- Sympathetic
Vibratory Physics - It's
a Musical Universe!
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-
- THE ETHER AND ITS
FUNCTIONS.
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- By Professor GEORGE FRAZER FITZGERALD,
1890?
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- "All are but parts of one stupendous
whole
- Whose body nature is, and God the soul."
-
- We often speak of space as being empty. We speak of an
empty room when it is quite full of air. We speak of empty space
between the stars. From this point of view the first line of the
above couplet should run:
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- "All are but parts of one stupendous
whole."
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- When we more carefully consider matters, however, we must
concede that this way of speaking does not accurately represent
even the popular view of nature. Still less does it represent the
view that must be taken by every diligent observer and accurate
thinker. In the case of an empty room, everybody acknowledges that
it is really full of air, and that to speak of it as empty is not
absolutely accurate, though sufficiently so for ordinary purposes.
It does not deceive those whom we are speaking to. Quakers even
have not objected to use the term. It is defensible on the same
plea as stating that one is "Not at home." Neither statement is
verbally accurate, but neither statement deceives, and each is, in
consequence, quite legitimate. It does not appear at first sight,
however, that there is any obvious way in which it is inaccurate
to speak of interstellar space as empty. There are, no doubt,
stars and comets and nebulae and meteors, but between them surely
space is empty. And yet even popularly a place is spoken of as
"full of light." Surely the space all round the sun is "full of
light." Can we, with perfect accuracy, speak of a space as empty
which is full of light?
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- There have been several theories as to the nature of this
light that fills space. At one time it was supposed to be some
sort of process or feeler that was projected out of people's eyes
by which they felt objects. What the cause of day and night can
be, seems a serious difficulty to this hypothesis. It would,
anyway, justify the suggestion as to the uselessness of the sun
which came, out by day, though it would hardly explain the
usefulness of the moon. This view is not even held by "cranks"
nowadays. Light is attributed to the sun, to lamps, to candles,
and not to the eyes of the observer. Metaphysicians may ask for
the sense in which one can speak of light being present without an
observer, but even in this age of skepticism, these very important
metaphysical questions have not yet attracted popular attention.
We are content to assert that in some sense or another we are
justified in speaking of light being due to the sun, or a
lamp.
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- A more recent view was that light was due to small particles
emitted by bright bodies. This was a hypothesis with many things
to recommend it. In this case it was certainly inaccurate to speak
of interstellar space as empty. It must be choked full of these
minute particles, hurrying about in all directions at the almost
inconceivable rate of one hundred and ninety-two thousand miles a
second. Can a space thus actively occupied be accurately described
as empty? Even in the shadow of the earth there must be
innumerable such particles. The stars are shining there. The earth
itself must be emitting immense numbers of them, for we know that
it is cooling all night, and the phenomenon of giving out heat by
radiation is essentially the same as that of giving out light by
radiation. There are, however, several very serious difficulties
in the way of believing this hypothesis. One of the most serious
is that one must suppose, upon this hypothesis, that the light
travels more quickly in water than in air, while it has been
proved by a direct experiment that light travels more slowly in
water than in air. There are, in addition, several other
difficulties in this hypothesis. Very curious and rather
inexplicable fits of easy reflection and easy transmission have to
be attributed to these light particles. In order to explain them,
Sir Isaac Newton suggested that all space was full of a fluid
which in some way caused these inexplicable fits. Such a
suggestion almost surrendered all ground for the hypothesis that
there were any light particles at all. Once it is conceded that
there is a medium filling space, why not attribute light to the
vibrations of this medium in the same sort of way as we attribute
sound to the vibrations of the air? This is, in fact, the
hypothesis now held, and while it explains almost every fact
connected with light, there are no known facts necessarily
inconsistent with it.
-
- Still, there are people who do not believe in this medium.
They seem to think that the sun may act upon us here without any
intervening medium. Such people do not appreciate the difficulty
in thus explaining what becomes of the action during the eight
minutes it takes to reach the earth after it has left the sun. The
light takes eight minutes to pass over the intervening space. What
is it during, these eight minutes? One view was that it existed as
small particles traveling with an enormous velocity. This
hypothesis is untenable because it does not explain a number of
other light effects. The other view is that it exists as some sort
of periodic change in structure of an intervening medium which is
called a wave of light in the ether. This is consistent with all
known phenomena, and no other hypothesis has as yet been published
which has been shown to explain in an intelligible way the
phenomena of light.
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- But there are other phenomena due to the air, for instance, in
addition to sound. It has chemical actions, it can blow things
about by winds, it can burst strong vessels by its pressure. Are
there no phenomena due to the ether except light? Surely a medium
whose vibrations are so important can hardly fail to possess other
properties. Lord Salisbury, no doubt, said in his inaugural
address last year, as President of the British Association at
Oxford, that the only function of the ether was to undulate. This
was a most extraordinary mistake for even a politico-scientist to
make. It is one of the glories of British science that by Faraday
and Clerk Maxwell a sure foundation has been laid for the theory
that electric and magnetic forces are due to the ether. Its only
function is to undulate! One might as well say the same of the
atmosphere or of the waters of the sea. No doubt the undulatory,
electric and magnetic properties of the ether require us to
suppose a very much simpler nature for the ether than for any
known form of ordinary matter. Ordinary matter, with which we are
so familiar that we treat its wonders with contempt, is fearfully
and wonderfully complex. We cannot hope to explain the innumerable
properties of air, for instance, which is quite a simple form of
matter compared with most other commonly occurring forms, without
attributing to it some very complicated structure. The properties
of the ether are so simple that there is every hope that we may be
able to explain its properties by attributing to it a simple
structure. So far as is known we need only attribute to it the
ability to produce electric force and magnetic force in order to
explain all the phenomena which can be repeated in any properly
equipped laboratory. It is as if we had an invisible bar by means
of which we could either push or pull or twist objects at a
distance. These are very simple operations, and if they were the
only ones that the invisible bar could perform we might very
fairly describe it as possessed of very simple properties. No real
ordinary matter is so extraordinarily simple as that.
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- A solid glass bar, for instance, would prevent our pushing our
fingers across it; it would bend light that passed through it; it
would reflect light from its surface; it would absorb heat; it
could be melted if raised sufficiently in temperature; it could be
acted upon chemically by hydrofluoric acid; and it would possess
innumerable other important properties, so that we could hardly
fairly describe it as possessed of very simple properties. Of
course no one can prophesy that there may not be found many other
important properties of the ether which may show it to be very
complicated. The very fact that matter is so complicated, and that
ether is so intimately connected with matter, shows that the ether
may be very complicated too. At present, however, it seems as if
these complications were due to the complex nature of matter,
while a comparatively simple ether would suffice to explain all we
know.
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- In the beginning of science it was difficult for people to
believe that we were living at the bottom of an ocean of air.
Winds were looked upon as subtle entities rather than as movements
of the air. The rising of water in pumps was ascribed to an
unexplained natural principle of abhorrence of a vacuum. In a
similar way we have, until within the last few decades, been
content to explain electric and magnetic forces by a natural
principle of attraction of electricity and magnetism. As soon,
however, as the existence of winds and the rising of water in
pumps, the height of the barometer, and the flight of balloons
were all explained by the varying pressures in an ocean of gas,
people gave up their former obviously unsatisfactory and
provisional explanations, and nobody now doubts the theory that
these phenomena are all due to a medium whose vibrations
constitute sound. All these properties have been shown to be
consistent properties of a single medium, and consequently nobody
doubts of the existence of this medium. We now are persuaded that
we feel this medium when the wind blows us; we see its action when
balloons rise; we hear its vibrations in sound. In a similar way
electric, magnetic and light phenomena are all consistent
properties of a single medium, and consequently no one should
doubt of the existence of this medium. We should feel this medium
when a magnet pulls at a piece of iron we hold; we should see its
action in a flash of lightning; we should see its vibrations in
light.
-
- But, it may be said, nobody has been able to explain these
properties? Well, neither has anybody been able to explain the
properties of the air. Some of the simpler properties of the air
can, no doubt, be explained by supposing it to consist of
countless small elastic particles of different sizes and weights
jostling one another about. The elasticity of these particles is,
however, unexplained, and a great many of their properties,
notably the whole series of these chemical properties, are still
in that obviously provisional condition of being described as
simply properties of doing this, that and the other. The electric,
magnetic and luminous properties of the ether are very much
simpler than the innumerable properties of air, and it is
consequently not unreasonable to expect that they will be
explained, and it is consequently unreasonable to doubt of the
existence of the ether because of its possessing unexplained
properties, while we have no doubt of the existence of air though
it possesses very many more unexplained properties.
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- Several directions have been suggested in which we may look
for explanations of the simple properties of the ether. It has
been suggested that it may consist of particles somewhat like
those of a gas, only very much smaller and moving, about with very
much greater rapidity. It has not, however, been fully shown how
this hypothesis can explain the electric and magnetic properties
of the ether. Others have gone to the opposite extreme, and
supposed that the ether may consist of smooth hard particles
almost completely filling space, instead of being very small
compared with their distances apart. These particles are supposed
to slide or roll over one another so freely that they practically
offer no resistance to matter moving among them. This seems in
many ways a rather hopeful direction in which to look for an
explanation of the properties of the ether. It has not, however,
been fully worked out, though Prof. Hertz has shown, in his
posthumous work, that such a supposition is not inconsistent with
what we know of electric and magnetic actions, for he attributes
all dynamical actions in nature to actions of this kind. It was
the direction in which Clerk Maxwell sought for a dynamical,
material system that would possess the same sort of properties as
he showed that the ether must possess.
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- All these theories depending on the existence of hard bodies
in space, whether like gaseous atoms they have large distances
between them, or like the second hypothesis they have small
distances between them, labor under the disadvantage of
postulating the existence of these hard bodies without offering
any explanation of the cause of their hardness, etc. A hypothesis
like Lord Kelvin's, that material atoms are vortex rings in a
continuous incompressible medium, only postulates the existence of
this continuous incompressible medium. From this one postulate,
and the hypothesis that its various parts are moving in a variety
of ways consistent with the postulate, it can be shown that
indestructible atoms could exist. It does not seem impossible that
all the complexities of nature may be explicable by this
hypothesis. A being living in the midst of an infinite ocean of
liquid, which was perfectly transparent and at rest, might never
discover its existence, just as mankind lived for generations
inside an ocean of air without fully realizing its existence, even
though they had plenty of motion in the winds to help them. Such a
being might be supposed some day to meet a great whirlpool and
thus become suddenly alive to the existence of the medium around
him. He would probably, at first, think of the whirlpool as an
independent entity. He would, however, ultimately find that its
effects extended to all places he could reach. No doubt, at a
distance from the whirlpool, its effects would be very small,
while near to it its actions would be so tremendous that maybe he
could never get quite close to its central core. With this
evidence before him, would not such a being be justified in
supposing that this active thing was a kind of movement in a
medium extending throughout all the space he could reach? We find
a very similar state of affairs near atoms of matter. They have a
central region where their action is so intense that we have no
evidence that we can penetrate it. Around this and extending
throughout space, diminishing in intensity the further we go from
this central core, are actions accompanying this atom. Close in
there are chemical actions. It may have electrical and magnetic
actions. It always has gravitational action at all places, at
least as far as the solar system extends. Is it then irrational to
suppose that these atoms are themselves really only a particular
kind of motion in a medium that fills all space? In order that an
incompressible liquid should be able to transmit actions such as
gravity, electric and magnetic force, light, etc., it must itself
be full of motion. Lord Kelvin has shown that certain kinds of
disturbances might be propagated in a manner somewhat similar to
light vibrations, by a liquid whose parts were in intense motion.
In order that the action may be propagated rapidly, the motion of
the liquid must be very intense. The average speed of the motion
of its parts must be comparable with that of the propagation of
the disturbance. In the case of light propagation this is very
great. Light goes one hundred and ninety-two thousand miles in a
second. The parts of the medium must consequently be moving on the
average with a velocity comparable with this. Some years ago,
Prof. DeVolson Wood proposed to calculate the average velocity of
the parts of the ether in a somewhat similar way. There was, at
that time, a very serious objection to this. Prof. Wood was
applying the theory of gases to this case. Now, though there its
some similarity between the cases, there is an essential
difference. Disturbances, such as sound waves, are propagated by
the compression and rarefaction of a gas. Light is known to be
propagated by some other kind of action, we don't know exactly
what, but it certainly is not by compressions and rarefactions in
the ether. It was, consequently, quite illegitimate to apply a
calculation which was only known to be true of this kind of motion
to quite a different kind of action. Before such a proceeding
would become in any way justifiable, it was necessary to prove
that this quite different kind of action could be propagated at
all by a medium whose parts were in intense movement, and Prof.
Wood had not at that time shown reason for believing this.
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- If the parts of the medium are really moving at these
tremendous speeds, every cubic foot of the medium must have some
energy in it. If the medium be at all dense, the energy of its
motion will be very large. Each cubic foot might, for instance, be
looked upon as a cubical box containing whirling wheels. If the
wheels are massive, and whirling with tremendous rapidity, there
will be a great deal of energy in the box. If the wheels are very
light, there will not be very much energy, even though they are
whirling very rapidly. Can we make any estimate as to whether the
medium is rare or dense? Most of the estimates that have been made
lead to the conclusion that it is very rare. They each depend upon
some unproved assumption. We have no conclusive proof as to the
density of the medium. It is generally thought that, because we do
not directly perceive the medium, it must be very rare. This is by
no means the case. To return to the being immersed in the ocean of
liquid, be was unable to perceive. Whether it were a dense liquid
or no, would not make any difference to him. If it were dense, he
would, no doubt, in moving his limbs, feel that he had to exert
himself a good deal in order to start them moving on account of
all the surrounding liquid be would have to set moving. If he was
suddenly transferred to a very rare medium, he would perceive the
difference. Like the ancient mariner, he "felt so light, almost,"
"he thought that he had died in sleep," "and was a blessed ghost."
But then this was supposed not to be one of the experiences of
this being. He was always accustomed to have to move all this
dense medium whenever he moved his limbs. In fact, he had never
attributed this inertia to the medium at all. He had always
attributed it to his limbs. In a similar way we, when we move a
stone or a bit of lead or platinum, attribute its inertia to the
body moved, while really the inertia may be due to the medium we
move along with the body. This must actually be the case if the
hypothesis already mentioned, as to the nature of matter, be true.
If matter be itself only a part of the medium, which is possessed
of some peculiarity of motion, then the inertia of matter is
merely the inertia of the medium itself. If this be so, it would
appear as if the medium must be at least as dense as platinum.
When we move a piece of platinum, we may not move all the medium
inside it, and in that case the density of the medium may be much
greater than that of platinum. There is nothing certainly known to
disprove such a hypothesis. If, for instance, the medium be five
times as dense as platinum, i.e., about one hundred times as dense
as water, all that it would require would be that when we move
water about we are only moving the one-hundredth part of the
medium that occupies the space of the water, and this does not
seem at all an impossible hypothesis. If this be so, how much
energy may there be in one cubic foot of ether? There will be
about one hundred million of million of million foot pounds of
energy. This would supply a million horse-power for five thousand
years. Such a calculation as this does not pretend to prove that
there is this energy in each cubic foot of the ether. All it
pretends to is to show that in our present desperate condition of
ignorance, we know nothing with absolute certainty that disproves
the possibility of this energy being there.
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- Is this energy available? Well, it is not safe to prophesy
what is and what is not possible. Most prophesies as to what is
and what is not possible have proved untrue. Until, however, we
have discovered how to utilize the immense known stores of energy
in each cubic foot of gross matter, in the earth, in the water of
the sea, and in the air about us, energy whose nature is pretty
well known and whose amount we can approximately estimate, until
we have found out some way of doing this, it seems very unlikely
that we shall be able to utilize the energy of the ether, even if
we are right in our hypothesis that it exists.
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- Each cubic yard of air possesses more than four foot tons of
energy, owing to the motion of its molecules, and yet we have not
found out any way of using this. If we could only catch hold of
whichever of the molecules we wished and harness them to a car,
and let these go when we had got all the energy out of them we
required and harness up fresh molecules, it would enable us to use
this energy. The discovery of how to use the chemical energy of
coal would be absolutely nothing compared with this. It has been
suggested that some of the minuter bacteria are able to do this.
Is it impossible that larger organisms may be able to do it? Is it
impossible that they may develop the ability thus to sort out the
molecule they require in their own superficial cells? If bacteria
have developed this ability in their cells, may not mankind by
judicious selection or by other means attain a similar ability? We
could easily fly then; we could do many other wonderful things. We
may fly before that. A surface set suddenly in motion with a
velocity greater than that of sound in air would, at least
temporarily, have a pressure of nearly fifteen pounds per square
inch on its surface, and an area of twelve square inches would
then support a heavy man. This is, however, quite beside the
matter in hand.
-
- And what is all this fierce motion in space which we desire to
direct in accordance with our wishes? How do we now direct motion
in accordance with our wishes? Is there any motion directed in
accordance with our wishes? Certainly there is, if "in accordance
with our wishes" has any real meaning. We can often direct the
motions of our limbs in accordance with our wishes. By experience
gained in childhood, by carefully conducted education, by
following the experience of others, we direct many, very many,
motions outside our bodies in accordance with our wishes. We do
this by learning what we call the law of nature, or the rules of
that great organism with which we have to work, and accommodating
ourselves to them. But what is the "we" and what are "our wishes?"
What is the "I" of another person? In old times people used to
attribute feelings and sensations and thoughts to the heart,
liver, spleen, etc. Nowadays we locate all these in the brain.
Why? Because we find that an animal can get along very comfortably
without a liver or spleen for a short time, so long as its nervous
system, of which the brain is such an important center, is kept in
working order. So long as the brain is in working order a person
can feel and think. If it is out of order or improperly supplied
with blood the feeling and thinking are disordered. There is every
reason to suppose that our feeling of light is concerned with one
series of brain cells, our feeling of sound with another; that so
long as we feel light there are certain changes, i. e., movements
going on in one set of brain cells; while we are conscious of
beauty some kind of change is going on, maybe not only in our
brain cells but a concomitant change affecting our whole system.
Somebody has recently shown reason to suppose that angry passions
produce a poison which disorders the digestive system. It is quite
likely, after all, that the spleen may be concerned in these
things, and the liver too. Anyway, what is of importance at
present is that the only way in which another person's angry
passions exist as a reality for me are as very complicated
movements in their organism. We do not know what movements in the
brain cells correspond to the sensation of red light, nor what to
a shrill sound. Neither movement is probably one bit like the
vibrations of the eye molecules, nor of the ear molecules, that
excite the cell motions. A waving flag may signal to a general
information as to an enemy's manoeuvers which leads him to
rearrange his infantry, cavalry, and artillery. But these
movements of his army are not a bit like the waving flag which
started them. We can, however, trace a connection between them.
They are things of the same kind. They are both movements of
matter. Similarly, the movements of the ear-drum and those of the
brain molecules are things of the same kind. Every action I can
perceive in another person is of this same kind. But the shrill
sound I perceive is not of this same kind. Ugliness and guiltiness
are not movements of matter. But then I can not perceive the
shrill sound that another person feels. We may both, no doubt, in
a colloquial sense, hear the same sound, but I am not conscious of
the other person's feeling. The same source causes two feelings,
one in me, the other in the other person. I feel my own feeling, I
cannot feel the other person's feeling. The only way in which the
other person's feeling exists for me is as a movement in his
brain, the only way in which my feeling exists for him is as a
movement in my brain. We know as yet no way of getting behind
this. There seems every reason to think that what is behind this
movement may be as complicated as the army manoeuvers compared
with the waving of a flag. It is hard to see how otherwise to
explain the fact that brain movements can correspond to such a
variety of feelings as light and sound, beauty and ugliness,
goodness and guilt. It is well to call all these "feelings,"
notwithstanding the boy who defined an abstract term to be a thing
like conscience that one cannot feel. It is always necessary to
recollect that to me these feelings are the only reality; other
people's feelings are to me an elaborate and frequently erroneous
inference.
-
- One of the most interesting investigations of the present day
is as to the positions of atoms in molecules. The whole system is
too small to see. We can form some rough conception of their
arrangement from their behavior, just as we can form an estimate
as to the orbit of a double star from the changes, in its
spectrum, even though the components are far too close to be
separately visible. We are gradually learning how to read, in the
spectrum, the story of what is taking place in molecules, too.
There is some prospect that we may some time even be able to tell
what movements in the brain cells correspond to a sensation of red
light, and, if the world lasts long enough, and mankind is good
enough, we may be able to discover what movements in his system
corresponded to Wilberforce's determination to put down
slavery.
-
- But if the spleen is involved in angry passions, it is evident
that motions outside our brain and even our nervous system are
involved in feelings and thoughts. Where does our brain end? Where
does movement cease to have a corresponding thought? Surely all
movement must have a corresponding thought. And perchance when we
know the movements corresponding to a determination to abolish
slavery we may be able to form some dim conception of the thoughts
that correspond to the movements of the earth, of the solar
system, to the development of species of animals and plants. These
thoughts will not be our thoughts, nor our ways their ways. That
they are not does not necessarily place them beyond investigation.
We already know much about four dimensional space, and can state
things true of multi-dimensional space, though even of four
dimensional space we can form no concrete conception. In the same
way we may hope some time to make scientific statements about the
thoughts of the universe, though we may be quite unable to
reproduce them as our thoughts. Even now we deal with the universe
as with a person. How do we get others to do what we wish? By
making them feel our wishes directly? No. By paying attention to
the laws of their nature and by so acting ourselves as to cause
them to act as we wish. Is not that also a description of how we
act on nature? How do others act on us? By speaking to us with
signs. Does not nature speak to us in the same way? We interpret
other people's signs and judge that they have corresponding
thoughts. Are we then wrong in considering the signs of nature as
the language in which the thoughts of nature are expressed?
-
- All the greatest, wisest, best have implored and exhorted
mankind to believe this. Prophets and seers, philosophers and
poets, have taught mankind this faith. We have faith in the
existence of the thoughts corresponding to other people's
brain-movements. Without this faith life would be a mockery. Is it
not almost a mockery without the greater faith? The greatest,
wisest, best have said so. It is the almost necessary conclusion
of science. Science has by itself no proof of the existence of
other people's thoughts. Science then cannot be expected to prove
the existence of these thoughts more complex, indeed, than other
people's thoughts, but which can, for all that, be safely called
thoughts. Do we not show our wisdom by holding fast by the
teaching of the greatest, the wisest and the best? Is it not the
most glorious prospect for science that it may one day give a
definite form to the greatest thoughts of mankind's greatest sons
?
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