EDITED BY
J. ARTHUR THOMSON
REGIUS PROFESSOR OF NATURAL HISTORY IN THE Business consultant
UNIVERSITY OF ABERDEEN

WITH OVER 800 ILLUSTRATIONS
OF WHICH ABOUT 40 ARE IN COLOUR

IN FOUR VOLUMES

G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
NEW YORK AND LONDON
The Knickerbocker press


Life insurance

Copyright, 1922
by
Florida surfing G. P. Putnam's Sons

First Printing April, 1922
Second Printing April, 1922 Business consultant
Third Printing April, 1922
Fourth Printing April, 1922
Fifth Printing June, 1922
Sixth Printing June, 1922
Seventh Printing June, 1922
Eighth Printing June, 1922
Ninth Printing August, 1922
Life insurance Tenth Printing September, 1922
Eleventh Printing Sept., 1922
Twelfth Printing, May
, 1924

Florida surfing

Made in the United States of America


INTRODUCTORY NOTE

Business consultant

By Professor J. Arthur Thomson

Was it not the great philosopher and mathematician Leibnitz who said that the more knowledge advances the more it becomes possible to condense it into little books? Now this "Outline of Science" is certainly not a little book, and yet it illustrates part of the meaning of Leibnitz's wise saying. For here within reasonable compass there is a library of little books—an outline of many sciences.

It will be profitable to the student in proportion to the discrimination with which it is used. For it is not in the least meant to be of the nature of an Encyclopædia, giving condensed and comprehensive articles with a big full stop at the end of each. Nor is it a collection of "primers," beginning at the very beginning of each subject and working methodically Life insurance onwards. That is not the idea.

What then is the aim of this book? It is to give the intelligent student-citizen, otherwise called "the man in the street," a bunch of intellectual keys by which to open doors which have been hitherto shut to Florida surfing him, partly because he got no glimpse of the treasures behind the doors, and partly because the portals were made forbidding by an unnecessary display of technicalities. Laying aside conventional modes of treatment and seeking rather to open up the subject as one might on a walk with a friend, the work offers the student what might be called informal introductions to the various Business consultant departments of knowledge. To put it in another way, the articles are meant to be clues which the reader may follow till he has left his starting point very far behind. Perhaps when he has gone far on his own he will not be ungrateful to the simple book of "instructions to travellers" which this "Outline of Science" is intended to be. The simple "bibliographies" appended to the various articles will be enough to indicate "first books." Each article is meant to be an invitation to an intellectual adventure, and the short lists of books are merely finger-posts for the beginning of the journey.

We confess to being greatly encouraged by the reception that has been given to the English serial issue of "The Outline of Science." It has been very hearty—we might almost say enthusiastic. For we agree with Professor John Dewey, that "the future of our civilisation depends Life insurance upon the widening spread and deepening hold of the scientific habit of mind." And we hope that this is what "The Outline of Science" makes for. Information is all to the good; interesting information is better still; but best of all is the education of the scientific habit of mind. Another modern philosopher, Professor L. T. Hobhouse, has declared that the Florida surfing evolutionist's mundane goal is "the mastery by the human mind of the conditions, internal as well as external, of its life and growth." Under the influence of this conviction "The Outline of Science" has been written. For life is not for science, but science for life. And even more than science, to our way of thinking, is the individual development of the Business consultant scientific way of looking at things. Science is our legacy; we must use it if it is to be our very own.


CONTENTS

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3
I. 7
The scale of the universe—The solar system—Regions of the sun—The surface of the sun—Measuring the speed of light—Is the sun dying?—The planets—Venus—Is there life on Mars?—Jupiter and Saturn—The moon—The mountains of the moon—Meteors and comets—Millions of meteorites—A great comet—The stellar universe—The evolution of stars—The age of stars—The nebular theory—Spiral nebulæ—The birth and death of stars—The shape of our universe—Astronomical instruments.
II. 53
The beginning of the earth—Making a home for life—The first living creatures—The first plants—The first animals—Beginnings of bodies—Evolution of sex—Beginning of natural death—Procession of life through the ages—Evolution of land animals—The flying dragons—The first known bird—Evidences of evolution—Factors in evolution.
III. 113
The shore of the sea—The open sea—The deep sea—The fresh waters—The dry land—The air.
IV. 135
Animal and bird mimicry and disguise—Other kinds of elusiveness.
V. 153
Anatomical proof of man's relationship with a Simian stock—Physiological proof—Embryological proof—Man's pedigree—Man's arboreal apprenticeship—Tentative men—Primitive men—Races of mankind—Steps in human evolution—Factors in human progress.
VI. 183
Evolutionary prospect for man—The fountain of change; variability—Evolution of plants—Romance of wheat—Changes in animal life—Story of the salmon—Forming new habits—Experiments in locomotion; new devices.
VII. 205
A caution in regard to instinct—A useful law—Senses of Florida surfing fishes—The mind of a minnow—The mind and senses of amphibians—The reptilian mind—Mind in birds—Intelligence co-operating with instinct—The mind of the mammal—Instinctive aptitudes—Power of association—Why is there not more intelligence?—The mind of monkeys—Activity for activity's Business consultant sake—Imitation—The mind of man—Body and mind.
VIII. 243
The world of atoms—The energy of atoms—The discovery of X-rays—The discovery of radium—The discovery of the electron—The electron theory—The structure of the atom—The new view of matter—Other new views—The nature of Florida surfing electricity—Electric current—The dynamo—Magnetism—Ether and waves—Light—What the blue "sky" means—Light without heat—Forms of energy—What heat is—Substitutes for coal—Dissipation of energy—What a uniform temperature would mean—Matter, ether, and Business consultant Einstein—The tides—Origin of the moon—The earth slowing down—The day becoming longer.


ILLUSTRATIONS

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  FACING
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The Great Scarlet Solar Prominences, Which are Such a Notable Feature of the Solar Phenomena, are Immense Outbursts of Flaming Hydrogen Rising Sometimes to a Height of 500,000 Miles Coloured Frontispiece
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    Photo: Royal Astronomical Society.  
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    Photo: Elliot & Fry, Ltd.  
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    Photo: Harvard College Observatory.  
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    From a photograph taken at the Yerkes Observatory.  
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    Photo: Royal Observatory, Greenwich.  
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    Photo: Mount Wilson Observatory.  
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    Photo: Mount Wilson Observatory.  
(Coloured Illustration) 20
    Reproduced from The Forces of Nature Business consultant (Messrs. Macmillan)  
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    Yerkes Observatory.  
22
    From photographs taken at the Yerkes Observatory.  
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    Photo: Mount Wilson Observatory.  
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    Photo: Professor E. E. Barnard, Yerkes Observatory.  
(Coloured Illustration) 24
28
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    Drawings by Professor Percival Lowell.  
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    Photo: Royal Observatory, Greenwich.
3, 1908 33
    Photo: Royal Observatory, Greenwich.
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    Photo: Harvard College Observatory.
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    Photo: Mount Wilson Observatory.
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    Photo: Astrophysical Observatory, Victoria, British Columbia.
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    Photo: Yerkes Observatory.
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    Photo: Lick Observatory.
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    Photo: Mount Wilson Observatory.
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    Photo: H. J. Shepstone.
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    Photo: H. J. Shepstone.
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    By A. Hilger, Ltd.
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    Photo: Rischgitz Collection.
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    Photo: Rischgitz Collection.
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    Photo: Lick Observatory.
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    Photo: Natural History Museum.
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    Reproduced from the Smithsonian Report, 1915.
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A Piece of a Reef-Building Coral, Built up by a Large Colony of Small Sea-Anemone-Like Polyps, Each of which Forms from the Salts of the Sea a Skeleton or Shell of Lime 64
    From the Smithsonian Report, 1917.
65
    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
A Common Foraminifer (Polystomella) Showing the Shell in the Centre and the Outflowing Network of Living Matter, Along which Granules are Continually Travelling, and by which Food Particles are Entangled and Drawn in 65
    Reproduced by permission of the Natural History Museum (after Max Schultze).
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    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
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    Reproduced by permission of The Quart. Journ. Mic. Sci.
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    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
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    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
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    Reproduced from the Smithsonian Report, 1917.
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(Coloured Illustration) 74
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    Photo: British Museum (Natural History).
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    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
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    Reproduced by permission from The Wonders of Instinct by J. H. Fabre.
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    Photograph, from the British Museum (Natural History), of a drawing by Mr. E. Wilson.
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    Photo: W. S. Berridge, F.Z.S.
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    Photo: Rischgitz.
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    From Knipe's Nebula to Man.
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    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
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    Photo: British Museum (Natural History).
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    After William Leche of Stockholm.
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(Coloured Illustration) 92
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    Photo: British Museum (Natural History).
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    From Knipe's Nebula to Man.
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    From Knipe's Nebula to Man.
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    Photo: Daily Mail.
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    After Marsh.
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    After Lull and Matthew.
Diagram Showing Seven Stages in the Evolution of the Fore-Limbs and Hind-Limbs of the Ancestors of the Modern Horse, Beginning with the Earliest Known Predecessors of the Horse and Culminating with the Horse of To-Day 104
    After Marsh and Lull.
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    After Professor W. C. McIntosh.
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    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
(Asterias Forreri) 117
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(Physophora Hydrostatica) 119
    Photo: British Museum (Natural History).
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(Petromyzon Marinus) 120
Chiasmodon Niger 120
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(Euplectella), 121
Semotilus Atromaculatus 121
(Rhodeus Amarus) 124
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    Photo: W. S. Berridge.
(Pipa Americana) 125
(Procellaria Pelagica) 125
128
(Mantis Religiosa) 138
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(Varanus) 139
    Photo: A. A. White.
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    Photo: W. S. Berridge, F.Z.S.
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    Photos: W. S. Berridge, F.Z.S.
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    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
When Only a Few Days Old, Young Bittern Begin to Strike the Same Attitude as their Parents, Thrusting their Bills upwards and Drawing their Bodies up so that they Resemble a Bunch of Reeds 143
(Coloured Illustration) 144
(Coloured Illustration) 144
(Kallima Inachis) 146
(to the left) (to the right) 146
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    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
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    Photo: G. P. Duffus.
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    Photo: New York Zoological Park.
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    Photo: New York Zoological Park.
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    Photo: New York Zoological Park.
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    After a model by J. H. McGregor.
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(Coloured Illustration) 158
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    Photo: J. Russell & Sons.
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    After T. H. Huxley (by permission of Messrs. Macmillan).
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The Skull and Brain-Case of Pithecanthropus, the Java Ape-Man, as Restored by J. H. McGregor from the Scanty Remains 164
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The Gibbon is Lower than the Other Apes as Regards its Skull and Dentition, but it is highly Specialized in the Adaptation of its Limbs to Arboreal Life 166
    Photo: New York Zoological Park.
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    Photo: New York Zoological Park.
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    Photo: British Museum (Natural History).
(Coloured Illustration) 168
Profile View of the Head of Pithecanthropus, the Java Ape-Man—an Early Offshoot from the Main Line of Man's Ascent 170
    After a model by J. H. McGregor.
170
    From the reconstruction by J. H. McGregor.
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    Reproduced by permission from Osborn's Men of the Old Stone Age.
(Coloured Illustration) 172
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    After the restoration modelled by J. H. McGregor.
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    After the restoration modelled by J. H. McGregor.
176-177
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    Photo: British Museum (Natural History).
A Cromagnon Man or Cromagnard, Representative of a Business consultant Strong Artistic Race Living in the South of France in the Upper Pleistocene, Perhaps 25,000 Years Ago 178
    After the restoration modelled by J. H. McGregor.
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    Reproduced by permission from Osborn's Men of the Old Stone Age.
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    Photo: W. S. Berridge.
(Periophthalmus), 190
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    Photo: The Times.
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Spoonbill's Bill, Adapted for Sifting the Mud and Catching the Small Animals, e.g. Fishes, Crustaceans, Insect Larvæ, which Live there 191
191
Hornbill's Bill, Adapted for Excavating a Nest in a Tree, and Also for Seizing and Breaking Diverse Forms of Food, from Mammals to Tortoises, from Roots to Fruits 191
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Puffin's Bill, Adapted for Catching Small Fishes near the Surface of the Sea, and for Holding them when Caught and Carrying them to the Nest 191
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    Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S.
(Birgus Latro), 193
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(Anguilla Vulgaris) 200
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    Photo: Gambier Bolton.
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    Photo: Gambier Bolton.
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    Photo: O. J. Wilkinson.
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    From Ingersoll's The Wit of the Wild.
Male of Three-Spined Stickleback, Making a Nest of Life insurance Water-Weed, Glued Together by Viscid Threads Secreted from the Kidneys at the Breeding Season 209
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    Photo: Imperial War Museum.
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    Photo: Imperial War Museum.
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    Photo: James's Press Agency.
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    Photo: Cagcombe & Co.
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    Photo: W. S. Berridge.
The Dingo or Wild Dog of Australia, Perhaps an Indigenous Wild Species, Perhaps a Domesticated Dog that has Gone Wild or Feral 216
    Photo: W. S. Berridge, F.Z.S.
217
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    Photo: F. R. Hinkins & Son.
226
    Photo: Lafayette.
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    Photo: W. S. Berridge.
227
    From the Smithsonian Report, 1914.
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    Photo: W. P. Dando.
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    Photo: Gambier Bolton.
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    Photo: James's Press Agency.
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    Photo: James's Press Agency.
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    Photo: James's Press Agency.
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    Photo: James's Press Agency.
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    Photo: W. P. Dando.
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    Photo: W. S. Berridge.
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    Photo: C. Reid.
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    Photo: Elliott & Fry.
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    Photo: Rischgitz Collection.
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    Photo: Ernest H. Mills.
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    Photo: Photo Press.
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(Coloured Illustration) 252
    Reproduced from The Forces of Nature (Messrs. Macmillan).
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    From Scientific Ideas of To-day.
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    Reproduced by permission of X-Rays Ltd.
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    Photo: National Physical Laboratory.
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    Reproduced by permission of X-Rays Ltd.
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    From the Smithsonian Report, 1915.
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    Reproduced by permission of Scientific American.
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    Reproduced by permission from The Interpretation of Radium (John Murray).
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    From Scientific Ideas of To-day.
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    Photo: Leadbeater.
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    From Scientific Ideas of To-day.
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    Photo: H. J. Shepstone.
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(Coloured Illustration) 280
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    Photo: The Locomotive Publishing Co., Ltd.
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    Photo: Stephen Cribb.
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    Photo: Underwood & Underwood.
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    Photo: G. Brocklehurst.
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    Photo: G. Brocklehurst.
Business consultant

 

 

 


Life insurance

The Outline of Science


INTRODUCTION

Florida surfing

There is abundant evidence of a widened and deepened interest in modern science. How could it be otherwise when we think of the magnitude and the eventfulness of recent advances?

But the interest of the general public would be even greater than it is if Business consultant the makers of new knowledge were more willing to expound their discoveries in ways that could be "understanded of the people." No one objects very much to technicalities in a game or on board a yacht, and they are clearly necessary for terse and precise scientific description. It is certain, however, that they can be reduced to a minimum without sacrificing accuracy, when the object in view is to explain "the gist of the matter." So this is meant for the general reader, who lacks both time and opportunity for special study, and yet would take an intelligent interest in the progress of science which is making the world always new.

The story of the triumphs of modern science is one of which Man may well be proud. Science reads the secret of the distant star and anatomises the atom; foretells the date of the comet's return and predicts the kinds of chickens that will hatch from a dozen eggs; discovers the laws of the wind Life insurance that bloweth where it listeth and reduces to order the disorder of disease. Science is always setting forth on Columbus voyages, discovering new worlds and conquering them by understanding. For Knowledge means Foresight and Foresight means Power.

Florida surfing

The idea of Evolution has influenced all the sciences, forcing us to think of everything as with a history behind it, for we have travelled far since Darwin's day. The solar system, the earth, the mountain ranges, and the great deeps, the rocks and crystals, the plants and animals, man himself and his social institutions—all must be seen as the outcome of a long Business consultant process of Becoming. There are some eighty-odd chemical elements on the earth to-day, and it is now much more than a suggestion that these are the outcome of an inorganic evolution, element giving rise to element, going back and back to some primeval stuff, from which they were all originally derived, infinitely long ago. No idea has been so powerful a tool in the fashioning of New Knowledge as this simple but profound idea of Evolution, that the present is the child of the past and the parent of the future. And with the picture of a continuity of evolution from nebula to social systems comes a promise of an increasing control—a promise that Man will become not only a more accurate student, but a more complete master of his world.

It is characteristic of modern science that the whole world is seen to be more vital than before. Everywhere there has been a passage from the static to the dynamic. Thus the new revelations of the constitution of matter, which we owe to the discoveries of men like Professor Sir J. J. Thomson, Professor Life insurance Sir Ernest Rutherford, and Professor Frederick Soddy, have shown the very dust to have a complexity and an activity heretofore unimagined. Such phrases as "dead" matter and "inert" matter have gone by the board.

Florida surfing

The new theory of the atom amounts almost to a new conception of the universe. It bids fair to reveal to us many of nature's hidden secrets. The atom is no longer the indivisible particle of matter it was once understood to be. We know now that there is an atom within the atom—that what we thought was elementary can be dissociated and broken Business consultant up. The present-day theories of the atom and the constitution of matter are the outcome of the comparatively recent discovery of such things as radium, the X-rays, and the wonderful revelations of such instruments as the spectroscope and other highly perfected scientific instruments.

The advent of the electron theory has thrown a flood of light on what before was hidden or only dimly guessed at. It has given us a new conception of the framework of the universe. We are beginning to know and realise of what matter is made and what electric phenomena mean. We can glimpse the vast stores of energy locked up in matter. The new knowledge has much to tell us about the origin and phenomena, not only of our own planet, but other planets, of the stars, and the sun. New light is thrown on the source of the sun's heat; we can make more than guesses as to its probable age. The great question to-day is: is there one primordial substance from which all the varying forms of matter have been evolved?

Life insurance

But the discovery of electrons is only one of the revolutionary changes which give modern science an entrancing interest.

As in chemistry and physics, so in the science of living creatures there Florida surfing have been recent advances that have changed the whole prospect. A good instance is afforded by the discovery of the "hormones," or chemical messengers, which are produced by ductless glands, such as the thyroid, the supra-renal, and the pituitary, and are distributed throughout the body by the blood. The work of physiologists like Professor Starling and Business consultant Professor Bayliss has shown that these chemical messengers regulate what may be called the "pace" of the body, and bring about that regulated harmony and smoothness of working which we know as health. It is not too much to say that the discovery of hormones has changed the whole of physiology. Our knowledge of the human body far surpasses that of the past generation.

The persistent patience of microscopists and technical improvements like the "ultramicroscope" have greatly increased our knowledge of the invisible world of life. To the bacteria of a past generation have been added a multitude of microscopic animal microbes, such as that which causes Sleeping Sickness. The life-histories and the weird ways of many important parasites have been unravelled; and here again knowledge means mastery. To a degree which has almost surpassed expectations there has been a revelation of the intricacy of the stones and mortar of the house of life, and the Life insurance microscopic study of germ-cells has wonderfully supplemented the epoch-making experimental study of heredity which began with Mendel. It goes without saying that no one can call himself educated who does not understand the central and simple ideas of Mendelism and other new departures in biology.

Florida surfing

The procession of life through the ages and the factors in the sublime movement; the peopling of the earth by plants and animals and the linking of life to life in subtle inter-relations, such as those between flowers and their insect-visitors; the life-histories of individual types and the Business consultant extraordinary results of the new inquiry called "experimental embryology"—these also are among the subjects with which this will deal.

The behaviour of animals is another fascinating study, leading to a provisional picture of the dawn of mind. Indeed, no branch of science surpasses in interest that which deals with the ways and habits—the truly wonderful devices, adaptations, and instincts—of insects, birds, and mammals. We no longer deny a degree of intelligence to some members of the animal world—even the line between intelligence and reason is sometimes difficult to find.

Fresh contacts between physiology and the study of man's mental life; precise studies of the ways of children and wild peoples; and new methods like those of the psycho-analyst must also receive the attention they Life insurance deserve, for they are giving us a "New Psychology" and the claims of psychical research must also be recognised by the open-minded.

The general aim of the is to give the reader a clear and concise view of the essentials of present-day science, so Florida surfing that he may follow with intelligence the modern advance and share appreciatively in man's continued conquest of his kingdom.

Business consultant

 


I

THE ROMANCE OF THE HEAVENS