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A HISTORY OF SCIENCE BY HENRY SMITH WILLIAMS,
M. D., LL. D. ASSISTED BY EDWARD H. WILLIAMS,
M. D.
IN FIVE VOLUMES VOLUME I.
THE BEGINNINGS OF SCIENCE
BOOK I.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I. PREHISTORIC SCIENCE
CHAPTER II. EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
CHAPTER III. SCIENCE OF BABYLONIA AND ASSYRIA
CHAPTER IV. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ALPHABET
CHAPTER V. THE BEGINNINGS OF GREEK SCIENCE
CHAPTER VI. THE EARLY GREEK PHILOSOPHERS
IN ITALY
CHAPTER VII. GREEK SCIENCE IN THE EARLY ATTIC
PERIOD
CHAPTER VIII. POST-SOCRATIC SCIENCE AT ATHENS
CHAPTER IX. GREEK SCIENCE OF THE ALEXANDRIAN
OR HELLENISTIC PERIOD
CHAPTER X. SCIENCE OF THE ROMAN PERIOD
CHAPTER XI. A RETROSPECTIVE GLANCE AT CLASSICAL
SCIENCE
APPENDIX
A HISTORY OF SCIENCE
BOOK I
Should the story that is about to be unfolded
be found to lack interest, the writers must
stand convicted of unpardonable lack of art.
Nothing but dulness in the telling could
mar the story, for in itself it is the record
of the growth of those ideas that have made
our race and its civilization what they are;
of ideas instinct with human interest, vital
with meaning for our race; fundamental in
their influence on human development; part
and parcel of the mechanism of human thought
on the one hand, and of practical civilization
on the other. Such a phrase as "fundamental
principles" may seem at first thought
a hard saying, but the idea it implies is
less repellent than the phrase itself, for
the fundamental principles in question are
so closely linked with the present interests
of every one of us that they lie within the
grasp of every average man and woman--nay,
of every well-developed boy and girl. These
principles are not merely the stepping-stones
to culture, the prerequisites of knowledge--they
are, in themselves, an essential part of
the knowledge of every cultivated person.
It is our task, not merely to show what these
principles are, but to point out how they
have been discovered by our predecessors.
We shall trace the growth of these ideas
from their first vague beginnings. We shall
see how vagueness of thought gave way to
precision; how a general truth, once grasped
and formulated, was found to be a stepping-stone
to other truths. We shall see that there
are no isolated facts, no isolated principles,
in nature; that each part of our story is
linked by indissoluble bands with that which
goes before, and with that which comes after.
For the most part the discovery of this principle
or that in a given sequence is no accident.
Galileo and Keppler must precede Newton.
Cuvier and Lyall must come before Darwin;--Which,
after all, is no more than saying that in
our Temple of Science, as in any other piece
of architecture, the foundation must precede
the superstructure.
We shall best understand our story of the
growth of science if we think of each new
principle as a stepping-stone which must
fit into its own particular niche; and if
we reflect that the entire structure of modern
civilization would be different from what
it is, and less perfect than it is, had not
that particular stepping-stone been found
and shaped and placed in position. Taken
as a whole, our stepping-stones lead us up
and up towards the alluring heights of an
acropolis of knowledge, on which stands the
Temple of Modern Science. The story of the
building of this wonderful structure is in
itself fascinating and beautiful.
I. PREHISTORIC SCIENCE
To speak of a prehistoric science may seem
like a contradiction of terms. The word prehistoric
seems to imply barbarism, while science,
clearly enough, seems the outgrowth of civilization;
but rightly considered, there is no contradiction.
For, on the one hand, man had ceased to be
a barbarian long before the beginning of
what we call the historical period; and,
on the other hand, science, of a kind, is
no less a precursor and a cause of civilization
than it is a consequent. To get this clearly
in mind, we must ask ourselves: What, then,
is science? The word runs glibly enough upon
the tongue of our every-day speech, but it
is not often, perhaps, that they who use
it habitually ask themselves just what it
means. Yet the answer is not difficult. A
little attention will show that science,
as the word is commonly used, implies these
things: first, the gathering of knowledge
through observation; second, the classification
of such knowledge, and through this classification,
the elaboration of general ideas or principles.
In the familiar definition of Herbert Spencer,
science is organized knowledge.
Now it is patent enough, at first glance,
that the veriest savage must have been an
observer of the phenomena of nature. But
it may not be so obvious that he must also
have been a classifier of his observations--an
organizer of knowledge. Yet the more we consider
the case, the more clear it will become that
the two methods are too closely linked together
to be dissevered. To observe outside phenomena
is not more inherent in the nature of the
mind than to draw inferences from these phenomena.
A deer passing through the forest scents
the ground and detects a certain odor. A
sequence of ideas is generated in the mind
of the deer. Nothing in the deer's experience
can produce that odor but a wolf; therefore
the scientific inference is drawn that wolves
have passed that way. But it is a part of
the deer's scientific knowledge, based on
previous experience, individual and racial;
that wolves are dangerous beasts, and so,
combining direct observation in the present
with the application of a general principle
based on past experience, the deer reaches
the very logical conclusion that it may wisely
turn about and run in another direction.
All this implies, essentially, a comprehension
and use of scientific principles; and, strange
as it seems to speak of a deer as possessing
scientific knowledge, yet there is really
no absurdity in the statement. The deer does
possess scientific knowledge; knowledge differing
in degree only, not in kind, from the knowledge
of a Newton. Nor is the animal, within the
range of its intelligence, less logical,
less scientific in the application of that
knowledge, than is the man. The animal that
could not make accurate scientific observations
of its surroundings, and deduce accurate
scientific conclusions from them, would soon
pay the penalty of its lack of logic.
What is true of man's precursors in the animal
scale is, of course, true in a wider and
fuller sense of man himself at the very lowest
stage of his development. Ages before the
time which the limitations of our knowledge
force us to speak of as the dawn of history,
man had reached a high stage of development.
As a social being, he had developed all the
elements of a primitive civilization. If,
for convenience of classification, we speak
of his state as savage, or barbaric, we use
terms which, after all, are relative, and
which do not shut off our primitive ancestors
from a tolerably close association with our
own ideals. We know that, even in the Stone
Age, man had learned how to domesticate animals
and make them useful to him, and that he
had also learned to cultivate the soil. Later
on, doubtless by slow and painful stages,
he attained those wonderful elements of knowledge
that enabled him to smelt metals and to produce
implements of bronze, and then of iron. Even
in the Stone Age he was a mechanic of marvellous
skill, as any one of to-day may satisfy himself
by attempting to duplicate such an implement
as a chipped arrow-head. And a barbarian
who could fashion an axe or a knife of bronze
had certainly gone far in his knowledge of
scientific principles and their practical
application. The practical application was,
doubtless, the only thought that our primitive
ancestor had in mind; quite probably the
question as to principles that might be involved
troubled him not at all. Yet, in spite of
himself, he knew certain rudimentary principles
of science, even though he did not formulate
them.
Let us inquire what some of these principles
are. Such an inquiry will, as it were, clear
the ground for our structure of science.
It will show the plane of knowledge on which
historical investigation begins. Incidentally,
perhaps, it will reveal to us unsuspected
affinities between ourselves and our remote
ancestor. Without attempting anything like
a full analysis, we may note in passing,
not merely what primitive man knew, but what
he did not know; that at least a vague notion
may be gained of the field for scientific
research that lay open for historic man to
cultivate.
It must be understood that the knowledge
of primitive man, as we are about to outline
it, is inferential. We cannot trace the development
of these principles, much less can we say
who discovered them. Some of them, as already
suggested, are man's heritage from non-human
ancestors. Others can only have been grasped
by him after he had reached a relatively
high stage of human development. But all
the principles here listed must surely have
been parts of our primitive ancestor's knowledge
before those earliest days of Egyptian and
Babylonian civilization, the records of which
constitute our first introduction to the
so-called historical period. Taken somewhat
in the order of their probable discovery,
the scientific ideas of primitive man may
be roughly listed as follows:
1. Primitive man must have conceived that
the earth is flat and of limitless extent.
By this it is not meant to imply that he
had a distinct conception of infinity, but,
for that matter, it cannot be said that any
one to-day has a conception of infinity that
could be called definite. But, reasoning
from experience and the reports of travellers,
there was nothing to suggest to early man
the limit of the earth. He did, indeed, find
in his wanderings, that changed climatic
conditions barred him from farther progress;
but beyond the farthest reaches of his migrations,
the seemingly flat land-surfaces and water-surfaces
stretched away unbroken and, to all appearances,
without end. It would require a reach of
the philosophical imagination to conceive
a limit to the earth, and while such imaginings
may have been current in the prehistoric
period, we can have no proof of them, and
we may well postpone consideration of man's
early dreamings as to the shape of the earth
until we enter the historical epoch where
we stand on firm ground.
2. Primitive man must, from a very early
period, have observed that the sun gives
heat and light, and that the moon and stars
seem to give light only and no heat. It required
but a slight extension of this observation
to note that the changing phases of the seasons
were associated with the seeming approach
and recession of the sun. This observation,
however, could not have been made until man
had migrated from the tropical regions, and
had reached a stage of mechanical development
enabling him to live in subtropical or temperate
zones. Even then it is conceivable that a
long period must have elapsed before a direct
causal relation was felt to exist between
the shifting of the sun and the shifting
of the seasons; because, as every one knows,
the periods of greatest heat in summer and
greatest cold in winter usually come some
weeks after the time of the solstices. Yet,
the fact that these extremes of temperature
are associated in some way with the change
of the sun's place in the heavens must, in
time, have impressed itself upon even a rudimentary
intelligence. It is hardly necessary to add
that this is not meant to imply any definite
knowledge of the real meaning of, the seeming
oscillations of the sun. We shall see that,
even at a relatively late period, the vaguest
notions were still in vogue as to the cause
of the sun's changes of position.
That the sun, moon, and stars move across
the heavens must obviously have been among
the earliest scientific observations. It
must not be inferred, however, that this
observation implied a necessary conception
of the complete revolution of these bodies
about the earth. It is unnecessary to speculate
here as to how the primitive intelligence
conceived the transfer of the sun from the
western to the eastern horizon, to be effected
each night, for we shall have occasion to
examine some historical speculations regarding
this phenomenon. We may assume, however,
that the idea of the transfer of the heavenly
bodies beneath the earth (whatever the conception
as to the form of that body) must early have
presented itself.
It required a relatively high development
of the observing faculties, yet a development
which man must have attained ages before
the historical period, to note that the moon
has a secondary motion, which leads it to
shift its relative position in the heavens,
as regards the stars; that the stars themselves,
on the other hand, keep a fixed relation
as regards one another, with the notable
exception of two or three of the most brilliant
members of the galaxy, the latter being the
bodies which came to be known finally as
planets, or wandering stars. The wandering
propensities of such brilliant bodies as
Jupiter and Venus cannot well have escaped
detection. We may safely assume, however,
that these anomalous motions of the moon
and planets found no explanation that could
be called scientific until a relatively late
period.
3. Turning from the heavens to the earth,
and ignoring such primitive observations
as that of the distinction between land and
water, we may note that there was one great
scientific law which must have forced itself
upon the attention of primitive man. This
is the law of universal terrestrial gravitation.
The word gravitation suggests the name of
Newton, and it may excite surprise to hear
a knowledge of gravitation ascribed to men
who preceded that philosopher by, say, twenty-five
or fifty thousand years. Yet the slightest
consideration of the facts will make it clear
that the great central law that all heavy
bodies fall directly towards the earth, cannot
have escaped the attention of the most primitive
intelligence. The arboreal habits of our
primitive ancestors gave opportunities for
constant observation of the practicalities
of this law. And, so soon as man had developed
the mental capacity to formulate ideas, one
of the earliest ideas must have been the
conception, however vaguely phrased in words,
that all unsupported bodies fall towards
the earth. The same phenomenon being observed
to operate on water-surfaces, and no alteration
being observed in its operation in different
portions of man's habitat, the most primitive
wanderer must have come to have full faith
in the universal action of the observed law
of gravitation. Indeed, it is inconceivable
that he can have imagined a place on the
earth where this law does not operate. On
the other hand, of course, he never grasped
the conception of the operation of this law
beyond the close proximity of the earth.
To extend the reach of gravitation out to
the moon and to the stars, including within
its compass every particle of matter in the
universe, was the work of Newton, as we shall
see in due course. Meantime we shall better
understand that work if we recall that the
mere local fact of terrestrial gravitation
has been the familiar knowledge of all generations
of men. It may further help to connect us
in sympathy with our primeval ancestor if
we recall that in the attempt to explain
this fact of terrestrial gravitation Newton
made no advance, and we of to-day are scarcely
more enlightened than the man of the Stone
Age. Like the man of the Stone Age, we know
that an arrow shot into the sky falls back
to the earth. We can calculate, as he could
not do, the arc it will describe and the
exact speed of its fall; but as to why it
returns to earth at all, the greatest philosopher
of to-day is almost as much in the dark as
was the first primitive bowman that ever
made the experiment.
Other physical facts going to make up an
elementary science of mechanics, that were
demonstratively known to prehistoric man,
were such as these: the rigidity of solids
and the mobility of liquids; the fact that
changes of temperature transform solids to
liquids and vice versa--that heat, for example,
melts copper and even iron, and that cold
congeals water; and the fact that friction,
as illustrated in the rubbing together of
two sticks, may produce heat enough to cause
a fire. The rationale of this last experiment
did not receive an explanation until about
the beginning of the nineteenth century of
our own era. But the experimental fact was
so well known to prehistoric man that he
employed this method, as various savage tribes
employ it to this day, for the altogether
practical purpose of making a fire; just
as he employed his practical knowledge of
the mutability of solids and liquids in smelting
ores, in alloying copper with tin to make
bronze, and in casting this alloy in molds
to make various implements and weapons. Here,
then, were the germs of an elementary science
of physics. Meanwhile such observations as
that of the solution of salt in water may
be considered as giving a first lesson in
chemistry, but beyond such altogether rudimentary
conceptions chemical knowledge could not
have gone--unless, indeed, the practical
observation of the effects of fire be included;
nor can this well be overlooked, since scarcely
another single line of practical observation
had a more direct influence in promoting
the progress of man towards the heights of
civilization.
4. In the field of what we now speak of as
biological knowledge, primitive man had obviously
the widest opportunity for practical observation.
We can hardly doubt that man attained, at
an early day, to that conception of identity
and of difference which Plato places at the
head of his metaphysical system. We shall
urge presently that it is precisely such
general ideas as these that were man's earliest
inductions from observation, and hence that
came to seem the most universal and "innate"
ideas of his mentality. It is quite inconceivable,
for example, that even the most rudimentary
intelligence that could be called human could
fail to discriminate between living things
and, let us say, the rocks of the earth.
The most primitive intelligence, then, must
have made a tacit classification of the natural
objects about it into the grand divisions
of animate and inanimate nature. Doubtless
the nascent scientist may have imagined life
animating many bodies that we should call
inanimate--such as the sun, wandering planets,
the winds, and lightning; and, on the other
hand, he may quite likely have relegated
such objects as trees to the ranks of the
non-living; but that he recognized a fundamental
distinction between, let us say, a wolf and
a granite bowlder we cannot well doubt. A
step beyond this--a step, however, that may
have required centuries or millenniums in
the taking--must have carried man to a plane
of intelligence from which a primitive Aristotle
or Linnaeus was enabled to note differences
and resemblances connoting such groups of
things as fishes, birds, and furry beasts.
This conception, to be sure, is an abstraction
of a relatively high order. We know that
there are savage races to-day whose language
contains no word for such an abstraction
as bird or tree. We are bound to believe,
then, that there were long ages of human
progress during which the highest man had
attained no such stage of abstraction; but,
on the other hand, it is equally little in
question that this degree of mental development
had been attained long before the opening
of our historical period. The primeval man,
then, whose scientific knowledge we are attempting
to predicate, had become, through his conception
of fishes, birds, and hairy animals as separate
classes, a scientific zoologist of relatively
high attainments.
In the practical field of medical knowledge,
a certain stage of development must have
been reached at a very early day. Even animals
pick and choose among the vegetables about
them, and at times seek out certain herbs
quite different from their ordinary food,
practising a sort of instinctive therapeutics.
The cat's fondness for catnip is a case in
point. The most primitive man, then, must
have inherited a racial or instinctive knowledge
of the medicinal effects of certain herbs;
in particular he must have had such elementary
knowledge of toxicology as would enable him
to avoid eating certain poisonous berries.
Perhaps, indeed, we are placing the effect
before the cause to some extent; for, after
all, the animal system possesses marvellous
powers of adaption, and there is perhaps
hardly any poisonous vegetable which man
might not have learned to eat without deleterious
effect, provided the experiment were made
gradually. To a certain extent, then, the
observed poisonous effects of numerous plants
upon the human system are to be explained
by the fact that our ancestors have avoided
this particular vegetable. Certain fruits
and berries might have come to have been
a part of man's diet, had they grown in the
regions he inhabited at an early day, which
now are poisonous to his system. This thought,
however, carries us too far afield. For practical
purposes, it suffices that certain roots,
leaves, and fruits possess principles that
are poisonous to the human system, and that
unless man had learned in some way to avoid
these, our race must have come to disaster.
In point of fact, he did learn to avoid them;
and such evidence implied, as has been said,
an elementary knowledge of toxicology.
Coupled with this knowledge of things dangerous
to the human system, there must have grown
up, at a very early day, a belief in the
remedial character of various vegetables
as agents to combat disease. Here, of course,
was a rudimentary therapeutics, a crude principle
of an empirical art of medicine. As just
suggested, the lower order of animals have
an instinctive knowledge that enables them
to seek out remedial herbs (though we probably
exaggerate the extent of this instinctive
knowledge); and if this be true, man must
have inherited from his prehuman ancestors
this instinct along with the others. That
he extended this knowledge through observation
and practice, and came early to make extensive
use of drugs in the treatment of disease,
is placed beyond cavil through the observation
of the various existing barbaric tribes,
nearly all of whom practice elaborate systems
of therapeutics. We shall have occasion to
see that even within historic times the particular
therapeutic measures employed were often
crude, and, as we are accustomed to say,
unscientific; but even the crudest of them
are really based upon scientific principles,
inasmuch as their application implies the
deduction of principles of action from previous
observations. Certain drugs are applied to
appease certain symptoms of disease because
in the belief of the medicine-man such drugs
have proved beneficial in previous similar
cases.
All this, however, implies an appreciation
of the fact that man is subject to "natural"
diseases, and that if these diseases are
not combated, death may result. But it should
be understood that the earliest man probably
had no such conception as this. Throughout
all the ages of early development, what we
call "natural" disease and "natural"
death meant the onslaught of a tangible enemy.
A study of this question leads us to some
very curious inferences. The more we look
into the matter the more the thought forces
itself home to us that the idea of natural
death, as we now conceive it, came to primitive
man as a relatively late scientific induction.
This thought seems almost startling, so axiomatic
has the conception "man is mortal"
come to appear. Yet a study of the ideas
of existing savages, combined with our knowledge
of the point of view from which historical
peoples regard disease, make it more probable
that the primitive conception of human life
did not include the idea of necessary death.
We are told that the Australian savage who
falls from a tree and breaks his neck is
not regarded as having met a natural death,
but as having been the victim of the magical
practices of the "medicine-man"
of some neighboring tribe. Similarly, we
shall find that the Egyptian and the Babylonian
of the early historical period conceived
illness as being almost invariably the result
of the machinations of an enemy. One need
but recall the superstitious observances
of the Middle Ages, and the yet more recent
belief in witchcraft, to realize how generally
disease has been personified as a malicious
agent invoked by an unfriendly mind. Indeed,
the phraseology of our present-day speech
is still reminiscent of this; as when, for
example, we speak of an "attack of fever,"
and the like.
When, following out this idea, we picture
to ourselves the conditions under which primitive
man lived, it will be evident at once how
relatively infrequent must have been his
observation of what we usually term natural
death. His world was a world of strife; he
lived by the chase; he saw animals kill one
another; he witnessed the death of his own
fellows at the hands of enemies. Naturally
enough, then, when a member of his family
was "struck down" by invisible
agents, he ascribed this death also to violence,
even though the offensive agent was concealed.
Moreover, having very little idea of the
lapse of time--being quite unaccustomed,
that is, to reckon events from any fixed
era--primitive man cannot have gained at
once a clear conception of age as applied
to his fellows. Until a relatively late stage
of development made tribal life possible,
it cannot have been usual for man to have
knowledge of his grandparents; as a rule
he did not know his own parents after he
had passed the adolescent stage and had been
turned out upon the world to care for himself.
If, then, certain of his fellow-beings showed
those evidences of infirmity which we ascribe
to age, it did not necessarily follow that
he saw any association between such infirmities
and the length of time which those persons
had lived. The very fact that some barbaric
nations retain the custom of killing the
aged and infirm, in itself suggests the possibility
that this custom arose before a clear conception
had been attained that such drags upon the
community would be removed presently in the
natural order of things. To a person who
had no clear conception of the lapse of time
and no preconception as to the limited period
of man's life, the infirmities of age might
very naturally be ascribed to the repeated
attacks of those inimical powers which were
understood sooner or later to carry off most
members of the race. And coupled with this
thought would go the conception that inasmuch
as some people through luck had escaped the
vengeance of all their enemies for long periods,
these same individuals might continue to
escape for indefinite periods of the future.
There were no written records to tell primeval
man of events of long ago. He lived in the
present, and his sweep of ideas scarcely
carried him back beyond the limits of his
individual memory. But memory is observed
to be fallacious. It must early have been
noted that some people recalled events which
other participants in them had quite forgotten,
and it may readily enough have been inferred
that those members of the tribe who spoke
of events which others could not recall were
merely the ones who were gifted with the
best memories. If these reached a period
when their memories became vague, it did
not follow that their recollections had carried
them back to the beginnings of their lives.
Indeed, it is contrary to all experience
to believe that any man remembers all the
things he has once known, and the observed
fallaciousness and evanescence of memory
would thus tend to substantiate rather than
to controvert the idea that various members
of a tribe had been alive for an indefinite
period.
Without further elaborating the argument,
it seems a justifiable inference that the
first conception primitive man would have
of his own life would not include the thought
of natural death, but would, conversely,
connote the vague conception of endless life.
Our own ancestors, a few generations removed,
had not got rid of this conception, as the
perpetual quest of the spring of eternal
youth amply testifies. A naturalist of our
own day has suggested that perhaps birds
never die except by violence. The thought,
then, that man has a term of years beyond
which "in the nature of things,"
as the saying goes, he may not live, would
have dawned but gradually upon the developing
intelligence of successive generations of
men; and we cannot feel sure that he would
fully have grasped the conception of a "natural"
termination of human life until he had shaken
himself free from the idea that disease is
always the result of the magic practice of
an enemy. Our observation of historical man
in antiquity makes it somewhat doubtful whether
this conception had been attained before
the close of the prehistoric period. If it
had, this conception of the mortality of
man was one of the most striking scientific
inductions to which prehistoric man attained.
Incidentally, it may be noted that the conception
of eternal life for the human body being
a more primitive idea than the conception
of natural death, the idea of the immortality
of the spirit would be the most natural of
conceptions. The immortal spirit, indeed,
would be but a correlative of the immortal
body, and the idea which we shall see prevalent
among the Egyptians that the soul persists
only as long as the body is intact--the idea
upon which the practice of mummifying the
dead depended--finds a ready explanation.
But this phase of the subject carries us
somewhat afield. For our present purpose
it suffices to have pointed out that the
conception of man's mortality--a conception
which now seems of all others the most natural
and "innate"--was in all probability a relatively late scientific induction
of our primitive ancestors. |