb forces of several kinds, and It follows as a corollary from the nebular
each of these, other groups of forces, Uui- liypothesis, that the earth" muFt at flrtt hafe
ver.-ially the effect is more complex than the Ijeen incandescent aud whether the nebular
;

cause. hypothesis be true or not, this oiiginal in-


Doubtless the reader already foresees the candescence of the earth is now inductively
course of jur agument. Tliis multiplication established— or, if not established, at least
of lesults, which is displayed in every event rendered so highly probable that it is a gen"-
of to-day, has been going on fiom the begin- erally adrailled geological doctrine. Lotus
ning and is true of the granJet^t phenouiona
; look first at the astronomical attributes of
of the universe as of the most insignilicaut. this once molten globe. From ils rotation
From tlie law ih.U every active ioice pro- there result the oblateness of its form, the
duces in,)re iHiin one change, it is an inevi- alternations of day and night, and (under the
table corollary that through all time there influence of the moon) the tides, aqueous and
has been an ever-growing complication cf atmosphciic. From the inclination of its
things. Starting with the ultimate fact that axis there result the precession of tbe equi-
every cause produces more than one effect, noxes and the many differences of the seasons,
we may rea;iiiy see Ihat throughout creation both simultaneous and successive, that per-
there must have g^me on, and must still go vade its surface. Thus the multiplication of
on, a never-ceasing transformation of the effects is obvious. Several of tlie differenti-
hum.jgi'ueous into the heterogeneous. But ations due to the gradual cooling of the earth
let uj Itaee out this truth in detail.*

have been alieady noticed as the formation
of a crutt, the solidification cf sublimed ele-
* A cor-relative ought also to lie taken
trutli wliich
ments, the precipitation cf water, etc.— and
liilo account (iliat the state of liomogeneity is one of
niiataDIu equilibrium), liut whirh it vvoultl greatly en- we here again refer to them men Iv to point
cumbi-r tlie argument to exemplify iu oonnectlon with out that they are simuttaneous effe'cts of the
thi: above, will bo found developed in the easay on
*'
Truiiseeudental Physiology."
one cause, dimitrishiug heat.
t Tli'j idea that the Nebular Hypothesis has been Let us now, however, observe the multi-
disproved because what were thouglit to be existing plied changes afterward arising from the
ue lUliB hive been resolvfid into clusters of stars is continuance of this one cause. 'The cooling
uliiui-t beneath notice. A prioH it was highly Im- of the earth involves its contractien.
'
probable, if not impossible, that nebulous masses Hence
should ttill remain uncondensed, while others have the solid crust first formed is presently too
be, n condensed miiUona of years ugo. largo for the shrinking nucleus
; and as it
PROGRESS: IT3 L.V^T AND CAUSE. 345

lliannot support itself, inevitably follows the ologifts term igneous, to aqueous and at-
jjucleus. Bill a spheroidal envelope cannot iiiospheiic agencies, we see the like ever-
ifjink (luu-Q into contact with a smaller inlor- growing complications of elfects. The dc-
[iiiil spheroid without disruption it must ; nuuirig actions of air and water have, from
run inio vi'rinklcs iis the rind of an apple the beginning, been modifying every exposed
Aies when the bulk of its interior decreases suifa<'c everywhere causing many different
;

,froin evuporaiion. As the cooling progresses changes. Oxidation, bent, wind, frost, lain,
and the euvelnjie thicktns, tlie uliies conse- i glaciers, rivers, tides, wa^es, have been un-
"queut on these ci.nli actions must become ceasingly producing disiultgration ; varying
..'irreater, rising ultimatelj- iutT hills and and amount according to local cir-
in kinel
m'juutains aul tlie later systems of mouu-
: cumstances. Acting upon a tract of gianite,
^tains Uhls produced nnist not oclj' be higher, they here woik seaicely an appieciable
^as we lind them to he, but they must be effect ; there cause exfoliations of the suiface
'longer, as we also find them to be. Thus, and a resulting heap of debris and houldeis ;

leaving out tf view other modifying forces, and elsewhere, after decomposing the feld-
we SCO what immense heterogeneity of sur- spar into a white clay, carry away this and
'

face has aiisen from the one cause, loss of the accompanying quartz aiifl mica, and de-
heat —
a heleiogeutity which the telescope posit them in separate b(i!s, tluv'atile and
sliuws ns to by paraded t'n the face of the marine. When the exposed laml consists of
moon, V. Iieie aqueous and atmospheric agen- sevcial unlike formations, sedimentary and
cies have Iiein alisrnt. igneous, the denudation produces changes
But ue haie yet to notice another kind of piopoitionaldy more heterogeneous. Tho
helerng; neily of sutface similaily and simul- formations being disintegiable in different
taneously caused. While the earth's oust dcgiees, there follows an increased irregular-
was still thin, the ridges produced by its ity of surface. Theare as drained by different
eontraction must uot oidy have been small, rivers being differently constituted, these
but the spaces between tliepe ridges must rivers carry down to the sea different combi-
have rested witli great evenness upon the sub- nations of ingredients; and so sundiynew
jacent liijmd .spheroid ; and the water in those strata of distinct composiiion are formed.
arctic and aularetic regions in which it flist And here indeed we may see very simply
C:TOden.~ed must have been evenly disttib- illustrated, the truth, which we thall presently
uted. But as fast as the crust grew thicktr liave to trace out in more involved cases, that
and gainfd coirei-ponding stiength, the lines in proportion to the heterogeneity of the ob-
of 1ra<-i\ire from lime to time caused in it ject or objects on which any force expends
must have occurred at greater distances itself, is the heterogeneity of tlie results. A
apail ; Uu iiueir.iLUiate su.faces must have continent of complex structure, exposing
foUovved ihe conlracliug uueleus with less many strata irregularly distributed, raised to
uniformitv and there must hare resulted
; various levels, tilled up at all angles, must,
larger areas of land and water. If any ouo under the same denuding ogencien, give cii-
after wiai;ping up an orange in wet tissue gin to immensely multiplied results each ;

paper, and observing not only how small are district must be differently modified ach ; i

the wrinkles but how evenly the intervening river must carry down a different kind of
spacps lie upon the suiface of the orange, detritus eachdepositmustbediffciently dis-
;

win then wiap it up in thick cartridge-paper, tributed by the entangled currents, tidal and
and note b'ltli the greater height of theridges other, which wash the contorted shores and ;

and the much larger spaces throughoutwhicli this multiplication of results must manifestly
the paper d.ics nut touch the orange, ho will be greatest where the complexity of tho sur-
realize the faet, tliat as the earth's solid en- face is greatest.
velope grew tliickcr, the areas of elevation It is out of the question here to trace in de-
and depresfcir.n must have become greater. tail the genesis of those endless complications
In place of i.slands more or less homogene- described by geology and physical geog-
ously scattered over an all-embracing sea, raphy : we might show how the general
else
/there niu.-l have graduall}' arisen heterogene- truth, that every acr.ive force produces more
ous airangcinenls of continent and ocean, than one change, is exemplified in the highly
sue 1; as we now knov.'. involved flow of the tides, in the ocean cur-
Once m double change in the ex-
:e, this rents, in the winds, in the distribution of
tent and in elevation of the lands, in-
t'le ram, in tlie distribution of heat, and su furth.
volved yet another species of heterogeneity, But uot to dwell upon these, let us, for tho
that of coufd-liiie. A
toleraljly even surface fuller elucidation of this truth in relation to
raiscfl out of the ocean must have a simple, the inorganic world, consider what would be
regular scu-margin ; hut a surface varied by the consequences of some e.xtensive cosmical
table-lands and intersected by mountain- —
revolution say the subsidence of Central
chains must, when raised cut of the ocean, America.
have an outline extremely irregular both in The immediate results of the disturbance
its leading featuiea and in its details. Thus would thenrselves be suflieieutly complex.
endlf.'^s is the accumulation of geological and Besides the numberless dislocations of si raia,
geographical results slowly brought about the ejections of igneous matter, the propaga-
by this one cause the contraction of the — tion of earlhqualce vibrations thousands of
earth. miles around, tlie loud explosions, and the
When we pass from the agency which go- escape of gases, there would be the rusU of
'

246 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

exist at the highest temperatures, and which


the Atlantic aud Pacific Oceans to supply
the vaciint space, the subsequent recoil of must, therefore, have been tlie first that wen
enormous waves, which would traverse both formed as the earth cooled, are those of thi
simplest constitutions. The protoxides— in.
these oceiuis aud produce mj'riads of oliangts
along Ihoir shorus, the corresponding aliiios- eluding under that head the alkalies, earths
phei ic waves complicated by the currents sur- etc,— are, as a class, the most stable com

rounding each volcanic vent.and the electrical pounds we know most of ihcm resisting de-
:

disclKii-ges with which such disturbances are composition by any beat we can generafc.
accompiUiied. But these temporary effects These, consisting severally of one atom lI
wo\ikl be insignificant compared with the per- each component element, are comliiualioni
manent ones. The complex currents of the of the simplest order— are but one degiee leei,
Allantic and Pacific would be altered in di- homogeneous than the elements themselves
rection and amount. The distribution of More heterogeneous than these, kss siablc,
and therefore later in the earth's history, art
heat achieved by these ocean currents would
be dift'erent from what it is. The ^riauge- the deutoxides, Iritoxides, peroxides, etc. ii: ;

ment of llie isothermal lines, not even on the whjch two. three, four or moieatomsof oxy
UL'iglil)oriug continents, but even throughout gen are united witii one atorri ot metal or olhei
Europe, vvuuUi be changed. The tides would element. Higher than these in heteiogeneitj
flow (lifi:ereiitly from what they do now. are the hydrates in which au oxide of hy-
;

There would be more or less modification of drogen, united with an oxide of some othei
the winds in their periods, strengths, diicc- element, forms a substance whose atoms sev-
tions. quiililies. Rain would fall scarcely erally contain at least fouB ultimate atomi
anywhere at the s-une times, and in the same of thiee different kinds. Yet moie helero
quantities as at present, iu short, the me- gencous and less stable still are the salts
teorological conditions thousand.^ of miles which present us with compound atoms eacl
off, on all sides, would be more or leas revo- made up of five, six, seven, eight, ten, twelve,
lutionized. or moie atoms, of thrie, if not moie kinds.
Thus, without taking into account the Then there are the hydrated salts, of a yt
infinitude of modiricalions which these greater heterogeneity, which undergo parlip
changes of climatd would produce upon tlie decomposition at much lower temperatures
flora and fauna, both of land aud sea, the After them come the further- complicatei!
reader will sm liie immense heterogeneity of supersalts and double salts, having a stabilitj
the results wrought out by one force, when agai[i decreased and so throughout. With
;

that force expends itself upon a previously out entering into qualifications for which wi
complicated area and he will readily draw
; lack space, we believe no chemist will deuj
the cuvoUary that from the beginning the com- it to be a general law of these in organ!
plication lias advanced at an increasing rate. combinations that, other things equal, Ihi
Before going on to sliow how organic prog- stability decreases as the complexity in
ress also depends upon the universal law creates.
that every force produces more tlian one And then when we pass to the compnundi
change, we have to notice the manifestation of organic chemistry, we find this general law
of this law in yet another species of inor- still further exemplified we find mucb
:

gaidc progress^nam.jly, chemical. The greater complexity and much less stability.
same geneial causes that have wrought out An atom of albumen, for instance, consisiS
the hetorogeui'ity of the earth, physically of 483 ultimate atoms of five different kinds.
considered, have simultaneously wrought out Fibrine, still moie intricate in constitution,
its chemical heterogeneity. VVithout dwell- contains in each atom, 298 atoms of caibon,
ing upon the general fact that the forces 40 of nitrogen, 3 of sulphur, 338 of hydro-
which liave been increasing the variety and gen, and 93 of oxygen —
in all, 0(50 atoms or, ;

c.)raple.\ity of geological formations, have, —


more strictly speaking equivalents. And
at the same time, been bringing into contact these two substances are so unstable as t;
elements not previously exposed to each decompose at quite ordinary temperatures-
other under conditions favorable to union, as that to which the outside of a joint of roa*.
and so have been adding to the number of meat is exposed. Tlius it is manifest th&
chemical compounds, let us pass to the more the present chemical heterogeneity of th<
important complications that have resulted earth's surface.has arisen by degrees, as ths
from the cooling of the earth. decrease of heat lias permitted and that il ;

Tliere is every reason to believe that at an


extreme heat the elements cannot combine.

has shown itself iu three forms first, in tho
multiplication of chemical compounds sec. ;

Even under such heat as can be artificially ond, in the greater number of different ele-
produced, some very strong affinities yieldf, ments contained in the more modern of these
as for instance, that of oxygen for hydro- compounds and third, in the higher and
;

gen ; and the great majority of chemical more varied multiples in which these more
compounds are decomposed at much lower numerous elements combine.
temperatures. But without insisting upon To say that this advance in chemical hete-
the highly probable inference, that when the rogeneity is due to the one cause, diminution
earth was in its first state of incandescence of the earth's temperature, would be to say
there were no chemical combinations at all, too much ;for it is clear that aqueous and at-
it will suffice our purpose to point to the un mospheric agencies have been concerned;
questionable fact that the compuuads that car and, further, that the affinities of the ele-
rHOGHESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE. 247

meats themselves are implied. The cause has plicated symptoms may set in. Similarly in
all aloug en a composite one
b( the cooling: cases of disease. A
minute portion of the
of tlio earth having been simplj' the must small-pox vi'us introduced into the system
general of the concurrent cmues, or assem- will, in a severe case, cause, during the first
blage of conditions. And here, indei'cl, it stage, rigors, heat of skin, accelerated pulse,
may be remarked that in the several classes furred tongue, loss of appetite, thirst, epi-
of facts already dealt witli (excepting, per- gastric uneasiness, vomiting, headache, pama
haps, the first) and still more iu tliose uiili in the back and limbs, muscular weakness,
which we sliall presently deal, the oauiies convulsions, delirium, etc. ; in the stconcj
are more or less compound as indeed are
; slage, cutaneous eiuption, itching, tingling,
nearly all causes -nith which we are ac- sore tliroat, swelled fauces, salivation, cuilgh,
quainted. Scarcely any change can willi boaiseness, dyspnoea, etc., and in the third
logical accuracy be wholly ascribed to one stage, (Edematous inflammations, pneumonia,
agency, to the neglect of the permanent or pleurisy, diairhcea, inflammation of the
temporary conditions under wliich only lliis brain, ophthalmia, erysipelas, etc. each of ;

agency produces the change. But as it does which enumerated symptoms is itself more
not materially affect our argument, we pre- or less complex.Medicines, special foods,
fer for simplicity's sake, to use throughout l)etler air, might in like manner be instanced
the popular mode of expression. as producing multiplied results.
Perhaps it will be further objected, that to Now it needs only to consider that the
assign loss ot heat as the cause of any many changes thus wrought by one foico
. changes, is to attribute these changes not to upon an adult organism, will be in pait par-
a force, but to the absence of a force. And alleled in an embryo organism, to understand
this is true. Strictly speaking, tlie changes how heie also, the evolution of the homo-
should be attributed to those forces which geneous into the heterogeneous may be duo
come into action when the antagonist force to the production of many effects by one
is withdrawn. But though there is an inac- cause. The external heat and other agencies
curacy in saying that the freezing of water which determine the first complications of
is due to the less of its heat, no jiiactical the germ, may, by acting upon these, super-
error arises from it nor will a pajullul luxily
; induce further complications upon tliesu
;

of expression vitiate our ttattmeuls lespecl- stdl higher and more numerous ones and so ;

ing the multiplication of cllects. Indeed, the on continually each organ as it is developed
:

objection serves but to draw attenlinn to tlio serving, by its actions and reactions upon
fact, that not only does the exeiliun of u, the rest, to initiate new complexities. Tha
force produce more than one change, but the first pulsations of the foetal heart must simul^
withdrawal of a force produces more than taneously aid the unfolding of every part.
one change. And this suggesislhat pcrliaps The growth of each tissue, by taking from
the most correct statement of our general the blood special proportions of elements,
principle would be its most abstract state- must modify the constitution of the blood ;

ment— every change is followed by more and so must modify the nutrition of all the
than one other change. other tisiues. The heart's action, implying aa
Returning to the thread of our exposition, it does a certain waste, necessitates an addi-
we have next to trace out, in organic tion to the blood of effete matters, which
progress, this same all-pervading principle. must influence the rest of the system, and
And here, where the evolution of the homo- perhaps, as some think, cause the formation
geneous into the heterogeneous was first ob- of excretory organs. The nervous connec-
served, the production of many changes by tions established among the viscera must
one cause is least easy to demonstrate. Tho further multiply their mutual influences :

development of a seed into a jjlant, or an and so continually.


ovum into an animal, is bo gradual, while the stronger becomes the probability ol
Still
forces which determine it are so involved, this view when we call to mind the fact,
and at the same lime sn unobtrusive, that it that the same germ may be evolved into
is difficult to detect the multiplication of different forma according to circumstances.
efifecls which iselsewhere eoobvious. Never- Thus, during its earlier stages, every embryo
theless, guided by indirect evidence, we may is sexless —
becomes either male or female as
pretty safelj' reach the conclusion that here the balance of forces acting upon it deter-
too the law liolds. mines. Again, it is a well-establishei! fact
Observe, first, how numerous are the effects that the larva of a working-bes will develop
which any marked change woiks upon an into a queen-bee, if, before it is too late, its
arlult —
organism a human being, for in- food be changed to that on which the larvae
stance. An alarming sound or sight, besides of queen-bees are fed. Even more remark-
the impressions on the organs ef sense and able is the case of certain cntozoa. The ovum
the nerves, may produce a start, a scream, a of a tape-worm, getting into its natural
distortion of the face, a trembling conse- habitat, the intestine, unfolds into the well-
quent upon a general muscular relaxation, a known form of its parent but if carried, as
;

burst of perspiration, an excited action of it frequenll}' is, into other parts of tha sys-
the heart, a rush of blood to the brain, fol- tem, it becomes a sac-like cieature, called by
lowed possibly by arrest of the heart's action —
naturalists the /Hohinocooaas acreatuie sjex-
and by syncope and if the system be feeble,
: tremely different from the tape-worm in as-
Hn indisposition with its leng train of com- pect and structure that only after careful
;;

248 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AISTD CAUSE.

Investigations has it been proved to have fie find that the production of many effects liy
kam'B origin. All whicli instances imply that one cause, which, as already shown, has
eaali aJv.mce in emliryimio coruplicalijn le- been all along increasing the physical hetero-
sulls from the acli.m of incident forces upoa geneity ot the earth, has further involved an
the complication previously e.visting. increasing heterogeneity iu its floia and
Indeed, we may tinil a priori reason to fauna, individually and collectively. An il-
thinli tliat tlie evolution proceuds after this lustiation will make this clear.
nanii'-T. For since it is now known that uo Suppose that by a series of upheavals, oc-
;i3(in, anim:il or vegetable, contains tlie curring, as they are now known to do, at long
iliglltest rudiment, trace, or indication of the intervals, the Bast Indian Archipelago were
future organism— now that the microscope to be, step by step, raised into a continent,
has shown us that llio first process set up in and a chain of mountains formed along the
every fertilized germ is a process of re- axis of elevation. By the first of these up-
peated spontaneous fissions, ending in the heavals, the plants and animals inhabiting
production of a mass of cells, not one of Borneo, Sumatra, JSTew Guinea, and the lesi,
which exhibits any special character: there would be subjected to slightly modified sets
seems n.i alternative but to suppose that the of conditions. The climate in general would
partial organization at any moment subsist- be altered in tcmpeialure, in iiumidily, and
ing in a growing embryo, is transformed by in its periodical variations ; while the local
the agencies acting upon it into the succeed- differences would be multiplied. These
ing puase of organization, and this into the modifications would affect, peihaps inappre-
next, until, througli ever increasing com- ciably, the entire floia and fauna of the re-
olexities, the ullimito form is reached. gion. The change cf le-. el would produce
Thus, though the sublilty of the forces and additional modifications: varjing in differ-
he slowness of (he results prevent us from ent species, and also in different members of
Ureetly showing that the stages of increas- the same species, according to their distance
ig hfiterogfueity through which every em- from the axis of elevation. Plant.'', growing
ryo passes, severally arise from the produc- only on the sea-shore in special localities, ,

;on ot many changes by one force, yet, ia- might become extinct. Others, living only
i.rectly, we have strong evidence that they in swamps of a certain humidity, -would, if
they survived at all, probably undergo visi-
We hive marked Iiow multitudinous are ble changes of appearance. While flill great-
J effects which one cauSe may generate in an er alterations would occur in the plants grad-
ull organism ; that, a like multiplication ot ually spreading over the lands newly laiscd
t^cts must happen in the unfolding orjian- above the sea. The animals and insects liv-
iii we have observed in sundry illustiative ing on these modified plants, would them-
ises ; further, it has been pointed out tliat selves be in some degree modified by change
ae abilii;y which like germs have to origi- of food, as well as by change of climate
lale unlike forms, implies that the successive and the modification would be more marked
ransformations result from the new changes where, from the dwindling or disappearance
uperindueed on previous changes and we ; of one kinil of plant, an allied kind was
lave seen that structureless as every germ eaten. In the lapse of the many geneiatioDS
rigiually is, tlie development ot an organ- arising before the next upheaval, the sensible
mi out of it is otherwise incomprehensible, or insensible alterations thus produced in
-fot indeed, tliat we can thus really explain —
each species would become organized there
lie production of any plant or animal. We would be a more or less complete adaptation
re still in the dark respecting those myste- to the new conditions. The next upheaval
ious propel lies in virtue of whicli the germ, would superinduce further organic changes,
/hen subject to fit influences, undergoes the implying wider divergences from the primary
leeial changes that bugin the series of Irans- forms, and so repeatedly.
iiuiatious. All WB aim to sliow is that, But now let it be observed that the revolu-
ven a germ pos^sessing these mysterious tion thus resulting would not be a substitu-
operties, tbo evolution of an organism tion of a thousand more or less modified -

irn it probably depends upon that multi- species for the thousand original species
icalijn of effects whicli we have seen to be but in place of the tliousand original species ,

e cause of progress In general, so far as we there would arise several thousand species, or
ive yet traced it.
vaiieties, or changed foims. Each species
When, leaving the development of single being distributed over an area of some extent,
ants and animals, we pass to that of the and tending continually to colonize the new
ith's floia and fauna, the course of our area exposed, its different members would bo
gumcnt again becomes clear and simple, subject to different sets of changes. Plants
iiough, as was admitted iu the first pait of and animals spreading toward the equator
is aiticlc, the fragmentary fads palteon- would not be affected in the same way with
logy has accumulated, do not clearly war- others spreading from it. Those spreading
ut us iu saying that, in the lapse of geo- toward the new shores would undeigo
gic lime, there luivc been evolved more changes unlike the changes undergone by
:lerogeneou3 organisms, and more hetero- those spreading into the mountains. Thus,
neous assemblages of oiganisms, yet we each original race of organisms would become
all now see tliat there mind ever have been
the root from which diverged seveial races
iendency towaid these results. We
ehali differinji more or less from it and from each
— i
..

PROGRESS: ITS LAW A^'D CAUSE. 9,10^.,


219

other ;and while some of tliefe mislit subse- of life, gains immensely in weight on finding
quently disappear, piobably moie than ons it to be in harmony wilh an inrluction diawn
would survive m
the next geologic period :
from diieet expeiienee. Ju.st that di\er-
the very dispeiti u itself increasing the pcnce of many
laees lium cue race, Which
chances of survival. Not only would there we inferred niust have been continually oc-
he certnin mndilicatioDs thus caused by curiing during geologic time, we km w to
change of phy.siral conditions and food, but have (ccurred dniing the puhistoiic and
also in some easts olhcrmndifieations caused historic periods, in man and domestic uni-
by change < f habit. The fauna of each mals. And just that niultiplicalion of efl'i ets
i.-hind, pcoplino-, step by step, the newly- which we concluded must have pioduce d the
raised t'lict-i. would eventually come in con- fiist, we see lias pioduced the liisit. tingle
tact witli the fauuas of oilier islands ;and causes, as fanuuc, pressure of pr puliiiion,
some members of these other faunas would war, have periodically led to fuilher disper-
be unlike any creatures before seen. Her- sions of mankind and of dependint ciiat-
bivores meeting with new beasts of prey, xires each sueh dispeision inilialirg new
:

would, in some cases, lie led into modes of moditications, new vaiieties of j pe. "W lie her
I I

defence or escape differmg from those pre- all the human races be or be not deiived
viously used and simultaneously the beasts
; from one stock, philology makes it clear that
of prey would modify their modes of pursuit whole groups of races now easily distinguish-
and attack. We know that when circum- able from each other were originally one lace
stances demand it, such changes of habit da —that the diilusion eif cue race into differ-
take place in animals an.l we Isuow that if
;
ent climates and conditions of txi,':|ence has
the- new habits become the dcmiuant ones, produced many modified forms of il.
they must eventually in some degree alter the Similarly wilh domestic animals. Though,
organizalion. in some cases — —
as that of dogs cnmmunily
Observe, now, linwever. a further crnse- cf origin will perhaps be disputed, yet iu
qnsnce. Theie must arise not simply a tend- —
other cases as that of the sheep or tlic cattle

ency towaid the diffeientiatioii of each race eif our own country it will not be ques-
of organisms into several races ; but also a tioned that local differences of climate, fuod,
tendency to the occasional productitn of a and liealment, have transformed oneoriginaL
somewhat higher organism. Taktn in the breed inio numerous breeds now beer nie so
mass tlitse divergent vaiietics ^^hicb have far dislinct as to produce unstable h) bi ids.
been caused by fresh physical coBdili( ns and Moreover, through the complications of
habits of life will exhibit changes quile in- effects flowing from single causes, we hero
definite in kind and degree ; and changes find, what we before inferred, not only aui
that do not nectssaiily ct^n.'^tilute an advance. increase of general lieterogeneity, but also of
Piobably in most cases themcdilitd Ijpe will special heterogeneity. While eif the di^ergenti
be neither mere nor less heterogeneous than divisions and subdivisions of the human lace,,
ttie original one. In some cases the habits many have undergone e^hanges not coiislilu-.
of life adopted being simpler than bcfoie, a, ting an advance while iusome the type mayi
;

hss helerogcnecus fctiuetuie will result:' have degraded iu others it has beceunc de--
;

there will be a retrogradation. But it must cidedly more heterogeneous. The civilized
now and then occur, that .'onie divTsien of a European departs more widely from the ver--
fpecies, falling into circumslances wlikh tebrate archetype than does the satiige.
give it ralhei more complex ixpuitnces, and Thus, both the law and the cause of [ire.g-
demand aeti^us tcmtwhat more invohed, ress, which, from lack of evidence, can be-
will have certain of ils organs fuilhcr differ- but hypotheticallysubslantialediu respect of
entiated in properlionately small dfgrtcs the earlier forms of life ou our globe, can be-
will become slightly moie heterogeneous. actually substantiated in respect of the latest,
Thus, in liienaiuial ctuise of things, there forms.
will from time to time arise an incieased If the advance of man toward greater- ,

heterogeneity both of the earth's floia and heterogeneity is traceable to the produciion.
fauna, and of individual races included in of many effects by one cause, still more
them. Omilling deiaikd explanations, and clearly may the advance of society toward
allowing for tie qualifications which cannot greater heterogeneity be so explained. Con-
here be spccilfied, we thjnk it is clear that sider the growth of an industrial organizi-
geological mutationshave all along tended to tion, Wnen, as must occasionally biippcu,
eomplicale the foims of life, whtlher re- sums individual of a tribj displays unusu-
paidtd sepaialely (;r collectively. The same al aptitude for making an article of gen-
causes which have kd to the evolution of the eral use — —
a weapon, for instance which was
earth's ciust from the simple into the com- before made by each man for himself, there
plex, have simultaneously led to a paiallel. arises a tendency toward the differentiation of
evolution of the life upon its surface. In that individual into a maker of such wea|)on.
this case, as in previous ones, we see that the —
His companions warriors and hunters all of
transformation of the homogeneous into the them— severally feel the importance of having
heterogeneous is consequent upon the pni- the best weapons that can be made and aie
;

versal principle, that every active force pro- therefore certain to offer strong inducements
duces more than one change. to this skilled individual to make weapons
The deduction here drawn from (he estab- fur them. He, on the other hand, having
lished truths of gecit'--'ry and the general laws not only an unusual faculty, but an unusual
;

aio PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

likiiio;, for miking such weapons (the talent where it already "exists, and establishes it
aii.l tim i.lesi.e l>e any occ ipilioa btiug com- where it is nascent. By increasing the press-,
m.)uly a=Hi)cia(ed), is pi'ii«lisp)sed tj fulfil ure on the means of subsistence, a larger
ttiesc uoiumi.s-ii jiH ou the offer of an adeqiiutu population again augments these lesults
rewind uspL-cially in liis )jve of distiuctiua
: seeiug that each person is forced more and
i3 gratified.
ttlaij Tiiis first specializatioa of more to confine himself to that whii ii lie can
fiiiicUivi, oiii;rj commence 1, tan ever to be- U do best, and by which he can gain most.
. side of the wea-
cuinii m.)ru decided. Ou the This industrial progress, by aiding futun^
pou-in.ilcer ooutimied practice gives increased
I
production, opens the way for a fuilhtr
skill: —
increased superiority to his produolg ; growth of population, which reacts as be-
on the^i le of his clients, cessation of practice
. fore in all which the uiultipiiciitiun of
:

1 entails dec ea3i3d skill. Tnns ihe influences


I effects is manifest. Presei.tly, under Ihese
Mhat determine this division of labor grow same stimuli, new occupations arise. Com-
sfltruoger in both ways and the incipient ;
peting workers, ever aiming to produce im-
t heterogeneity is, ou ihe average of cases, proved articles, occasionally disiover lietier
likely I ) become permanent for that genera-
.'
processes or raw materials. In weiipon.s irnd
tion, if no jnger.
I I cutting tools, the siibstitutiim of bioiize for
Observe aoiv, however, that this process stone entails upon him who first makes it a
not only differentiate* the sjuial mass into
: great increase of demand — so great an in-
two p.uts, the one minopolizing, or almost
1 crease that he presently finds iill his time
raon,)p)liziag, the perfjrm.ince of a certain
t occupied in making the bronze for the yrlicles
function, and the other h.ivmg lost the habit,
I he sells, and is obliged to depute the fashion-
.rand in some measure the p )wer, of perform- ing of these to otheis :and, evenliially, Ihe
. ing that .functioa ; but it ten Is to imitate making of bronze, thus giadualiy diffeien-
• other diffj 'enliatioas. Tiieaivauce we have tiated from a pre-existing occupation, be-


•,(lescribe I implies the intr jdiicti)n of barter
the maker of weapons has, on each occa-
Biou, 10 OB paid in such other articles as ha
comes an occupation by itself.
But now mark the lamifled changes which
follow this change. Bronze soon icplaces
; agrees to take in exchange. But he will njt stone, not only in the articles it was first
habituilly lake in etohangj one kini of —
used for, but in many otheis in aims, tools,
:arlicle, hut many kinds. He does n)t want and utensils of various kinds and tn affects
;

mats only, or skins, or fishing gear, but he the manufacture of these things. FuitLfr,
wants all these and on each oocasion will ; it affects the processes which these uitnsils
bargain for the particular things he most
I
subserve, and the resulting pre ducts— modi-
;,needs. What follows ? If among the raem- fies buildings, carvings, dress, pti tonal dec-
. hjrs of the tribe there exist any slight orations. Yet again, it sets gt.ing sundiy
.differences of skill in the manufacture of manufactures which were befoic in, possible,
. these various things, as there are almost sura fiom lack of a material fit fur the requisite
. to do, the weapon-maker will take from each tools. Anil all these changes react cnlhepeo-
' one the thing which that one exoils in mak- plj —
increase their manipulative ekiU, their
. ing he will exchange for mats with Uirn
:

whose mats are superior, and will bargdin for


intelligence, their —
comfort refine their hab-
itsand tastes. Thus the evolution of a ho-
; the fishing gear of whoever has the best. mogeneous society into a heterogeneous dm
. Blithe who has bartered away his mats or his is clearly consequent onthegcneialpiiiiciple
fi.sliing gear mu.st make other mats or fishing that many effects are produced by one cause.
..
gear tor himself and in so doing must, iu ; Our limits will not allow us to follow out
some degree, further develop his" aptitude. this process in its higher complications else
:

'
Thus it results that the small specialities of might we show how the localization of tpecial
If faculty possessed by various members industries in special parts »f a kingdom, ai
of tha
1 tribe will tend to grow more decided. If such well as the minute subdivision of labor inthe
I
transactions are from time to time repeated, making of each commodity, are similailj
; these specialii^ations may become appre- determined. Or, turning to a somewhat dif-
ciable. And whether or not there ensue dis- ferent order of illustrations, we might dwell
tiuct diffiirenlialions of other individuals into
makers of particular articles, it is clear that

on the multitudinous changes nuiteiial, in-
1
tellectual, moral— cause,! by piinting ;or the
incipient differentiations take place through-
: further extensive) series of changes wrought
out the tribe the one oriamal cause produces
'
: by gunpowder. But leaving the mteimediatt
not only the first dual effect, but a number
.
phases of social development, let us take a
'Of secondary dual effects, like in kind, but few illustrations from its most recent and its
iminor in degree. This process, of which passing phases. To trace the effects of
itraces may be seen among groups of school- steam-power, in its manifold applications to
Iboys, cannot well produce any lasting i-ffccts mining, navigation, and manufactures of all
in an unsettled tribe but where tl;ere grows ; kinds, would carry us into unmanageable
up a fixed and multiplyingcommunlty, these detail. Let us confine ourselves to the latest
differentiations become permanent, and in-
crease with each generation. larger pop. A engine.

embodiment of steam-power the locomotive
wlation, involving a greater demand for every This, as the proximate cause of our rail-
commodity, intensifies the functional activity way system, has changed the face of the
of each specialized person or class and this ; country, the course of trade, and the habits
leaders the specjulizatioa more definite of the people. Consider, first, the compli-

PROGRESS: ITS LAW AXD CAUSE. 251

cated sets of changes that precede the making tions introduced, and the many old ones
of evfciy railwiiy —
the provisional arrange- further specialized; prices in every place
menls, lliu meetings, Ihe registration, the trial have been altered ; each trader has, nroie or
feclion, Ihe pailianieuUuy survey, the liilio- less, nudified his way of doing business.;
graphed plans, tlie books of rcfeicnce, the and almost every person has been afllected iu
IochI deposits and notici:s, the application to his actions, thoughts, emotions.
Parliaiiunt, llie passing Standing Oidcrs Illustrations to the same effect might be
Comraillee, the fiisl, second, and Kiird read- indefinitely accumulated. Thai every influ-
ings each of whicli brief heads indicates a.
; ence brought to bear upon society works
mulliplicity of liausaction=, and the devel- multiplied effects, and that increase of htle-
opment of s\indry occupations as those of — roaent'ity is due to this mulliplicaticn of
engineers, surveyors, lilhngrapheis, pailia- effects, be seen iu the liistory of every
may
lEiKjtarY .igents, share-brokers ; and the cre- trade, every custom, every belief. But it is

aiion i.f sundry otheis as those of traffic- needless to give additional evidence of this.
takers, reference-takers. Consider, next, The only further fact demanding notice is,
the yet mure marked changes iniplitdiu rail- that we here see still more clearly than ever-,

way construction the cuttings, embankings, the truth before pointed out, thiit in propor-
luurn4rMiL;s, divtrsions of roads the build- ; tion as the area on which any force expends
ingof bridges and stations ; the layirrg down itself becomes heterogeneous, the results are
of ballast, sleepers, and rails the making ; in a yet higher degree multiplied in number
of engines, tenders, carriages and wagons : and kind. While among the primitive tribes
whicli processes, acting upon numerous to whom it was first known, caoutchouc
trades, increase the importation of timber, caused but a. few changes, among ourselves
the (juarrying of stoire, the manufacture of the changes have been so many and varied
iron, the mrning of coal, the burning of that the history of them occupies a volume.*
bricks institute a variety of special manu-
: • TJpon the small homogeneous community
factures weekly advertised in the Raihoay inhabiting one of the Hebrides the eUciric
Times ; and, finally, opeu the way to sundry telegraph would produce, were it used,
new occupations, as those of drivers, stokei'S, scarcely any results; but in England the
cleaners, plate-layers, etc., etc. And then results it produces are muUitudmous. Tiie
consider the changes, mote numerous and comparatively simple organization under
involved still, which railways in action pro- which our ancestors lived five centuries ago,
duce on the community at large. The organ- could have undergone but few modifications
ization of every buarness is more orlessmod- from an event like the recent one at Canton ;

ified ease of communication makes it better


: but now tho legislative decision respect intr it
to do directly what w as before done by pioxy ; sets up many hundreds of complex raodiHca-
agencies arc established where previously tions, each of which will be the parent of
they would not have paid goods aie obtained ;
numerous future ones.
from remote wholesale houses instead of near Space permitting, we could willingly have
retail unes, and or mmodities are used which pursued the argument in relation to all the
distance once rendered inaccessible. Again, subtler results of civilization. As befor-e,
the rapidity and small cost of carriage tend we showed that the law of progress to which
to specialize more than ever the industries of the organio and inorganic worlds conform, is
different districts —
to confine each manufac- also conformed to by language, sculptuie,
ture to the parts in which, from local advan- music, etc.; so might we here show that tlm
tages, it can be best carried on. Further, cause which we have hitherto found to de-
the diminished cost of carriage, facilitating termine progress holds in these cases also.
distribution, equalizes prices, and also, on We might demonstrate in detail how, in sci-
the average, lowers prices thus bringing : ence, an advance of one division presently
divers articles within the means of those be- advances other divisions— how astronomy
fore unable to buy them, and so increasing has been immensely forwarded by discoveries
their comforts and improving their habits. iu optics, while other optical discoveries have
At the same time the practice of travelling is initiated microscopic anatomy, and greatly
immensely extended. Classes who never aided the growth of physiology liow chem- —
before thought of it, take annual trips to the istry has indirectly increased uur kuowlodga
sea ; visit their distant relations ; make of electric'ty, magnetism, biology, geology
tours and so we are benefited m body, feel-
; how electricity has reacted on cliemistry, and
ings, and intellect. Moreover, the more magnetism, ilevelopedour views of light and
prompt transmission of letters and of news heat, and disclosed sundry laws of nervous
produces further changes makes the pulse — action. . I

of the nation faster, xet imoie, there arises In literature the same truth might be ex-
a wide disstmination of cheap literature hibited in the manifold effects of the primi-
through railway bookstalls, and of adver- tive mystery-play, not only as originating tlue
tisements in railwaj- carriages both of them : modern drama, but as affecting througti it
aiding ulterior progress. other kinds of poetry and fiction ; or iu the
And all the innunjerable changes here still multiplying forms of periodical litera-
biitfly indicated are consequent on the inven- ture that have descended from the first news-
tion of the locomotive engine. The social * " Personal Narrative of tlie Oriain of the Caoat-
organism has been rendered more hetero- clionc, or India-Kubber Manufacdue in Bnglasd."
geneous in virtue of the many new occupa- 67 Thomari Hancock.
; ; ; 1

g.'JS PROGRESS. ITS LAW AXD CAUSE.

paper, aa.l which have severally acted and to their genesis as manifested to the human
iy,tcte i ou titerature and on
otiier f jims of con.sciousness. After all that has been said,
ouch oilier, The influence which a new the ullimate mystery remains just as it was.
sdiaiil of piiintina; — a3 uf the pre-R.iif lel-
'.liat The explanatirm of that which is explicable
ito-i — r\L-(cises upon schools the hints
iitlier ;
doe^ but bring out into great er clearness the
which all kinds of pictorial art are deriving inexplicahleuess of that which remains be-
liMin pliolo,;5rapliy the complex results of
;
hind. However we may succeed in reducing
noWr'iUical doctrines, as those of Mr, Rus- the equation to its lowest terms, we are not
kia, raigiit severady be dwelt upon as dis- thereby enabled to determine tire unknown
ptMyiti:^- the like multiprcatiou of effects. quantity : on the contrary, it only becomes
B it it would needlessly tax the reader's pa- more manifest that the unknown quantity
tience to pursue, in their many ramifications, can never be found.
these various changes here become so in-
: Little as it seems to do so, fearless inquiry
viilved and subtle as to be followed with tends continually to give a firmer basis to all
some difficulty. true religion. The timid sectarian, alarmed
Without further evidence, we venture to at the progress of knowledge, obliged ft
thinli our case is mada out. The imperfec- abandon one by one the superstitions of his
tions of statement which brevity has necessi- ancestors, and daily finding hischcri.shtd be
tated d ) not, we b :lieve, militate against the liefs more and more shaken, secietl^' fearf
proposilions laid down. The qualifications that all things may some day be explained,
ho/e and there demanded would not, it made, and has a corresponding dread of science
affect the inferences. Though in one ia- thus evincing the protoundest of all infidelity
elituce, where suthcient evidence is not at- — the fear lest the truth be bad. On the other
tainalile, we have been unable to show that hand, the sincere man of science, content to
the law of progress applies, yet there is high follow wherever the evidence leads him, be-
probability that the same generalization comes by each new inquiry more profoundly
holds which holds throughout the rest of convinced thai the universe is au insoluble
creation. Though, in tracing the gtniesis of problem. Alike in the external and the inter
progft'sa, we have frequently spoken of com- nal worlds, he sees himself in the midst of
Jilux causes as if they were simple ones, it perpetual changes, of which he can discover
tiJiJl remains true that such causes are far less neither the beginning nor the end. If,v

cjoipie.v than their results. Detailed criti- tracing back the evolution of things, he al-
cisiu-i canuol affect our main position. End- lows himself to entertain the hypothesis that
Jus,s liicLs go to show that every kind of prog- all matter once existed in a diffused form, hf
res., ii from Jhe homogeneous to the hetero- finds it utterly impossible to conceive how
geneous, and that it is so because each change this came to be so ; and equally, if she pecu-
is followrd by many changes. And it is lateson the future, he can assign no'ITmit to'
fignifioint that where the facts are most ac- the grand succession of phenomena ever un-
ce^Miile and abundant, there are these truths foldiai; themselves before him. On the other
raosl maid'esl. hand, if he looks inward, he peictives that
Hiwuver, to avoid committing ourselves to both terminations of tkethiead of conscious-
in H'o thau is yet proved, we must be content ness are beyond his grasp he cannot remem-
:

wiih .sayiug that such are the law and the ber when or how consciousness commenced,
cause of all progress that is known to us. and he cannot examine the conscioueneas
Should the nebular hypothesis ever be es- that at any moment exists for only a state
;

tablished, then it will become manifest that of consciousness that is already past can be
the universe at large, like every organism, come the object of thought, and never one
was once homogeneous that as a whole, and ; which is passing.
ju eveiy detail, it has unceasingly advanced When, again, he turns from the succession
toward greater heterogeneity and that its ; of phenomena, external or internal, to their
heterogeneity is still increasing. It will be essential nature, he is equally at fault.
seen that as in each event of to-day, so from Though he may succeed in resolving all prop-
(he beginning, the decomposition of every ex- erties of objects intomanifestations"of force,
pended force into several forces has bet n per- he is not thereby enabled to realize what force
petually producing a higher complication is ; but finds, on the contrary, that the more
that the increase of heterogeneity so brought he thinks about it the more be is baffled.
about going on, and must continue to
is still Similarly, though analysis of mental actions
go on and that thus progress is not an ac-
; may finally bring him down to sensations as
cident, not a thing within human control, the original materials out of which all
but
a beneficent necessity. thought is woven, he is none the forwarder
A few words must be added on the onto- for he cannot in the least comprehend sen-
Ingical bearings of our argument. Probably sation—cannot even conceive how sensation
not a few will conclude that here is an at- is possible. Inward and outward things ho
tempted solution of the great questions with thus discovers to be alike inscrutable in their
which philosophy in all ages has perplexed ultimate genesis and nature. He sees that
rtself. Let none thus deceive themselves. the materialist and spiritualist controversy is
Only such as know not the scope and the a mere war of words the disputants being
;

limits of science can fall into so grave equally absurd— each believing he under-
an
upror. The foregoing generalizations apply stands that which it is impossible for any
uol to the genesis of things m
themselves but man to understand. In all directions Uis in-
'

PROGRESS; ITS LA"W" AND CAUSE. 1

restigations eventually bring him face to face mollusks, are considered by physiologists to
witli the iin^'in^viM" and he -jver more
,-
be as purely automatic as is the dilatation or
clearly perceives it to be the unknowable. closuie of the iris under variations in quan-
He learns at once the greatness and the little- tity of light and similarly exemplify the
;

ness of human intellect— its power in dealing law, that an impression on the end of au
with all that comes within the range of ex- affeient nerve is conveyedtosomeganglionic
perience ; its impotence in deaUai,- with all centre, and is thence usually reflected along
that transcends experience, ile teels, v.dh an eSerent ueive to one or more muscles
a vividness which no otheis can, the utlerin- which it causes to contract.
compiehinsibleness of the simplest fact, con- In a modified form this principle holds
sidered in itself. He alone tiuly sees that with voluntary acts. Nervous excitation al-
absolute knowledge is impossible. He alone ways tends to beget muscular motion and ;

knows that under all things there lies an im- when It rises to a certain intensity, alwaya
penetrable mystery. does beget it. Not only in reflex actions,
vfhether -with or without sensation, do we
II. see that special nerves, when raised to a,
state of tension, dischai'ge themselves oa
THE PHT8T0L0GT OP LAUGHTER. special muscles with which they are in-
Why do we smile when a child [luts on a directly eonnected but those external ac-
;

man's bat V or what induces >is to laugh on tions through which we read the feelings of
reading that the corpiUent Gibbon was un- others, show us that under any considerablt)
able to rise from his knees after making a tension the nervous 83'stem in general dis-
tender declaration ? The usual reply to such charges itself on the muscular system in gen-
questions is, that laughter results from a eral either with or without the guidance
:

perception of incongiuity. Even weie there of the will. The shivering produced by
not on this reply the olivious criticism that cold implies irregular muscular contrac-
laughter often occurs from extreme plcasuie tions, wliich, though at first only partly
or from mere -vivacity, there would still re- involuntary, become, when the cold is ex-
main the real problem, How comes a sense treme, almost wholly involuntary. When
of the incongiuous to be followed by these Jou have severely burned your finger, it is
peculiar bodily actions ? iSome have alleged very difhcult to preserve a dignified com-
that laughter is due to the pleasuieof a rela- posure contortion of face or movement Of
:

tive self -elevation, which we feel on seeing limb is pretty sure to follow. If a man re-
the humiliation of others. But this theory, ceives good uews with neither change of
whatever portion of truth it may contain, is, feature nor bodily motion, it is inferred that
in the first place, open to the fatal objection he is not much pleased, or that he has ex-
that there are various humiliations to others —
traordinary self-control either inference im-
which produce in us anything but laughter ;
plying that joy almost universally produces
and, in the second place, it does not apply contraction of the muscles and so alters tho
;

to the miiny instances in which no one's dig- expression, or attitude, or both. And whea
nity is implicated as when we laugh at a
: we hear of the feais of strength whicii meu
good pun. Moieover, like the other, it is have performed when their lives were at staka
merely a generalization of certain conditions — when we read how, in the energy of despair,
to laughter, and not an explanation of the even paralytic patients have regained for
Olid movements which occur under these a time the use of their limbs we see still —
conditions. Why, whtn gieally delighted, more clearly the relations between nervous
or impressed with certain unexpected con- and muscular excitements. It becomes
trij^ts of ideas, should there be a conti action manifest both that emotions and sensations
of "j ailicular facial muscles, and particular teud to generate liodily movements, and thsl;
muscles of the chest and abdomen? Such the movements are vehement in proportion
answer to this question as may be possible, as the emotions or sen3ath)us are intense.*
can be rendered only by physiology. This, however, is not the sole direction in
Every child has made the atttiupt to hold which nervous excitement (xpeuds itself.
the foot still while it is tickled, and has Viscera as well as muscles may receive tho
failed ;and probably there is scarcely any dischai-ge. That the heart and blood-vessela
one who has not vainly tried to avoid wink- (wliich, indeed, being all contractile, may ia
ing when a hand has been suddenly passed a restricted sense be classed with the muscu-
before the eyes. These examples of muscu- lar system) are quickly- affected by pleasures
lar movements which occur independently and pains, we havedaily proved to us. Every
of the will, or in spite of illustiale
it, wh^ sensation of any acuteness accelerates the
pli3'sioloffists call reflex actii'U as likewisfi
; pulse; and how
hcusitive the heart is to
do sneezing and coughing. To this class of emotions is by tlio familiar expres-
testified
which involuntary motions are ac-
cases, in sions which use heart and feeling as convert-
companied by sensations, hag to be added ible terms. Similarly with the digestivo
another class of cases, in whicli involuntary organs. Without detailing lhevari,)us waya
motions are unaccoinriauied by sensations : in which these may be influenced by our
instance the pulsations of the heart the ; i^nental states, it sutflces to mention tho
contractions of theslomachdunngdigefcti(,n.
Further, the great mass of seemingly volun- * For numerous illnptrations aee eeaay on "Tk«
tary acts in such creatures as insects, worms, Origia and i'unciion of Mueic,"
— ;

PR0GKES3: ITS LATV AND CATJSE.

mailted benefits deriverl by dyspeptics, as leellng, and the new ideas appropriate to it
well iis oilier invalids, fiom cheerful society, but a certain portion overflows inlothe vis-
Welcome news, cliiiiige of sceue, to show ceral nervous system, increasing the actiua
lijw pleasurable feelio;; stimulates the vis- of the heart, and probably facililaling diges-
ecra in geueral into greater activity. tion. And here we come upon a class of con-
TJiere is still another direction in which sidoralions and facts which open the way to
any excited portion of the nervous system a solution of our special problem.
in:iv discharge itself ; and a direction in For stalling with the unquestionable
which it usually does discharge itself when truth, that at any moment the existing quan-
the excitement is not strong. It may pass tity of liberated nerve-force, which in an iu-
un the stimulus ti some other portion of the scrutable way produces in us the state we
nervous system. This is wliat occurs in call feeling, must expend itself in some di-
a[uiet lliinking and feeling. Tiie successive rection— toms< generate an equivalent mani-
atates which constitute cousciousness result festation of foice somewhere— it ckarly fol-
fiVdii this. Sensations excite ideas and eino lows that, if of the several channels it may
tious ; these in their turns arouse other ideas take, one is wholly or partially closed, moie
and emotions; and so, continuously. That must be taken by Ihe others or that if two
;

is to say, the tension existing in particular are closed, the discharge along the remaining
Hfirves, or groups of nerves, when they yield one must be more intense and that, con-
;

u-i certain sens-ations, ideas or emotions, gen- versely, should anything deteimine an un-|
erates an equivalent tension in some other usual effiux in one direction, there will be »
nerves, or groups of nerves, with which lliere diminished efflux in other directions.
is a cimneetion : the liow of energy passing Daily experience illustrates these conclu-
on. the one idea or feeling dies in producing sions. It is commonly remarked that the sup.
the lu'.xt. pression of external signs of feeling makes'
Thus, then, while we are totally unable to feeling more intense. The deepest giief is
comprehend how the excitement of certain silent grief. Why
? Because the nervouD
nerves should generate feeling— wliile in llie excitement not discharged in muscular action
pioluction of consciousness bj' physical dischaiges itself in other nervous excitements
b^iLMi.s acting on physical structure, we come
I., aa absolute mystery never to be solved
— arou.ses more numerous and mure rtmole
as3ociati<ins of melancholy ideas, and so in-
it i.i yet quite possible for us to know by ob- People who
creases the mass of feelings.
se V, II ion what are the successive forms conceal their anger are habilually found to be
W;ii,;i this absolute mystery may take. We more levengeful than those wlio explode ia
St.! ihat there are tliree channels along which
loud speech and vehement actior. Why?
n-A ves in a state of tension may discharge Btcause, as before, the emotion is reflected
theiuoelves or rather, 1 should say, thi'LC
;
back, accumulates, and intensifies. Simi-
cius^«s of channels. They may pass on the larly, men who, as proved by their powers of
exiitument to other nerves that have no di- represeutaiion, have the keenest apprecia-
rect toanections witli the bodily members tion of the comic, are usually able to do aud
and may so cause other feelings and ideas ; say the most ludicrous things with perfect
or iliey may pass on the excitement to one gravity. •

or m.iiu motor nerves, and so cause muscu- On the other hand, all are familiar with
lar contractions ;or lliey may pass on the the truth that bodily activity deadens emo-
exci'.emsnt to nerves which supply the vis- tion. Under great irritation we get relief by
cera, and may so stimulate one or more of walking about rapidly. Extreme effort in
these. the bootless attempt to achieve a desired end
For simplicity's sake, I have desciibed greatly diminishes the intensity of the deete.
these as alternative routiis, one or other of Those whj are forced to exeit tbemselTeu
which any current of nerve-force must take ; after misfortunes do not suffer nearly so
thereby, as ic may be thoiiglil, implying much as those who remain quiescent. If
l^at such current will be exclusively con- an}'- one wishes to checls intellectual excite-
fined to some one of them. But this is by no ment, he canuot choose a more effleient
means the case. Rarely, if ever, does it hap- method t ban running till he is exhausted.
pen that a state of nervous tension, present Moreover, these cases, in' which the pro-
to consciousness as a feehng, expends itself
duction of feeling and thought is hindered
in one direction only. Yery gpneially it may
by determining the nervous energy toward
be observed to expend itself in two audit is
bodily movements have their counlerpaits iu
;

probable that the discliarge is never abso-


the cases in which bodily movements are
lutely absent from any one of the three.
hindered by extra absorption of nervous
TJiere is, however, variety in the propmiious
energy in sudden thoughts and feelings. If,
in which the discharge is divided among
when walking along, there flashes onVou an
these diilereut channels under different cir-
idea that creates great surprise, hope, or
cumstances. Ill a man whose fear impels him
alarm, you stop or if -fitting cross legged,
;
to tun, the mental tension generated is only
swinging your pendent foot, the movement
in part transformed intoamuscular stimulus
there is a surplus which causes a lapid cur-
;
is at once arrested. From the viscera, too,
intense mental action abstracts energy. Joy,
r«nt of ideas. An agreeable state of feehng disapnoiniment, anxiety, or any moral per-
produced, say liy praise, is not wholly used
turbation rising to a great height will destroy
up In arousing the succeeding phase of the appetite or if food has been taken, will ar-
;
"

PEOGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE. 2.'55

rest digestion ; and even a purely intellectual Siitlons we breathe more rapidly possibly :

uctlvily, when extiorne. will do the like. as a consequence of the increased demand for
Facts, tlien, fully bear out these d priori oxygenated blood. The sensations that accom-
infeicucc's, that the nervous exeitement at pany exertion also bring on haid-brealliing ;

any moment present to consciousness as which here moie evidently responds to the
fctliug must expend itself in some way or physiological needs. And emotions,! oo, agree-
ether ; of the three classes of channels
tiiat able and disagreeable, bolli, at first, excite
open to it, must lake one, two, or moie,
it respiration lliough the last subsequently de-
;

aeeonliug lo circumstances thai the closure


; pressit. That isJo say, of the bodily muscles.
or obslruclioii of one niu^t increase the <'tis- the respiratory are more constantly implicated
<-haii:o through the others; ;ind conversely, thanauy others inthosc various acts whieli our
that if to answer some demand, the etilux of feelings impel us to and, hence, when there
;

nervous energy in one direction is unusually occurs an undirected discharge of nervous


great, there must he a corresponding de- energy into the muscular system, it happens
crease of the ctHux in other dueelioos. Set- that, it the qu-antity be consideiable, it con-
ting out fiom these premises, let us now see vulses not only certain of the articulatoiy
what iatLTprelation is to be put on the phe- and vocal muscles, but also those which ex-
nomena of hiujhtcr. pel air from the lungs.
That laughter is a display of muscular ex- Should the feeling to be expended be still
citemenl, and so illustratrs the general law —
greater in amount too great lo find vent iu
that feehn;; passing a certain pitcli habitually these classes of muscles iinolher —
class
vents ilhcit in bodily action, scarcely needs jomes into jilay. The upper limbs are set in
pointmg out. It perhaps needs poinling out, mjtiou. Children frequently clap their
however, that strong feeling of almost any hands in glee by some adults the hands are
;

kind produces this result. It is not a sense rubbed together ; aad utheis, under still
of the ludicrous, only, which does it nor ; greater intensity of delight, slap their knees
are the variius foims of joyous emotion the and sway their bodies backward and for-
sole additional causes. We
have, besides the ward. Last of all, when the other channels
sardonic laughter and the hysterical hmghter, for the escape of the surplus nervo force
which result from mental distress to wdiich
; have been filled to overflowing, a yet further
must be added certain sensations, as tickling, and less-used group of muscles is spasmodi-
and, according to Mr. Bain, cold, and some cally affected the head is thrown back and
:

kimls of acute pain. —


the spine bent inward there is a slight degree
Btiung feeling, mental or physical, being, of what medical men cal'l opislliotouos.
then, the gcneial cause of laughter, we have Thus, then, without contending that the
to note that the muscular actions constUuting pheuomena of laughter in all th'Jr details
It are di.sliiiguished from most others by this, are to be so accounted for, we see that iu
that thiy aie purposeless. In general, bodily theirt'7jse;raAfe they conform to these general
motions that are prompted by feelings are di- principles that feeling excites to muscular
:

lected to special ends as when wo try to es-


; action that wheu the muscular action is un-
;

cape a danger, or struggle to secure agrati- guided by a purpose, the muscles first
ticatiou. But the mo/tmenls of chest and aliected are those which feeling most habit-
limbs which we make when laughing have ually stimulates and that as the feeling to
;

no object. And now lemaik that these be expended increases iu quantity, it excites
quasi-convulsive contractions of the muscles an increasing number of muscles, in a suc-
having no object, but being results of an un- cession determined by the relative fieqiieuoy
controlled discharge of energy, we may see with which they respond lo the regulated
whence arise their special characters how — dictates of feeling.
it happens that ceitain classes of muscles Tliere still, however, remains the question
are ailectcd first, and then certain other with which we set out. The explanation
classes. For an overflDW of nerve force, here given applies only to tlie laugliter pro-
undirected by any motive, will manifestly duced bj' acute pleasure or pain it does not :

take first the most habitual routes and if ; apply to the laughter that follows certain per-
these do not sulHce, will next oveiflow into ce|)tions of incongruity. It is an insuiUcieut
the less habitual ones. Well, it is through explanation that in these cases JaughtLr is a
the oigans of speech that feeling passes into result of the pleasure we take in escaoing.
movement with the greatest frequency. The from the restraint of grave feelings. That
jaws, tongue, and lips are used not only to this is a part cause is true. D.mbTless very
expiess strong initation orgraliticatiou but ; often, as Mr. Bain says, "it is the coerced-
that very modeiate flow of mental energy form of seriousness and solemnity without
which accompanies ordinary conversation, the reality that gives us that stiff position
finds its chief vent through this channel. from which a conlact with triviality or vul-
Hence it happens that certain muscles garity relieves us, to our uproarious lielight.
round the mouth, small and easy to move, Aud in so far as mirth is caused by the
aie the first to contract under pleasurable gush of agreeable feeling that follows tlie
emotion. The class of muscles which, next cessation of mental st.'ain, it fiirtlier illus-
after those of articulation, are most con- trates the general principle above set fortli.
stantly set in action (or exl ra action, we should But no explanation is thus afforded of lliQ
say) by feelings of all kinds, are those of res- iniith which ensues when the short silence
piration. Under pleasuiable or painful sen- between the andante and allegro in one of
; '

256 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

Beethoven's symphouies, is broken by aloud feeling suggested are not numerous and
sneezu. In Ihis, and hosts of liko cases, the massive enough to carry off the nervous
mental tension is nut coerced but spoutaneous energy to be expended. The excess must,
—not disagreeable but agreeable and the ; therefore discharge itself in some other direc-
coming impressions to wliich the attention is tion and in tho way already explained,
;

directed promise a graliflcation that few, if there results an efflux thrcugli the.nlotor
any, desire to escape. Hence, wlieu tlie un- nerves to various classes of the muscles, pro-
lucky sneeze occurs, it cannot be that the ducing the lialf-cpnvulsive actions we teria
laughter of the audience is diiq simply to the laugliter.
releasefrom an irksome altitude of mind : This explanation is in harmony with the
some other cause mast bj sought. fact, that when, among sevend persons wbo
This cuuse we shall anive at by carrying wilnebS the samo ludicrous occurrence, there
our analysis a step farther. We have but
to are soms who do m.t laugh it is because
;

consider the quantity of feeling that exists there has arisen in them an emotion not par-
under such circumstances, and then to ask ticipated iu by the rest.uud which is sufficitnl-
what are the conditions that determine tho ly massive to absorb all the nascent excite-
direction of discharge, to at once reach
its ment. Among the speclatois of an awkward
a solution. Take a case. You are sitting ia tumble, those who preserve their gravity are
a theatre, absorbed in tho progress of an in- those in whom there is excited, a degree of
teresting drama. Some climax lias been sympathy with the sufferer, sufficiently great
reached which has aroused your sympathies to serve as an outlet for the feeling which
— say, a reconciliation between the hero and the occurrence had larnrd out of its previous
heroine, after long and painful misunder- course. Sometimes anger carries oil the
standing. The feelmgs excited by this scene arrested current, and so jireveuls laughter.
are not of a kind from which yuu seek re- An instance of (his was lidcly furnished me
lief ;but are, on tho contrary, a grateful re- by a friend who had been witnessing the
lief from the painful feelings with which you feats at Franconi's. A
tipoienilous leap had
lia'.'o witnessed the previous estrangement. jast been made by an acrobat over a number
Moreover, the sentiments these fictitious per- of horses. The clown, seemingh' envious of
sonages have fur the moment inspired you this success, made ostentatious pii.paralion
with, are not such as would lead you to re- for djiug the like and then, taking the ptc-
;

joice iu auy indignity offered to them but


; limmary run with immense cneigj', stopped
rather, such as would make you resent the short on reaching the first horse, and pre-
indignity. And now, while you are contem- tended to wipe some dust from its liaunchcs.
plating the reconciliation with a plsasurable In the majority of the spectators merriment
sympathy, there appears from behind the was excited ; but in my
friend, Vi'ound up by
scenes a tame kid, which, having stared the expectation of the coming leap to a Htalu
round at the audience, walks up to the lovers of gieat nervous tension, the effect of the
and sniffs at tliem. Yoa cannot help joining balk was to produce indignatfon. Exptui-
in the roar which greets this contretemps. cnce thus proves what the theory implies—
Inexplicable as is this irresistible burst on namely, that the discharge of arrested feel-
the liypothesis of a pleasure in escaping from ings juto the muscular system fakes place
mental restraint, or on the hypothesis of a only in the absence of oilier adequate chau-
pleasure from relative increase of self impor- iiels-— does not take place if there arise other
tance when witnessing the humiliation of feelings equal in amount to those arrested.
others, it is readily explicable if we consider Evidence still more conclusive is at hand.
what, in such a case, must become of the If wecontrast the incongruities which pro-
feeling that existed at the moment the incon- duce laughter with those which do not, we
gruity arose. A large mass of emotion had at once see thatiu the non ludicrous ones the
been produced or, to speak in physiological
; unexpected stale of feeling aioused, though -

language, a large portion of the nervous sys- wholly different iu kin:l, is not less in quan-
tem was iu a state of tension. There was tity or intensity. Among incongruities that
also great expectation with respect to the may excite anything but a laugh, Mr. Bain

further evolution of the scene a quantity of instances : "A decrepit man under a heavy
vague, nascent thought and emotion, into burden, five loaves and two fishes amomr a
which the existing quantity of thought and multitude, and all unfitness and gross (dis-
emotion was about to pass. proportion an instrument out of tune, a fly
;

Hud there been no interruption, the body iu ointment, snow in May, Archimedes
of new ideas and feelings next excited would studying geometry in a siege, and all discor-
have sufficed to absorb the whole of the lib- dant things a wolf iu sheep's clothing, a
;.

erated nervous energy. But now, this large breach of bargain, and falsehood in general,
amount of nervoun energy, instead of bciu.u- the multitude taking the law in their own
allowed to expend itself in producing an hands, and everythiiig of the nature of dis-
equivalent amount of the new thoughts and order a corpse at a feast, parental cruelty,
;

emotions which were nascent, is suddenly filial ingratitude, and whatever is unnatural
checked in its flow. The channels along the entire catalogue of the vanities given by
which the discharge was about to take place Solomon are all incongruous, but they cause
are closed. The new channel opened— that feelings of pain, anger, sadness, loathing,
afforded by the appearance and proceedings rather than mirth." ]^low, in these cases,
of the kid— is a small one the ideaa and
; where the totally unlike state of conscious-

PROGRESS: ITS LAW AXD CAUSE. 357

•\ess suddenly produced is not Inferior in ing before a master, has often disabled him
mass to the preceding one, the conditions to from repeating a lesson which he had duly
mugliler aie nut fultilled. As above shown, learned. In explanation of this we com-
?aught€r natut-illy results only when cim- monly say that the attention is distracted
.ciousness i:j unawares Iruusferied from great that the proper train of ideas is inoken by
liings to small — only vheu there is what we the intrusion of ideas that are irielevant.
:all a descending incongi uily. But the question is, in what manner does
And now ol .-jerve, finally, Ihe fact, alike unusual emotion produce this effect and we ;

nferablo a prioii and illuslrated in expui are here supplied with a tolerably obvious
fuce, that an aKceiiding inc( ngruity not only answer. The repetition of a lesson, or set
'ails to cause laughtir, hut woiks on the speech previously thuuglit out, implies the
nuscular sjstem an tifect of exactly the le- How of a very moderate amount of nervous
fersn k nrl. "When after sometliing very iu- sxcitement througli a comparativelj' narrow
ngniticEUit there arises without auticijiation channel. The thing to be done is simply to
umelliing veiy gitat, the emotion we call call up in succession certain previously-
wont'er results and this tUiOtiou is accom-
; —
arranged ideas a process in which no great
panied n<,t by an txcii( nieut of the muiif as, aurount of menf-d energy is expended.
but by a ic"lax:itiin of thim. In cliildien Hence, when there is a large quantity of
and cpiiiitrj- people, that falling of the jaw emotion, which must be discharged in some
which occurs on witnessing something lliat direction cjr other and when, as usually
;

i< imposiug and unexpected, exemplities th;s happens, the restricted series of intellectual
effect. Persons who have been wonder- actions to begone through does not sufliee to
struclc at the pioducti'-.n of veiy striking le- carry it off, there result discharges along
sulls by a stemingly inadequate cause, are other chaunels besides the oue prescribed :

frequently des-cilbed as unconsciously drop- there are aroused various ideas foreign to the
ping (he things they held in their hands. train of thought to lie pursued and the.se ;

Such aie just the effects to be anticipated. tend to exclude from consciousness those
After an aM-rage state of coasciousness, which should occupy it.
absorbing but a" small quantity of nervous And now obserse the meaning of those
energ}', is aroused without the slightest bodily actions spontaneously set up under
notice, a strong emotion of awe, terror, or these circumstances. The schoolboy saying
admiration ;j; incd with the astonishment his lesson, cominoaly has his fingeis actively
due to an a[:partnt want of adequate caus-
ation. Thii new" slate of consciousness de-

engaged perhaps in twisting about a broken
pen, or perhaps squeezing the angle of his
mivjds far more nervous energy than that .jacket ; and if told to keep his hands still ho
which it has tuddculy replaced and this in-
; soon again falls into the same or a similar
creased absijrplion of nervous eneigy in trick. Many anecdotes are current cf public
mental changes invohes a tempoiaiy dimi- speakers having inciirable automatic actions
nution of the outflow in other directions : of this class barristeis who perpetually
:

whence the pendent; jaw and the relaxing wound and unwound pieces of tape mem- ;

grasp. bers of parliament evei' putting on and tak-


One further observation is worth making. ing off their spectacles. So long as such
Amorg the se\eral sets of channels into movements are unconscious, they facilitate
which surplus feeling might be discharged, Ihe mental actions. At least this seems a
was named the nervous system of thevisceia. fair inference from the fact that confusion
Tlie sudden overflow of an arrested mental frequently results from putting a stop is
excitement which, as we have seen, results fliem witness the caie nanated by Sir
:

from a descending incongruity, must doulit- Walter Scott of his schoolfellow, who became
less stimulate not only the muscular system, unable to say his les.son after the removal of
is we see it does, but also the internal the waistcoat-bulton that he habituallj' fin-
rgans the heart and stomach must come
; gered while in class. But why do they facili-
,Q fur a share of the discharge. And thus tate the mental actions ? Clearly because
here seems to be a good physiological basis they draw off i. poilijn of the suiplus ner-
'or the popular notion that mirlh-eieating vous excitement. If, as above explained, the
xcitement facilitates digestion. quantity of mental energy geneiated is
Though in doing so I go beyond the greater than can find vent along tire narrow
oundaiies of the immediate topic, I may channel of thougiit that is opeu to it and ;

'lly point cut that the method of inquiry if, in consequence, it is apt to produce con-

'ere followed is one v/hich enables us to fusion try rushing into other channels of
ndersland various phenomena besides those tliought then by allowing it an exit ihrough
;

f laughter. To show the importance of pur- the motor nerves into the muscular system
luing it, 1 will indicate the explanation it the pressure is diminished, and irrelevant
'urnislies of another familiar class of facts. ideas are less likely to intrude on conscious-
All kuow liow generally a large amount :>f ness.
-.'motion disturl)s the action of the intellect, This further illustration will^ i thiuk,
and interferes with the power of exptessitn, justify the position that something may be
A speech delivered with gieat facility to achieved by pursuing in other eases this
tables and chairs is by no means so easily method of psychologicai inquiry. com- A
delivered to an audience. Every schoolhoy plete explanation of the phenomena requires
can testify that his trepidation, when stand- us to trace out all the consequences of any
S.fS PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

given state of consciousness ; anil we cannot lar actions of amuch more decided kind. A
d.) iliis without studying the effects, bodily sudden twinge produces a convulsive start of
and mental, as varying in quantity at eacli the whole body. A
pain less violent, but
other' expense. We should probably learn continuous, is accompanied 'ny a knitting of
much if we in every case asked, Where is the brows, a setting of the teeth or biting of
all the nervous energy gone ? the lip and a contiaction of the features gen-
erally. Under a persistent pain of a severer
111. kind, oilier muscular actions are added the :

body is swayed to and fro the hands clinch


;

THE ORIGIN AND FUNCTION OF MUSIC. anything the^' can lay hold ol and should;

When Carloj standing chained to his the agony rise still higher the sufferer rolls
kennel, sees his master in the distance, a about~on the floor almost convulsed.
alight motion of the tail indicates his but Though more varied, the naluial language
feint hope that he is about to be let out. A of the pleasurable emotions ccmes within the
much more decided wagging of the tail, same generalization. A tmilc, which is the
passing by and by into lateral undulations of commonest expression of gratified feeling, 19
Zke body, follows his master's nearer ap- a contraction of certain facial muscles and ;

proai^h. When hands are laid on his collar, when the smile broadens into a laugh, wesie
and he knows that he is really to have an a niore violent and more general musculitr
outing, his jumping and wriggling are such excitement produced by an intenscr gratili.
that it is by no means easy to loose his fast- cation. Rubbing together of the hands, and
enings. And when he finds himself iiclually that other motion which Dickens somewhere
free, his joy expends itself in bounds, in describes as " washing with impalpable toap
pirouettes, and in scourings hither and thither in invisible water," have like implications.
at the top of his speed. Puss, too, bj' erect- Children may often be seen to "jump for
ing her tail, and by every time raising her joy." Even in adults of excitable temper-
back to meet the caressing hand of her mis- ament, an action approaching to it is some-
tress, siinilaily expresses her gratification by times witnessed. And dancing has all the
certain muscular action^ as likewise do the
; world through been regarded as natuial to
parrot by awkward dancing on his perch, an elevated state of mind. Many of the
and the canary by hopping and fluttering specialemotions show tliemselves in special
about his cage with unwonted rapidity. muscular actions. The gratification result-
Under emotions of an opposite kind, animals ing from success raises the head and gives
equally display muscular excitement. The firmness to the gait. A
hearty grasp of the
enraged lion lashes his sides with his tail, hand is currently taken as indicative of
knits Ins brows, iirotnides his claws. Thu friendship. Under a gush of afficii(in the
cat sets up her back the dog retracts his
; mother clasps her child to her breast, feeling
upper lip the horse throws back his ears.
; as though she could squeeze it to deaih. And
And in the struggles of creatures in pain, we so in sundry other cases. Even in that
see that the like relation holds between ex- brightening of the eye with which good news
citement of the muscles and excitement of is received we may trace the same truth for ;

the nerves of sensatioo. this appeiirance of greater brilliancy is due to


In ourselves, distinguished from lower an extra contraction of the muscle which
creatures as we are by feelings alike more raises the eyelid, and so allows more light to
powerful and more varied, parallel facts are at fall upon and iio reflected from the wet sur-
once more conspicuous and more numerous. face of the eyeball.
We may conveniently look at llieiu in gi oups. The bodily indications of painful emotions
We shall find that pleasurable sensations and are equally numerous, and still more vehe-
painful sensations, pleasurable emotions and ment. Discontent is shown by raised eye-
painfu) emotions, all tend to produce active brows and wrinkled forehead disgust by a
;

demonstrations in proportion to thtir inten- curl of the lip offence by a pout. The im^
;

sity. patient man beats a tattoo with his fingers


In children, and even in adults who are on the table, swings his pendent leg with inr
not resirained by regaid for appearances, a creasing rapidity,' gives needless pokingS to
highly agreeable taste is followed by a the fire, and presently paces with hasty strides
smacking of the lips. An infant will laugh about the room. In great giief there is
and bound in its nurse's arms at the sight^f wringing of the hands, aud e\cn tearing c,l
a brilliant color or the hearing of a new the hair. An angry child stamps, i.r rolls
sound. People are apt to beat time with on its back and kicks its heels in the air and
;

head or feet to music which particularly in manhood, anger, first showing itself ia
pleases them. In a sensitive person an agree- frowns, in distended nostrils, in compressed
able perfume will produce a smile ; and lips, goes on toproducegrindingof Iheteeth^
smiles ^viU be seen on the faces of a crowd clinching of the fingers, blows of the fist od
gazing at some splendid burst of fireworks. the table, and perhaps ends in a violent at-
Even the pleasant sensation of warmth felt tack on the offending person, or in throwing!
on getting to the fireside out of a winter's about and breaking the furnituie. From
storm, will similarly express itselt in the that pursing of tire mouth indicative of
face. slight displeasure, up to the frantic stmggles
Painful sensations, being mostly far more of the maniac, we shall find tliat mental irri-
intense thau pleasurable ones, cause muscu- tation tends to vent itself in bodily activity.
PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE. 269


All feelings, then sensations or emotions; thus account for the chief peculiarities

pleasurable or painful havu this common in the utterance of the feelings grouping
;

ehaiacteristic, that they are nmsoulai- stimuli. these peculiarities under the heads of loud-
Not forgetting the few apparentlj excep- ness, quality, or timbre, pitch, intervals, and
tional cases in which emotions exceeding a rate of variation.
certain intensity produce prostration, we may Between the lungs and the organs of voice
set it down as a general law that, aliite in there is much the same relation as between
man and animals, there is a direct connec- the bellows of an orsan and its pipes. And
tion between feeling and motion, the last as the loudness of the soun;! given out bj' an
growing more vehement as the first grows organ-pipe increases witlt the stienglh of the
more inlense. Were it allow able here to treat blast from the bellows ; so, other things
the matter scientifically, we might trace this equal, the loudness of a vocal sound increases
general law down to the principle known with the strength of the blast from the lungs.
among phj'siologists as that of reflex action* But the expulsion of air from the 1 ugs is
Without doing this, however, the above nu- effected by certain muscles of the chest and
merous instances justify Ihc gmeralization, abdomen. The force with which thuse mus-
that mental excitement of all kinds ends in cles contract is pruportionale to the intensity
excitement of the nuiscles'; and that the two of the fueling experienced. Hence, a priori,
preserve a more or less constant ratio to each loud sounds will be the liabilual results of
other. strong feelings. Tliat they are so we have
" But what has all this to do wilh ' The daily proof. The pain which, if moderate,
Origin and Fuucliun of Music?' " asks the cau be borne silently, causes outcries if it
reader. Vtiy much, as we sliall presently becomas extreme. While a slight vexation
see. All mnbic is oiigiiihlly vocal. All vocal makes a child whimper, a tit ot passion calls
sounds are produced by lbs agency of cer- forth a howl that dislurlis the neighborhood.
tain mntcles. These muscles, in common Wheu the voices in an adjacent room become
With llhse of the body at large, aie excited unusually audible, we infer anger, or sur-
to conti action by pleasurable and painful feel- prise, or joy. Loudness of applause is sig-
ings. And .therefore it is that feelings dem- nificant of great approbation ;and with up-
onstrate tbi-m^elves in sounds as well as in roarious mirth we associate the idea o£ high
mov. uunio. Theiefore it is that Carlo barks enjoyment. Commencing with the silence of
as wlU 8S Ie;.]is when he is let out that ; apathy, we find that the utterances grow
puss puits as well as erects her tail that ; louder as the sensations or emotions, whether
the canary chiips as well fiS fluttiTS. There- pleasurable or painful, grow stronger.
fore it is that the angry lion roars while he That diSerent qualities ot voice accompany
lashes his sides, and the dog giowls whde he different mental states, and that under states
retracts his lip. Therefore it is that the of excitement the tones are more sonorous
mainu d imimal not only struggles but howls. than usual, is another gencnd fact admitting
And it is from Ibis caufe that in human of a parahel explanation. The sounds of com-
beings bodily suffering exprei-ses itself ni.t mon conversation have but little resonance ;
onlyin contortions, but in sliricks and groans those of strong feeling have much more.
— that in anger, and fear, and giief tlie ges- Under rising ill temper the voice acquires a
ticulations are .'..companied by shouts and metallic ring. In accordance with her con-
Bcrearas— that delightful stnsalions are fol- stant mood, the ordinary speech of a virago
lowed by exclamations and that we hear — has a piercing quality quite opposite to that
screams of J03' and sliouls of exultation. softness indicative of placidity. A
ringing
We
have here, then, a principle undeilying laugh marks an especially joyous tempera-
all vocal phenomena including those of
; ment. Grief unburdening itself uses tones
vocal music, and by consequence those of approaching in timbre to those of chanting :
music in general. Ihe mu>eles that move and in his most pathetic passages an eloquent
Ihe chest, larynx, and vocal chords, contract- speaker similaily falls into tones more vibra-
ing like other muscles in pioportion to the tory than those common to him. Now any
.intensity of tLe feelings every different
; one may readily convince himself that reso-
'contiaction of these muscks involving, as it nant vocal sounds cau be produced only by a
does, a difterent adjustment of the vocal or- certain muscular effort additional to that or-
'gans every different adjustment of the vo-
;
dinarily needed. If after uttering a word in
cal r.igans causing a change in the sound his speaking voice, the reader, without
emitted it follows that vai iations of voice
;
changing the pitch or the loudness, will sing
are the physiological results of variations of this word, he willperceive that before he can
feeling it follows that each inflection or
;
sing it, he has to alter the adjustment of the
modulation is the natural outcome of some vocal organs to do which a certain force
;

passing emotion or sensation and it follows ; must be used and by putting liis fingers on
;

that tlie explanation of all kinds of vocal ex- that, external promiacuce marliing tlie lop of
pression must be sought in this general re- the larynx, he will have further evidence
lation between mental and muscular excite- that to produce a sonorous tnuo the organs
ments. Let us, then, see whether we cannot must be drawn out of their u.sual position.
Thus, then, the fact that the tones of excited
Tlio..:e who seeic n ormatlon on tills point may find
=p i f feeling are more viliratory than tliose of com-
It in an in'ere..>Einj.' tract l)y Mr. Alexander Bain, on
" Animal Instinct and Intelligence."
mon conversation, is another instance of the
coaaectioa between mental excitement and
S60 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

muscular excitement. The speaking voice, —will be uttered in much more strongly con-
tliB and the singing voice,
recitativi) voice, trasted tones., The two syllables of theword.
severally exemplify oue general principle. "hallo" will be the one much higher anil
That the pitch ofthe voice vaiies according the other much lower than before; and the
to the action of the vocal muscles, scarcely rest of the sentence will similarly ascend and
needs saying. All know that the middle descend by longer steps.
notes, in v>/hich tliey converse, are made with- Again, if, supposing her to be in an ad-'
out any appreciable effort and all know that
; joining room, the mistress of the house calls
to make euhcr very high or very loiv notes " Mary," the two -syllables of the name will
loquires a consideraljle effort. In either as- be spoken in an ascending inter\'al of a third.
cetrdiHi^ or dcscenUiug ."r.^m the pitch of or- If Mary does not reply, the call will be re-
dinary speecli, we aie conscious of an in- peated probably in a descending fifth im- ;

creasing muscular strain, which, at botla ex- plying the shghtest shade of annoyance at
tremes of the register, becomes positively Mary's inattention. Should Mary still make,
paiuful. Hence it follows from our general no answer, the increasing annoyance will
principle, that virhile indifference or calmness show itself by the use of a descending oc-
will use tiie medium tones, the tones used tave on the next repetition of the call.. And
duiing fcxtitemcnt will be either above or be- suppjsingthe silence to continue, the lady,
low tliem and will rise higher and higher,
; if not of a very even temper, will show li'et
or fall lower and lower, as the feelings grow irritation at Slary"s seemingly intentional
strunger. This physiological deduction we negligence by finally calling her in tones still
aNo find tT be in harmony with familiar facts. —
more widely contrasted the first syllable
The complaints
h;ihitual sufferer utters his being higher and the last lower than be-
in a voice raised considerably above the tore.
natural l-.cy an,l agonizing paia venls itself
;
Now these and analogous facts, which the
in (jilher shrieks of groans —
in very high or reader will readily accumulate, clearly con-
very low notes. Beginning at his talking form to the law laid down. For to make
pitc!), the cry nf the disappointed urchin large intervals requires more muscular action
grows moie shiill as it grows louder. The than to make small ones. But not only is the
"oh of astonishment or delight begins
I" Client of vocal intervals thus explicable as due
sevejal notes below the middle voice, and to the lelaliun between nervous and mus-
descends still lower. Anger expresses itself cular excitement, but also in some dfgr,
in high tones, or clso in "curses not loud their direction, as ascending or descenHing. '

but deep." Deep tones, too, are ulvi^ays used The middle notes being those which dtinaud
in uttering strong reproaches. Such an ex- no appreciable eSoit of muscular adjust-
clamation as "Beware!" if made dramati- ment, and the effort becoming greater as
cally ^tbat is, if made with a show of feeling we either ascend or descend, it follows tliat
— must be many notes lower than ordinary. a departure from the middle notes in either
Further, we have groans of disapprobation, direction will maik incieasing emotion;
groans of horror, groans of remorse. And while a return toward the middle notes will
(xtrtme joy and fear are alike accompanied m.ark decreasing emotion. Hence it happens
by shrill outcries. that an enthusiastic person uttering such a
>learly allied to the subject of pitch is that sentence as " It was the must splendid sight
of inlenals ; and the explanation of them I ever saw !" will ascend to the first syllable
carries our argument a step farther. While of the word " splendid" marking the climax
eaim speech is comparatively monotonous, on the feeling produced by the recollectioik
emotion makes u^e of Sflhs, octaves, and Hence, again, it happens that, under some
even wider intervals. Listen to anj- one nar- extreme vexation produced by another's stu-
rating or repeating something in which he pidity, an irascible man, exclaiming, " What
has no interest, and his voice will not wan- a confounded fool the fellow is I" will begin
der more than two or three notes above or somewhat below his middle veice, and (i(-
below his medium note, and that by small scending to the word " fool," which he will
stops but when he comes to some exciting
; utter in one of his deepest notes, will Ihca
event he will be heard n.-)t only to u.'^e the ascend again. And it may be remarked, that
higher and lower notes of his register, but to the word "fool" will not only be deeper
go from oue to the other by larger leaps. and louder than the rest, but will also have
Bcit)g unable in print to imitate these traits
Ci' we feel some difficulty in fully
fecluig,

more emphasis of articulati.in another mode
in which muscular excitement is shown.
realiziug them to the reader. But we may Tliere is some danger, however, in giving
suggest a few remembrances which will per- instances like this seeing that as the mods
;

haps call to mind a sufficiency of others. If of rendering will vary according to the in-
two men living in the same place, and fre- tensity of the feeling which the reader feigns
quently seeing oue another, meet, say at a to himself, the right cadence may not bo Lit
public r.csembly, any phrase with which one upon. With single words there is less dilli-
may be heard to accost the other— as " Hallo, culty. Thus the " Indeed '" with which a
aie you here ?"— will have an ordinary into- surprising fact is received, mostly begins on
nali;u. But if one of them, after long ab- the middle note of the voice, and risi's with
sence, bus ut]e.\peclcdly returned, theexpres- the second syllable or, if disaiiprobaiioii as
;

sion of surprise with which his friend may



greet him " Hallo how came you here ?"
I
well as astonishment is felt, the first syllable
will be below the middle note, and the
FKOGRT.SS. ITS hAW AND CAUSE. 981

Becond lower slill. Conversely, llie word others, but also the means of exciting our
" Alas !" whicli marks not the rise of a par- sympathy with such cuiutions.
oxysm of grief, but its decline, is intend in Have we not heic, then, adoqna.te data for
a cadence descending toM-aid the middle a theory of music? These vocal pecaliari-
note or, if tbe first syllable is in the lower
; ties which indicate excited feeling, are those
pait of the register, the second ascends tow- which expci-ially distinguish soiifj from vrdi-
ard the niiddle nolc. In the " Ileisb-ho I" nary speech. Every one of the alterations of
expressive (.f mental and nmscular ))roslra- voice which we have found to be a physio-
tion, we may see llio same trulh and if the
; logical result of pain oi-i'li asure. hay.rriedto
(adence appropriate to it be iiiveited, the ab- its greatest extreme in vucal 'nnir.ir. For in-
surJity of the efl'c e* clcaily shows I'.ow tlie stance, we saw that, in viilue of thn general
meaning of iuterv.-ilK is dependent on the prin- relation between mental and niiK-ular excite-
ciplewe have been illustrating. ment, one cliaraetciistic of passionate utter-
The icmauiing characteiistic of emotional ance is loudheKg. Well, its comivp.iative 1 jud-
speech ivhioh we have to notice is that of ness is one of the distinctive marks of song as
Tiiri<(hility of pitch. It is scarcely possible contrasted with Ihespeech of daily life ami ;

here to convey adequate ideas of this more further, the forte passages of an air are those
complex manifestation. \\'e must be content intended to represent tlie climax of its emo-
with simply indicating some occasions ou tion. Wenextsawtliatthu tones in which emo-
which it maybe ob-erved. On a mccliusc of tion expresses itself, are, in conformity with
friends, for instance —
as when there ariivcs tliis same law, of a more sonorous timbre thau
a party of much-wished-for visitors the — those of calm conversation. Here, to;), song
voices of all will be heard to undergo displays a still higher degree of the pecu-
changes of pitch not only greater but much liaritjf for thesinging tone is the m.jstreso-
;

more numerous than usual. If a speaker at nant we can make. Again, it wis shown
a public meeting is interrupted by some that, like cause, mental excitement
from a
squabble among those he is adilressing, his vents itself iu the liigher and lower notes of the
compaiatiTcly level t; ncs will be in marked register, using the middle notes but seldom.
contrast v,'ilh the rapidly changing one of And scarcely needs saying that vocal
it
the disputants. And ani'jng children, whose music more distinguished by its com-
is still
feelings aie less under control than those of parative neglect of the notes in vdiicli we
adults, this peculiarity is still more decided. talk, and its habitual use of those above or
During a scene of com|)laint and recriminr- below them and, moreover, that its most pas-
;

tion between two excitable little girls, the sionate effects are commonlj'prodiiceii at the
voices may be heard to ran up and down the two extremities of its scale, but especially
gamut several limes in each sentence. In the upper one.
such cases we once more recognize the same A yet further trait of strong feeling, simi-
law : for muscular excitement is shown not larly accounted fca-, was the employment of
ouly in strength of contraction but also in the larger intervals than are employed in com-
rapidity with which dirl'ereul muscular ad- mon converse. This trait, also, every liallad
justments succeed each other. and ai-ia carries to an extent beyond that
Thus wc find all the leading vocal phenom- heard in the spontaneous utterances of emo-
ena to have a physiological basis. They tion :add to which, that the direction of
are Romany manifestations of thcgenerallaw these intervals, which, as diverging fr.im or
that feeling is a stiinidus to muscular action converging toward the medium tones, we
— a law conformed ti throughout the wdiole found to be physiologically expiessive of in-
economj', not of a man ouly, but of every creasing or decreasing emotion, may be ob-

sensitive mature a law, therefore, which served to have in music like meanings. Once
lies deep in the nature of animal organiza- more, it was pointed out that not only extreme
tion. The expressiveness of these various but also rapid varialioiisof pitch are charac-
modificaticus (jf voice is therefore innate. teristic of mental excitement and once more
;

Each of us, from babyhood upward, has been we see in the quick changes of every melody
spontaneously making them, v.hcu under the that song carries the characteristic as far, if
Various sensaiions and emotions by which not farther. Thus, in respect alike of loud-
tiiey are produced. Having been conscious ne-is, timbre, pitch, intervals, and riife of vari-
of each feeling at Ihesametimelhat we heard ation, song employs and cxaugciales the
outscites make the conseiiueut sound, we natural language of the emotions it arises
;

have acquiicd an established association of from a systematic combination ot those vocal


ideas between such sound and the feeling peculiarities which are the physiological
which caused il. AVhen the like sound is effects of acute pleasure and pain.
made by another, we ascribe the like feeling Besides these chief characteristics of song
to him :and by a further consequerjce we as distinguished from common speech, thera
not only a'-crilie to him Ihatfeelini;, but have are sundry minor ones similarly explicalile,
a certain desrrce of it aroused in ourselves : as due to the relation between menial and
for to become conscious of the feeling wliich muscular excitement anil before proceed-
;

another is experiencing, is to have that feel- ing farther these slould be briefly noticed.
ing awakened in our own consciousness, Thus, certain passions, and perhaps, all pas-
which is the same thing an experiencing the sions when pushed to an extreme, produce
feeling. Thus these various modifications (probably through their influencoover Iheac-
of voice become not only a language through tion of the heart) an effect the reverse (>f that
which we understand the emotions of which has beeu dcsciibed ; they cause a
:

263 PEOGKESS; ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

pliysiual prostration, one symptom of which possibly, we have already carried too far. It
is a genera! relaxation of Ibe muscles, and a is not to be supposed that the more special pa
consequent trembling. have the trem- We culiarities of musical expression are to bedefl.
bling of angei', of tVar, of hope, of joy and ; nitely explained. Though probably they may
the vocal muscles being implicated with the all in some way conform to the principle that
rest, the voice too becomes tremulous. Now, has been worked out, it is obviously imprac-
iT singing, this tremulousness of voice is ticable to trace that principle in its mure ram-
very effectively used by some vocalists in ifled applications. Nor is it needful to out
higl^ly pathetic passages sometimes, incleed, ; argument that it should lie so traced. The
because of its effectiveness, too much used foregoing facts sufficieully prove that what
by 111 em—as by
Taraberlik, for instance. we regard as the distinctive trait.'; of song are
Again, there a mode of musical execu-
is simply the traits of emotional speech inten-
tion known
as the staccato, appropriate to sified and systematized. In respect of its

energetic [lassages to passages expressive of general characteristics, we think it has been
exhilaration, of resolution, of confidence. made clear that vocal music, and by conse-
The action of the vocal muscles which pro- quence all music, is an idealization of tlw
duces this staccato style is analogous to the natural language of passion.
muscular action which produces the sharp, As far as it goes, the scanty evidence fur-
decisive, energetic movements of body indi- nished by history confirms this coDclusion.
cating these stales of mind ; and therefore it Note first the fact (not properly an historical
is that the staccato le lias the meaning we
!:^t,v one, but fitly grouped with cuch) that the
ascribe to it. Conversely slurred intervals dance-chants of savage tribes are very monot-
are expressive of gentler and less active onous and in virtue of their monotony are
;

feelings and are so because they imply the


; much more nearly allied to ordinary speech
smaller muscular vivacity due to ii lower than are the songs of civilized races. Join-
mental ener<n-. The difference of effect re- ing with this the fact tliat there are still ex-
sulting fiuui difference of time in music, is tant among boatmen and others in the East,
also attributable to the same law. Already it ancient chants of a like monotonous charac-
has been ptjinted out tliat the more frequent ter, we may infer that vocal music originally
changes of pitch which ordinarily result diverged from emotional speech in a grad-
from passion are imitated and developed in ual, unobtrusive manner ; and this is the in-
song and iiere we have t,5 add, that the va-
; ference to which our argument points. Fur-
lious rates of such changes, appropi-iate to ther evidence to the same effect is supplied
the differ ent styles of music, are further traits by Greek liistory. The early poems of the
having the saine derivation. The slowest —
Greeks which, be it remembered, were
movements, largo and adagio, are used where sacred legends embodied in that rhythmical,
such depressing emotions as grief, or such metaphorical language which strong feeling
unexciting emotions as reverence, are to be —
excites were not recited, but clianted
portrayed wiiilo the more rapid movements,
; the tones and the cadences wero ma<)s musi-
andante., allegro, presto, represent succes- cal by the same influences which made the
sively increasing degrees of menial vivacitj', speech poetical.
and do this because Ihey imply that muscular By those who haveinvestigated the mat-
activity which flows from this mental vi- ter, this chantingbelieved to have been not
is
vacity. Even the rhythm, which forms a what we call singing, but neatly allied to
remaining distinction between song and our recitative (far simpler, indeed, if we
speech, may not improbably have a kindred may judge from the fact that the early Greek
cause. Wny
tlie actions excited by strong lyre, which had but /oar strings, was played
feeling should tend to become rhythmical is in vniaon with the voice, which was there-
not very obvious but that they do so there
; fore confined to four notes) ;and as such,
are divers evidences. There is the swaying much less remote from common speech than
of the body to and fro under pain or grief, our own singing is. For recitative or must-
of the leg under impatience or agitation. cai recitation, is in all respects intermediate
Dancing, too, is a rhythmical action natural between speech and song, lis average effects
to elevated emotion. That under excitement are not so lovd as those of song. Its tones
Bpeecli acquires a certain rhythm, we may are less sonorous in rtmdre than those of song.
occasionally perceive in the highest efforts Commonly it diverges to a smaller extent
of an orator. In poetry, which is a form of from the middle note.s— uses notes neither so
speech used fur the belter e?pressi(m of high nor so low in pitcli. The intenaU ha-
emotional ideas, we have this rhythmical bitual to it are neither so wide nor so varied.
tendency developed. And when we bear in Its rate of variation is not so rapid. And at
mind that dancing, poetry, and music are the same time that its primary rhythm is less

connate are oiiginally constituent parts of decided, it has none of that secondary

the same thing it becomes clear that the rhythm produced by recurrence of the same
measured movement common to them all im- or parallel musical phrasts, which is one of
plies a rhythmical action of the whole sys- the marked characteristics of song. Thus,
tem, the vocal apparatus included and that ; then, we may not only infer, fern the evi-
80 the rhythm of music is a more subtle and dence furnished by existing liarbarous tiibes,
complex result of this relation between men- that the -vocal music of prehistoric times was
tal and mu.sciilar excitement.
emotional speech very slightly exalted, but
But it is time to end this analysis, which we see that the earliest vocal music of vrhicb

PROGRESS: ITS LAW AXD CAUSE.


we have nny account differed imich less was elaborated ; so, we may expect to find
from tmjtioiial cijeech than does the vocal that still stronger emotion produced tiie elab-
niu=ic of onr daj's. oration and we have evidence implying
That, recilittive ^ beyond which, by the this.
;

Instances in abundance may be cited,


way, the Cliincse and Hindoos seem necer to showing that musical composers are men of

have advanced irrew naturally out of the extremely acute sensibilities. The life of
modulations and ciidences of strong- feolinjr, Mozart depicts him as oue of inten';ely active
we liave indeed still current evidence. Tliere affections and highly impressionable toniper-
are even now to lie met wth ceeasinns on ament. Various anecdotes represent Bee-
which strong feeling vents ilself in this form. thoven as very susceptible and very passion-
Whoever has been present when a meeting ate. Mendelssohn is described by those who
of Quakers was addressed liy one of their knew him to have been full of line feeling.
preacheis (whose practice it is to speak only And the almost incredible sensitiveness of
under tlie influeix-e of religions emotion), Chopin has been illustrated in tlie memoirs
must have lieen si ruck by the quite unusual of George Sand. An unusually emotional
tones, like those of a subdued eliant, in which nature being thus the general characteristic
the address was made. It is clear, too, that of musical composers, we have in it just the
the intoning used in some chuiches is repre- agency required for the development of reci-
sentative of tliis same mental state, and has tative and song. Intenser feeling produciug
been adopted on account of the instinctively intenser manifestations, any cause of excite-
felt congruily between it and the contrition, ment will call forth from such a nature tones
supplication, or leverence verliaily expressed. and changes of voice more marked than
And if, as we have good leasou to believe, those called forth from an ordinary nature
lecitative arose by degiees out of emotional will generate just those exaggerations which
speech, "tt becomes manifest that by a con- we have found to distinguish the lower vocal
tinuance of the same process song lias arisen music from emotional speech, and the higher
out of recitative. Just as, from the orations vocal music from the lower. Thus it becomes
and legends of savages, expressed in the crediljle that the four-toned recitative of the
metaphorical, allegorical style natural to early Greek poets (like all poets, nearly allied
them, there sprung epic poetry, out of which to composers in the comparative intensity of
lyric poetry was afterward developed ; so, their feelings), was really nothing more than
from the exalted tones and cadtmces in which the slightly exaggerated emotional speech
such orations and legends were delivered, came natural to them, which grew by frccinent
the chant or recilaiivo music, from whence use into an organized form. And it is readily
lyrical mu.sic has since grown .up. And conceivable that the accumulated agency of
there has not only thus been a simultaneous subsequent poet-musicians, inheriting and
and parallel genesis, but theie is also a paral- adding to the products of those who went
lelism of results. For lyrical poetry differs before them, sutSced, in the course of the
from epic poetry just as lyrical music differs ten centuries which we know it took, to de-
from recitative : each still further intensifies velop this four-toned recitative into a vocal
the natural language of the emotions. Lyri- music having a range of two octaves.
cal poetry is more mct-dphoncal, more hyper- Not only may we so understand how more
bolic, more elliptical, and adds the rhythm sonorous tones, greater extremes of pitch,
of lines to the rhythm of feet ; just as lyrical and wider intervals, were gradually intro-
music is louder, more sonorous, more extreme duced, but also how there arose a greater
in its iutervals, and adds the rhythm of variety and complexity of musical expres-
phrases to the rhythm of bars. And the sion. For this same passionate, enthusiastic
known fact that cut of epic poetry the temperament, which naturally leads the
stronger passions developed lyrical poetry as musical composer to express the feelings pos-
their appropriate vehicle, strengthens the in- sessed by others as well as himself, in ex-
ference that they similarly developed lyricM tremer iuteivals and more marked cadences
music out of recitative than they would use, also leads him to give^
Nor indeed are we without evidences of the musical utterance to feelings which they
transition. It needs but to listen to an opera either do not experience, or experience in
to hear the leading gradations. Between the but slight degrees. In virtue of this general
comparatively level recitative of ordinary susceptibility which distinguishes him, he
dialogue, the more varied recitative with regards with emotion events, scenes, con-
wider intervals and higher tones used in ex- duct, character, which produce upon most
citing scenes, the still more musical recitative men no appreciable effect. The emotions SJ
which preludes an air, and the air itself, the generated, compounded as they are of the
Buccessife steps are but small and the fact
; simpler emotion.s, are not expressible by in-
that among aiis themselves gradations of like tervals and cadences natural to these, but by
nature may he traced, further confirms the combinations of such intervals and cadences ;

conclusion that the highest form of vocal whence arise more involved musical phiases,
music was arrived at by degrees. conveying more complex, subtle, and un-
Moreover, we have some clew to the influ- usual feelings. And thus we may in some
ences which have induced this development, measure understand how it happens that
and may roughly conceive the process of it. music not only so strongly excites our more
As the tones.intervals, and cadences of strong familiar feelings, but also produces feelings
emotion were the elements out of which son^' we never had before arouses dormant sen-
;

timents ('"
-''' ^^ '•"'• ••
-""d " '
;

2fi4 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

possibillly, and do not Itnow the meaning ; follows, as a matter of course, that we shall
or, as Rieliliif says, tells us of things we like the sounds that habitually accompany
have not seen and shall not see. agreeable feelings, and dislike those that
Indirect evidences of several kinds remain habitually accompany disagreeable feeling,-).
to be brietly pointed out. One of Ihem is Once more, the question, How
is the ex-
the diflicully, not to, say impossibility, of pressiveness of music to be otherwise ac-
olherAJse accounling for the expiefesiveness counted for? may be supplemented by (he
of music. Whence comes it that special question. How is the genesis of mu.«ic to be
combiualions of notes should have special otherwise accounted for? That music is a
etfecls upon our emnlion.s ? —lliat one should product of civilization is manifest for
;

give us a feeling of exhilaralion, another of though savages have their dance-chants,


melancholy, another of affection, another of these are of a kind scarcely to be dignitied
reverence? Is it that these special combi- by the title musical at most, they supply
:

nations have intrinsic meanings apart ftom but the vaguest rudimcut of music, picpeily
the human constilulion V^lhat a certain so called. And if music has been by slow
number of aeiisil waves per second, followed steps developed in the course of civilization,
by a certain other number, in the nature of it must have been developed out of some-
things eignify grief, while in the reverse thing. If, then, its origin is not that above
order they signify joy; and similaily with alleged, what is its origin ?
all other intervals, phrases, and cadences? Thus we find ihat the negative evidence
Few will be so irrational as to think this. confirms the positive, and that.^taken to-
Is it, then, that the meanings of these special gether, they fuinisli strong proof. We have
combinations are conventional only ?^that seen that there is a physiological relation,
we learn their implications, as we do those common to man and all animals, lietween
of words, by oliserviug how others under- feeling and muscu'ar action that as vocal
;

stand Ihem? This is an hypothesis not sounds are produced by muscidar action,
only devoid of evidence, but directly opposed there is a con.sequent physiological relation
1o the experience of evtrj" one. How, then, between feeling and vocal sounds; that all
are musical clfecis to be explained? If the the modifications of voice expressive of feel-
theory aboce set forth be accepted, the diffi- ing are the direct results of this physiologi-
culty disappears. If music, taking for its cal relation ; that music, adopting all tliese
raw miiteiial the various modifications of modifications, intensifies them more and
voice which are the physiological results of more as it ascends to its higher and higher
excited feeling, intensifies, combines, and forms, and becomes music simply in virtue

complicates them if it exaggerates the loud- of thus intensifying them that, from the
;

ness, the resonance, the pitch, the intervals, ancient epic poet chanfing his verses, dowa
and the variability, which, in virtue of an to the modern musical composer, men of un-
oiganiclaw, are the characteristics of passion- usually strong fet lings, prone to express them
ate speech — if, by carrymg out these farther, in extreme forms, have been naturally the
more consistently, more unitedly, and more agents of these successive iulensitieations;
sustainedly, in produces an idealized lan- and that so there has little by little arisen a
guage of emotion then its power over us
; wide divergence between this idealized lan-
becomes comprehensible. But in the absence guage of emotion and its natural language;
of this theory, the expressiveness of music to which direct evidence we have just
appears to be inexplicable.
Again, the preference we feel for certain

added the indirect that on no other tenable
hypothesis can either the expressiveness or
qualities of sound presents a like diflicully, the genesis of music be explained.
udmitling only of a like solution. It is gen- And now, what is the function of music?
erally agreed that the tones of the human Has music any effect beyond the immediate
voice are more pleasing than any others. pleasure it produces? Analogy suggests
Grant that music lakes its rise from the mod- thrt it has. The enjoyments of a good din-
ulations of the human voice under emotion, ner do not end with themselves, but minister
and it becomes a natural consequence that to bodily well-being. Though people do not
ilie tones of that voice should appeal to our marry with a view to maintain the lace, yet
feeiiniis more than any oiheis ; and so should the passions which impel theta to marry
lie considered more beautiful than any others. secure its maintenance. Parental ntleCtioB
But deny that music has this origin, and the is a feeling which, while it conduces to
( nly allr-ruative is the untenable position that
parental happiness, insures the nurture of
the vibrations proceeding from a vccaiist's offspring. Men love to accumulate property,
throat are, olijectively considered, of a higlier oft€u wuhout thought of the benefits it pro-
order than those from a horn or a violin. duces ; but iu puisuing the pleasure of
Similarly with liar.-h and soft souirds. If acquisition they indirectly open the way to
the cimclusiveness of the foregoing reason- other pleasures. The wish for public ap-
ings be not admilled, it must be 'supposed proval impels nil of us to do many things
that the vibiation.'* causing the last a;e in-
trinsically bettei tiiau these causing the fiist
which wo should otherwise not do to under- —
take great labors, face great dangers, and
and that, in virtue of sjnie pre-it-labliEhed habitually rule ourselves in a way that-
harmony, the higher feelings and natures sniocths social intercourse that is, iu grati-
:

produce the one, and the Lnver the other. fying our love of approbation we subserve
But if the foregoing rpa.«ouings be valid, it divers ulterior purposes. And, generally,';
PROGRESS: ITS L.VTV AXD CAUSE. 26j

our nature is sucli that in fulfilling each de- up those more involved changes of voice
sire, we some way facilitate the fulfilment
in which express the feelings pruper to such
of llie rest. But the love of music seems to ideas. If intellectual limguage is a growth,
exist for its own sake. The delights of so also, without doubt, is emotional langaagts
melody and harmony do not obviously min- a growtli.
ister to the welfare either of the individual Now, the hypothesis which we have
or of society. May we not suspect, how- hia ed above is, that hpyond Ihe direct
ever, that this exception is apparent only ? pleasure wliieh it gives, mu^ic hii» the iiidi-
Is it net a ralijmil inquiry, What are the in- reel effect of developing lliis language of the
direct bcnelits which accrue from music, in emoliou-i. Having iis root, hs we liai e en-
addition to the direct pleasure it skives ? deavored to show, in lliDso tones, inle'-vals,.
But that it would take us too far out of and cadences of speccli which expiess feel-
our track, we should prelude this inquiry by —
ing arising by the corahinalion anrS intensi-
illustrating at some length a certain general fying of these, and canning finally to hnvir
law of progress the law that alike in occu-
: an embodiment of ils own, music has all
pations, sciences, arts, the divisions that had along been reading upon speech, and in-
a common root, but by continual divergence creasing ils power of rendering emotion.
hate become distinct, and are now being sep- The use in recitative and sing of inflections
arately developed, are not truly independent, more expressive than ordinary ones, must
but severally act and react on each other to from the beginning have tended to develop
their mutual advancement. Merely hiniing the ordinary ones. Familiarity with tha
thus much, however, by way of showing more varied combinations of tones that
that there are many analogies to justify us, occur in vocal music can scarcely have
we go on to express the opinion tliat there failed to give greater variety of comiM-
exists a relationship of this kind between nation to the tones in which we utter
music and speech. our impressions and dcsirt><;. The complex
All speech is compounded of two elements, musical phrases by wliicu composeis have-
the words and the tones in which they are conveyed complex emotions may rationally

uttered the signs of ideas and the signs of be supposed to have influenced us in making
feelings. While certain articulations express those involved cadences of conversation by
the thought, certain vocal sounds express which we convey our subtler thoughts and ,

the more or less of paiu or pleasure which feelings. '

the thought gives. Using the word cadence That the cultivation of music has no effect
inan unusually extended sense, as compre- on the mind, few will be alisurd enougli to-
htnding all modifications of voice, we may contend. Anil if it has an effect, what more
say that cadence is the commeniari/ nf the natural effect is there than this of develop-
emotions upon the propositu/ns of t!ie intellect. ing our perception of the mnanings of inflec-
This duality of spoken language, though not tions, qualities, and raoduhilions of voice;
formally recognized, is recognized in prac- and giving us a correspi)ndingl)r increased
tice by every one and every one knows that
; power of using them ? .Just as mallieinatics, ,

very often more weight attaches to the tones taking its start phenomena of ptiys--
from the
than to the worrls. DuiJy experience sup- ics and astronomy, and presenily coming to-
plies cases in which the same sentence of be a separate science, has since reaeied om
disapproval will be understood as meaning physics and astronomy to their immense ad-
•little or meaning much, according to the in- vancement just as chemistry, ttist aiising,
;

flections of voice which accompany it and ; out of tlie processes of metallurgy and tho^
daily experience supplies still more striking industrial arts, and gradually growing ;iail»Ot-
cases in which words and tones are in direct an iniiepeudent studi'. Iv.n now become 'anj.
contradiction— the first expressing consent, aid to kinds of production just as phys-
all ;

while the last express reluctance ; and the iology, originating out of medicine and once^
last being believed rather than the first. subordinate to it, but latteily pursui-d for its
These two distinct but interwoven ele- own sake, is in our day coming to be the-
ments of speech have been undergoing a science on which the progress of medicine
simultaneous development. know thatWe depends so music, having its root in emo-
;

in llie course of civilization words have been tional language, and gradually evolved from
multiplied, new parts of speech have been in- it, has ever been reacting upon and further
troduced, sentences have grown more varied advancing it. Whoever will examine ihe-
and complex and we may fairly infer that
; facts will find this hypothesis to lie in har-
during the same time new modifications of mony with the method of civilization every-
voice have come into use, fresh mtervals where displayed.
have been adopted, and cadences have be- It will scarcely be expected that much di-
come more elaborate. For while, on the one rect evidence in support of this cnnelu.sioa
hand, it is absurd to suppose that, along can be given. The facts are of a kind which,
with thfi undeveloped verbal forms of bar- it isdifficult; to measure, and of which we
barism, tnere existed a developed system of have no records. Some suggestive traits,
vocal inflections, it is, on the other hand, however, may be noted. Mjy we net sa'r.
necessary to suppose that, along with the for instance, that the Itiilians, among whf-m
higher and more numerous verbal forms modern music was earliest cultivated, and
needed to convey the multiplied and compli- who have more especially practised and ex-
cated ideas of civilized life, there have grown celled in melody (the division of music with

2G6 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

•whiuh niir is chiefly concerned)


arc;iimf>iit that forall happiness beyond what the un-
may we say that these Italians speali in
nol, friended recluse can have we aie indebted
jiixe varied am] expressive inflections and to this same sympathy, we shall see tliatthe
cadences tiian any other nation ? On the agencies which communicate it can scarcely
ntlier hand, may we not say that, confined be overrated in value.
almost exclusively as they have liitherto been The tendency, of civilization is more and
Do their ualiuual airs, which have a niaiked more to repress the antagonistic eiejneuls of
{family likeness, and therefore accustomed to our characters. and to develop the social ones—
ibut a limiled ranse of musical expression, to curb our purely selfish desires and t.'cereise
;lhe Scotch are uuusually monotoQuus in the our uuselfisli ones ; to ipplace private gratifi-
'
iintervals and moilulations of their speech? cations by gratiifications res'-iltuig f oni, or in-
i

.And again, do we not find among different volving, the happiness of other.s. And while,
I

"glasses of the same nation, differences that by this adaptation to the social s^late, the
ihave like implications ? The gentleman and sympathetic side of our nature is being lin-
rthe clown stand in very decided contrast folded, there is simultaneously giowiug up a
'with respect to variety of intonation. List- language of sympathetic iutercourse^~i lan-
*en to (he conversation of a servant -girl, and guage through which we communicHte to
(then toitliat of a refined, accomplished lady, others the uappiuess we feel, and axe made
!»nd the more delicate and complex changes sharers in their happiness.
of voice used by (he latter wiil he conspic-
• This double process, Of which the f ffecta
;nous. Now, without going so far as to say are already sufficiently appreciable, must go
ithat out of all the differences of culture to on to an extent of which we can as re t have
>^hich the uppet and lower classes are sub- no adequate conception. The habitu;il con-
j«cted, difference of musical culture is that cealment of our feelings diminishing, as_it
\to which alone this difference of speech is as- must, in proportion as our feelings become
(cribahle yet we may fairly say that there
;,
such as do not demand concealment, we may
rseeras a much more obvious connection of conclude that the exhibition of them will be-
cause and effect between these than between come much more vivid than we uov/ dare al-
any others. Thus, while the inductive evi- low it to be and this implies a more ex-
;

dence to which we can appeal is but scanty pressive emotional language. At the same
and vague, yet what there is favors our po- time, feelings of a higher and more comples
sition. kind, as yet experienced only by the culti-
Probably most will think that the function vated few, will become .general and there ;

!here assigned to music is one of very little will be a corresponding development of (he
moment.
; But further reflection may lead emotional language into move involved
them to a contrary conviction. In its bear-
1 forms. Just as there has silently grown up
'ings upon human happiness, we believe (hat a language of ideas, which, rude as it at first
this emotional language, which musical cul-
'.

was, now enables us to convey with precision


tuie develops and refines, is only second in the most subtle and complicated thoughts ;

importance to the language, of the intellect ; so there is still silently growin;, ap a lan-
; perhaps not even second to it. For these guage of feelings, which, notwithstanding its
I modifications of voice produced by feelings present imperfection, we may expect will ul-
; are the means of exciting like feeling* in timately enable men vividly and completely
' others. .loiued with gestures and expres- to impress on each other all the emotions
f siona of f.ice, they give life to the otherwise which they experience from moment to mo-
' dead words in which the intellect utters its ment.
; ideas and so enable the hearer not only to
; Thus if, as we have endeavored to show, it
> understand the state of mind they accompany, is (he function of music to facilitate the de-
i.but to^artofe of that state. In short, they velopment of this emotional langua.c;e. we
care the chief madia of sympathy/. And if we may regard music as an aid to (he achieve-
(.consider how much both our general welfare ment of that liigher bappincis which it in-
sajJ.d our immediate pleasures depend upon distinctly shadows forth. Thi .se vague feel-
f»vs.npathy, we shall recognize the importance ings of unexperienced felicity which music
of whatever makes this sympathy greater. arouses, those indefinite impressions of an
If we bear in mind (hat by their fellow-feel- unknown ideal life which it calls up, may be
\u^ men are led to behave justly, kindly, and considered as a prophecy, to the fulfilment
cueisideiately to each other— that the diffler- of. which music is itself partly instrumental.
Eoee between the cruelty of the barbarous The strange capacity which we have for
Hod the humanity of the civilized results being so affected by melody and harmony,
from the increase of fellow-feeling ; if we may be taken to imply both that it is within
bear in mind that this faculty which makes the possibilities of our nature to realize
us sharers in the joys and sorrows of others, those intenser delights they dimly suggest,
is the basis of all the higher affections— that and that they are in some way concerned in
in friendship, love, and all domestic pleas- the lealization of them. On this supposition
ures it is an essential element if we bear
; the power and the meaning of music become
in mind how much our direct gratifications comprehensible ;but otherwise they are a
are intensified by sympathy how, at the
; mystery.
theatre, the concert, the picture gallery, vie We wUl only add, that if the probability
lose half our enjoyment if we have no one to of these corollaries be admitted, then music
enjoy with us if, iu short, we bear in mind
; must take rank as the liighest of the fine

PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE. 36?

arts —as tho one which more than any other limbs and viscera rush together from all tba
m'mislers to humun welfare. And thus, even points of the compass? or must we receive
leaviDg out of view the immediate gratiiica- the Old Hebrew idea, that God takes clay and
lious it is hourly giving, we canuol too moulds a new creature? If they say that a
much applaud that progress of musical cul- new creature is produced in none of these
luie which is becoming one of the character- modes, which are too absurd to be believed ;
isticc of our age. then they are required to describe the mode
in which a new creature may be produced -.a
lY. mode which does not seem absurd and suoh
;

11 mode thev will find that they neither have


TKE DEVELOPMENT IITPOTHESIS.
conceived nor can conceive.
In a debate iipou the development hypoth- Should the believers in special creations
narrated to me by a friend, one
esis, lately consider it unfair thus to call upon them to
of the disputants was dfc?cribed as arguing, describe how special creations lake place, 1
that as, in all our experience, we Jvuow no reply, that this is far less than they deinarui
such phi-uomenon as tr^insmutation ot spe- from the supporters of the development hy-
cies, it is uaphdo.sopliical to assume that pothesis. They are merely asked to point
transmutation of species ever takes place. out a cortcewabie mode. On tlie other hand,
Had 1 been present, I think that, passing tney ask, not simp'y for a conmivable mode,
over his assenion, which is open to criti- but for the aci'iai mode. Ihey do not say.
cism, I should have replied that, as in all Show us now this may take place ; but they
our experience we have never known a spe- gay, Show us how this does take plac;e. 8(j
cies created, it was, by Jiis own showing, un- far from its being unreasonable to p\it tbe
philosophicai to assume that any species ever above question, ii would be reasonable to ask
had been created. not only for a possible mode of speoiai crea-
Those who cavalierly reject the theory of tion, but for an ascertained mode ;seeing
evolution, as not adequately supported by that this is no greater a demand than they
facts, seem quite to forget that their own make upon their opponents.
theory is supported by no facts at all. Like And here we may perceive how much
the majoi ity of men who arc born to a given more defensible the new doctrine is than tha
belief, they demand the most rigorous proof old one. Even could the supporters of tho
of any adverse b-ilief, but assume that their development hypothesis merely show that
own needs none. Here we find, scattered the origination of species by tlie proce=:s of
over the globe, vegetable and animal organ- modification is conceivabie, they would be in
isms numbering, of the one kind (accordiiig a better position than their opponents. But
to Humboldt), some 320,000 species, and of they can do much more than this. They ciia
the other, some 2,000,000 species (see Car- show that the process of modification has ef-
penter) ; and if to these we add the numbers fected, and is effecting, decided changes in
of animal and vegetable species that have be- all organisms subject to modifymg influences,
come extinct, we may safely estimate the Thuugl). from tlie impossibility of getting at
number of species that have existed, and are a sufficiency of facts, they are unable to trace
existing, on the eailli, at not less than ten the many phases through which any existing
miUiofis. "Well, which is the most rational species has passed in arriving at its present
theory about tiiese ten millions of species 1 form, or to identify the influences which
Is it 'most likely that there have been ten caused the successive modifications, yet
millions of special creations? cr is it most they can show that any existing species
likely that by continual modifications, due —
animal or vegetable when placed under
to cuauge (..f circumstances, ten millions oi condil ions different from its previous ones,
varieties have been produced, as varieties are immediately begins to undergo certain change*
being produced still ? of structure fitting itfm- the new conditions.
Doubtless many will reply that they can They can show that in successive generations
more easily conceive ten millions of special these changes continue, until ultimately tha
creations to have taken place, than Ihey can new conditions become the natural ones.
conceive that ten millions of varieties have They can show that, in cultirated plants, in
arisen by successive modifluatioas. All such, domesticated animals, and in the several
however, will find, on inquiry, that they art races of men, such alterations have taken
under an illusion. This is one of the many place. They can show that the degrees of
cases in which men do not really believe, but difference so produced are often, as in dogs,
rat]ier believe ihey believe. It is not that they greater than thcie on which distinctions of
can truly conceive ten millions of special species are in other cases founded. They
creations to have taken place, but that they can show that it is a matter of jlispute
think ilwy can do so. Careful introspection whether some of these modified forms are
will'show them that they have never yet re- varieties or separate species. They caa
alized to themselves the creation of even one show, too, that the changes daily taking
species. If they have formed a definite con- —
place in ourselves the facility that attends
ception of the process, let them tell us how a long practice, and the loss of aptitude that
nevv species is constructed, and how it makes —
begins when practice ceases the strengthen-
its appearance. Is it thrown down from the ing of passions habitually gratified, and th9
clouds ? or must we hold to the notion that weakening of those habitually curbed tha —
it struggles up out of the ground ? Do its development of every faculty, bodily, muraJ,
2fi8 PEOGRESS. ITS L.VW AN, CAUSE.

»r intenectusil, according to the use made of ing ita pb<filiar properties and its^ separst?
it — are iill exxjlicable on this same principie. equation, and the first and last of which are
Aui UiUs tliey can show that througliout all quite opposite in nature, connected together
nature there is at work a modifyiug
(irg-fi^ic as lUQmbers of one series, all producible by
influence of the kind Ihey assign as the cause a single process of insensible modification.
Of lliese specific differences an influence : But the blindness of those who tliink it
which, though slow in its action, does, in absurd to complex organic
suppose that
time, if the circumstances demand it, pro- forms may have
arisen by successive modifi-

duce marked clianges an influence which, cations out of simple ones, becomes astonish-
to all ippoarauce, would produce in the mill- ingwhenwe remember that complex organic
ions of years, and under the great varieties forms are daily bein? thus produced. A
of conililion which geological records imply, tree differs from a seed immeasurably in
auy aiiiouut of change. —
every respect in bulk, in structure, in color,
then, is tlie most rational hypoth-
\Vhi(.'h, in form, in specific gravity, in chemical
esis ? —
that of special creations, which has composition differs so greatly that no visi-
:

neither a fact to support it nor is even defi- ble resemblance of at;y kind can be pointed
nitely conceii'able ; or tliat of modification, out between them. Yet is the one changed
%Thich is not only definitely conceivable, in the course of a few years into the otlitr:
but is countenanced liy the habitudes of changed so gradually, that at no moment
every existing organism 'i can it be said. Now the seed ceases to he,
That by any series of changes a profozoon and the tree exists. What can be more
should ever become a mammal, seems to widely contrasted than a newly-born child
those who are not familiar with zoology, and and the small, semi-transparent, gelatinous
who haTC not seen how clear becomes the spheride constituting the human ovum?
relationship l)etween the simplest and the The infant is so complex in structure that a
most complex forms when intermediate cyclopaedia is needed to describe its constit-
fiirms are examined, a very grotesque notion. uent parts. Tlie germina! vesicle is so
Habituall}'' looking at things rather in their timple that it may be defined in a line.
.slatical than in tlieir dynamical aspect, they Nevertheless, a few months suffice to develop
never realize the fact that, by small incre- the one out of the other and that, too, by a
;

menlt of modification, any amount of modi series of modifications so small that were
licHlinn may in lime be generated. That the embryo examined at successive minutes,
si'.ipiise which they feel on finding one even a microscope would with difficulty dis-
whom tliey last saw as a boy, grown into a close any sensible changes. That the uned-
mm, becomes incredulity when the degree ucated and the ill-educated should think the
of cliange is greater. Nevertheless, abun- hypothesis that all races of beings, man in-
d;:fjt instances are at hand of the mode in clusive, may in process of time have been
wliicli we may pass to the most diverse evolved from the simplest monad, a ludicrous
forms, by insensible gradations. Arguing one, is not to be wondered at. But for the
the matter some time since with a learned physiologist, who knows that every individ-
professor, I illustrated my
position tlius : ual being is so evolved— who knows further,
You admit that there is no apparent rehvtion- that in their earliest condition the germs of
ship beiweenacjrcle and an hyperbola. The all plants and animals whatever are bo sim-
one is a finite curve the other is an infinite
;
ilar, " that thcie is no appreciable distinction
one. Allpaits of the one arealike; of the among them wliich would enable it to be de-
ether no two parts are alike. The one in- termined whether a particular molecule is
closes a space the other will not inclose a
;
thegeim of a conferva or of an oak, of a
space though jirodnced forever. Yet oppo-
site as are these curves in all their properties,

zoophyte or of a man ;" * for him to make
a difficulty of the matter is inexcusable.
tliey may be connected together by a series
Surely if a single cell may, when subjected
of intermediate curves, no one of which dif- to certain influences, become a man in the
fers from the adjacent ones in any appre-
space of twenty years, there is nothing ab-
ciable degree. Thus, if a cone be cut by a surd in the hypothesis that under certain
plane at right angles to its axis we get a other influences a cell may in the course of
eucle. If, instead of being perfectly at right
millions of years give origin to the human
angles, the i)lane subtends with the axis an
race. The two processes are generically the
iiiigle we have an ellipse, which
of 89° 59',
same, and differ only in length and com-
no human even when aided by an accu-
eye,
plexity.
lata pair of compnsses, can distiuguish fron^
a ciicle. Decreasing the angle minute by
We have, indeed, in the part taken by
many scientific men in this controversy of
minute, the ellipse l)ecorue^ first perceptibly "
eccentric, then manifestly so, and by and by
Law i^ersus Miracle," a good illustration of
the tenacious vitality of superstitions. Ask
acquires so immensely elongated a form as
one of our leading geologists or physiologists
to bear no recognizalile resemblance to a
whether he believes in the Mosaic account
circle. By continuing this process, the of the creation, and he will take the question
ellipse passes insensibly into a parabola and ; as next to an insult. Either he rejects the
iiUimateiy, by still further diminishing the
narrative entirely, or understands it in some
angle, into an hyperbola. Now here we vague non-natural sense. Yet one part of it
have four diiierent species of curve— circle, he unconsciotisly adopts, and that, too, liter-
allipse, parabola, and hyperbola— each hav- ally. For whence has he got this nolioa of
PROGRESS; ITS LAW AND CAUSE.
•'
special creations," which he thinljs so division of labor suffices to show this. IS
reasonable, and fights for so vigorously ? has not been by command of any ruler that
Evidently he can tiace it back to no other some men have becoms manufacturers white
source than t bis mylU which he repudiates. others have remained cultivators of the soil.
He has not a single fact in nature to quote la Lancashire, millions have devoted them-
in proof of it ujr is lie prepared willi any
; selves to the making of cotton fabrics in
;

chain of abstract reasoning liy -which it may Yorkshire, another million lives by produc-
be established. Catechise him, and he will ing woollens andthepnltery of StaiSordshire,
;

be forced to confers that the notion was put tlie cutliery of Sheffield, the hardware of
into his mind in childhood as pait of a story Birmingham, severally occupy their hundreds
which he now thinlis absurd. And why, of thousands. These are large facts iu tiie
after rejecting all the rest of this story, he structure of English society ; but we can as-
should strenuously' defend this last lemnaut cril)ethem neither to miracle nor to legisla,-
of it as though lie had received it on valid tion. It is n)t by " the hero as king," any
authority, he would be puzzled to say. more than by " collective wisdom," that mea
have been segregated into producers, whole-
V. sale distributors, and retail distributors.

THE SOCIAIi ORGANISM.


The whole of our industrial organization,
from its main outlines down to its minutest
Sir James JIacintosh got great credit for details, lias become what it is, not simply
the saying, that " constitutions are not made, without legislative guidance, but, to a con-
but grow." In our day the most significant siderable extent, in spile of legislative hin-
thing about this saying is, that it was ever drances. It has arisen under the pressure of
thought so significant. As from the surprise Imman wants and activities. While each
displayed by ;i man at some familiar fact, citizen has been pursuing his individual wel-
you may judge of his geneial culture so ; fare, and none taking thought about division
from the admiration which an age accords to of labor, or, indeed, conscious of the need
a new thought, its average degree of enlight- for it, division of labor has yet been ever be-
enment may be inferred. That this apoph- coming more complete. It has been doing
thegm of iVEacintosl). should have been quoted this sl,)wly and silently
: scarcely any having
and re quoted as it has, shows how profound observed it until quite modern times. By
has been the ignorance of social science. A steps so small, that year after year the in-
small ray of liuth has seemed brilliant, as a dustrial arrangements have seemed to men
distant rushlight looks like a star in the sur- just what they were before — by changes as
rounding darkness. insensible as those through which a seed
Such a conception could not, indeed, fail —
passes into a tree society has become Iha
to be startling when let fall in the midst of a complex body of mutually-dependent work-
system of thought to which it was utterly ers which we now see. And this economiir
alien. "Universally in Macintosh's day, things organization, ma. k, is the all-essential or-
were explained on the hypothesis of manu- ganization. Til rough the combination thus
facture lather than that of growth: as in- spontaneously evolved, every citizen is sup-
deed they are, by the majority, in our own pUed with daily necessaries, while he yields
day. It was held thatthe planets were sev- some product or aid to others. That we are
erally projected round the sun from the severally alive lo-da}', we owe to the regular
Creator's liand, with exactly the velocity re- working of this combination during the past
quired to halance the sun's attraction. Tha week and could it be suddenly abolished, a
;

formation of the earth, the separation of sea great prop jitiou of us would be dead before
from land, the production of animals, were another week ended. If tliese most conspic-
mechanical woiks from which God rested as uous and vital arrangements of our social
a laborer rests. Man was supposed to be structure have arisen without the devising of
moulded after a manner somewhat akin to any one, but through the individual cHorts
that in which a modeller makes a clay-figure. of citizens to satisfy their own wanls, we
And of course, in harmony with such ideas, may be tolerably certain that the less impor-
societies were tacitly assumed to be arranged tant arrangements have similarly arisen.
thus or thus by direct interposition of Provi- " But surely," it will be said, " the sccial
dence ; or by the regulations of lawmakers ; changes directly produced by law cannot be
or by both. classed as spontaneous growths. When
Yet that societies are not artificially put parliaments or kings order this or that thing
together is a truth so manifest that it seems to be done, and appoint officials to do it, the
wonderful men should have ever overlooked jirocess is clearly artificial, and society to
it. Perhaps nothing more clearly shows the this extent becomes a manufacture lalliev
small value of historical studies, as they have than a growth." No, not eveu thesechanges
been commonly pursued. You need but to are exceptions, if they be real and permanent
look at the changes going on around, or ob- changes. The true sources of such changes
serve social organization in its leading pecul- lie deeper than the acts of legislators. To
iarities, tosee that these are neither super- take first the simplest instance. We all know
natural nor are determined by the wills of that the enactments of representative gov-
individual men, as by implication historians ernments ultimately depend on the national
commonly teach, but are consequent oa will : they may for a time be out of harmony
general natural causes. The oue case of the with it, but eventually they must conform to
270 PROGEESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

it. And to say that thfe national -wiH finally the industrial structure of society is true ol

deteimines them is to say that they result its whole structure. The fact that " const),
from the average of iudividuiil desires or, ;
tuticms are not made, but grow," is simply g
th other words, from the average of iiidivid- fragment of the much larger fact, that under
iuil nutures. A law so iniliated, therefore, all its aspects and through all its ramitica-
really grows out of the popular clMiMOlor. lions, society is a growth and not a mauu.
Ill Ibe ca«e of u government lepiesentiDg a facture.
(dominant class, the same thing holds, though A perception that there exists some anal-
uot so mauifeslly. For iJie very existence ogy between the body politic and a living in-
of a class mimopolizing all power is due to dividual body was early reached, and from
certain senlimenls in the commonalty. But time to time reappeared in literature. Bui
for the feeling ot loyally on the part of re- this perception was necessarily vasue and
tainers, a feudal system c"nM not exist. TVe more or less fanciful. In the absence of
see in the protest of the Highlandeis against physiological science, and especially of those
the aholition of hetitable juiisdictions, that comprehensive generabzations which it has
they preferred that kind of local )ule. And but recently reached, it was impossible to
if to the popular nature must thus be as- discern the real parallelisms.
eaibed the growth of an incsponKible ruling The central idea of Plato's model republic
"dass, then to the popular nature must be is the correspondence between the parts of a
rsscribed the social arrangements which that society and the faculties of the human mind.
oi'ass creates in the pursuit of its owii ends. Classifying these faculties under the heads of
Bven where the goveinroeut is despotic, the reason, will, and passion, he classifies the
dootiiue still h ilds. The character rf the members of his ideal society utder what lie
geople is, as betore, the original source o£ regards as three analogous heads council- :

this poliiical form ; and, as we have abun- lors, who are to exercise government; mili-
dant proof, other forms suddenly cieated will tary or executive, wlio are to fulfil their be-
hot act, but rapidly retrograde to the old hcssf s ; and the commonally, bent on gain and
form. Moreover, such regulations as a des- selfibli gratification. In otl;cr words, the
pot makes, if really operative, are so because ruler, the warrior, and the craftsman are, ac-
of Iheir fitness to the social Elate. His acts cording to him, the analugnes of our rdiec-
being very much swayed by general opinion tive, volitional, and emoticnal" powers. Now
— by precedent, by the feeling of his nobles, even were there tiuth in the implied assump-

his priesthood, his army are in part imme- tion of a parallelism between the si ructure of
(Jiate results of the national character ;and a society and that of a man, this classification
when they are out of harmony with the would be indefensible. It might moie truly
national chaiaoter they are soon practically be contended that, as the military power
abrogated. obeys the commands of the government, it
The failure of Cromwell permanently to is the government which answers to the
estahlish a new social condition, and the rapid will ; while the military power is simply an
revival of suppressed institutions and prac- agency set in motion by it. Or, again, it;
tices after his death, show how powerless is miglit be contended that whereas the will is
!v monarch to change the type of the society apioduct of predominant desires, to which
be governs: He may disturb, hemayretanl, the reason serves merely as ac eye, it is the
OT he liiay aid the natural process of organ- craftsmen, who, according to the alleged
ization ; but the general course of this analogy, ought to be the moving power of
process is be3''oad bis control. Nay, more the warriois.
tiian this is true. Those who regard the his- Hobbes sought to establish a still more
tories of societies as the histories of their definite parallelism ; not, however, lie'lwttn a
great men, and think that these great men society and the human mind, but belwetna
shape the fates ot their societies, overlook society and the human body. In the intro-
the truth that such great nu n are the prod- duction to the work in which he develops
ucts of their societies. Without certain an- this conception, he sa3"S :

tecedents, without a certain average national " For by art is created that great Levi.v-
cfiaracler, they could neither have been gen- THAN called a CoMMONWEALTir, cr State, in
erated nor could have had the culture which Latin Civitas, which is but an artificial
formed them. If their s^cie1y is to some ex- man ; though of greater stature and stitugili
tent remoulded by them, they were, both than the natural, for whose protection and
betore and after biith, moulded by their so- defence it was intended, and in which the
ciety — were the results of all those influences sovereignity is an artificial soul, as giving lil'e
which fostered the ancestral character they and motion to the whole body; the magis-
inherited, and gave their own early bias, trates and ether officers of judicature and ex-
their creed, moials, knowledge, aspirations. ecution, artificial jom<s / ri ward and punish-
So that such social changes as are immedi- ment, by which, fastened to the seat of the
ately traceable to individuals ot unusual sovereignly, every joint and member is
power are still remotely traceable to the so- moved to perform his duty, are the nerves,
cial causes which produced these individ- that do the same in Ihe body natural the ;

uals, and hence, from the highest point ol wealth and riches of ail the particular mem-
view, such social changes also are parts ot bei s are the strength ; snlus popuU, the peo-
the general developmental process. ple's safety, its hvsmess ; counselors, by wht.m
Thus that which is so obviously true of ail things needful for it to know are sub-
PROGRESS: ITS L.VW AND CAUSE. 37t

eested unto it, are equity and


tlie rnerfiory ; tions of the truth. Lucking the great gen-
£ws, an reason and will; concoi-d,
artificiiil eralizalious of biology, it was, as we have
Tieallh ; sickness; cuiltcitr, deaUi."
fi'difion, said, impossible to trace out the real relations
Aud Hubbes carries tliia comparisquso far of social organizations to organizations of
as acnially to give a drawing of the Levi- another order. We propose here to show

athau a vast liuman-siiaped figure, 'whose what are the analogies which modern sci-
b -dy and limbs are made up of multitudes ence discloses to us.
of men. Ju^t noting that these different Let us set out by succinctly stating the
analogies asserted by Plalo aud Hobbes points of similarity and the points of differ-
serve to cancel each ether (being, as they are, ence. Sacleties agree with luilividual organ/^
so completely at variance), we may say that isms in four conspicuous peculiarities ;

on till' whole those of Hublics are the more 1. That, commencing as small aggrega-
plau.siblc. But they are IviU of mconsisten- tions, they insensibly augment in mass ;
cies. If the sovereignty is the S(ml of the some of Ihem eventually reaching ten thou-
body politic, bow ca;i it be that magistrates, sand times what they originally were.
who are kind of d(puty-sovereigns, should be 8. That while at first so simple hi struc-
comparable to joints? Or, agaiu, bow can ture as to l)e considered structureless, they
the three mental functions, mcnury, reason, assume, in the course of their growth, a con
and will, be severally analogous, the first to tiniially-iucreasiug complexity of struciure.
ooimsellnrs, who are a cla.-s of public oifi- 3. That though in their eai ly, undeveloped
cers, and the other two to equity and laws, states there exists in them scarcely any mu-
which are uot classes of ofBcers, but abstrac- tual dependence of parts, their parts giad-
tions ? Or, once moie, if magistrates are the ually acquire a mutual dependence, whicli
artificial joints of society, how can reward becomes at last so gieat that the activity
and punishmeut be its nerves? Its nerves and life of each part is made possible only
must surely be some class of persons. Re- by the activity and life of the rest.
ward and punishment must, in societies as 4. Tliat the lift! aud development of a so-
in individuals, be conditions of the nerves, ciety is independent of, and far more pro-
and not the nerves themselves. laaged than, the life and development of any
But the chief errors of these comparisons of its comp nent units: who are severally
made by Plato and Hobbes lie much deeper. born, grow, work, leproduoe, and die, while
Both tliinkers assume that the ra-ganization the body politic composed of them survives
of a society comparabJe, not simply to the
is generation after generation, incrcisiiig in
orgauization of a living body in gineral, but mass, completeness of stiucture, and func-
to the organization of the human body in tional activity.
particular. There is no warrant whatever These four parallelisms will appear the
for assuming this. It is in no way implied more significant the more we contemplate
by the evidence and is simply one of those
; them. VVhile the points specified are points
fancies which we commonly find mixed up in which societies agree with individual or-
with the truths of early speculation. Still ganisms, they are points in which iudivi Jual
more erroneous are the two conceptions in organisms agree with each other, and dis-
this, that they construe a society as an ar- agree with all things else. In the course of its
tificial structure. Plato's model republic— existence, every plant aud animal increases
his ideal of a healthful body politic— is to be in mass, in a way not paralleled by inor-
consciously put together by meri, just as a ganic objects even such inorganic objects
:

watch might be ; and Plato manifestly thinks as crj'stals. which arise by growth, sliow us
of societies in geneial as tlius originated. no such tiefinite relation between growth and
Quite specifically does Hobbes express this existence as organisms do. 'L'he onleily
view. "For \iy art," he says, "is created progress from simplicity to complexity, dis-
tliat great LEVLATHitf called a Com.mon- played by bodies politic in common with all
WBALTH." And hi! even goes so far as to living bodies, is a cliaracteristic wlrieh dis-
compare the supposed social eoutraet, from tinguishes Jiving bodies from the iuauimate
which a society suddenly originates, to the bodies amid which they move. Tliat firnc-
creation of a man by the divine fiat. Thus tional dependence of parts which rs scaictly
they both fall into the extreme inconsistency more manifest in animals or plants tlian na-
of considering a community as similar in tions, has no counterpart elsewhere. And in
structure to a human being, and yet as pro- no aggregate except an organic or a social
duced in the same way as an artificial me- one is there a perpetual removal and rephiee-
chaniism— in nature, an organism in history, ; ment of parts, joined with a coulinued integ-
a machine. rity of the whole.
Notwithstanding errors, however, these Moreover, societies and organisms are nut
speculations have considerable significance. only alike in these peculiaiities, in which
That such analogies, crudely as they are they are unlike all other things ;but the
thought out, should have been alleged by highest societies, like the bighe.^.t oignnisms,
Plato and Hobbes and many others, is a exhibit them in the greatest degree. We sea
reasjn for suspecting that some analogy ex- that the lowest animals do not increase to
ists. The untenableness of the particular anything, like the sizes of the higiier qnes ;
comparisons above instanced is no ground and, similarly, we see that aboriginal soci-
for denying an essential parallelism for ; eties are comparatively limited in their
early ideas are usually but vague adumbra- growths. In complexity, our large civilized
S73 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

nations as much exceed primitive savage which organic points are distributed. Now
tribes, as a vertebrate animal does a zoophyte. this is very the case with a society.
much
Simple communities, lilse simple creatures, For we must remember that though the meo
hcne so little mutual dependence of parts who make up i, society are physically sepa-
lliatsubdivision or mutilation causes but lit- rate and even scattered, yet that the surface
tle inoiinvenience ; but from complex com- over which they are scattered is not one de-
munities, as from complex creatures, you void of life, but is covered by life of a lower
uaiuiot remove auy considerable organ with- order which ministers to their life. The veg-
out producing great disturbance or death of etation which clothes a coL-ntry makes pos-
the rest. And in societies of low type, as in sible the animal life in that country and ;

inferior animals, the life of the aggregate, only through its animal and vegetal produota
often cut short by division or dissolution, ex- can such a country support a human society,
ceeds in length the lives of the component Hence the members
body politic are
of the
imits, very far less than in civilized commu- not to be regarded as separated by intervals
nities and superior animals which outlive
;
of dead space, but as diffused through »
many generations of their component units. space occupied by life of a lower order. In
On the other hand, the leading differences our conception of a social organism wemust
between societies and individual organisms include all that lower organic existence on
are these :
which human existence, and therefore social
1. That societies have no sptcific external existence, depend?. And when we do this,
forms. This, however, is a point of contrast we see that the citizens who make up a com-
which loses much of its importance, when munity may be consideied as highly vital-
we remember that throughout the vegetal ized units surrounded by substances of lower
kingdjm, as well as in some lower divisions vitality, from which they draw thtir nutii-
of the animal kingdom, the forms are often ment much as in the cases above instanced.
:


verj'' indefinite definiteness being rather the Thus, svhm examined, this appaitnt distinc-
exception than the rule ; and that tliey are tion in great pait disappears.
manifestly in part determined by surround- 3. That while tlie ultimate living elements
ing physical circumstances, as the forms of of an individual organism, are mostly fixed
societies are. If, too, it should eventually be in their relative positions, those of the social
shown, as we believe it will, that the form organism are capable of moving from place
of every species of organism lias resulted to place, seems a marked disagreement. But
from the average play of the external forces here, too, the disagreement is much less
to which it has been sut)ject during its evo- than would be supposed. For while citizens
lution as a species, then, that the external are locomotive in their private cajacities,
forms of societies should depend, as they do they are fixed in their public capacities. As
on surrounding conditions, will be a further farmeis, manufacturers, or tiaders, men
point of community. cany on their business at the same spots,
3. That though the living tissue whereof often throughout thtir whole lives and if ;

an individual organism consists forms a con- they go away occasionally, they leave liebiud
tinuous mass, the living elements of a society others to discharge their functions in their
do not form a continuous mass, but are absence. Each great centie of production,
more or less widely dispersed over some por- each manufacturing town or district, con-
tion of the earth's surface. This, which at tinues always in the Pame place and many ;

first s'ght appears to be a fundamental dis- of the firms in such town or district are for
tinction, is one which yet to a great extent generations carried on either by the descend-
disappears when we contemplate all the ants or successors of those who founded
facts. For, in the lower divisions of the ani- them. Just as in a living body, the colls
mal and vegetal kingdoms, there are types of that make up some important organ, severally
organization much more neady allied, in perform their functions for a time and then
this respect, to the organization of a society, disappear, leaving others to supply their
than might be supposed— types in which the places so, in each pait of a society, the or-
;

living units essentially composing the mass gan remains, though the persons who com-
are dispersed through an inert substance, pose it change. Thus, in social life as in the
Ihat can scarcely be called living in the full life of an animal, the units as well as the
sense of (he word. It is thus with some of larger agencies formed of them, are in the
tlie Protococci and with the Nostoaece, which main stationaiy as respects the places where
exist as cells imbedded in a viscid matter. It they discharge their duties and obtain their
\i so, too, with the r/iafaw'coZte— bodies sustenance. And hence the power of indi-
that are made up of differentiated parts, dis- vidual locomotion does not piactically affect
persed through an undifferentiated jelly. the analogy.
And throughout considerable portion's of 4. The last and peihaps the most impor-
Iheir bodies, some of the Acaleplm exhibit tant distinction is, that while in the body of
more or less distinctly this type of structure. an animal, only a special tissue is endowed
Indeed, it may be contended that tliis is with feeling, in a society all the members
the primitive form of all organization see-
;
are endowed with feeling. Even this distinc-
ing that, even in the highest creatures, as in tion, however, is by no means a complete
(.uiselves, every tissue develops out of what one. For in some of the lowest animals,
physiologists call a blastema— an unorgan- characteiized by the absence of a nervous
ized though oiganizable substance, through system, such sensitiveness as exists is poB-

PROOUESS: ITS LAW AWD CAUSE. 273

'tessedby all parts. It is only in the more distinctions such distinctions being scarcely
:

Organized forms that feeling is monopolized greater than tliose which separate one half of
by one class of the vital elements. Moreover, the organic kingdom from tlie other. The
we must remember tbat societies, too, are not principles of organization are the same and ;

without a certain differentiation of Ihitkind. the differences are simply differences of ap-
Though the units of a community are all sen- pl cation.
'ilive, yet they are so in unequal degrees. Here ending this general survey of the
The classts engagtd in agriculture and labo- facts which justify the comparison of a
ious occupations in general are much less society to a living body, let us look at them
•msceptible, intellectually and emotionally, in detail. We
shall find that the parallelism
..han llie rest ;and especially h ss sotluiu tlie becomes the moremarlied the more closely it
jlasses of highest mental culture. Still, we is traced.
tiave here a tolerably decided contrast be- The lowest animal and vegetal forms
^ween bodies politic and individual bodies. Prolo.'.oa and P rotophytij,— len chiefly in-
And it is one which vce should keep con- habitants of the water. They are minute
ftantly in view. For it reminds us that bodies, most of which are made individually
While m individual bodies tire vrelfaie of i.ll viiible only by the microscope. All of them
fjther parts is rightly subservient to the wel- are extremely simple iu structure and some
;

fare of lire neivous system, whose pleasur- of them, as the Rhizopods, almost structure-
able or painful activides make up the good less. Multiplying, as tliey ordinarily do, by
or evil of life in bodies politic the same
; the spontaneous division of their bodies, they
thing does not hold, or holds to but a very produce halves, which may either l)ecome
slight extent. It is well that the lives of all quite sepaiate and move away in diffeient
parts of an animal should be merged in the ilireotious, or may continue attached. Jij
life of the whule because the whole has a
;
tne repeli'ionof this process of fission, aggre-
corporate consciousness capable of happiness gations of various sizes an 1 kinds are formed.
or misery. But it is not so with a society, Among the Protophyta we have some classes,
since its living units do not and cannot lose as tlie Diaiomacem and the yeasl-plaut, in
individual consciousness, and since the com- which the individuals maybe either separate
munity as a whole has no corporate conscious- or attached in groups of two, three, four, or
ness. And this is an everlasting reasuu more other classes in which a considerable
;

why the welfare of citizens cannot rightly be number of individual cells are united into a.
sacrificed to some supposed benetit of the thread (Conferva, Monilia) others in which
;

state, but why, on the other band, the state they form a net-work (Hydrndictyon) otliers ;

is to be maintained solely for the benefit of in which Ihey form plates ( Ulva) and others
;

citizens. The corporate life must here be in which they form masses (Laniinaria,
subservient l) the lives of the parts, instead Agaricus) all which vegetal forms, having
:

of the lives of the parts being subservient to no distinction of root, stem, or leaf, are
the corporate life. called Tliallogens. Among the Protozoa we
Such, tlieu, are the points of analogy and flud parallel facts. Immense numbers of
the points of difference. May we uot say Arrv3iba-\W.a creatures, massed together in a
that the points of differeueu serve but to framework of horny fibres, constitute
bring into clenrer light thi points of analogy? sponge. In the Foraminifera, we see smaler
Willie comparison makes definite the ob\'ioa3 groups of such creatures arranged into mora
contrasts between organisms CLmrnonly SD definite shapes. Not only do these almost
called, and the social organism, it shows structureless Protozoa unite into regular ot
that even these contrasts are not so decided irregular aggregations of various sizes, but
as was to be expected. The indeflniteness among some of the more organized ones, as
of form, the discontinuity of the parts, the the Yorticdlm, there are also produced clus-
tnobilily of the parts, and the universal sensi- ters of individuals, proceeding from a com-
*i?eness, are not only pecuUarities of the mon stock. But these little societies of
'..xial organism which have to be stated with monads, or cells, or whatever else we may
:-onsidorable qualifications, but they are call them, are societies only in the lowest
leculiaiities to which the inferior classes of sense : there is no sutiordination of pui ts
mimals present approximations. Thus we among them— no organization. Each of tlia
'.u(I but little to conflict with the all-impor- component units b?es by and tr.i itself,
lut analogies That societies slowly augment neither giving nor receiving aid. There is no
1 mass ; that they progress in complexity of mutual dependence, save that consequent on
itructure ;that at the same time their parts mere mechanical union.
.'ecome more mutually dependent ; that tlieir Now do we not here discern analogies tD
I ving units are removed and replaced witli- the first stages of human societies ? Among
:ut destroying their integrity; and further, the lowest races, as the bu«hmen, we find
;aat the extents to which they display these —
but incipient aggregation sometimes single
JiBCuiiarities are proportionate to tiieir vital families, sometimes two or three families
activities ;are traits that societies have in wandering about together. The number of
common with organiu bodies. And tliese associated units is small and variable, and
traits iu which they agree with organic bodies their union inconstant. No division of labor
and disagree with all oilier tilings these — existsexcept between the sexes ;andtheonly
tiaits which in truth specially cliaiacteiize kin I of mutual aid is that of .ioint attack ut
organic bodies, enturely subordinate the minor defence. We see nothin;; beyond an undit*
274 PROGRESS; ITS LATT AND CAUSE.

ferenti:ited group of individuals, forming tlie such governmental organizatiop as ex-


tribes
germ of a society just as in \he homogene-
;
ists very inconstant.
is It is frequently
ous groups of cells' above described we see changed by violence or treachery, and the
uuly the initial stage of animal and vegetal function of ruling assumed by other mem-
organization. bers of the community. Thus between the'
The comparison may now be carried a step rudest societies and some of the lowest forms
Jifflier. In llie vegetal kingdom we pass of animal life there is analogy alike in llie
/fom the Thallogens, consisting of mere slight extent to which organization is carried,
masses of similar cells, to the Aerogens, in in the indefiniteness of this organization, and
which the cells are not similar throughout in its want of fixity.
the whole mass ; but are here aggregated A further complication of the analogy is at
into a structure serving as leaf, and there hand. From the aggregation of units into
into a structure serving as root, thus form- organized groups, we pass to the multiplica-
ing a whole in which there is a certain sub- tion of such groups, and their coalescence
division of functions among the units, and into compound groups. The Hydra, when it
therefore a certain mutual dependence. In has leached a certain bulk, puts foith fiom
the animal kingdom we find analogous prog- its surface a bud, which, growing and grad-
ress. From mere unorganized groups of ually assuming the foim of the paient, finally
cells, or cell-like bodies, we ascend to groups becomes detached and by this piocess of
;

of such cells arranged into parts that have gemmation the creatuie peofjles the adjacent
different duties. The common Polype, from water with others like itself. Apaiallel pro-
Whose substance may be separated individual cess is seen in the multiplication of those
cellswhich exhibit, when detached, appear- lowly-organized tribes above described. One
ances and movements like those of the soli- of them having increased to a size that is
tary Ammba, illustrates this stage. The com- either too great for co-ordination under so
ponent units, though still showing great rude a structure, or else that is greater than
community of character, assume somewhat the summnding country can supply with
diverse functions in the skin, in the internal game and other wild food, there arises a
surface, and in the tentacles. There is a cer- tendency to divide and as in such commu-
;

tain amount of " physiological division of nities there are ever-occurring quairels, jeal-
labor." ousies, and other causes of division, there
Turning to societies, we find Ihese stages soon cmes an occasion on which apaitot
parallel in the majority of aboriginal tribes. the tribe separates under the leadership of
When, instead of such small vaiiable groups some subordinate chief, and migrates. This
is are formed by bushmen, we come Id the process being from time to time repeated, an
larger and more permanent groups foimed extensive region is at length crropied with
by savages not quite so low, wa begin to tind numerous separate tribes descended frr.m a
traces of social structure. Though industrial common ancestiy. The analogy by no
organization scarcely shows itself, except in means ends here. Though in the ccnimnn
the different occupations of tlie sexes, yet Hydra, the young ones that bud out from tie
there \i always more or less of governmental paitnt soon become detached and indepen-
organization. "While all the men are war- dent, yet throughout the rest of the class
riors and hunters, only a part of them are Hydrozoa, to which this cieature behmg;!, the
included in the council of chiefs and in this
; like does not geneially happen. The succes-
council of chiefs some one has commonly sive individuals thus developed continue
Bupreine authority. There is thus a certain attached, give oiigin to other such individ-
distinction of classes and powers ; and uals which also continue attached, and so
through this slight specialization of func- there results a compound animal. As in the
tions is effected a rude co-operation among Hydra itself, we find an aggiegation of units
Ihe increasing mass of individuals, whenever which, considered separately, are akin to the
Jhe society has to act in its corporate capac- lowest Protozoa ; so here, in a Zooiihyte, we
ity. Beyond this analogy in the slight ex- find an aggregation of such aggregations.
tent to which organization is carried, there The like is also seen throughout the extensive
ja analogy in the indefiniteness of the organ- family of Polyzoa or 31olluscoida. The ascid-
ization. In the Hydra, the respective parts ian mollusks, too, in their man}' varied
^f the creature's substance have many func- forms, show us the same thing exhibiting
:

iinns in common. They are all contiactile ; at the same time various decrees of uuiou
emitting the tentacles, the whole of the ex- subsisting among the compontut individuals.
(ernal surface can give origin to young For while in the mlj.ce the component indi-
IlydrcB ; and when turned inside out, siomach viduals adhere so slightly that a blow on the
performs the duties of skin, and skin the vessel of water in which tbey are floating
duties of stomach. In aboriginal societies, will separate them in Ihe Potiyllida there
;

Buch differentiations as exist are similarly exists a vascular connection between them,
imperfect. Notwithstanding distinctions of and a common circulation.
rank, all persons maintain tliemselves by Now in these vaiii-us forms and degrees of
their own exertions. Not only do the head aggiegation, may we not see paralleled the
men of the tribe, in common with the rest, union of groups of connate tribrs into
build their own huts, make their own weap- nations? Though in ugi( ns where circum-
ons, kill their own food, but the chief does stances peimit, llie separate tribes descended
the like. Moreover, in the ludesl of these from some original tribe, migrate iu all diiec-
PEOGTRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE. a75

Uons aad beccme far removed and quite sep- is a partial separation of classes iaving dif-
aiate yet, in other cases, wliere Uie territory
; ferent duties. And now we have to observe
presents liairiers to distant migration, this how, in a nation formed by the fusion of
does not happen the small Idudred com-
; such small communities, the several sections,
munities are held in closer contact, and at first alrke in structures and modes of activ-
eventually become more or less united into a
nation. The contrast between the tribes of
ity, gradually become unlike in both
ually become mutually - dependent parts,
— grad-

American Indians and the Scottish clans diverse in their natures and functions.
ilUistrates this. And a glance at our own Tlie doctrine of the progressive division of
early history, or the early histories of conli- labor, to which we are here introduced, is
nunlal nations, shows this fusion of small familiar to all readers. And further, the
simple communities taking place in various analogy between the economical division of
ways and to various extents. As says M. labor and the " ph}'siolr)gical division of
Guizot, in his history of " The Origin of Rep- labor," is so striking, as long since to have
resentative Government," drawn the attention of scientific naturalists :
" By degrees, in the midst of the chaos of so striking, indeed, that the expression
the rising society, small aggregations are "physiological division of labor," has beeu
formed which feel the want of alliance and suggested by it. It is not neeilful, therefore,
union with each other. . Soon in- . . that we should treat this part of our subject
tqualily of displayed among
stiength is in great detail. We shall cxmtent ourselves
neigli boring aggregations. The strong tend with noting a few general aud significant
to subjugate tiie weak, and usurp at first the facts, not manifest on a first inspectiim.
rights of taxation and military service. Throughout the whole animal kingdom,
Thus political authority leaves the aggrega- from the Ccelenterata upward, the first stage
tions which first instituted it, to take a wider of evolution is the same. Equallj' in this
range." germ of a polyp and in the human ovum,
That is to say, the small tribes, clans, or the aggregated mass of cells out of which the
feudal unions, sprung mostly from a common creature is to arise gives origin to a periph-
stock, and long held in contact as occupants eral layer of cells, slightly diJfering from the
of adjacent lands, gradually get united in rest which they include ; and tuis layer sub-
other ways than by mere adhesion of race —
sequently divides into two the inner, lying
and proximity. in contact with the included yelk, being
Af Hither seiies of changes begins now to called the mucous layer, and the outer, ex-
take pliiee to which, as before, we shall find
; posed to surrounding agencies, being called
analogies in individual organisms. Katurn- the serous layer ; or, in the terms used by
ing again to the Hydrozoa ,YHi observe that iu Professor Huxley, in describing the develop-
the simplest of the compound forms, the —
ment of the Hydrozoa the endoderm and
connected iodividuals developed from a com- ectodeim. This primary division marks out
mon sUoek, are alike in structure, and per- a fundamental contrast of paits in the future
form like functions : with the exception, in- organism Prom the mucous layer, or en-
deed, thai here and there a bud, instead of doderm, is developed the apparatus of nu-
developing into a stomach, muulh, and ten- trition; while from the serous layer, or ecto-
tacles, becomes an egg-sac. But \fith the derm, is developed the appaiatus of external
oceanic Hydrozoa, this is by no means the action. Out of the one arise the organs by
case. In the Calyeaphonda, some of the which food is prepared and absoibed, oxygen
polyps growing from the common germ imbibed, and blood purified ; while out of
become developed and modified iulo large, the other arise the nervous, muscular, and
long, sack - like bodies, which by their osseous systems, by whose combined actions
rhythmical contractions move through the the movements of the body as a whole are
water, dragging the community of polyps effected. Though this is not a rigorously
after them. Iu the Pliysophoridai, a variety correct distinction, seeing that some organs
of organs similarly aiise by trausformatiou involve both of thise primitive membranes,
of the buJding polyps so that in creatures
; J'et high authorities agree in stating it as a
like the Pltysalia, commonly known as the broad general distinction.
" Portuiruese man-of-war," instead of that Well, in the evolution of a society wesee
group of similar individuals form-
Irte-like a primary differentiation of analogous kind,
ing original type of the class, we have a
t.'ie which similarly underlies the wliole future
complex mass of unlike parts fulfilling un- structure. As already pointed out, the only
like duties. As an individual i?i/fi(;-a may be manifest contrast of parts in primitive soci-
regarded as a group of Protozoa wliich have eties is that between the governing and the
become partlaDy metamorphosed into differ- governed. In the least organized tribes, the
ent organs, so a Physaliaxa, morphologically council of chiefs may be a body of men dis-
considered, a group of hydrae of which the tinguished simply by greater courage or ex-
individuals have been variously transformed perience. In more organized tribes, the
to fit them for various functions. chief-class is definitely separated from the
This differentiation upon differentiation is lower class, and oflen regfnried as different
just what takes place in the evolution of a in, nature — sometimes as goddesci'nded.
cii'ilizfd society. We
observed how, in the And later, wo find these two becoming le-
tmall communities first formed, there arises speotively freemen and slaves, or nolvks and
a certain simple political organization there — serfs. A glance at their leapective functions
a

276 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

makes it obvious that the great divisions thus whether they be retailers, who divide out to
early fovmi'.d stand to tacli oilier in a rela- those who wa^t them, the masses of tom-i
tion similar to tliat in which the piimary modifies thus collected together, all merean-/
divisions of Ihe embryo stand to eacli other. tile men are agents of transfer from tlifi
For, from its flisl appearance, the class of places where things are pioduced to tliS
chiefs is that by which the external acts of places where they are consumed. Tbui»^thi
the society are controlled alike in war, in
: distributing apparatus of a society answyfe
negotiation, and in migration. Afterward, to the distributing apparatus of a living
wnile the upper class glow 3 distinctfrom the body not only in its functions, but in its
;

lower, and at the same time becomes more inteimediale origin and subsequent position,
and more exclusively regulative and defen- and in the time of its appearance.
sive in its functions, ahke in the peisons of Without enumerating the minor differen-
kings and suboidinate rulers, priests, and tialiims which these three great classes after-
military leadeis the inferior class becomes
;
ward undergo, we will merely note that
more and more exclusively occupied in pro- throughout Ihey follow the same general
viding tlie necessaries of life for the com- law -with the differentiations of an individ-
munity at lage. From the soil, with which ual organism. In a society, as in a rudimeu-
it comes 11 most direct contact, the mass of the
i taiy animal, we have seen that the most gen-
people takes up and prepaics for use the food eral and broadly contrasted divisions are the
and tuch rude articles of manufacture as aie fiist to make their appearance; and of tlie
known, while the overlying mass of superior subdivisions it continues true in both cases,
mm, maintained by the woiking population, that they arise in the order of decreasing
deals with circumstances external to the generality.
commonily —ciicumstances
with which, by Let us observe next, that in the one case
position, it is more immediately concerned. as in the other, the sptcializalions aie at first
Ceasing bj' and by to have any knowledge very incomplete, and become moie com-
of or power over the concerns of the sotitty plete as organization progresses. We saw
as a whole, the serf class becomes devoted to that in primitive tribes, as in the simplest
the processes of alimentation ; while the animals, there remains much community of
noble class, ceasing to take any part in the functitn between the parts that aie nomi-
piocetses of alimentation, beccmes devoted nally diflereut that, for inslance, the class
:

to the co^oidinaled movtmen'.s of the entire of cbiefs long remain industrially the saru
body politic. as the inferior class just ati in a Hydra, llie
;

Equally remarkable is a furtlier analogy of property of contractility is possessed by the


like kind. After the mucous and serous units of the endodeim as well as by these ol
layers of the embryo have separated, there the ectoderm! Wc
noted also how, as the
presently arises between the two, a third, society advanced, the two great primitive
known to pli3'siologists as tlie vascular layer classes partook less and less of each ottier'fl
— a layer out of wbiih are developed the funcliuus. And we have here to remark,
chief blood-vessels. The mucous layer ab- that all subsequent specializations are at first
sorbs nutriment from the mass of yelk it in- vague, and gradually become distinct. " In
closes this null imeot has to be tiansferred
; the infancy of society," says M. Giiizot,
to the oveiiying serous layer, out of which "everything confused and unceilaiu;
is
the iiervo-muscular system is being devel- there is no fixed and precise line of
as yet
oped and between tlie two arises a vascular
; demarcation between the diffeient powers in
system by which tlie tiausfer is effected — a state." " Oiiginally kings lived like other
system of vessels whicli continues ever after landowners, on tlie inctmes derived from
to be the transferrer of nuliiment from the their own private estates " Nobles wete
places where it is absorbed and prepared, to petty kings, and kings only the most power-
the places where it is needed for growth and ful nobles. Bishops were feudal lords and
repair. Well, may we not trace a parallel military leaders. The right of coining- money
step in social progress ? was possessed by povreilul subjects, and by
Between the governing and the governed, the Church, as well as liy the king. Every
theie at first exists no intermediate class; leading man exercised alike the functions of
and even in some societies that have reached landowner, farmer, soldier, statesman, judge.
considerable sizps there are scaroely any but Retainers were now soldiers, and now la-
the uoblbs and tlieir kindred on the one hand, borers, as the day required. But by degrees
and the serfs on the other : the social struc- the Church has lost all civil jurisdiction the
;

ture lieing such tliat the transfer of com- state has exercised less and less control over
modities takes place directly from slaves to religious teaching the military class has
;

tlieir masters. But in societies of a higher grown a distinct one handicrafts have con-
;

type there grows up between these two centrated in towns and the spinning-wheels
;

primitive classes another the trading or— of scattered farmhouses have disappeared
middle class. Equally at first as now, we before the machinery of maoufacluring dis-
may see that, speaking generally, this middle tricts. jSot only is all pi ogress from the
class is the analugue of the middle layer in homogeneous to the heterogeneous, but at
the embryo. For all tradeis are essentially the same time it is from tlie indefinite to the
clislributors. Whether they be wholesale definite.
dealers, who collect into large masses the Another fact which should not be passed
commodiliea of various producers, or over, is that in the evolution of a large so-
PROGRESS: ITS LAW AXD CAUSE. 3:7

dety out of an aggregation of small ones the production of iron and iron-goods in-
there is a, gradual uUliteiation of the original cludes parts of Warwickshire, Slailofdshiie,
lines of scpaiation —
a cliarige to whinli, aUo, Woicesteishire and those various apeiiali-.
;

WB may see analogies ia living i)o<lics. zations of agriculture which have made
Thioiigliom the sub-liingiiom Amitilom this different parts of England noted for different
ipclea:lyand variously illustrated. Amnug products show no more respect to county
the lower types of tiiis siil)-kiugdom tiie boundaries than do our growing towns to
body consist." of numerous segments Hint are the boundaries of parishes.
alike in nearly eveiy particular. Each has If, after contemplating these analogies of
its extei nai iug
i ;its pair ot legs, if th'! creat- structure, we inquire whether tliere aie any
ure has legs its eq'.ial portion of intestines,
; such analogies beiween Ihe processes of or-
or else its sepaiatf stomach its equal por-
; ganic change, the answer is. Yes. TI16
tioa of the great blood-ves.se!, or, in some causes which lead to increase of bulk in any
cases, its separate h^art its equal poition of
; part of the body politic are of like nature
the uervous cord, and, perhaps, its sepaiale with those which lead to increase of bulk in
pair of ganglia. Hut in tlie highest types, as any pait of an individual liody. In both cases
in the large Vrnstuceii, many ot the segments the ;\utecedent is gi eater functional activity,
are cumpL'tely fused together, and tliu in- consequent on greater demand. Each limb,
ternal oigans are no longer uniformly re- viscus, gland, or other member of an animal
peated in all llie segnv.'nis. Now the seg- is developed by exercise —
by actively uis-
ments of whicli nations at first consist Inse charging the duties which the body at large
their separ,ite,extein:ilandinternal structures requires of it ; and similarly, any class of
in a similar manner. In feudal times the laborers or artisans, any manufacturing cen-
minor conimuiiities giverned by feudal tre, or any official agency, begins to enlarge
lor, Is, were se» ei'ally oigaaized in the same when the community devolves on it an in-
rude way, and were held togt-lher only by crease of work. In each case, too, growth
the fealty of their respec;i\'e lulers to some has i's conditions and its limits. Tiiat any
suzerain. But along with th? growth of a organ in a living being may grow by exer-
central power ihe demarcations of these cise there needs a due supply of blood all ;

looil c.)miniinitiL's disappeared, and their action implies waste blood brings the male-
;

separate 01 guiiz tipus merged into ibe gen-


I rials tor lepair ; and before tlieie can be
eral organization. The like is s»eu on a growth, the quantity of blood supplied must
larger scale, in tlie fusion nf England, Wales, be more than that requisite for repair.
Scollanil, and Ireland and, on tlie conti-
; So is it in a society. If to some district
nent, in the cialescence of provinces into which elaborates for the community partic-
kingdiinis. E/en in the disappearance of —
ular commodities say the woollens of York-
law made divisions, the process is analogous. shire— there comes an augmented demand ;

Among the Anglo-Saxons England was di- and if, in fulfilment of this demand, a cer-
vided into tithings, hund.eds, and counties : tain expenditure and wear of the munufac-
there weie county conits, courts of hundred, turiug organization are incurred and if, ia ;

and courts of tithing. The courts of tithing payment for the extra supply of woollens sent
disappeared tiist tnen the courts of hun-
: away there comes back only such quantity
dred, wiiich have, however, left traces while ; of commodities as replaces the expenditure,
the county jui isdiction still exists. and makes good the waste of life and ma-
'
But chiefly it is to be noted, that there chinery, there can clearly be no growth.
eventually grows up an organization which That there may be growth, the commodities
has no reference to these oiiginal divisions, obtained in return must be more than suffi-
but traverses them in various directions, as cient for these ends and just in proportion
;

is the case in creatures belonging to the sub- as the surplus is great will the growth be
kingdom just named and, further, that in
; rapid. Whence it is manifest that what in
both cases it is the sustaining organization commercial affairs we call profit answers to
which tlius traverses old boundaries, while the excess of nutrition over waste in a living
in both cases it is the governmental or co-or- body. Moreover, in both cases, when the
dinating organization in which th-; original functional activity is high and the nutrition
boundaries eonlinue traceable. Tnus, in the defective, there results not growth, but de-
higli.ist Ari:i,iiM>;a, the exo-skelstoa and the cay. If in an animal any organ is worked so
muscular sy»tein never lose all traces of hard that the channels which bring blood
their primitive segmentation, but throughout cannot furnish enough for repair, the organ
a great pait of the body the contained vis- dwindles and if in the body politic some
;

cera do not in the least conform to the ex- part has been stimulated into great produc-
ternal divisions. Similarly, with a nation, tivity, and cannot afterward get paid for all
we see that whilj, for governmental pur- ils produce, certain of its members become
poses, such divisions as counties an! parishes bankrupt, and it decreases in size.
still exist, the structure developed for carry- One more parallelism to be here noted is,
ing on the nutrition of society wholly ig- that the different parts of the social organ-
nores these boundaries : our great cotton- ism, like the different parts of an individual
manufacture spreads out of Lancashire into organism, compete for nutriment, and sev-
Noith Derbyshire Leicestershire and Not-
; erally obtain more or less of it according as
tinghamshire have long divided the stocking- they are discharging more or less duty. If a
Irade between them ; one great centre tor man's brain be ovei-excitcd, it will abstract
278 PROGRESS: ITS LAW AOT5 CAUSE.

blood from his viscera and stop digestion or


; primitive communities an analogous condi-
digestion actively going on will so afifect the tion ? When the men, partirfly or fully united
circulation through the brain as to cause into one society, become numerous when, —
drowsiness or great muscular exertion will
; as usually happens, they cover asuifaceof
determine such a quantity of blood to the country not everywhere alike in its products
limbs as to arrest digestion or cerebral ac- —when, more especially, there arise consiil-
tion, as the case may be. go, likewise, in a erable classes that are not industrial some ;

society, it frequently happens that great ac- process of excliange and distribution inevi-
tivity in some one direction causes partial tabl}' arises. Traversing here and Iheiellin
arrests of activity elsewhere, by abstracting earth's surface, covered by that vegetation
commodities as instance the
capital, that is : on which human life depends, and in which,
way in which the sudden development of as we say, the units ot a society are im-
our railway system hampered commercial bedded, there are formed indefinite paths,
operations ; or the way in which the raising along which some of the necessaries of life
of a large military force temporarily stops occasionally pass, to be bartered for others
the growth of leading intiustries. which presently come back along the pani»
The last few paragraphs introduce the cliannels. Note, however, that at fiist httle
next division of our subject. Almost un- else but crude commodities are thus trans-
awares we have come upon the analogy —
ferred fruits, fish, pigs or cattle, skins,
which exists between the blood of a living etc. : there are few, if any, manufactured
body and the circulating mass cf commodi- jirodurts or ai tides prepared for cousiimp-
ties in the body politic. We have now to lion. And note further, that such distribution
trace out this analogy from its simplest to its of these unprepared necessaries of life as
most complex manifestations.
In the lowest animals there exists no blood
talies place is but occasional —
goes on with
a certain slow, irregular rhythm.
properly so called. Through the small aggre- Further progress in the elaboration and
gation of cells which make tip a Hydra, per- distribution of mitiiment or of commodities
meate the juices absorbed 'from the food. is a necessary accompaniment of fiulher
There is no apparatus for elaborating a con- differentiation of functions in the individual
centrated and purified nutriment, and dis- body or in the body politic. As fast as each
tributing it among the component units ; organ of a living animal becomes confined to
but these compontnt units directly imbibe a special action, it must become dependent
the unprepared nutriment, either from the on the rest for all those materials which its
digestive cavity or from each other. May we position and duty do not permit it to obtain
not say that this is what takes place in an for itself in the same way that, as fast as
;

aboriginal tribe ? All its members severally each paiticular class of a community be-
obtain for themselves the necessaries of hfe comes exclusively occupied in producing its
in their crude states, and severally prepare own commodity, it must become dependent
them for their own uses as well as they can. on the the other commodities it
rest for
When there arises a decided diflereutiation needs. And, simultaneously, a more per-
between the governing and the governed, fectly-elaborated blood will result from a
some amount of transfer begins between highly-specialized group of nuttJtive organs,
those inferior individuals, who, as workers, severally adapted to prepare its different ele-
come directly In contact with the products ments ; in the same way that Ihe stream ot
of the earth, and those superior ones who commodities circulating throughout asociety
exercise the higher functions— a transfer will be of superior quality in proportion to
parallel to that which accompanies the the greater division of labor among the
differentiation of the ectoderm from the en- woikers. Observe, also, that in either case
doderm. In the one case, as in the other, the circulating mass of nutritive materials,
however, it is a'transfer of products that are besides coming gradually to consist of better
little if at all prepared, anil takes place di- ingredients, also grows more complex. An
rectly from the unit which obtains to the increase in the number of the unlike organs
unit which consumes, without entering into which add to the blood their waste matters,
any general current. and demand from it the different materials

Passing to larger organisms individual and they severally need, implies a blood more
social— we find the lirst advance upon this heterogeneous in composition an i •priori—
arrangement. Where, as among tlie com- conclusion which, according to Dr. Will-
pound Uydrozoa, there is an aggregation of iams, is inductively confirmed by examina-
or many such primitive groups as form tion of the blood throughout the various
EydrcB, or where, as in a Medusa, one of grades of the animal kingdom. And simi-
these groups has become of great size, larly it is manifest that as fast as the division
there exist rude channels running through- of labor among the classes of a community
out the substance of the body ; not how- becomes greater, there must be an increasing
ever, channels for the conveyance of pre- heterogeneity in the currents of merchandise
pared nutriment, but mere prolongations flowing throughout that community.
of the digestive cavity, through which the The circulating mass of nutritive materials
crude chyle-aqueous fluid readies the re- in individual
organisms and in social organ-
moter parts, and Is moved backward and isms becoming alike better in the quality of
forward by the creature's contractions. Do its ingredients and more heteroj^eneous in
we not find in some of the morfi advanced composition, as the type of structure becomes
'

PEOGKESS; ITS LAW AND CAUSE. 273

higher, eventually has udded to it, in both through the half-organized substance of the
cases anotliur element, which is not itself nu- body they have no lining membranes, but
:

tritive, but facilitates the process of nutii- are mere lacunm traversing a rude tissue.
tiou. Wu refer, in the case of tlie individual Now countries in which civihzation is but
organism, to tlie blood-dislis, and in the cuse commencing display a like condition there
:

of tiie social organism, to money. This are no roads properly so called but the wil-
;

anahigy who in
has Ijcen observed by Liebig, derness of vegetal life covering the earth's
his " Famiiiur Letters on Chemistry," says :
surface, is pierced by tracks, through which
" Silver and gold have to perfoim in the the distribution of crude commodities takes
organization of the slate the same function place. And while in both cases the acts pf
us the blood corpuscles in tlie liumau or- distribution occur only at long intervals (I he
ganization. As these round dislis, without currents, after a pause, now setting toward a
themselves taking an immediate siiare in the general centre, and now away from il), the
nutritive process, are the medium, tlio essen- transfer is iu both cases slow and dithcult.
tialcondition of the change of matter, of the But among other accompaniments of prog-
production of the heat, and of llie force by ress, common to animals and societies, comes
whicli the temperature of the body is kept the foimation of more definite and complete
up and the motions of the blood auil ailjthe channels of communication. Blood-vessels
juices are determined, so has goldr''become acquire distinct walls ; roads are fenced and
the medium of all iictivity in the life of the gravelled. This advance is first seen in
'
state. those roads or vessels that are nearest to the
And
blood-corpuscles bein^; like money in chief centres of distribution ; while the pe-
their fuucUous, and
in the fact that they are ripheral roads and peripheral vessels long
not consumed in nutrition, he furtlier points continue in their primitive states. At a yet
out, that the number of lliera which in a laterstage of development, wlrere comparative
considerable interval flows througli Uie great finish of structure is found throughcMit the
centres is enormous when compared with system as well as near the chief centies,
their absolute number just as Uie (juautity
;
there remains in both cases the difference,
of money which annually passes througli the that the main channels are comparatively
great mercanlile centres is enormous when broad and straight, while the subordinate
compared with (he total quantity of money ones are narrow and tortuous in proportion
in the kingdom. Nor is this all. Lieliig has to their remoteness.
omitted the significant circumstance, that Lastly, it is to be remarked that there ulti-
only at a certain stage of organizalion does mately arise in the higher social organisms,
this element of the circulation make its ap- as in the higher individual organisms, main
pearance. Throughout extensive divisions of channels of distribution still moie distin-
the lower animals, the blood contains no cor- guished by their perfect struct uies| their
puscles and in societies of low civilization
; comparative straightuess, and the absence of
there is no money. those small branches which the minor chan-
Thus far we have considered the anahtgy nels perpetually give off. And in railways
between the blood iu a living body and the we also see, for the first time in the social
consumable and circulating commodities in organism, a specialization with respect to
the body politic. Let us now compare the the directions of the currents— a system of
appliances by which they are respectively djuble channels conveying currents in oppo-
distributed. We
shall find in the develop- site directions, as do the arteries and veins
ment of these appliances, parallelisms not of a well-developed animal.
less remarkahle than those above set forth. These parallelisms in the evolutions and
Already we have shown that, as classes, structures of the circulating systems intro-
wholesale and retail distributors discharge in duce us to otliers in the kinds and rates of
a society the otHoe which the vascular sys- the movements going on through them. In
tem discliarges in an individual creature that ;
the lowest societies, as in the lowest creat-
they como into existence later than the other ures, the distribution of crude nutriment is
two great classes, as the vascular layer ap- by slow gurgitations and regurgitations. In
pears later than the mucous and serous lay- creatures that have rude vascular systems,
ers and that they occupy a like inlerinedi-
;
as in societies that are beginning to have roads
ate position. Here, however, it remains to and some transfer of commodities along
he pointed out that a complete conception of them, there is no regular circulation iu defi-
the circulating system in a society includes nite courses ; but instead, periodical changes
not only the active human agents who propel —
of the currents now toward this point, and
the currents of commodities, and regulate now toward that. Through each part of an
their distribution, but includes also the inferior moUusk's body the blood flows for
channels of communication. It is the forma- a while in one direction, then stops, and
tion and arrangement of these to which we flows in the opposite direction ;
just as
uow direct attention. through a rudely-organized society the dis-
Groiug back once more to those lower ani- tribution of merchandise is slowly carried on
mals in which there is found nothing but a by great fairs, occurring in different locali-
partial diffusion, not of blood, but only of ties, to and from which the currents periodi-
crude nutritive fluids, it is to be remarked cally set. Only animals of tolerably com-
that the channels through which the liillu- plete organizations, like advanced communi-
sion takes place are mere excavations ties, are permeated by constant currents that
;

280 PROGRESS. ITS LAW AJfD CAUSE.

are definitely directed. In living bodies the element facilitating the nutritive processes.
local and varijible currents disapffear wlien The cliannelsof communication pass Ihrougli
tliere grow up great centres of circulation, similar phases of development, which bring
generating more powerful currents by a them to anaicgous forms. And the direc-
rhythm which ends in a quiclc, regular pul- tions, ihylhms, and rates of circuialion jvo-
sation. And when in social bodies theie gress by like steps to like final conditions.
aiise great centres of commercial activity, We come at length to the nervous system.
producing and exchanging large quantities of Having noticed the primary differentiation of
conmiodities, the rapid and conlmuoua societies into the governing and governed
streams drawn in-and emitted by these cen- classes, and observed its apalugy to the dif-
tres subdue all minor and local circulations : ferentiation of the two primary tissues whieli
the slow rhy tlim of fairs merges into the faster respectively develop into organs of external
one of weekly markets, and in the cidef cen- aclion and organs of alimentation ; having
tres of distribution weekly markets merge noticed some of the leading analogies be-
into daily maikele while in place of the
; tween the development of industrial arrange-
languid transfer from place to place, taking ments and that of the alimentary appaialus;
place at first weekly, then twice or thiice a and having, above, more fully tractd the
week, we liy and by get daily transfer, and analogies between the distributing systems,
finally transfer many times a day the orig- — social and individual, we have now to com-
inal sluggish, irregular rhythm becomes a pare the appliances by which a society, as a
rapid, eijuahle pulse. whole, is regulated, with those by which Ihe
Mark, ton, that in both cases the increased movements of an iniiividual creature are
activity, like tlie greater perfection of struc- regulated. Weshall find here paialklisiaj
ture, is mucli less conspicuous at the pe- equally striking with those already detailed
riphery of the va.scular sj stem. On main lines The class out of which goveinnienlal
of railway we have, perhaps, a score trains organization originates, is, as we have said,
in each'direction daily, going at from thirty analogous in its relations to the ectoderm of
to fifty miles au hour a», through the great
; the lowest animals and of embiyonic forms.
arteries, the blood rushes rapidly in succes- And as this primitive mtmhiane, out of
sive gushes. Aljng higli roads there move which the neivo-muscuiar system is evolved,
veliicles conveying men and commodities must, even in the first stage of its differentia-
with much less, though still considerable tion, be slightly distinguished from the rest
speed, and wilh a much less decided rhythm ,
by that greater impressibility and contractil-
as, in the smaller arteries, the speed of the ity characterizing the organs to which it
blood is greatly diminished, and the pulse gives rise ; so, in that supeiior class which
less conspicuous. In parish-roads, narrow, is eventually transformed into the directo-
less complete, and more tortuous, the rate of execuiive system of a society (its legislative
movement is further decreased and the and defensive appliances), does there exist in
rhythm scarcely traceable, as in the ultimate the beginning a larger endowment of the
arteries. In those still more imperfect by- capacities required for tJiese higher social
roads which lead from these parish roads to functions. Always, in rude assemblages of
scattered farmhouses and cottages, (he motion men, the strongest, most courageous, and
is yet slower and very irregular just as we
; must sagacious become rulers and leadeis
find It in the capillaries. While along the and in a tribe of some standing this results
fleld-roads, which, in their unformed, un- in the establishment of a dumiuant class,
feuced sti^te, are typical of laciinm ihe move- characterized on the average by those mental
ment is tlie slowest, the most irregular and and bodily qualities which fit them for delib-
the most infrequent as it is, not only in the
; eration and vigorous combined action. Thus
primitive lamncB of animals and sncielies, that greater impressibility and contractility,
but as it IS also in those lacunae in which the which in the rudest animal types characterize
vascular system ends among extensive fam- the units of the ectodeim, characterize also
ilies of infi riur cieatures. the units of the pi imitive social ectoderm;
Thus, then, we find between the distribut- since impressibility and contractility are the
ing systems of living bodies and tlie distrib- respective roots of inlelli£r(nce and strength.
uting systems of bodies politic, wondei fully Again, in the unmodified ectoderm, as we
close parallelisms. In the lowest forms of see it in the Hydra, the units are all endowed
individual and social organisms there exist both with impressiliility and contractility;
nciilier prepared nutritive matters nor dis- but as we ascend to higher types of organi-
tiibutiug appliances and in both, these,
; zatiou, the ectoderm differentiates into classes
arising as nccessaiy acconipanimenls of the of units which divide those two functions
differential ion of pails, appioach perfeclioa betwetjn them : some, becoming exclusively
as this differentiation aiiproaclies complete- impressilile, ceass to be contractile while
;

nei^s. In animals as in societies, the dii^trib- same, becoming- exclusively contractile,


uling S!;cncics begin to show themselves at cease to be impressible. Similarly with
the same rdattvo periods, and in the same societies. In an aboriginal tribe, the direc-
relative poshions. In the one, as in the tive and executive functions are diffused in
other, the nutritive mateilals ciiculaled are a mingled form throughout the whole gov-
at flisl crude nd simple, giadually liecome
s
erning class. Each minor chief commandB
better {labjialed and mcjre heterogeneous, those under him, and, if need be, himself
and have e^mlualiy aiided to them anew coieces them into obeilience. The council
a ;

PROGRESS; ITS LAW AND OAUSE. 281

of carries out on the batlle-field


rlilcf-i itself divided without severing the body, the hind
il3 owu decisions. Tlie head cliief uut onlv limbs may be seen trying to propel the body
makes laws, but administers iustice with his in one direction, wliile the fore limbs are
own hands. In larjjer and more settled com- trying to propel it in another. Among the
munities, howevcTjlhe directive and executive higher Artieulata, however, a number of the
aiXt.-ncies begin to prow distinct from each anterior pairs of ganglia, besides growing
other. As fast as his duties accumulate, the larger, unite iu one mass ; and this great
head chii f or king confines l.'imselfmore and cephalic ganglion, becoming the co-ordiuator
mjre to directing public affairs, and leaves of all the creature's movements, there no
the execution cf his will to others he de- : longer exists much local independence.
putes olh( rs to enforce submission, to inflict INowmay wenotin thegrowlhof a consoli-
p:in!shment«!, cr to carry out minor acts of dated Idngdom out of petty sovereignties or
cftVncc i'.iid defence and only on occasions
; baronies, observe analogous changes ? Like
when, [loiliaps, Uie safely of the society and the chiefs and jirimitive rulers above de-
his iiwu supremacy aie at slake, does he scribed, feudal lords, exercising supreme
begin to act as well as direct. As this diffor- power over their respective groups of retain-
cnlialion establishes itself the characteristics
, ers, discharge functions analogous to those
of the ruler begin to change. No longer, as of rudimentary nervous centres ; and we
in an aboriginal tribe, the strongest and most know that at first tliej-, like tlieir analogues,
darmg man, the tendency is for him to be- are distinguished by supeiioritiesof (iirecti''e
come the man of greatest cunning, foresight, and executive organization. Among these
and skill in the management of otbeis for ; local governing centres there ia, in early
in societies that have advanced beyond the feudal times, very little subordination. They
first stage it is chiefly such qualities that are in frequent antagonism they are indi-
;

insu'-e success in gaining supreme power, vidually restrained chiefly by tlie influence
and holding it against internal and e.xleinal of large parties in their own class, an 1 are
enemies. Thus that member of the govern- but imperfectly and irregularly subject to
ing class who comes to be the chief directing that must powerful member of their nider
agent, uiid so plays the same part that a who has gained the position of head suzeiain
rudimentary nervous centre does in an un- or king. As the growth and organization of
folding organism is usually one endowed the society progresses, these local diieclive
with some superiorities of nervous oiganiza- centres fall more and more under the contnd
tion. of a chief directive centre. Closer commer-
In those somewhat larger and more com- cial union between the several segments ij
plex communities possessing, perhaps, a sep- accompanied by eloser governmental union ;
arate military class, a priestliood, and dis- and these minor rulers end in being litile
persed masses of population requiring local more than agents who administer, in their
control, there necessarily grow up subordi- several localities, the laws made by the
nate governing agents who, as their duties
; supreme ruler ; just as the local ganglia
accumulate, severally become more directive above described eventually become agents
and less executive in their characters. And which enforce, in their respective segments,
when, as commonly happens, the king be- the orders of the cephalic ganglion.
gins to collect round himself advisers who The parallelism holds still further. "We
aid him by communicating information, pre- remaiked above, when speaking of the rise
paring subjects for his judgment, and issuing of aboriginal liings, that in pioportion as
his ordeis, we may say that the form of their territories and duties increase, they are
organization is comparable to one very gen- obliged not only to perform their executive
eral among inferior types of animals.in which functions by deputy, but also to gather round
there exists a chief ganglion with a few dis- themselves advisers to aid them iu their
persed minor ganglia under its control. directive functions ;and that thus, in place
The analogies between the evolution of of a solitary governing unit, there grows up
governmental structures in societies, and the a group of governing units, comparable to a
eyohition of governmental structures in living ganglion consisting of many cells. Let us
bodies, are, however, more strikingly dis- here add, that the advisers and chief olflceis
played during the formation of nations by who thus form the rudiment of a ministry,
the coalescence of small communities — tend from the beginning to exercise a ceitain
process already shown to be, in several re- control over the ruler. By the information
spects, parallel tu the development of those they give and the opinions they express, they
creatures that primarily consist of many like sway his judgrrient and affect his commands.
segments. Among other points of commu- To this extent he therefore becomes a chan-
nity between the successive rings which make nel through which aie communicated the
up the body in the lower Artieulata, is the directions originating with them and in
;

possessiqn of similar pairs of ganglia. These course of time, when the advice of ministers
^aiis of ganglia, though united together by becomes the acknowledged source of his
nerves, are very incompletely dependent on actions, the king assumes very much the
any general controlling power. Hence it re- character of an automatic centre, reflecting
sults that when the body is cut in two, the the impressions made on him from without.
hinder part continues to move forward under Beyond this complication of governmental
the propulsion of its numerous legs ; and structure many societies do not progress
that wlien the chain of ganglia has been but in some a further development takes
283 FROGHESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE.

place. Our own case best illustrates this and diiectly appreciated by the sensory
further denliipment and its fuitber atialo- gnnglia or primitive nerv<ju8 centres, the cer-
{jiea. To^ kings and llieir ministiks have c! rum receives only tlie representations of
been addi'd, in England, other great directive these f-entations and its consciousness is
;

ctulies, exercising a control which, at first called represeniaUve consciousness, to dis-


srnnl), lias been giadually bccomiug predom- tinguish it frcm the original or p^'esentatiu
inant : as with the great governing ganglia consciousness. Is it not sign ifir ant Ihiit we
t'aat especially distinguish the highest classes liave hit on the same word to distinguish ilie
of living beings. Strange as the assertion function of our House of Commons 1 We
will be thought, our houses of parliament call it a repreientaU'ce body, because the in-
discharge in the social economy, functions terests with which it deals —
the pains and
Itiat a;e in sundry respects comparable to pk-asuies about which it cont-ults— are not
those discharged by the cerebral masses in a directly presented to it, but represented to it
(ViTlebiiile animal. As it is in the nature of by its various members and a debate is a
;

a single ganglion to be affected only by conflict of representations of the evils or


special stiujuli from particular parts of the benefits likely to follow from a proposed
bodj-, so it is in the nature of a siogle'iuler —
course a description which applies with
to be swayed in his acts by exclusive persoii- equal truth to a debate in tlie individual con-
al or class interests. As it is in the nature sciousness. In both cases, too, these great
rf an aggregation of ganglia, connected with governing masses take no part in the execu-
the primary one, to convey to it a greater tive functions. As, after a conflict in the
variety of influences from more numerous cerebrum, those desires which finally pre-
organs, and thus to' make its acts conform dominate act on the subjacent ganglia, and
to more numerous requirements, so it is through their instrumentality determine the
in the nature of a king surrounded by sub- bodily actions so the paities which, after a
;

sidiary controlling powers, to adapt his rule pat liameutaiy struggle, gain tbe victory, do
to a greater nu'taber of public exigencies. not themselves carry out their wishes, hut
And as it is in the nature of those great and get them carried out by the executive divi-
l-Uest-developed ganglia Wshich distinguish sions of the government. Tbe fulfilment of
the higher animals, tp interpret and combine alllegislative decisions still devolves on the
the multiplied and varied impressions con- original directive centres —
the rn;pulse pass-
veyed to them from all parts of the system, ing from the parliament to the ministers, and
^ and to regulate the actions in such way as from the ministers to the king, in whoso
duly to regard them all so it is in the nature
; name everything is done just as those
;

of those great and latest-developed legislative smaller, first developed ganglia, which in the
bodies which distinguish the most advanced lowest vertebrata are the chief controlling
."ocieties, to interpret and combine the wishes agents, are still, in the brains of the higher
and complaints of all classes and localities, vertebrata, the agents through which the
and to legulate public affairs as much as dictates of the cerebrum are worked out.
possible in harmony with the genetal wants. Moreover, in both cases these original
The cerebrum co-ordinates the countless centres become increasingly automatic. In
heterogeneous consirleralions which affect the developed vertebrate animal, they have
tliepiesent and future welfare of the indi- little function beyond that of conveying im-
vidual as a whole and the legislature co-
; pressions to, and executing the determina-
ordinates the countless heterogeneous con- tions of, the larger centres. In our highly
siderations which affect the immediate and organized government, the monarch has long
remote welfare of the whole community. been lapsing into a passive agent of parlia-
We may describe the office of the brain as ment and now, ministers are rapidly falling
;

that of averaging the interests of life, physi- same position.


into the
cal, intellectual, moral, social and a good
; Nay, between the two cases there is a par-
brain is one in which the desires answering allelism, even in respect of the exceptions to
to these respective interests are so balanced, this automatic action. For in the individual
that the conduct they jointly dictate, sacri- creature, it happens that under circumstan-
fices none of them. Bimilarly, we may de- ces of sudden alarm, as from a loud sound
scribe the office of a parliament as that of close at hand, an unexpected object start-
ai:eraging the interests of the various classes ing up in front, or a slip from insecure foot-
in a community and a good parliament is
; ing, the danger is guarded against by some
one iif wliich the parties answering to these quick involuntary jump, or adjustment of
respective interests are so balanced, that the limbs, that lakes place before there is
their united legislation concedes to each class time to consider the impending evil, and
as much as consists with the claims of the take deliberate measures to avoid it the
:

rest. Besides being comparable in their rationale ot which is, that these violent im-
duties, tliese great directive centres, social pressUms produced on the senses are reflected
and individual, are comparable in the pro- from the sensory ganglia to the spinal cord
cesses by which their duties are discharged. and muscles, without, as in ordinary cases,
It is now an acknowledged truth in psy- first passing through the cerebrum. In Uke
chology, that the cerebrum is not occupied manner, on national emergencies, calling for
with direct impressions from without, but prompt action, tire king and ministry, not
wilii the ideas of such impressions instead
: having time to lay the matter before the
of tbe actual sensations produced in the body. great deliberative bodies, themselves issue
PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE. 263

commands for the requisite movements or our railways. The most striking parallel-
precautions the primitive, and now ahnost
: ism, however, remains. Into each great
automatic, directive centres, resume tor a bundle of nerves, as it leaves the axis of the
moment their original uncontrolled power. body along with an artery, there enters a
And then, strangest of all, observe that in branch of the sympathetic nerve which ;

either case there is an after process of branch, accompanying the artery through-
approval or disapproval. The iudividual out its ramifications, has the function ol
ou recoveiing from his automatic start, at regulating its diameter and olhervvise con-
once contemplates the cause of his fright ; trolliag the flow of blood through it accord-
and, according- to the case, concludes ing to the local reciuirements. Analogously,
that it was well he moved as he did, tn the group of telegraph wires running
or condemns himself for his groundless alongside each railway, theie is (me for the
alarm. In like manner, the deliberative —
purpose of regulating the traffic for retard-
powers of the state discuss, as soon as may ing or expediting the flow of passengers and
be, the unauthorized acts of the executive commodities, as the local conditions demand.
powers and, deciding that the reasons were
; Probably, when our now rudimentary tele-
or were not suttioieut, grant or withhold a graph-system is fully developed, other anal-
bill of indemuil}'.* ogies will be traceable.
Tnus far in comparing the governmental Such, then, is a general outline of the evi-
organizHtion of the body politic with tliiitiof dence which justifies, in detail, the compari-
an mdividual body, we have considered only son of societies to living organisms. That
the respective co-ordinating centres. We they gradually increase in mass that they ;

have yet to consider tlie channels through become little by little more complex that at ;

which these cj-ordiuatmg centres receive in- the same time their parts grow more uiutu-
form Ltiun and convey commands, in the ally dependent, and that they continue to
simijlest societies, as in tha simplest organ- live and grow as wholes, while successive
isms, lliere is no " internuncial apparatus," generations of their units appear and disap-
as Hunter styled the nervous system. Con- pear, are broad peculiarities which bodies
sequently, impressions can be but slowly politic display, fn common with all living
propagated iiom unit to unit throughout the bodies ;and in which they and living bodies
whole mass. Tiie same progress, however differ from everything else. And on carry-
wliicli, in animal organization, shows itself ing out the comparison in detail, we find
in tlie establishment of ganglia or directive that these major analogies involve many
centres shows itself also m
the establishment minor analogies, far closer than might have
of uerve-tlireads, through vvluch the ganglia been expected. To these we would gladly
receive and convey impressions, ami so con- have added others. We had hoped to say
1«)1 reni,)te organs. And in societies the like something respecting the different types of
eventually takes place. social organization, and something also on
After a long period during which the social metamorphoses but we have reached
;

directive centres commanicale with various our assigned limits.


parts of the society through other means,
VI.
there ut last comes into existence an " inter-
nuncial apparatus," analogous to that found THE USB OF ANTHROPOMORPHISM.
iu individual bodies. The comparison of That long fit of indignation which seizes
telegraph-wires to nerves is familiar to all. allgenerous natures when in youth they be-
It applies, however, to an extent not com- gin contemplating human affairs, having
monly supp*sed. We
do not refer to the fairly spent itself, there slowly grows up a
near alliance between the subtle forces em- perception that the institutions, beliefs, and
ployed iu the two cases though it is now
; forms so vehemently condemned are not
held that the nerve-force, if not literally elec- wholly bad. This reaction runs to various
tric, is still a special form of electric action, lengths. In some, merely to a comparative
related to the ordinary form much as mag- ooutentment with the arrangements under
netism is. But we refer to the structural which they live. In others to a recognition
arrangements of our telegraph - system. of the fitness that exists between each people
Thus, throughout the vertebrate sub-king- and its government, tyrannical as that may
djin, the great nerve-bundles diverge from be. In some, again, to the conviction that, «

the vertebrate axis, side by side with the hateful though it is to us, and injurious as it 1

great arteries and similarly, our groups of


;
would be now, slavery was once beneficial
telegraph- wires are carried along the sides of — was one of the necessary phases of human
progress. Again, in otheis, to the suspicion
* It may be well to warn the reader against an erroi that great benefit has indirectly arisen from
fallen incu by one who criticised this essay on its first the perpetual warfare of past times insur- ;
uiibllcHtion— the eiTorof supposing that the analogy
here intended ro be drawn is a specific analosiy be-
ing as this did the spread of the strongest
tween iJie organizHtion of society m
England and the races, and so providing good raw material
Imman organization. As said at the oiitnet. no purh for civilization. And in a few this leaction
analogy exists. The above parallel is one be-
Specific
tween the most-developed systems of governniental
ends in the generalization that all modes of
organization, individual and social and thevertebrate
;
human thought and action subserve, in the
type is instanced merely as exhibiting this most-de- times and places in which they occur, soma
veloped system. If any specific cqmparison were useful function :that though bad in the ab-
made, which it cannot rationally be, it would bo tc
some much iower~vertebrhte form than the human. stract, they are relatively good—are the best
i84 pi;oG?.rc ITS LAW a:;d cause.

which the then existing conditions admit of. rather necessity, is manifested by themselves
A startling conclusion to which this faith with sufficient grossness —
a grossness that is
in the essenlial beneficence of things com- offensive to those more advanced Cbiistiaus —
leligious creeds throiigl-
niits us, is tliHt Ihi; are indignant at the still grosser maniffsia-'
wliich tuankiud Fuccessively pass, are, dur- tious of it Men among uncivilized men. Cer-
ing the eras inwhich they are 6ev< rally held, tainly, fuch conceptions as those of seme
the best that could be held ; and that this is Pojynefians, who believe that their gods feed
true, not only of the latest and most ri fined on the souls of the dead, or as tli(;se of llie
creeds, but of all, e^en to the earliest and Greeks, who ascribed to the peisonages of
most gross. Those who regard inin's faiths their Pantheon eveiy vice, fum domestic

as given to thera from without as having (•annibalism downwaid, aie repulsive enough.
origins either directly divine or diabolical, But if, ceasing to legard these notions from
and who, considering their own as the sole the outside, we more philosophically regard
example of the one, class all the rest under —
them from the inside if we consider how
^he other, will tiiink this a very shocking they looked to believers, and observe the
opinion. ] can imagine, too, that many of lelalionships they bore to the natuus and
those who have abandoned current theologies needs of such, we shall begin to think of
and now rpgiird religions as so many natural them with some tolerance. The question to
products of human nature— men who. hav- be answered whether these beliefs were
is,

ing lof't that antagonism toward their old beneficent in their eflfecls on those who held
treed which they felt while shaking them- Ihcm not whether they would bebinificent
;

selves free fiom it, can now see that it was for us, or for perfect men and to this ques-
;

higlily beneficial to past generations, and is tion the answer must be that while absolutely
beneficial still to a large part of mankind I ;
bad, they were relatively good.
ran iniiigine even these hardly prnpared to For it is not olivious that the savage man
arimit that all religions, down to the lowest will be most effectually cHinliolled by his
lelichism, have, in their places, fulfilled use- feais of a savage deity Must it not happen,
'I

ful fimctiohs. If such, however, will con- that if his nature requires great lestraiut, ihr
Bi!~tpnlly develop their ideas, they will find supposed consequences of transgression, t'e
tijis inference involved. be a check upc n him, must be propoition-
For if it be true that humanity in its cor- ately terrible; and for these to be propoition-
porate as well as in its individual aspect, is ately terrible, must not his god be conceived
a growlli and not a manufacture, it is ob- as proportionately ciuel and revengeful? Is
^i'lU3 that during each phase men's theolo- it not well that the treacherous, thievish,

gies, MS well as their po:itical and social ar- lying Hindoo should believe in a hell wherd
langements, must be determined into such the wicked are boiled in caldions, rolled
foims as the conditions 'require. In the one down mountains Inistling with knives, and
case as in the other, by a tentative process, sawn asunder between flaming iron posts!
things from time to time resettle th&raselves And that there may be provided such a hell,
in a way that Lest consists with national is it not needful that he should believe in a
equilibrium. As
out of plots and the Strug- divinity delighting in human immolations
gles of chieftains, it continually results that and the self-torture of fakirs? Does it not
the strongest gets to the top, and by virtue seem clear that during the earlier ages in
of his proved superiority insures a period of Christendom, when men's feelings were so
(juiet, and gives society lime to grow as out
;
hard that a holy father could describe one of
of incidental expedients there periodically the delights of heaven to be the contemplation
aiise new divisions of labor, which get per- of the torments of the damned does it not —
manently estab'ished only by serving men's seem clear that while the general nature was
wants better than the previous arrrange- so unsympathetic, there needed, to keep men
ments did so, the creed wliich each period
;
in order, all the prospective tortures de-
(volvesisone more in conformity with the scribed by Dante and a deity implacable
needs of the time than the creed which pre- enough to inflict them ?
ceded it. Not to lest in general statements, And if, as we thus see, it is well for the
however, let us consider why this must be savage man to believe in a savage god, thea
so. Let us fee whether, in the genesis of we may also see the great usefulness of this
men's ideas of deity, there is not involved a anthropomorphic tendency ; or, as before
necessity to conceive of deity under the as- said, necessity. We
have in it another illus-
pect most influential with thtm. tration of that essential beneficence of things
It is now generally admitted that a more visible everywhere throughout nature.
or less idealized humanity is the form which From this inability under which we labor to
every conception of a peisonal God must conceive of a deity save as some idealization
fake. Anthiopomorphism isan inevitable of ourselves, it inevitably results that in each
lesult of the laws of thought. We cannot age, among each people and to a great ex-
take a step toward constructing an idea of tent in each individual, there must arise just
God without the ascription of human attri- that conceptiarn of deity best adapted to the
butes. We cannot even speak of a divine needs of the case. If being violent and
will without assimilating the di vine natuie to bloodthirsty the nature be one calling for
our own for we know nothing of volition
;
stringent control, it evolves the ideja of a ruler
save as a property of our own minds. Btill more violent and bloodthirsty, and fil;ted

While this anthroDomorphic tendency, or to afford this control. Wlien by ages of so-
PROGRESS: ITS LAW AND CAUSE. 28?

Claldiscipline the nature has been partially have for their aboriginal god, a serpent. Is U
humanized, and the degree of restraiat re- not clear, then, that these violent emotions
quired has become less, the diabolical char- which the missionaries describe, these ter-
acteristics before ascribed to tlie deity cease rors and agonies of despair which they re-
to be so predominant in the conception of joiced over, were nothing but the worship of
him. And gradually, as all need for rr. the old god under a new name ? It is not
slniint disappears, this conception approxi- clear that these Fejees had simply under-
mates toward that of a purely beneficent stood those parts of the Christian creed
necessity. Thus, man's constitution is in whi(;h agree in spirit with their own the —
this, as in other respects, self adjusting, vengeance, the perpetual torments, the dia-
self-balancing. The mind itself evolves a bolism of it that these, harmonizing with
;

compensating check to its own inovements, their natural conceptions of divine rule, were
varying always in proportion to ihe require- realized by them with extreme vividness ;

ment. Its centrifugal and its centripetal and that the exlieriaity of the fear which
forces are necessarily in correspondence, be- made them " literally roar for linurs to-
cause the one generates the other. And so gether," arose from the fact that while Ikey
we find that the forms of both religious and could fully take in and believe the punitive
secular rule follow the same law. As an ill- element, the merciful one was beyond their
controlled national character produces a de- comprehension ? This is the obvious infer-
spotic terrestrial government, so also does it ence. And it carries with it the further one,
produce a despotic celestial government the — that in essence their new belief was merely
one acting through the senses, the other their old one under a new form— the same
through the imagination anQ in the con- ; substantial conception with a diffeient his-
verse case the same relationship holds good. tory and different names.
Organic as this relationship is in its origin, However great, therefore, may be the
no aitiflcial interference can permanently seeming change adventitiously produced in
affect it. Whatever pertuibalions an exter- a people's leligioii, the anthroptniorphic ten-
nal agency may seem to produce, they are dency pievtn'ts it from being other than a
soon neutralized in fact, if not in appearance. superficial change —insures such modifica-
1 was recently struck with this in leading a tions of the new leligion as to give it all the
missionary account of the "gracious visita- —
potency of the old one oliscurts whatever
tions of the Holy Spirit at Vewa, " one of the higher elements there may be in it until the
iVjee Islands. Describing a " penitent people have I eached the capability of being
meeting," the account says ; acted upon by them and so, re-establishes
:

" Ceitainly the feelings of the Vewa peo- the equilibrium between the impulses and
ple were not ordinal y. Tliey liteially the control they need. If any one requires
loared for hours together fcjr the disquie- detailed illustrations of this, he will find
tude of their souls. This frtquently leimi- them in abundance in the histoiy ot the modi-
naled in fainting from exhaustion, which fications of Chiislianity throughout Europe.
was Ihe only respite some cf tliem had till Ceasing then to legard heathen theologies
they found peace. They no sooner recovered from the personal point of view, and consid-
their consciousness than they prayed them- ering them solely with reference to the func-
selves first into an agony, ihen again into a tion" they fulfil where they are indigenous,
state of entire insensibility." we must recognize them, in common whh all
Now these Fejee Islanders are the most theologies, as good for their time and places ;

savage of all the uncivilized races. They and this mental necessity which disables us
are given to cannibalism, infanticide, and from conceiving a deity save as some ideali-
human sacrifices ; they are so bloodthirsty zation of oui selves, we must recognize as
and so treacherous thatmemlieis of the same the agency by which harmony is produced
family dare not trust each other ; and, in and maintained between every phase of hu-
harmony with these characteristics, they man character and its religious creed.

CONTENTS.
PAGE
IV. The Developmeat Hypothesis S67
I Progress: its Law and
Cause ^33
The Social Organism
The Physiology of Laughter
It. . . ^i V. 2()9
._
«» VI. The Use ol Anthropomorphism 283
HI The Origin and Function of Musio
.;; ;

Coatents:— Progress; the Physiology of Laugh- No, 29. Facts And Fictions of Zoology.
"terOrigin and Functions of Music the Develop-
; ; By Andrew Wilson, Ph.D. (illustrated).
ment Hypothesis the Social Organism the Use ;
j
Contents :— Zoological Myths the Sea Serpents ;

of Anthropomorphism. of Science Some Animal Architects Parasites


; ;

and Their Development What I saw in an Ant's


fljo, 18. I-essons in ElectrJleity. By Nest.
;

John Tvndall, F.R.S. (illustrated).


Contents [_in part): The Art of Experiment; — Nos. 30 and 31, On the Study ot
Electric Induction ; Lichtenberg's Figures ; Elec- ^Vords, By Richard Chenevix Trench, D.D,
trics and Non-Electrics
the Lej^den Jar ; ; Physio- Contents ;— Introduction the Poetry in Words ;
;

logical Effect of the Electric Discharge ; Atmos- the Morality in Words; the History in Words;
pheric Electricity, etc., etc. the Rise of New Words the Distinction of Words ;
;

the Schoolmaster's use of Words.


]Vo« 19. Familiar !Essays on Scientific
Subjects. By Richard A. Proctor, F.R.A.S. No. 32, Hereditary Traits, and other
Contents :— Oxygen in the Sun Sun-spot, Storm Essays. By R'chard A. Proctor, F.R.A.S. ;

and Famine Ne'vv ways of Measuring the Sun's


;
Contents :— Hereditary Traits Artificial Som- ;

Distance Drifting Light-waves


; The new Star nambulism Bodily Illness as a Mental Stimulant ;
;

which f£.ded into Star-mist ; Star-grouping. Dual Consciousness.


No. 20. Tlie Roniance of Astronomyo No, 33. Vignettes from Nature. By
By Ri Kalley Miller, M.A. Grant Allen.
Contents —The Planets Astrology The Moon
:
;
Contents (in part)
the Heron's ;— Fallow Deer ;

the Sun the Comets Laplace's Nebular Hypoth-


; ;
; ;
Haunt Wild Thyme the Fall of the Leaf the
; ; ;

esis the Stars ,the Nebulae Appendix. Hedgehog's Hole Seaside Weeds the Donkey's ; ;
; ; ;
Ancestors,
No. 21. On tlie PhysicalBasis of rife.
The Philosophy of Style. By No, 34.
With other Essays. By Thomas H. Hux-
ley, F.R.S.
Herbert Spencer. To which is added :— The
Contents:— Physical Basis of Life ScientiHc Mother Tongue, By Alexander Bain, ;

Aspects of Positivism A Piece of Chalk Geolog- LL.D.


ical Contemporaneity
Contents: —The ;

A Liberal Education and to words Effect Principle ;


of Economy applied
;

where to find it. of Figurative Language Ex- ;

plained Arrangement of Minor Images in build-


No. 22. Seeing and Thinking. By Prof
;

mg up a thought The Superiority of Poetry to ;

William Kingdon Clifford, F.R.S. (illustrated). Prose explained Causes of Force in Language ;

Contents :—The Eye and the Brain the Eye and ; which depend upon Economy of the Mental Sensi-
Seeing the Brain and Thinking; On Boundaries
; bilities ; the Mother Tongue.
in General. No. 35. Oriental Relis^ions. Edited by
No. 23. Scientific Sopliisms :— A Review Rev. John Cairo, D.D., President of the Uni^
of Current Theories concerning" Atoms, Apes versity of Glasgow.
and Men. By Samuel Wainright, D.D. Contents Brahmanism Buddhism ; — Confu-

: ;

Contents- The Right of Search Evolution: A ; cianism Zoroaster and the Zend Avesta.
;

Puerile Hypothesis Scientific Levity a House of •

No. 36, liCctures on Evolution, with a.r


Cards Sophisms Protoplasm the Three Begin-
; ; ;
Appendix on the Study of JSiology, By
nings the Three Barriers; Atoms; Apes; Men
; ;
Thomas H. Huxley, F.R S. (illustrated).
Anima Mundi. Contents:—The Three Hypotheses respecting
No. 24. Popular Scientific Ejcctures. the History of Nature the Hypothesis of Evolu- ;

By Prof. H. Helmholtz (illustrated). —


tion the Neutral and Favorable Evidence ; the
Contents —The Relation of Optics to Painting.
: Demonstrative Evidence of Evolution ; the Study
T. Form. 2. Shade. 3. Color. 4. Harmony of of Biology.
Color the Origin of the Planetary System
; ; No, 37. Six liCetures on Light, By John
Thouffht in Medicine ; Academic Freedom in Ger- Tvndall, F.R.S. (illustrated).
man Universities. Contents Introductory —
Origin of Physical
: ;

No. 25. The Origin of —


Nations :— Com- Theories Relation of Theories to Experience ,
;

two divisions, viz.: ""Early Civiliza-


prising Chromatic Phenomena produced by Crj'stals •,

tions, and "Ethnic Affinities," By George Range of Vision and Range of Radiation Spec- ;

Rawlinson, M.A., Camden Professor of Ancient trum Analysis.


History in Oxford University, England. Nos. 38 and 39. Geological Sketches
Contents Early Civilizations : —
Introduction : — :
at Honie and Abroad ; in two Parts, each
Antiquity of Civilization in England Antiquity of ;
complete in itself. By Archibald Geikie,
Civilization at Babylon Phoenician Civilization F.R.S.
Civilizations of Phrygia, Lydia, theTroas, Assyria,
Media, India, etc.; Civilization of* the British Celts
ContentsPart I My first Geological Excur-
:
:

; sion " The Old Man of Hoy " the Baron's Stone
; ;
Civilization of the Etruscans Results of „the In- ;
of Killochan the Colliers of Carrick Among the
quiry. Ethnic Affinities Chief Japhetic Races : — ; Volcanoes of Central France the Old Glaciers of
;

;
;

Subdivisionsof the Japhetic Races; Chief Hametic Norway and Scotland Rock-Weathering meas- ;

Races: Subdivisions of Cush Subdivisionsof Miz- ; ured by Decay of Tombstones. Part II: A Frag-
raim and Canaan the Semitic Races Subdivis- ; ;
ment of Primeval Europe In Wyoming The ; :

ions of the Semitic Races, Geysers of the Yellowstone the Lava fields of ;

No. 26. Xlie Evolutionist at liarge* By Northwestern Europe the Scottish School of ;

Grant Allen. Geology Geographical Evolution ; the Geologi-


;

(in part) :— Microscopic Brains ; Slugs


Contents cal influences which have affected the course of
and Snails ; Butterfly Psychology In Summer • British History.
Fields; Speckled Trout ; Origin of Walnuts ; Dogs No. 40. The Scientific Ii:Tidence of Or-
and Masters, etc., etc. fanic Bvoiution. By George J. Romanes, '

No. 27. Xlie History of liandlioldlng .R.S.


in England. By Joseph Fisher, F.R.H.S. Contents (in pa;rt);—The Argument from Classi-
Contents (in part) :— The Aborigines the Scan- ;
fication —from Morphology or Structure— from
dinavians; the Plantagenets the Stuarts; the Ro- ;
Geology— from Geographical Distribution- from
mans the Normans; the Tudors the House of
;
;
Embryology, etc., etc.
prunswick Land and Labor, etc., etc.
; No, 41, Current Klscnssions .in Sci-
No, 28. Fashion in Deformityj as Illus-
. ence. By W. M. "Williams, F.C.S.
Contents (in part): The Fuel of the Sun; Ori-
trated in the Customs of Barbarous and Civil-
Henry gin of Lunar Volcanoes Aerial Exploration of
ized Races. By William Flower, F.R.S. ;

To which is added :— Jtlanners the Arctic Regions ; The Air of Stove-heateii


(illustrated).
and. Fasliion. By Herbert Spencer. Rooms, etc., etc.
Contents (in part) — Fashions in Coiffure Tat- No. 42, History of the Science of Poll-
: ;

tooing; Deforming the Teeth Deforming the tics. By Frederick Pollock, ;

Feet: Eradicating the Eyebrows; Ornaments for Contents The Place of Politics in Human :

the Nose, Ears, Lips Compressing the Skull Knowledge The Classic Period — Pericles— Soc-
; ;

Effects of Tight Lacing, etc., etc. rates^^Plato— Aristotle, etc.; the Medieval Period

;;;; ;;

—the Papacy and the Empire Beginning of the Tlos, 56 and S?. lUnslons: A Psya
:

Modern Period— Machiavelli —Hobbes; the Mod- chologlcal Study. By James Sully.
—Locke—Hooker—Blackstone— Hume
ern Period Contents —
The Study of Illusion Classification
:

Montesquieu — Burke the Present Century— Ben-


;

; of Illusions ; Illusions of Perception j Dreams


tham— Austin— Kant— Savigny— Herbert Spencer. Illusions of Introspection ; Other Quasi-Presenta-
No. 43. Darwin and Humlboldt, their tive Illusions Illusions of Memory ; Illusions of
;

Ijives and Works :— Contains


a series of Belief.
notices ofDarwin, by Huxley, Romanes, Geikie, Nos. 58 and 59 (two double numbers, 30 cents
Thiselton Dyer; also the late Prof. Agassiz's each). The Origin of Species. By Charles
Centennial Address on the Life and Work of Darwin.
Alexander von Humboldt. *** This is Darwin's famous work complete,
No8. 44and45. The Daw^n of History :
with index and glossary.
an introduction to Pre-Historic Study. Edited No. 60. The Childhood of the TVorld.
'

C. F. Keary, M.A., of the British Museum.


by By Edward Clodd, F.R.a.S.
In two Parts. Contents (in part) Man's First Wants, Man's
: —
Contents of Part I Earliest Traces of Man ; the
: First Tools, Fire, Dwellings, Use of Metals Lan- ;

Second Stone Age ; the Growth of Languages guage, Writing, Counting, Myths about Sun and
Families of Languages the Nations of the Old ; Moon, Stars, Eclipses Ideas about the Soul, Be- ;

World; Early Social Life: the Village Community. lief in Witchcraft, Fetichism, Idolatry, etc., etc.
Contents of Part H; Religion; Aryan Religion; No. 61. Mlscellaueons Essays. By Rich-
the Other World : Mythologies and Folk Tales ard A. Pkoctor.
Picture Writing ; Phonetic Writing Conclusion, ;
Contents :
—Strange Coincidences ; Coincidences
No. 46. The Diseases of memory. By and Superstitions ; Gambling Superstitions
Th. Ribot. (Translated from the French by Learning Languages ; Strange Sea-Creatures the ;

J. Fitzgerald.) Origin of Whales ; Prayer and Weather.


Contents — Memory as
a Biological Fact j Gen-
:
No. 62 (Double number, 30 cents). The Ke*
eral Amnesia Partial Amnesia ;Exaltation of ; liglons of the Ancient World.
Memory, or Hypern?.nesia Conclusion. ;
Contents :—Religions of the Ancient Egyptians,
No. 4T. The Childhood of Religions. ancient Iranians, Assyrians, Babylonians, ancien/
By Edward Clodd, F.R.A-S. Sanskritic Indians, Phoenicians, Carthaginians,
Contents (in part) :— Legends of the Past about Etruscans, ancient Greeks and ancient Romans.
Creation Creation as told by Science Legends
; ; No. 63. Progressive morality. By
of the Past about Mankind ; Ancient and Modern Thomas Fowler, F.S.A., President of Corpus
Hindu Religions, etc., etc. Christi College, Oxford.
No. 48. Iilfe In Nature. By James Hinton, Contents: — The Sanctions of Conduct; th^
Author of " Man and his Dwelling Place." Moral Sanction, or Moral Sentiment Analysis ;

Contents (in partj Function ; Living Forms .


— and Formation of the Moral Sentiment ; the Moral
Is Life Universal ? Nutrition ; Nature and Man
;
Test; Examples o{ the practical applications oi
the Life of Man, etc., etc. the Moral Test.

No. 49. The Snn:— its Constitution; its Phe-


No. 64. The Distribution of Jjlte. By
Alferd RussElf Wallace and W. T. Thiselton
nomena its Condition.

By Nathan f. Carr, Dyer.
LL.D., Judge of the 'Ninth Judicial Circuit of
Indiana. Contents (in part) :— Geographical Distributton
of Land Animals Distribution of Marine Ani..
;
Contents :—The Sun's Atmosphere the
(in part) ;
mals -Relations of Marine with Terrestrial Zoolog-
Chromosphere the Photosphere ; Production of
;
ical Regions; Distribution of Vegetable Life;
the Sun's Spots the Question of the Extinction of
;
Northern, Southern, Tropical Flora, etc., etc.
the Sun, etc., etc.
Nos. 50 and 51. ITIoney and the Mech- No. 65. Conditions «t mental DeTel*
anism of Exchange. By Prof. W. Stan- opmentj and Other Essays. By William
Kingdon Clifford, F.R.S.'
lev Jevons, F.R.S.
Contents :— Conditions of Mental Development;
Contents (in part) :—The Functions of Money
Early History of Money the Metals as Money
Aims and Instruments of Scientific Thought;
Principles of Circulation Promissory Notes the
Atoms The First and the Last Catastrophe.
;
;

Banking System the Clearing House Quantity;


No. 66. Technical Education, ?nd other
; ;

of Money needed by a Nation, etc., etc. Essays. By Thomas H. Huxlby, F.R.S. ;

No. 52. The Diseases of the ITUl. By Contents :—Technical Education The Connec- ;

Th. Ridot. (Translated from the French by J. tion of the Biological Sciences with Medicine;
Fitzgerald.) Joseph Priestley On
Sensation and the Unity ol
;

Structure of the Sensif erous Organs On Certain ;


Contents :—The Question Stated ; Impairment Errors respecting the Structure of the Heart at-

of the Will Lack of Impulsion Excess of Impul- — tributed to Aristotle.
sion Impairment of Voluntary attention ; Caprice
;

Extinction of the Will Conclusion. ;


No. 67. The
Black Death; An account o{
the Great Pestilence of the 14th Century. By
No. 53. Animal Automatism, and Other J. F. C. Hecker, M.D.
Essays.By Prof. T. H. Huxley, F.R.S.
Contents :— General Observations; the Disease;
Contents :

Animal Automatism Science and ;
Causes— Spread, Mortality Moral Effects Physi- ; ;
Culture Elementary Instruction in Physiology
;

the Border Territory between Animals and Plants ;


cians ; Appendix,
Universities, Actual and Ideal. No. 68 (Special Number, 10 cents). Three
No. 54. The Blrtlt and Oronrtb of Essays, viz.: Laws, and the Order of theif
inyth. By Edward Clodd, F.R.A.S. Discovery Origin of Animal Worship ; Politi-
;

cal Fetichism. By Herbert Spencer.


Contents (in part) :— Nature as viewed by Primi-
tiveMan Sun and Moon in Mythology the Hindu No. 69 (Double Number, 30 cents). Fetich-
Sun and Cloud Myth Demonology Beast Fables
;
ism A: Contribution to Anthropology and the
Totemism, etc., etc.
; ;
History of Religion. By Fritz Sckultze, Ph.D.
Translated from the German by J. Fitzgerald,
No. 55. The Scientific Basis of morals, M.A.
and Other Essays. By William Kingdom
Clifford, F.R.S. Contents :—The Mind of the Savage'; Relation
between the Savage Mind and its Object Fetich- :

Contents :— Scientific Basis of Morals Right and ism as a Religion Various Objects of Fetich Wor-
;
Wrong ; the Ethics of Belief ; the Ethic; of Re- ship ;—The Highest Grade of Fetichism; Aim ol
ligion. Fetichism.
' ;
;

No. 70. Essays, Speculative and Prac-


tical. By Herbert Spencer. ^S' 84. studies of Animated Nature.
By W. S. Dallas.
Contents :— Specialized Administration- "The
Contents: — Bats; Dragon-Flies:' The Glow.
Collective Wisdom;" Morals and Moral Senti-
Worm and other Phosphorescent Animals; Minute
ments ; Reasons for Dissenting from the Philos-
Organisms.
ophy of Comte
What is Electricity ?
;

No. 71. Amtfcropology. By Daniel Wil- No. 85. The Essential Nature of Ro-
son, LL.D.
llgion. By J. Allanson Picton.
Contents Religion and Freedom of Thought;
Contents :— Scope of the Science ; Man's Place in :

Evolution of Religion; Fetichism; Nature- Wor-


Nature ; Origin of Man Races of Mankind An-
;
; ship; Prophet! ''eligions; Religious Dogma; The
tiquity of Man Language ; Development of Civ- Future of Re'
ilization.
No. 72. TUe Dancing mania of ^2,V*?:, "'"• Universe. Also,
Middle Ages. By
tlie rheP» Mie Pure Science ':
J. M.D. By Wm
F. C. Hecker,
,d, f.r.s.
Contents (in part) :— The Dancing Mania in Ger-
many and the Netherlands The Dancing Mania in;
Contf Universe; Philosophy of
Italy; The Dancing Mania in Abyssinia. the Pi atement of the Question ;'

Knov /; Postulates of the Science


No. 73. EToIution in History, Iian- of S- jal Statements of Arithmetic.
gaage, and Science. Lectures delivered at
the London Crystal Palace School of Art, Sci- N' morphine Habit (OTor-
ence, and Literature. ) With Four other
Contents .-—The Principle of Causal Evolution / Prof. B. Ball, M.D,
Scientific Study of Geography ; Hereditary Ten
;
-neral Description of Morphino-
dencieff; Vicissitudes of the English Language. of the Abuse of Morphine; Effects
Nos. 74, 75, 76,- 77. Xlie Descent ! The Borderland of Insanity Pro- ;

.ms ; Cerebral Dualism Insanity in


Man, and Selection in Relatlor ;

Sex. By Charles Darwin.


*«* Price, Parts 74, 75, 76, fifteen cent' Science and Crime, and other
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-^ 89. The Genesis of Scieuce. By
IBERT SfeNCER.
"hich is added The Coming of Age of "
: The
Species " By T. H. Huxley.
" "n.Earthqiialtes : with
^'^tchard a. Proctor.

^'fc^
— -•«.- on Earthquakes; Photograph-
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;


Contents: Social Benefits of Paraffin; Forma- Niagara; The Unknowable; Sun-Worship Her-
;

tion of Coal Chemistry of Bog Reclamation ; The


; bert Spencer on Priesthoods Star of Bethlehem •

Coloring of Green Tea " Iron Filings " in Tea


;
; and a Bible Comet An Historical Puzzle; Gahleo,
;

Origin of Soap Action of (Frost on Building Ma-


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terials, etc. ; Fire-Clay and Anthracite ; Rumford's Parents and Children.


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92.

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£fie^resent and the Past Life in Other Worlds
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No. 94. The Factors of Organic Evolution. By Herbert Spencer.

No. 95. The Diseases of Personality. By Th. Ribot.


(Translated

from the French by J.


Fitzgerald.)
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