oofa* bp fcenrp fcolt CALMIRE, Man and Nature. Sixth edition revised. STURMSEE Man and Man. Third edition revised. THE COSMIC RELATIONS AND IMMORTAL- ITY, second edition, 2 vols. ON THE Civic RELATIONS. Being a third edition of " Talks on Civics" rewritten from the catechetical into the expository form, and revised and enlarged. HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY BOSTON AND NEW YORK THE COSMIC RELATIONS AND IMMORTALITY IN TWO VOLUMES VOL. I THE COSMIC RELATIONS AND IMMORTALITY r HENRY HOLT Bting a second edition eftbt author" i treatise "ON THE COSMIC RELATIONS" VOLUME I BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY *br filter* iDe prr*< CambnDgr 1919 COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY HKNRY HOLT COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY HENRY HOLT Published November, igu Reprinted. March, igis Second edition, enlarged, November, 1919 PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION OP course no one could sanely undertake an exhaustive treatment of the subject indicated by the title of this book. What I have attempted is an outline of the evolution of the relations between the soul and the external universe, and a summary of the recognized relations that are still so im- maturely evolved as to be little understood. With the latest philosophy, I have assumed a germ of consciousness in each particle of the star dust, recognizing the consciousness when it becomes obvious in the recoil of protoplasm from contact, and following the evolution up through primitive life into the soul as we know it to-day. I have made this sketch with a special view to showing that the existence of an unknown universe is a corollary of the evolution of knowledge. This has often been expressed in a sentence, but not often systematically expounded and illus- trated. After this hasty sketch of the a priori indications of an unknown universe, I have gone at once into the a posteriori indications, giving an account of the mysterious relations that have been carefully studied only for a generation, between the human forces now termed telekinetic and the better known modes of force; and also of the psychical relations termed telepathic, following them up to those which some consider spiritistic. That these phenomena are of great interest, and the study of them of the very first importance, has been the belief of some of the first minds of our time, including minds so diverse as those of Mr. Gladstone and Professor James. These things upon the borders of our Cosmic Relations have been most notably studied by the Society for Psychical Research, and earliest perhaps among the motives for under- taking this book, was the desire to present, so far as I could in the limits, and in such organic shape as I could, the most 2033194 vi Preface important of the accounts of phenomena and comments upon them scattered through the forty odd volumes so far pub- lished by that Society. My compilation has naturally ac- creted with itself considerable material from kindred sources, including some from the observations of my friends and myself; and I have ventured to accompany it with many guesses and comments of my own as to causes and implica- tions of the phenomena. Where all is so vague, there can be no immodesty in any earnest student hazarding his guesses. The only immodesty conspicuous in the connection is that frequently shown by those who pooh-pooh the facts without knowing anything about them. Many of the facts presented are very nebulous, and the guesses are naturally more nebulous still. This has led to a great deal of deliberate repetition, of views from various angles, so much that I fear it will tax the patience of the readers whose approval I most desire. I trust, however, that they will bear with the repetitions better from knowing that, although there is probably a full share of those which result from imperfection in the author's grasp, there are many others which are of set purpose. I beg farther indulgence for some inconsistencies. For instance, in dealing with the most tremendous subjects that tempt our intellects, at one moment one is conscious of their immensity, and uses the habitual symbols for the feeling, and at the next moment, in a different connection, the word that he has just capitalized arises in some matter-of-fact connection without any emotional content, and slips off the pencil as free from emphasis as any other word. I let them stay as they fell, and hope that their inconsistencies will not bother the reader as much as they have bothered the proof readers. Those good (and sometimes very bad) people have also been greatly bothered by the extracts of heteromatic writing : for I left them to be printed just as I found them, and they are often superior to the rules of rhyme and reason, let alone rhetoric and proof reading. Moreover, there are folks who don't like being bound by rule : if there never had been such, this book would not have been possible or perhaps any other. In addition to the sins for which I have already sought Preface vii absolution, I have contradicted myself with a freedom per- haps not quite Emersonian, but also, alas! not quite with Emersonian excuse ; and perhaps the worst thing I have done, but a thing which I suspect has been done by more than one other author, even by as great a one as I have just named, is letting stand two or three sentences written in good faith, whose meaning is so elusive that, by the time of revision, it has escaped even the author. It may come back, though, when sought under different circumstances, even by a different person. To crown all the paradoxical treatment of a paradoxical subject, there is matter on pages 373-4 and 395-6 that perhaps ought to be in the preface, but it could not be understood without a knowledge of much that precedes it. I have not made so much apology without a vivid con- sciousness that qui s'excuse s'accuse. But is there not suf- ficient sanction in antique usage, for a preface being " The Author's Apology " ? And surely in these days of unrelent- ing book production, he has more need of apology than ever before. I do not envy the man, or have much hope for the work of the man, who can write on these vague subjects without painfully mistrusting himself. But there is at least one good reason for any aspirant setting out with a good heart though he may receive, and deserve, no atten- tion, or even contemptuous attention, he is at least essaying needed work: for our age takes too little interest in these subjects, even if some ages have taken too much. My obligations to many friends are great to Mr. Dorr, Professor Kellogg, and Professor Newbold they are beyond expression. That two of them have sometimes talked all night with me is but a faint indication. Professor Kellogg has read some of the proof, and Professor Newbold the whole of it So has Mr. Bartlett, the biographer of Foster. So also have several other friends, some of them at almost as great sacrifice of peace of mind as the proof readers. I have also to express my thanks to the Society for Psy- chical Research for permitting the publication of some of the matter in Professor Newbold's hands which is under their viii Preface control. It is given in Chapter XXXVI, and also in the Baker case on pp. 8591 Some passages have been printed in The Unpopular Re- view. As it is usual to acknowledge such facts, partly per- haps to warn off readers, so slight a circumstance as my being the editor ought not to prevent the acknowledgment here. H. H. FAIBHOLT, BURLINGTON, Vr. September 26, 1914. PEEFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION THE interest in Psychical Eesearch which has sprung from the bereavements of the war, has brought a sudden demand for a new edition of this work. The title of the first edition was simply "On the Cosmic Relations." Sir William Bar- rett, in a notice approving of its contents, expressed dissatis- faction with its title, and made its inadequacy for the first time apparent to the author. Although the principal purpose of the book was to tell what had been done in Psychical Eesearch, the title came from a desire to show that the new phenomena under research were as legitimate a part of our relations to the cosmos as those which had preceded them, and thus to establish the scientific basis for the new knowledge by correlating it with the old. I also hoped thereby to lessen the opposition with which the new knowledge, so contrary to old prejudices, is generally received. But Sir William's comment opened my eyes to the fact that the book's title failed in what, to a person not of the Euskinian type of mind, is really the first object of a title to indicate the main purpose of the book ; and thereby incidentally facili- tate its circulation. I trust that the expansion of the title in this edition will remedy the defect, and excuse this long explanation. Since the first edition was published in 1914 " mediums " as gifted as their predecessors, and with a great variety of gifts, have cropped up everywhere and in all social positions, and Preface to the Second Edition ix there has been an enormous amount of involuntary writing by ouija board or pencil. Seldom has there been such a flood of literature, good and bad, contributed in an equal time to any other department of knowledge. This suggests that this book should be rewritten, but that would involve withholding it at a time when the demand is pressing and perhaps impor- tant. And rewriting is not really worth while : for there has been no such change in the aspect of the matters treated, as cannot readily be disposed of in a supplement. Yet not only has the general literature of the subject vastly increased, but my personal knowledge of the phenomena has increased also, and it may be worth while to give some idea of the new aggregate. This I have attempted in some supplementary chapters, and I have also made some modifications in the final summary of the first edition. I have added nothing to speak of about " materialization." Before Dr. Crawford's discoveries, summarized in Chapter LVI, I was so skeptical about it that I had not even studied the subject ; and I am still ignorant of it except at second hand. But Dr. Crawford's evidence, and some that has reached me privately, make me think that the topic is probably worthy of attention. I can not, however, hold back this edition to study it farther. When the first edition was published, there was compara- tively little information outside the Proceedings of the S. P. R., and as they were not easily accessible to readers gen- erally, I quoted from them very freely. But the English S. P. R. has not been as active as before the war, and has confined its reports more and more to studies deeper than the average lay student's interests go. But, on the other hand, there are now many good books within reach of everybody. Yet with the exception of Dr. Crawford's, they do little more than confirm what I have given already. All the additions I have found practicable are, in Chapter LVI some brief accounts of what appear to be the revolu- tionary discoveries in Telekinesis announced by Dr. Craw- ford ; in Chapters LVII and LVIII, some account of my own experiences with two remarkable new sensitives, touching whom nothing has yet been published except my own articles in The Unpopular (now the Unpartizan) Review, from which i Preface to the Second Edition I quote freely; and in Chapter LIX, I give some comments on the current flood of involuntary writing, and a brief ac- count of a few of the most remarkable and novel recent miscellaneous cases. Because of the progress of Psychical Eesearch since the first edition, the supplementary chapters (LVI-LIX) and the slightly modified final summary composing Chapter LX, are of course somewhat at variance with the first edition. Espe- cially are Chapters LVII, on my experiences with Mr. T. and LVIII, on my experiences with " Mrs. Vernon," at vari- ance with the statement, after my seance with Mrs. Piper, in Chapter XXVIII, that I had not been near a medium since, nor cared to go. But I did not go then, and have not gone since, to seek communication with my own departed ones (in fact I willed it away in the Piper sitting) but I have gone merely to study the subject; and I strenuously counsel against the habit of going for any other purpose. Notice Mrs. Travers- Smith's opinions on that point in Chapter LIX. To avoid making an entirely new index, a short sup- plementary index of the new matter has been printed after the original index. But introducing that new matter between the last two chapters of the first edition, has involved renum- bering the pages, and consequently the references after page 930 in the original index are seventy pages too small. They can be corrected by adding that number, or the corrected ones can be found in the supplementary index. In the investigation of the subject, probably the greatest need now obvious is the comparative study of the immense mass of alleged evidence already accumulated a search for generalizations regarding which sensitives generally agree; and that is needed whether the study leads to the discovery of underlying principles, or "busts up" the whole thing. I, for one, don't think it will. If I were younger and less committed to other work, I might attempt that study, but even then there would be no justification to keep this book out of print until the work should be done. There are others to do the work, and I earnestly commend it to them. What little comparative study has already been done has Preface to the Second Edition xi brought out some important uniformities which it may not be premature to call laws. The best summary of them that I know has been made by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in The New Revelation. I give a brief but very significant quotation from it in Chapter LIX. Since the first edition appeared, we have had the terrible privilege of living through, or at least into, the greatest period of revolution the world has known. On its physical side the revolution has probably been no greater than on its psychical side. The accelerated weakening of old dogmas has greatly increased the interest in Psychical Research; but, of course, a stronger influence has been the hope of reunion with those whom the war has so cruelly torn away. Ex- travagant as the suggestion may appear, perhaps this interest may yet more than compensate all the suffering of the war. The least that can be expected from it is a better correlation of psychic phenomena with our previous knowledge, while as much can be hoped for as a clearer demonstration of the survival of death, a regenerated religion, and expectation of a rational heaven. An eminent scientific man casually remarked to me the other day : " I see that now Lodge and Conan Doyle have had their heads turned." I asked him if he had read their books, and when he told me he had not, I had my pleasure usual in such cases, of telling him that I knew he had not, when he made his remark. The splendid labors of the S. P. R. have been, especially lately, largely devoted to search for what James used to call " knock-down evidence." I don't expect it much more than I expect the exact squaring of the circle : what with telepathy, teloteropathy, and the possibility of verification only from incarnate minds, not to speak of the inevitable difference between the conditions of incarnate existence and postcarnate existence, if there is any, the conditions of the question, outside of Telekinesis, do not seem to admit of knock-down evidence. Yet evidence may be convincing without being con- clusive, and there does seem a visible chance that as people learn more and more of the facts that have already convinced xii Preface to the Second Edition most of the investigators that have " turned the heads " of Swedenborg, Lincoln, Myers, Hodgson, Lodge, Crookes, Bar- rett and the Balfours, and attracted the profound attention of Gladstone, Bishop Boyd-Carpenter, MacDougall, Schiller, Bergson, Gilbert Murray, James, and Lord Eayliegh as peo- ple learn more of these things, and as the fashion of involun- tary writing spreads, there will gradually spread a belief in immortality based on such evidence as we may have. Men have gone to the stake for convictions whose evidence was no stronger. With that conviction we may hope for a great increase in right reason, in morality, in hopefulness, and consequently in happiness. H. H. FAIRHOLT, BURLINGTON, VT. October 23, 1919. CONTENTS BOOK I CORRELATED KNOWLEDGE BAPTER FAOB I. INTRODUCTION 1 II. SKETCH OF HUMAN EVOLUTION BODY . . 13 III. SKETCH OP HUMAN EVOLUTION SOUL . . 29 IV. EVOLUTION OF THE UNIVEBSE .... 50 V. THE KNOWN UNIVERSE AND THE UNKNOWN . 55 VI. SOME ETHICAL ASPECTS OF EVOLUTION . . 67 BOOK II UNCORRELATED KNOWLEDGE VII. INTRODUCTION 81 PART I TELEKINESIS VIII. MOLAR TELEKINESIS 91 IX. MOLAR TELEKINESIS (Continued) DOWSING 123 X. MOLECULAR TELEKINESIS 142 XI. MOLAR TELEPSYCHIC TELEKINESIS . . . 167 XII. MOLECULAR TELEPSYCHIC TELEKINESIS . . 181 PART II XIII. AUTOKINESIS 197 PART III XIV. PSYCHOKINESIS . 216 ziii XIV Contents PART IV TELEPSYCHOSIS CHAPTER PAGE XV. '.INTRODUCTION 218 XVI. TELEPATHY BETWEEN FOSTER AND THE AU- THOR 221 XVII. EARLY TELEPATHIC SENSITIVES . . . 228 XVIII. EECENT TELEPATHIC SENSITIVES . . . 240 XIX. SUGGESTED CORRELATIONS OF TELEPATHY . 276 XX. THE COSMIC SOUL 294 XXI. THE COSMIC SOUL AND THE INDIVIDUAL SOUL 305 XXII. MIND AND BRAIN AGAIN .... 314 XXIII. THE IDEA 321 XXIV. POSSESSION IN GENERAL . . . .329 XXV. POSSESSION IN HETEROMATIC WRITING . 339 XXVI. DRAMATIC POSSESSION. EARLY CASES . 364 XXVII. PRELIMINARY EEGARDING THE S. P. B. SITTINGS ....... 368 XXVIII. MRS. PIPER : AUTHOR'S EXPERIENCE . . 380 XXIX. HODGSON'S FIRST PIPER EEPORT, 1888-91 . 400 XXX. MRS. PIPER'S ENGLISH SITTINGS, 1889-90 . 426 XXXI. HODGSON'S SECOND PIPER EEPORT, 1892-5 GEORGE " PELHAM " . . . . .460 XXXII. HODGSON'S SECOND PIPER EEPORT (Con- tinued) MISCELLANEOUS SITTINGS . 479 XXXIII. HODGSON'S SECOND PIPER EEPORT (Con- tinued) THE THAW SITTINGS . . 496 XXXIV. HODGSON'S SECOND PIPER EEPORT (Con- cluded) HODGSON'S CONCLUSIONS . . 513 XXXV. PROFESSOR NEWBOLD'S EEPORT . . .531 XXXVI. FARTHER NEWBOLD NOTES . 552 Contents xv CHAPTER PAOK XXXVII. PROFESSOR HYSLOP'S REPORT . . .597 XXXVIII. MR. PIDDINGTON'S REPORT ON MRS. THOMPSON . . . . . . 602 XXXIX. THE THOMPSON-PIPER-JOSEPH MARBLE SERIES . . . . . . . .629 XL. THE THOMPSON-MYERS CONTROL . . 637 XLI. HETEROMATIC SCRIPT: MRS. HOLLAND . 647 XLJI. HETEROMATIC SCRIPT: MRS. VERRALL . 672 XUII. THE PIPER-HODGSON IN AMERICA . . 685 XLIV. THE PIPER-HODGSON IN AMERICA (Con- tinued) 713 XLV. THE HODGSON CONTROL IN ENGLAND . 737 XLVI. THE ISAAC THOMPSON SERIES IN 1906 . 749 XLVII. CROSS-CORRESPONDENCES .... 761 XLVIII. THE PIPER-MYERS AND THE CLASSICS . 774 XLIX. THE PIPER- JUNOT SITTINGS . . .785 BOOK HI ATTEMPTS AT CORRELATION L. RELATIONS OF THE MEDIUM'S DREAMS WITH OTHER DREAMS .... 830 LI. THE MAKING OF A MEDIUM . . .848 LJI. FINAL GUESSES REGARDING POSSESSION . 864 LIII. PROS AND CONS OF THE SPIRITISTIC HY- POTHESIS 870 LIV. THE DREAM LIFE 881 LV. DREAMS INDICATING SURVIVAL OF DEATH 914 xvi Contents BOOK IV SUPPLEMENT FOR SECOND EDITION LVI. RECENT PROGRESS. DR. CRAWFORD'S AN- NOUNCEMENTS 931 LVII. THE MEDIUMSHIP OF MR. T. 945 LVIII. THE MEDIDMSHIP OP " MRS. VERNON " . . 962 LIX. THE INVOLUNTARY WRITERS . . . .982 LX. FINAL SUMMARY 1000 LIST OF BOOKS 1063 THE COSMIC RELATIONS AND IMMORTALITY BOOK I CORRELATED KNOWLEDGE CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION THERE is something more than resemblances of words to make this age of wireless telegraphs, horseless carriages, and tuneless music, an age of lawless laws and creditlcss creeds. When new things replace old ones, new conceptions must follow; and during the transitions, men's convictions are suspended. Accordingly the comparatively recent realization that the Cosmos is governed by law, uniform, just, and merci- less, has dethroned the god whom prayer influences to dis- turb the order of Nature. With such a god, goes most that such a god implies ; and until we assimilate new conceptions of the power behind the universe, we are getting along with a short supply of faiths, and in some respects not getting along at all well. It may not be hard for instance to trace the connection of the lawless laws and creditless creeds with the tuneless music, or with any other art which has parted with inspiration. The old views of our Cosmic Relations being gone, these conditions cry out for new ones. It is a commonplace, but a very true one, that we are apt to attribute too much of mankind's well-being to recent dis- coveries. Telephones and wireless telegraphs are useful as transmitters of words only if the words say something worth saying; and there has not been said as much worth saying since the invention of the telephone as there was during an equal period before that invention. The wealth developed by man's recently increased control of nature has put the 2 Introduction [Bk. I search for wealth in front of the searching of the spirit: neither in production nor in appreciation have literature, philosophy, or the arts, the place they had about the middle of the nineteenth century, and science has been turning more and more from the discovery of Nature's inspiring laws to the production of wealth. The relation between man and the universe outside him has been growing more mechanical and less emotional. True, the city dweller seeks Nature more than he did, but it is for his body's sake rather than his soul's sake, and he feels a responsive soul behind Nature less than he did. The fervors, thrills, and longings of the philosopher are gone with those of the devotee. With them have dis- appeared the inspirations of the poet and the artist. If they come back, they must come under new forms: the old ones are like worn-out garments. Of what the new ones may be we are about to search for some hints. Men have always had some sort of realization of the ineffable mystery surrounding what they know. From the savage's propitiation of the unknown Power behind every known thing, up to Spencer's predication of an Unknowable beside which all we know shrinks toward nothingness, that mystery has been the source of many of our best emotions, and often of our dominant ones. For long periods and over wide spaces, religion has been both an inspiration and a con- trol. Although it was behind the cruelties of the Inquisition and the asceticisms of the Thebaid, it was no less behind the sculpture of Greece, the painting of the Kenaissance, the poetry of the Divina Commedia and the Paradise Lost, and the music of the Twelfth Mass and the Stabat Mater. What perhaps is more, it filled the ages in which lived makers of other great works, who, while showing no consciousness that they were affected by religion, even while contemning it, unconsciously owed to it much of their inspiration. This is realized by most of the few living men who experienced and hated the Puritan education that survived beyond the first half of the last century. At college they may have hated to go to chapel, especially when compelled to it before daylight in winter, and in the shortened holidays of June afternoons; they may have despised many of the dogmas taught, and even many of the good teachers who were too stupid to see the Ch. I] Inspirations. Puritanism. Infidelity 3 new revolutions rushing through thought; but despite all the hatred and contempt, some of them feel yet the thrill from the old hymns sung in the slanting sunlight of the shortened holidays, and realize that those thrills were akin to those which made that an age of great music and great literature great- ness whose dwindling makes this age comparatively barren. Yet the inspirations of Rossini and Verdi and Abt and Lachner and our own Foster, and those of Tennyson and Emerson came from precisely the same universe that we have before us now nay, from a much narrower one; but the interpretations of it were different, were generally accepted and were embodied in a set of enthusiasms common to all men, and therefore doubly inspiring to all men, even to the few whose emotions affirmed when their intellects ignored or denied. The Calvinistic theology, with its outcrop of Puritanism, had made God a tyrant to whom all joy in his creatures was displeasing. This made morality consist in self-suppres- sion. The master of my preparatory school, though educated as a physician, counseled his boys against drinking water in hot weather : so far did the conviction go that all our desires inclined toward evil ; even in fevers, water was not permitted ; and at Yale in my time, not only were the students forced to go to chapel in the dark mornings and winter storms, but an offer to cushion the benches of the chapel was rejected be- cause it was feared the cushions would promote effeminacy. At the same time, in defiance of all consistency regarding the effeminacy, but most consistently regarding the asceticism, athletics were not encouraged, partly, whether so realized or not, because they gave pleasure. But the reaction against those monstrous opinions, in dethroning the monstrous god the opinions propitiated, de- throned the only god there was, and, to the minds of many, introduced a purely material universe one without malevo- lence but equally without benevolence a Cosmos, it is true, because orderly and governed by law, but with its emotional elements ignored, and even its beauty dissected away in the search for causes. These arid views were of course possible only during the passing of an intense emotional reaction. While the relations 4 Introduction [Bk. I of the Soul to God became abstractions too tenuous to con- sider, the interactions between the Soul and the rest of the Cosmos, were more distinctly recognized and investigated, and it became generally realized that of those interactions, hap- piness is, despite exceptions, the natural result: indeed, the Cosmos has come to appear an apparatus for the production of happiness, and, on the whole, despite many failures, a very successful one. At least in our corner of it, Nature has been at work longer than we can intelligently realize, in making man "from the dust of the earth" in evolving responsive matter from irresponsive, and in building up organisms of responsive matter for no other apparent reason than that the responses may produce happiness. All sane action is undertaken for the sake of happiness. Other reasons have been given, but they do not bear examina- tion. Action may be sane, however, and yet mistaken, or may even be deliberately counter to the happiness of the actor, in which case, as in self-sacrifice for another's sake, it will be intended for the happiness of someone other than the actor it may be even for the happiness of God, as in the Juggernaut sacrifices no less than in the Roman incense or the musical tributes of the rural New England melodeon and choir. Or the action may be counter to the happiness of someone else, in which case it will be for the happiness of the actor, as in robbery; or of some third person, as in removing a friend's enemy; or again even of God, as in persecuting those who deny him. Or, once more, the action may be against the immediate happiness of the actor, but for his at-least-supposed ultimate happiness, as in asceticism for the soul's sake; or it may be against the immediate happiness of another, but for his sup- posed ultimate happiness, as in religious persecution. But in whatever complexities the purpose of action may be dis- guised, it is, if sane, ultimately intended for happiness of somebody somewhere. Counter theories have been main- tained, but they have been demonstrated fallacious, both in logic and in practice. The proposition that, so far as we can see, happiness is the only known justification for the existence of either soul or universe, has probably been the object of more attack Ch. I] Happiness, Duty, Cosmic Law 5 than any other proposition in philosophy. The opposition, however, has been mainly against low definitions of the term happiness, which the critics have made for themselves. But that proposition is supported even by their suggestion that God made both soul and universe to amuse himself that his eyes might be delighted by human sacrifices, and his palate by their flesh; or that his ears might be tickled by melodeons, and his nose by incense such was one idea of Divine happiness entertained by some of those who made the suggestion. If happiness means the satisfaction of poor taste, or vanity, or sensuality, or means even mere amusement, the proposition is well founded. But where does happiness bulk larger in poor taste, or good taste; in vanity, or modesty; in excess, or temperance; in selfishness, or generosity; in laziness or activity? If happiness is most effectively sought in good work relieved by the recreation essential to its best efficiency, and directed to the greatest aggregate happiness regarding the happiness of the individual only as a component of that; in love of the beautiful universe and of the arts we generate from it ; in love of beautiful bodies and beautiful souls, and the beautiful moral law; and in grateful, hopeful, filial, intimate reverence for the Power and Beneficence obvious behind it all if happiness comes mainly from these things, who shall say that its production is not the main result, and the best result, of all the legitimate activities we know ? And yet it is but a by-product of duty. With this view that the cosmic relations are normally productive of happiness has come the realization that the substitution, in the control of the universe, of law for anthropomorphic volitions, has not done away with morality; and that discrediting the testimony on which, in our branch of the race, the hopes of immortality had mainly rested, did not destroy all bases for the hopes, especially as there began to appear new bases, which even conquered the skepticism of many investigators to whom the old ones appealed in vain. These new mental attitudes have resulted from much dis- cussion, but they are still so new that discussion can hardly yet have become superfluous, and that any earnest writer may hope to present some aspects worth noticing. In this hope 6 Introduction [Bk. I I venture one more consideration of our Cosmic Eelations one by no means exhaustive, even of our present knowledge, but only of some salient features of it. Our " Cosmic Eelations " is a brief term for the interactions between Soul and Universe. For those interactions to be successful which means for them to be productive of hap- piness, the actions on one side must of course be in conformity with the actions on the other. There are actions on both sides not controlled by our wills on one side, many of our own thoughts and feelings; and on the other, most of the processes of Nature. But we have always found the actions we do not control, consistent with each other in conformity with Nature's laws, as we phrase it; and when the actions we do control are also in such conformity, the actions we do not control always co-operate with us, and insure our success ; when our actions are not in conformity, the other actions op- pose us, and insure our failure. Conformity is what we call morality. With some of the reactions we are very familiar, some we know vaguely, there may be others at which we merely guess, and probably the vast majority we do not even guess about. The changes in our bodies on which our mental and physical well-being depends, are but very imperfectly known to us, and many not known at all. The same is true of con- ditions in our environment. We can yet foresee but im- perfectly the daily and seasonal changes of temperature and moisture on which our health and fortunes so largely depend ; and we guess but faintly that there are around us changes of magnetic and electrical tension which materially affect our vigor and spirits, and yet which we recognize but slowly and vaguely, and cannot anticipate, much less control. Such, however, as already hinted, is the obvious consistency of the universe, that there is every reason to believe that if we deduce correct principles of conduct regarding what we know, we will comport ourselves wisely regarding what we do not know. The vast majority of wise people have even carried this principle so far as to believe that if there is a life beyond the one we are leading, the full use of this one is the best possible preparation for that one. Some ascetics, however, Ch. I] Philosophy and Conduct. Soul and Universe 7 have advocated the subordination of this one to certain fancies which they have entertained regarding that one. To guard against such extremes, it is well to know the general laws of the happiness-producing Cosmos: for they indicate the right uses of less general knowledge. That is the reason for traditionally applying the term The Guide of Life to the general laws, embraced under the name Philoso- phy, and is why masters of special arts have always come to learn from masters of philosophy, and why widespread errors of philosophy have led to disastrous blunders in re- ligion, statecraft, economics, criminology, physical science, and invention blunders all the way from attempting to govern heterogeneous peoples by homogeneous suffrage, and attempting to cure laziness by fostering it, down to astrology and perpetual motion. As any treatment, however modest, of the widest generali- ties, must here and there touch the outlines of all we know, to make some sort of consistent whole it must include many things with which most readers are already familiar. But that is an infirmity of nearly all exposition: often the best that one can hope to reach, is putting old facts in new lights. Our study, like all others, needs a classification of subject- matter and a terminology, and our classification, like all others, cannot escape being a little arbitrary, with some overlapping at the lines of division. As already intimated, we will consider the Cosmos as con- sisting of the soul and the universe external to it. Yet some wise people deny any such duality part of them declaring that there is nothing outside the mind, and others declaring that mind is only a function of matter. Very well, we will consider this later; at present, for the first class of persons, let us divide the contents of the mind into what it does not project as seemingly outside itself, and what it does; and for the second class of persons, let us divide the functions of matter into those taking place in the nervous system, and those taking place outside of it. As said before, no classifica- tion is faultless, but any one of these will do to work with, 8 Introduction [Bk. I and the three are nearly enough identical to permit the terms of any one to apply to the others at least closely enough for our purposes. The terms in each case may well be cov- ered by the old-fashioned words subjective and objective. This is our first illustration of something that will come before us often and with which the reader is probably already only too familiar the absence in Nature of lines of demarcation, and the frequent necessity of assuming them for purposes of study. As with body and soul, so with animal and vegetable, chemical and physical, and hosts of other pairs of categories. Of most of the items under any pair, we can say: This comes under one of the pair, and this under the other; but there are some which we find it so difficult to place that we are tempted to say : This comes under both. Even to-day certain of the simplest organisms will be found included in both zoological and botanical text-books. Using our terms Soul and Universe, we place the body outside of the soul. But inside the soul we recognize a Something which says my body, my sensations, my thoughts, my feelings, my soul. This something we know only as making such remarks, and claiming such possessions ; but we at least give it a name Consciousness. But we call even it, my consciousness. What calls it so ? Another consciousness ? If so, that too must be "mine," and so on ad infinitum. Thus consciousness, like everything else, is ultimately a mystery beyond our faculties. Yet we include it with the mass of sensations, thoughts, and feelings, under the con- ception which, pace the quarrels of the psychologists, we call Soul. Outside of the soul,, too, are other souls, which, in relation to it, we are to include not in Soul, but in Universe: for as happiness is mainly produced by the interactions between one soul and other souls, unless we did include objective soul in universe, there would be but a sorry foundation for our fundamental proposition that the interactions between soul and universe are the cause of happiness. To this proposition it may be objected (How hard it is to make a proposition to which " it may be objected " never applies!) that the soul derives happiness from its own func- tions from studying its own processes, contemplating its Ch. I] Knowledge, Experience, Forecast 9 memories and imaginations, and constructing its interpreta- tions, theories, and schemes. True, but all these seem to have their origin in reactions between Soul and Universe. We will regard the universe as consisting of, first, the portion known to us; second, the portion partly known, or on the borderland between the known and the unknown; and third, the portion unknown, which is presumably im- measurably the largest. This classification, too, is like all others, very vague at the dividing lines so vague indeed that we have to begin by admitting the first portion to be, from one point of view, identical with the second; but we will find another point of view. What shall we understand by the known universe? It is really a sequence of phenomena. Until lately it was believed, and is still generally believed, that we can perceive, think, and feel only through vibrations in the objective universe, includ- ing nerve matter, and we may as well proceed provisionally on this belief until we reach the reasons that may point to supplementing it. Supplementing belief seems, in this genera- tion, to have been one of our most important functions. Knowledge is the recognition of uniformities and differ- ences in the aforesaid vibrations, and it is really knowledge, only as it can prophesy uniformities and differences in new vibrations. The ability thus to prophesy depends of course upon uni- formity and breadth of experience. Certainty varies as these vary, and as there is no final experience as the sun may not rise to-morrow morning; as next winter may be hot, and next summer cold ; as anything and everything may turn out differently from what it always has; there is of course no absolute certainty. Or looking at it from another angle : if certainty means demonstration not open to any possible doubt, absolute certainty is impossible to the human mind: for, as has often been said, absolute certainty would need infinite evidence, whose accumulation would require infinite time. Meanwhile " absolute " and " infinite " are words which are merely confessions of ignorance, and therefore " absolute certainty" is not only unattainable, but unthinkable; and over all this, some diseased minds have made a great pother. 10 Introduction [Bk. I But it is a far cry from such considerations, to the in- ference of the pessimists that as human knowledge is not certain, it is useless. We have found practical certainty, in the vast majority of instances, as reliable as absolute certainty could have been ; and our uncertain knowledge is not only the best knowledge we have, but it is good enough. Our degree of certainty that the sun will rise to-morrow morning, and that things will go as they have gone, except as their totality improves, has been a guide to all human effort, and a basis for all human happiness. Though the disasters that have come from mistakes have been many and serious, they have not been enough to prevent life being generally worth while to sane people not given to pessimism if any sane people are. There are those for whom the only certainty possible to men is not enough. Their trouble, however, is not with their mental food, but with their mental digestion. They need the help of the alienist rather than the philosopher. One often meets a general statement that the fact of evolu- tion of our faculties and of our knowledge of the Cosmos up to the present stages, demonstrates that the evolution of both will continue, and that therefore there must be not only a uni- verse, astronomical and microscopical, outside the one we know, but also an unknown universe within the one we partly know, and that this is as true of mind as it is of matter. But I have never seen an attempt to make this abstract state- ment more realizable more like the fruitful knowledge we have of visible and tangible things, by a sketch of evolution contrasting our universe with the universe of our primitive ancestors, and drawing from the contrast the legitimate in- ferences regarding the wider capacities and wider universe unknown to us, presumably infinitely vaster than those we know, and presumably to be enjoyed by our descendants, and possibly by ourselves in some other plane of being. The mysteries of that unknown universe of mind and matter have always been contemplated with awe, alike by the primi- tive savage and the most advanced saint and mystic, and this awe has been the parent of most of the religious emotions. But the developments in the universe of our daily experience during the past century, have been so much greater than ever before have so increased our control over the powers Ch. I] Consciousness of the Unknown. Plan of this Work 11 of Nature, and with it our wealth, that never perhaps, cer- tainly never since the luxurious days of Rome, have men's thoughts been so diverted from the mysteries and emotions which have marked the great religious ages. Those ages have had their extremes, but ours is in the opposite extreme, and sadly needs to have a portion of its interests lifted from Lombard Street and Wall Street, not to speak of the Savoy and the Waldorf-Astoria. Without a large consciousness of the universe beyond our knowledge, few men, if any, have done great things. The consciousness may have been mingled with dark and cruel superstitions, but it has been effective in spite of them. Even poor Napoleon had it, and if his age had not been enough like ours to afford him but a niggard supply, he might not have been the pitiable failure he was. The task I have set myself is, first, to attempt (in Book I) some such sketch of evolution as may impress, more than abstract statements can, a living consciousness of the exist- ence of the universe beyond our knowledge. For such a sketch the facts are yet meager, and have to be pieced together by not a little guesswork. Moreover, they largely relate to primitive and uninteresting things, and I fear my sketch will be dull, especially in the early stages, where its relation to its object cannot be very obvious. Moreover, as it must deal largely with commonplaces of knowledge, you may be impatient unless I am fortunate enough to lead you constantly to regard them as links in a chain of demonstration which, when completed, may possibly repay your attention. As soon as you find yourself bored, which I greatly fear you will, it may still be worth while to turn to Chapter V. There, after you skip what I fear may be some " fine writing " that I have been betrayed into, you will find the gist of every- thing between here and there ; and in Chapter VIII you will find the beginning of some things that may not have to de- pend on any powers of mine to make you " sit up and take notice." Having done what I can to arouse an interest in the Unknown, I shall proceed (in Book II) to give some account of a mass of phenomena which of late have fitfully emerged 12 Introduction [Bk. I from the Unknown, and which although they seem to have always been more or less a part of man's reactions with the Universe of both mind and matter, have been so small a part that, while they raise questions of the highest importance, they have been little explained that is to say: little correlated ' with the mass of verified and usable knowledge. Incidentally, and especially in conclusion (in Book III), I shall offer the leading guesses, and some of my own, as to the possible correlations and implications of these uncorrelated phenomena, and the answers they offer to the questions they raise. The last two books I trust will not tax the reader's patience as severely as the first one. We proceed now to the threatened sketch of evolution with reference to its demonstration of a universe beyond our knowledge. CHAPTER II SKETCH OF HUMAN EVOLUTION The Body FIRST for a rough survey of the apparatus through which the Soul maintains its reactions with the Universe. As this apparatus is evolved, its presumptive farther evolution involves a farther evolution of its functions, which means an increase of the reactions between Soul and Universe; and that means an increase of happiness. At the outset, the survey of the evolution of the apparatus may seem going over too familiar ground, but it will contain some implications that are not very familiar, and that are ancillary to our main purpose. It will also help some more specific work later. Moreover generally, probably always, the best way to study things and their relations is to begin with their evolution. Evolution began anterior to our knowledge, but it is now going on in things so much like any one we may wish to study, that we can generally get a fair notion of that thing's evolution, through the similar evolutions going on around us. For instance, from hints we get from other suns and systems, and from the action of mechanical laws that we know, we have made a history of the evolution of our solar system; and although no man ever saw that evolution, our history of it is probably more reliable than many histories of human events that profess to be made from the reports of witnesses. Similarly regarding the evolution of plants and animals and intelligence : we have primitive protoplasm and many primi- tive organisms with us now, and by watching them, and seeds and embryos which repeat their own ancestral evolution, we have learned much of the past biological evolution of which we are the summit. As we know (in the sense of "knowing" already ex- plained), the evolution of the human body took its start, if 18 14 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I we wish to assume a start anywhere, an immeasurable time ago, in a cell of protoplasm. The most primitive individual creature that we know is the amoeba. It is little more than a nucleated cell of protoplasm, and yet it does queer things. But first let us see if we can get behind it to a connection with inorganic nature: for inorganic objects do queer things too. Professor Holmes says (Evolution of Animal Intelligence, p. 67) : " There are various ways of imitating the movements of Amoeba by drops of oil or other fluids subjected to changes of surface tension. If a drop of mercury is placed in dilute nitric acid and a piece of potassium bichromate placed near it the drop of mercury will bulge out toward the bichromate and may surround it. The bichromate as it diffuses against the mercury causes a diminution of surface tension at the region of contact. The stronger contraction of the rest of the surface film forces the mercury to protrude at the weakest point, producing an outpushing resembling the pseudopod " [false foot] " of the Amoeba. It has been contended that varia- tions in surface tension account in great measure for the movements of Amoeba and other Khizopods much as in inor- ganic fluids. There is certainly a striking analogy between the phenomena in the two cases, but the studies of Jennings have shown that explanation of the phenomena is not quite so simple." Elsewhere Professor Holmes tells us that a drop of water will swallow a fine splinter of glass, and that a drop of chloroform will also, if the splinter is covered with shellac, and will eject it after the shellac is dissolved and becomes part of the drop. A drop of protoplasm with a nucleus, which we call an amoeba, will swallow pretty much anything it can manage to flow around, and after treating it, so far as con- ditions permit, as the drop of chloroform treats the shel- lac, will eject what remains, as the chloroform does the In view of such facts, one is almost tempted to ask whether the desire to draw an arbitrary line between "physical and chemical processes," on the one hand; and on the other the " super-physical agency . . . vital principle, or entelechy of some sort/' may not be simply the old theological prejudice, Ch. II] Origin of Life. Protozoa 15 and whether organic and inorganic are not simply two aspects of the same thing. To determine where, in the three performances above de- scribed, life begins, certainly will give material for debate to those fond of the exercise. Perhaps the question can be settled by the fact that you and I can be pretty closely proved to be descended from drops of protoplasm, and nobody yet heard from can be nearly as closely proved to be descended from drops of water or even drops of mercury or chloroform or oil, though the chloroform is complex matter, and the oil is organic matter. Professor Holmes (op. cit.) is my principal authority for the statements immediately following: In the material of amcebae and other low forms, various chemical reagents inserted in the water they inhabit, awaken reactions which lead to changes in form, sometimes enough to produce motion of the organism, and lead it to or away from the reagent It is thus difficult, if not impossible, in the simpler creatures, to draw the line between chemical reaction and animal motion, and even purposeful motion in creatures a little higher still. So with the effects of gravity some of these creatures find their way to the bottom of the receptacle, and others to the top. Chemical reactions, especially variations in the amount of oxygen, combine with gravity in producing these motions. Light, too, is an agent; and when the spectrum has been thrown on the water, there has been a marked clustering of some creatures toward the red end. Often clusters form in response to the conditions for instance around a drop of some reagent, sometimes to their destruction, though oftener to their betterment. If an electric current is sent through a mass of amoebae, it will move itself, or part of itself, toward the cathode. All may go, or, if the current is very strong, the point near the anode may contract and disintegrate. Paramecia, worms and mollusks generally react to elec- tricity negatively, and crustaceans positively. Masses of amabse elongate themselves toward favoring objects throw out pseudopods and attach themselves. We envy the crab who, if he happens to lose a limb, develops a 16 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I new one, but the crab may envy the amoeba who makes his limbs as he needs them extrudes a pseudopod in the direction where his reactions send him, and flows the rest of himself up into the pseudopod. Then he will do it again, and so travel. Amoebae also get (make themselves?) top-heavy, and roll over, and keep it up till they have traveled an appreciable distance. Creatures a degree higher have more or less per- manent cilia which they use similarly, and by which they regulate their motions. A grade farther on, these cilia become a swimming apparatus in later evolution, the tentacles of the octopus; or the creatures may evolve, instead of cilia or tentacles, a curtain like that of the jelly-fish. The cell of protoplasm has, in a sense, no interior organiza- tion: it gets all its nutriment and sensations (if it has any) from its surface from outside. But its descendants tend to evolve into sacs or tubes, and the water flowing through the opening of the sac or tube supplies some nutriment and sensations inside. This differentiation soon becomes marked, the nutriment being taken up more and more from the inside, and distributed through a system of minor tubes which become evolved throughout the material composing the prin- cipal one. In time, the central tube evolves a bulge which acts as a stomach, a gland shows up alongside it, and that pestilent organ a liver is introduced into the world, perhaps con- temporaneously with original sin. In time the lower end of the tube differentiates into various sorts of intestines, and appendicitis becomes a fashionable possibility. The upper end differentiates into a mouth, and when the mouth becomes human, not only do its lips and teeth become beautiful, but eating itself becomes a fine art, and a well-managed dinner table becomes a great educational and political influence. The subsidiary apparatus for circulating the blood also develops into a pumping engine and system of intakes arteries, and one of outlets veins, for the waste left after the nutritive matter has parted with its force. This waste is deposited in reservoirs from which it is discharged period- Ch. II] Digestive Organs, Limbs, Nerves 17 ically. Were it discharged constantly, as it is made, all re- finement of life, and present attractions of human beings for each other, would be non-existent. The circulatory and ex- cretory system also does its share for the aesthetic, in supply- ing red lips and pink cheeks and the flushes of emotion, and Cleopatra's " bluest vein." Meantime is evolved a parallel tube for gaseous food and waste. It opens into the mouth, and below ramifies into lungs, and, like the other tubes, in time makes its contribution to intelligence and beauty: for it contains the apparatus for the voices of Patti and Caruso, and an extension of it was covered by that same Cleopatra's nose upon whose dimensions Pascal rested the fortunes of the world. On the way up to all this, parts of the body surrounding the original tube have differentiated, as already partly in- timated, into the curtain of the jelly-fish, the radiates of the star-fish, the feelers of the octopus, the fins and tail of the vertebrate fish, the paddles of the amphibious lizard, the wings and legs of the bird, the legs of the quadruped; and at length the arms and legs from which are modeled those of the Apollos and Venuses. To receive the sensations which all these pieces of appa- ratus pick up (including the aches announcing that they need attention), and to direct their consequent activities, there is gradually evolved throughout the body a nervous system. It begins at the surface, where it gets its sensations from the external universe. A very primitive nervous system is an afferent nerve near the surface, bringing sensation to a ganglion, and from the ganglion an efferent nerve going to some sort of contractile tissue near the surface. The surfaces of some primitive animals are covered with such rudimentary systems the earliest distinguishable ones being little more than ganglia alone, which, in addition to producing contractions, in some way influence the surface nutrition and, in time, the tem- perature. But by and by these rudimentary systems get integrated into higher systems; two ganglia may be connected by a nerve, or each connected with a third ganglion, and by the 18 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I intervention of the third ganglion the afferent nerve to the first ganglion may provoke an answer through the efferent nerve from the second: so that a message that a surface spot itches, is not offset by a mere message from the ganglion to the spot to contract, but by a message through a different ganglion to a beak or a claw or a hand, to scratch it. Farther, two of such systems of three ganglia each, may be connected through each third ganglion with a seventh. And in this system, of seven, an afferent bringing a report from any of the six, may start, by way of the seventh, an afferent from any other of the six, or perhaps all of them. There may be a scratch ordered from one, a cry from another, a reflection on the cussedness of fleas from another, and so on. Two such sets of seven ganglia may both, by connection with a fifteenth ganglion, be incorporated into a set of fifteen, and then there will probably be some philosophizing, perhaps not only regarding the cussedness of fleas, but possibly re- garding a universe where fleas are possible, or even a god who permits them. These incorporations are not as systematic as described, but take place in all conceivable fashions. Moreover they need not be between ganglia connected by lines of nerves, but in most cases they actually are between adjacent cells connected in all sorts of ways by prolongations from globular or oval centers. Masses of cells so connected by many varying affixes, make up still larger ganglia; and in the higher ani- mals, the largest of these is the brain. Meanwhile the nerves at the surface have multiplied until, as any pin-prick will prove, they are as close together as some of the early casuists supposed the angels were on the needle's point. The ends of the afferent nerves all over the surface, includ- ing the sense organs, get intelligence from the external world, and transmit it to the first point where something is done about it at least to the first point where the nerve carrying intelligence in, meets, in a nerve-bunch or ganglion, a nerve carrying orders out. This meeting may be in a ganglion on the way to the brain, or in the brain itself. In the first case, the return message goes to the muscles near the affected spot, before the nerve from the spot affects Ch. II] Sympathetic Nervous System 19 the intelligence at all ; and the muscle gives some involuntary jerk. Or possibly the afferent nerve current will pass on, perhaps through sundry ganglia, to the brain itself. In this case, before any efferent message goes back, the situation may be thought over it may be concluded, for instance, that scratching is more trouble than it's worth, and no orders are issued, except sometimes a very imperative order to keep still, if the itching, or the impulse to sneeze, or perhaps the impulse to say something questionable, should be dangerously strong. Mingled with the lacework of afferent nerves to carry sen- sations from the surface of the body, but preponderantly behind them, is the network of efferent nerves leading to the muscles. Then, mainly well below the surface, both the afferent nerves and the efferent nerves begin to join each other, not only in ganglia, as stated, but also in "cables" going to other ganglia, the cables uniting into larger ones until these last go to the backbone, and one of them passes in on each side between each pair of vertebrae, and there unites with the principal cable of all, and passes up into the brain. A preparation of a human nervous system in the Jardin des Plantes looks like a statue of lace: so here again, as in every piece of apparatus or every function we have been con- sidering, evolution has been toward beauty, even though hid- den beauty. This is a rough sketch of the apparatus for the soul's voluntary reaction with the universe, whether the soul be a mere capacity to react to touch, or a capacity to receive im- pressions and ideas, and issue directions and ideas, with the power of a Bismarck or a Shakespere. In addition to the apparatus for voluntary reaction, is one in some respects more interesting still, and, as will become plainer as we proceed, more related to our present task. In fact the sketch of the nervous system already given, serves our immediate purpose only as contributing to an under- standing of the sketch we are about to give. In ffont of the spinal column, and on its respective sides, are two other cables which do not go to the brain, and into which enter 20 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I nerves from all the organs that act independently, or partly independently, of the will the heart, the lungs, the digestive organs, even the sweat pores on the skin, which help to regu- late the temperature of the body. These cables have several ganglia which act like subsidiary brains in regulating the actions of the connecting organs. The two nervous systems may be probably often have been, respectively called voluntary and involuntary, though they connect with each other so that, regarding respiration, for instance, they are both voluntary and involuntary; and, as in walking, playing music, or in some tricks of legerdemain, the voluntary one may be trained into almost involuntary action. Our wills control the first system, being limited only by our powers and whatever unresponsiveness there may be in the environment. With the other system (generally called the sympathetic) our wills have little to do, except so far as our knowledge and discretion affect the body's health. If the conscious purposeful human soul controls the nerves or most of them, which center in the brain, what controls the nerves centering in the sympathetic system, where the human will does not enter? There are overwhelming reasons for recognizing it as the same power that makes and vitalizes the flowers and the sequoia, the unthinking monad and the scarcely-more-thinking whale; causes the sun to lift moisture and to gild the clouds in which it floats; causes the air to float them, and the shifting wind to send them back to earth in storms and with lightnings the same power that causes the sun to burn, that rolls us away from him by night, that swings the other planets around him, and all the planets of other systems around their suns, and all (the word begins to lose meaning here) the suns around each other ; and still the same power that has evolved and sustains the mind of man to learn these things the power for which we may as well, perhaps, use the old name God, with all its reverend associa- tions, and despite all its besmirchings. The name can often save a lot of circumlocution, and we need not confine it to the anthropomorphic conceptions generally associated with it. Our limitations being what they are, it is fortunate that we do not have to take entire care of ourselves, and that so Ch. II] The Power not Ourselves 21 much care of us is taken by that " Power not ourselves.'* If we had to take thought to pump our own hearts and lungs, digest our food, secrete our bile, and perform the other functions essential to keep us in condition, we would forget, keep constantly ailing, or be letting something stop; and if it were the heart, we should die. In fact, if we had to attend to these functions from the beginning, we cannot conceive of our growing up at all; we cannot even conceive of our existence starting at all, if "God" had not started it for us. " He " sets the little apparatus going, and brings it to maturity, but allowing us, as it goes on, to do for ourselves as much as we can do well, and more. Where and how did the apparatus start? Nobody knows. Nobody knows where anything started even a train of cars. Did it start at the station, or in the factories, or in the ore beds, or in the star dust, or in the previous system smashed into star dust, or in the star dust that made that system, or where? In all our classifications, we have to assume a starting-point with reference to the inquiry at hand. Whether we begin man, as we have done, in primitive protoplasm, or in the cell differentiated from the male parent, the will and the power that assimilate and integrate and differentiate him, are both his own and not his own. If the soul creates the body (for which proposition Dr. William H. Thomson, in his new book on Brain and Personality, makes the latest argument and one of the best), the soul must be both the spark of life in the parent cell, and the power working outside of the independent volition of that cell, even when matured. There will be significant things to say about this later. The Senses So much in general for the apparatus through which the reactions between soul and universe take place. Now let us proceed to the more specific reactions. This will involve a more specific consideration of some portions of the apparatus. Here too we have to choose our starting-point Star dust may be a little too primitive, though I confess that I, for one, cannot conceive of anything physical or spiritual without its start at least that eirly. But let us start with as primitive a thing as we are familiar with. 22 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I A bit of rock reacts to gravity. Is there any sign of soul versus universe there? Hardly. Non-magnetic ore reacts to magnetic ore. Any sign there? Not yet probably. A bit of protoplasm, or the sensitive plant, expands to heat, or contracts to cold. The puzzle begins: there is life indeed, but expansion and contraction with heat and cold are no evidence of life : inanimate things show that. But when an animate thing does it, may it not mark a transition toward consciousness? The bit of protoplasm, or the sensitive plant, contracts to touch, and restores itself; the puzzle thickens: a rubber ball will do that, but the ball's contraction is only in proportion to the degree of the pressure, while the protoplasm's or the plant's contraction may be much greater or less than the degree of pressure. We have no doubt about that being a vital reaction some- thing that no inorganic thing will do; or if we find it done by anything before called inorganic, we will, I suppose, at once call that thing organic. Such primitive responses, although there were, strictly speaking, no nerves, were the first germs of nervous reaction. As evolution went on, however, portions of the primitive homo- geneous substance were more and more differentiated into nerve, and nerve differentiated and integrated into brain. Touch, as distinct from the special senses, is hardly differ- entiated at all. Very early in the scale of being, any portion of the surface contracts when touched. Some portions are more sensitive than other portions. Gradually from the sur- face with its one sense of touch, were differentiated, from the more sensitive portions, organs of special sense: response to contact with material objects being gradually refined into response to objects so nearly immaterial as odors, as air in vibration appealing to a gradually developed sense of hearing, and as (we assume) ether in vibration appealing to a gradually developed sense of sight. Light produces all sorts of changes in inorganic matter, find organic matter is less stable than even inorganic. Light has been impinging upon organic matter a long time: it is inconceivable that no changes should result, and that sus- Ch. II] Evolution of Sight 23 ceptibility to the touch of .rays of light should not appear stronger in some spots than in others. (For the reasons, read a hundred or two pages of Spencer's First Principles.) In the course of generations, perhaps as the result of chemical changes, such spots have become discolored by some sort of pigment, and the dark color increases the amount of light absorbed. Farther differentiations take place until we find features that we deliberate about calling eyes; and a few thousand generations farther on, we unhesitatingly call them eyes. The conception of the evolution of the senses thus becomes easy, and the placing of its evidences in sequence in the labor- atory, has been but a matter of detail. It has been easy to find the points where primitive eyes, or pigment patches, which would respond to white light, grow responsive to blue light or to red or orange or yellow or green or indigo or violet; and similar points regarding response by other senses. If receptacles of different colors are offered to mosquitoes, they avoid the yellow ones. This has led some recent investigators in mosquito regions to dress themselves and cover their shel- ters with yellow. When pigment first appears, it is generally flat behind the light-receiving tissues, and so can receive light from but one direction ; but later it and the receiving cells curve, and so become capable of receiving light from more direc- tions, and finally the curvature becomes, as in most seeing animals, the lining of a globe. The stained skin gradually develops into a crystal-clear lens on the outer surface of a ball filled with clear jelly, and on the back of its interior, the nerve, which first reported only the difference between light and dark, becomes spread out into the sensitive plate of a camera, and reports the images thrown upon it through the lens, with all the colors we know. The evolution goes from a fixed rudimentary lens to a developed lens up to fixed eyes of many lenses, as in the fly, or perhaps by a different route to the moving eye with a single lens. Eyes appear early in various parts of the body, on the back, belly, sides, legs, even the tail ; and in special prolonga- 24: Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I tions that can be moved in various directions, as if we had eyes in our hands. In the human embryo, the first trace of the eye is a line in the skin, which develops into a fold, and thence by slow stages up to the eye as we know it; and in contemporary animals we find eyes all the way from mere localized sensi- bility to light, up to the optical instrument in the head of man. Before leaving the eye, it may be worth while to quote, with a comment or two, a remarkable account of its varieties, by Dr. Edward A. Ayers (Harper's Magazine, September, 1908) : " The snake has no use for tears, nor the goose for parallel vision. The spider can spin the warp and woof of his destiny without gazing at the stars, and the sand-burrowing eel would soon starve with sensitive cornese. Nature holds to her excep- tionless law that the talent unused by the sire shall be with- held from the son. But simplicity has its compensations. If the spider cannot bend his neckless head nor move his socket- fixed eyes, he gets one for each point of the compass, whereby he can keep one eye on his struggling menu fly, and as many as needed upon the straining halyards and guys of his gum thread web. And each eye is set high, like a lantern on a hill, so its wide range of vision makes eye-rolling useless. But he can only focus four or five inches, and can be easily fooled with an imitation fly. Why are his eyes so beautiful for many are like rubies set in gold if the only creatures that can see them well have no sense of beauty ? " The rock-clinging starfish with his penta rays jeweled with eyes; and the wood-louse called a millepede with twenty- eight eyes, set in rows of sevens, as if his ancestors had gath- ered maternal impressions of navy-yard cannon-ball decora- tions; and the blood specialist leech, with ten little eyes surrounding his mouth to guard against tainted food; and the dozen-eyed silkworm with eyes single to spinneret output and market quotation each; and the caterpillar sticking his nose into an octagon crowned yoke of eye-gems, whence no salad leaf may escape his view. " A goose's eyes are larger than his brain. Man's eyes are the best all around yet evolved, though they can see less than the owl's in the dark; less keenly than the eagle's afar; change focus less quickly than the hawk's; cannot sweep clear the cornea without briefly hiding the view; cannot focus as near as the fish; nor glow back like the cat's in the dark; they 'Ch. II] Senses of Touch and Hearing 25 cannot see opposite points at one time like the chicken's, nor stare all day long like the snake's; they cannot self -gaze like the snail's, nor behold as small creatures as can the fly." Yet they can do vastly more things than can the eyes of any creature who surpasses them in some one capacity. The matured eye is in itself a thing of beauty and moral expression, and yet its functions have been evolved from reporting mere mechanical contact, up to reporting everything from the sun-studded- night to the dotted plate under the microscope from the menace of the storm-cloud to the love in eyes that answer. While senses responding to light and sound have been de- veloping, so of course has susceptibility to contact with hard bodies been developing into susceptibility to contact with soft bodies. Very primitive organisms, without definite sense- organs beyond those for mere contact, have been seen to con- tract and expand at contact with fluid as well as with air, light, sound. As the eye has grown from mere reflex action from mechan- ical contact, to reporting Nature and art, so has the ear from a mere sense of vibration, up to that of the songs of the birds and loved voices and the other forms of what we call music. Organs of hearing have generally been differentiated from the skin, but not always. In some animals far from the surface, even inside a chitin shell, are strings which are supposed to be organs of hearing, and which are evolved from muscles. In such positions these chorodontal organs could of course only be affected by vibrations heavy enough through water to affect the solid body imbedding the organs, but such organs have been found in a later stage associated with tympanous membranes which could transmit vibrations through the air. The Greenland whale hears well through the water, but does not appear to be affected by sounds through the air.* Insects often can hear only sounds of a certain pitch and quality generally those made by the opposite sex, as by the *K. Sajo, Scientific American Supplement, April 13, 1809. (Appar- ently quoted from "Prometheus"?.) 26 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I female mosquito. So sounds, as well as sights and smells, are emissaries of love. But for that matter, so can we hear only " sounds of a certain pitch," but about ten octaves in all, and probably only of a certain " quality," i.e., there are probably sounds of a pitch we can hear, whose quality prevents our hearing them. In insects, the ears, or what appear to be such, are pretty much anywhere, but generally in the antennae, feet, and abdomen. Mark Twain's famous biological statement that clams will lie perfectly still if you play slow music to them, is probably not strictly accurate: for many organisms not so high have visibly responded to sounds. The same that is true of the organs responding to touch, temperature, light, and vibrating air, is, mutatis mutandis, true of the organs of taste and smell. The antennae serve also as organs of smell. They, like organs of taste, are naturally near the orifice receiving the food. But the reports of the senses are not restricted to the organs specially differentiated for each. Lombroso (After Death What?, pp. 2, 3) gives the following case from his own experience, and there are many others well attested. "A certain C. S., daughter of one of the most active and intelligent men of all Italy . . . had lost the power of vision with her eyes, as a compensation she saw with the same degree of acuteness (7 in the scale of Jaeger) at the point of the nose and the left lobe of the ear. In this way she read a letter which had just come to me from the post-office, although I had blindfolded her eyes, and was able to distinguish the figures on a dynamometer. Curious, also, was the new mimicry with which she reacted to the stimuli brought to bear on what we will call improvised and transposed eyes. For instance, when I approached a finger to her ear or to her nose, or made as if I were going to touch it, or, better still, when I caused a ray of light to flash upon it from a distance with a lens, were it only for the merest fraction of a second, she was keenly sensitive to this and irritated by it. ' You want to blind me ! ' she cried, her face making a sudden movement like one who is menaced. Then with an instinctive simulation entirely new, as the phenomenon itself was new, she lifted her forearm to protect the lobe of the ear and the point of the nose, and remained thus for ten or twelve minutes. Ch. II] Transferred Senses 27 " Her sense of smell was also transposed ; for ammonia or asafctida, when thrust under her nose, did not excite the slightest reaction, while, on the other hand, a substance pos- sessing the merest trace of odor, if held under the chin, made a vivid impression on it and excited a quite special simulation (mimica). Thus, if the odor was pleasing, she smiled, winked her eyes, and breathed more rapidly; if it was distasteful, she quickly put her hands up to that part of the chin that had become the seat of the sensation and rapidly shook her head. " Later the sense of smell became transferred to the back of the foot; and then, when any odor displeased her, she would thrust her legs to right and to left, at the same time writhing her whole body; when an odor pleased her, she would remain motionless, smiling and breathing quickly." He farther says (op. cit., 5-7) : " As early as 1808 Petetin cited the cases of eight cataleptic women in whom the external senses had been transferred to the epigastric region and into the fingers of the hand and the toes of the feet (Electricite Animale, Lyons, 1808). " In 1840 Carmagnole, in the Giornale dell' Accademia di Medicina, describes a case quite analogous to ours. It con- cerned a girl fourteen years old " . . . who had " true fits of somnambulism during which she saw distinctly with the hand, selected ribbons, identified colors, and read even in the dark." " Despine tells us of a certain Estella of Neuchatel, eleven years old, who . . . was found to have suffered transposition of the sense of hearing to various parts of the body, the hand, the elbow, the shoulder, and (during her lethargic crisis) the epigastrium " Frank (Praxeos Mediae, Univ. Torino. 1821) publishes an account of a person named Baerkmann in whom the sense of hearing was transposed to the epigastrium, the frontal bone, or the occiput." The literature abounds in such cases, but I cited the first I happened upon, and there are hosts of illustrations, as we shall see later, of cosmic relations independent of any senses yet known. The implications of these facts we will touch upon later. The evolution of the different sense organs received another interesting suggestion and perhaps confirmation, from the experience, reported in the Revue Philosophique in 1887 (and by me got from the Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research), of a French sailor who came home from Mada- gascar with hysteria, sense-paralysis of the left side, but part of his right side so sensitive as to throw him into attacks 28 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I of hysteria. These abnormal conditions could be temporarily relieved by hypnotism, and, despite some skepticism at the time, appear to have been ultimately cured by the magnet. The point in his case which is of interest here, however, is that under hypnotization, the nerves of ordinary feeling ap- peared to act as nerves of special sense. When his ears were closed, he would repeat words spoken close to his fingers, and with his eyes bandaged, he would sort various colored wools. All this might be accounted for by telepathy instead of by interchange of nerve function, but how account for his picking out all the blue wools in the dark ? It was once the fashion in dealing with somnambulic patients to address the pit of the stomach instead of the ears, apparently with reference to the sympathetic nervous system. I don't know whether the fashion prevails yet. CHAPTER III SKETCH OF HUMAN EVOLUTION (Continual) The Soul (a) Sources IN proceeding to consider soul, I use the term in the popular sense, without any reference to the technical sense over which the psychologists are constantly quarreling. I take the word rather than mind, in order to cover the emo- tions and the will, as well as the mere intelligence. Yet it will often be natural to use the term mind interchangeably. In considering the evolution of soul, we are met at the outset by the question : Is there a primary something a mind- potential, from which thought and emotion are evolved, just as body is evolved from force and matter? At first sight it seems easy to find the raw material of soul in consciousness, and to assume a starting-point for what we now know as mind, when the matter in an amoeba con- tracts at a touch: for then there must be some sort of con- sciousness; but consciousness is not dynamic: so how can it be the raw material of thought, not to speak of emotion and will ? It is merely aware of them, as it is of sensation. Telesio " argued . . . from the human consciousness to the feeling of [in?] inorganic matter." Somewhere I have seen Weismann credited with the question : " Why should we not return to the idea of matter endowed with soul ? " It is probably as old as the other great guesses. The present aspect of it, however, could not have antedated the verification of the old guess of evolution, and that verification cannot be set before Darwin. Bergson says (C.eative Evolution, p. 199) : "An incidental process must have cut out matter and the intellect, at the same time, from a stuff that contained both." For myself, long before I knew the opinion as anybody's else, 29 30 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I I could not imagine mind existing in Shakespere without its germs existing in the star dust. And long after I first realized my incapacity to separate consciousness from the star dust, I found (italics mine) in James's Psychology (I, 149) : "// evolution is to work smoothly, consciousness in some shape must have been present at the very origin of things. Accordingly we find that the more clear-sighted evolutionary philosophers are beginning to posit it there. Each atom of the nebula, they suppose, must have had an aboriginal atom of consciousness linked with it; and, just as the material atoms have formed bodies and brains by massing themselves together, so the mental atoms, by an analogous process of aggregation, have fused into those larger consciousnesses which we know in ourselves and suppose to exist in our fellow-animals. Some such doctrine of atomistic hylozoism as this is an indispensable part of a thorough-going philosophy of evolution. According to it there must be an infinite number of degrees of conscious- ness, following the degrees of complication and aggregation of the primordial mind-dust. To prove the separate existence of these degrees of consciousness by indirect evidence, since direct intuition of them is not to be had, becomes therefore the first duty of psychological evolutionism." Mind, then, would appear to be as much a general element of the universe as Motion is, and not only to enter the body, as already said, with each unit of matter, but also in more complex forms through our perceptive organs as raw sen- sation, and in predigested shape from the memory of each mind and other minds. All this psychic material from any source, after it enters the organism is modified into a specific stream of thoughts and feelings, which we call the mind or soul, just as Motion (or Matter, if that is the more convenient phrase) is modified into a specific stream of molecular changes which we call the body. But however mind may enter the system, in passing through it is modified into a more complex form, as thread is modified into fabric as it passes through the loom ; but thought is no more made of brain-matter than cloth is made of loom matter. But if mind-potential is inextricably associated with matter, how can mind exist independently of matter what becomes of the idea of a soul surviving the body in which it was de- Ch. Ill] Force and Matter Limited, Mind Unlimited 31 veloped ? Mind is not limited in place or quantity, as appar- ently matter is. With our present knowledge we cannot imagine matter greater or less in amount than earlier or later forms of the same matter. But we can imagine one little flash of thought pervading the psychic universe. If all mind inhered in the star dust from which our world was evolved, no more mind was in the brain of Newton than in any other brain of the same weight, yet from New- ton's brain, mind spread over the world and over all suc- ceeding time, while from the other brain it spread no far- ther than the owner's interlocutors, and no longer than his life. The fact seems to be that mind outgrows matter as soon as perceptive organs are evolved that it comes to be not merely the presumed primitive mind-potential associated with matter, but more in amount and complexity, and in some degree in- dependent. Soon the star dust mind-potential becomes a rel- atively insignificant portion of the developed soul, and if the soul is to survive the body, apparently it can well afford to let the congeries of atoms, or whatever you call them, that have constituted the body, go their way to dissolution from each other, and carry with them their negligible portion of the original mind-potential. It is a world-old speculation regarding immortality, that after-existence cannot be conceived without pre-existence. I never saw any sense in the speculation, except as I have indi- cated regarding mind-potential in the star dust. But won't that, up through the life of protoplasm to that of the imme- diate parent germ, do well enough for pre-existence ? In light of this very simple knowledge, we cannot conceive of the soul at all without attributing to it a pre-existence, and I confess that I cannot conceive it then, without going back not only to the star dust, but to the hypothetical ( if we are not hypothet- ical enough already) system where the hypothetical smash-up furnished the hypothetical star dust; and so back through evo- lution and dissolution " time without end." These ideas of course are somewnat vague and paradoxical. But they are definiteness itself compared with some that we will be led into. How often may I be indulged in repeating the truism that our ideas of the universe beyond the little we 32 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I know must always be vague and paradoxical ? But it is only by starting with such ideas and reshaping them as we go along, that we come to know more. The idea that there is cosmic mind-potential just as there is cosmic matter and cosmic force, and that, like them, it flows into us, helping to evolve us, is fraught with some very important implications, and may help us to some in- teresting conjectures regarding some mysteries which we shall meet later. Meanwhile we will consider a few facts which go to support the idea, and will later consider in its light some of the salient phenomena of the evolution of soul, and see if the idea is consistent with them. The only alternative to the theory that the mind comes from outside, is that it is evolved inside that, in Cabanis' celebrated phrase, the brain secretes thought, as the liver secretes bile. This famous analogy, however, is but a very partial one: for bile is limited and sensizable (I don't know whether that word is in the dictionaries, but it's time it were), while thought is neither. And at least the most valuable por- tion of thought enters the brain as thought, thought already evolved from sensation, and supplied by memory or other minds, while bile does not enter the liver as bile. True, while thought generally enters the brain as thought, it sometimes, perhaps always, undergoes modification there; but it is not modified into something other than thought, as in the liver blood is modified into something other than blood. Cabanis' analogy is not even good as an analogy: to make it so, the brain would have to secrete thought from blood. What it does with the blood is not to secrete or transform thought, but merely to build itself up, and send away its waste. Those who hold the view that man is " one and indivisible " that the stream of thought is not from outside, but is secreted by the brain, only put the question a stage back, not asking themselves what runs the brain not considering that the fact that man eats potatoes and exudes heat, belongs in this connection. In holding their view, they are believers in perpetual motion. The entire being, body as well as mind, is but a fleeting Ch. Ill] The Stream of Consciousness 33 mass of physical vibrations and psychical experiences, and often has been well likened to a fountain: though it has a definite shape, it consists but of particles changing con- stantly and with varying degrees of rapidity those concerned in respiration, for instance, probably changing fastest; those in arterial and venous circulation, next ; and so on, in lessen- ing degree, until we get to those constituting bone or tooth- enamel, which probably abide in the body from five to ten years. At death so much of its energy as is in the form of heat, rapidly rushes back into the cosmic reservoir, and so much as is in the forms which we generalize as matter, begins to return immediately but more slowly. Most mani- festations of the psychic stream also cease to appear, but by no means all. It persists not only in memories and influences, but we shall see indications of it difficult to attribute to either. While force and matter seem to be limited constant in amount throughout the universe, and before and after their service in an individuality are in service elsewhere, we have a good deal of evidence, the best being very recent, that, at worst, revolutionizes all our previous experience of the reach of mind; and, at best, would indicate that even the individual mind, not to speak of mind in general, has no permanent limits in time or space. One school of philosophers reason that as force and matter, through all their variations, are both persistent and constant in amount, so mind must be. Perhaps none of them ever stated it exactly in this form: the proposition may be too evidently ludicrous. But hosts of them have stated it in hosts of other forms, regardless of the plain fact that mind is increasing every day: not only are there new thoughts, but what thoughts there are, are being disseminated indefi- nitely. An orator's mind pervades an audience, and next morning through the papers pervades his city and country, and in a few hours more, through the cables, pervades the civilized world. So far as the orator said new things, or old things in a new way, there is that much more mind in the world. It is not, as would be the case with matter or force, a mere substitution of a new form : for no mind to speak of has 34 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I disappeared : virtually all that there was before is still stored up in men's memories and in libraries ; and perhaps elsewhere, as we shall see later. Moreover, when matter takes any one of its transitory and limited forms, it arouses new ideas which are not transitory. This is of itself no argument against Cabanis' assertion that the brain secretes thought, but the men who produce the mind-things that last, say they don't come that way. Probably Cabanis himself, and each man who independently reaches Cabanis' conclusion, would call his apparently im- mortal and equally incorrect phrase, an inspiration some- thing breathed in from outside. This is, however, a denial of his own proposition. The theory that psychic phenomena are simply a result of nervous function, beginning with it, running parallel with it, and ending with it, is generally called parallelism, but parallelism does not prove beginning or ending together : for the soul could be entirely independent of the body, and yet act in exact correspondence with nervous function, the two being like instruments in the same orchestra. Nay, the body could even condition the soul without the soul being evolved from it, as a pipe conditions water running through it; or a channel conditions a river. Total parallelism is at best an assumption. M. Bergson is credited with being the last St. George effectually to dispose of it. Even on the assumption that all mind does run parallel with brain changes during all the brain's life, as parts of mind certainly do during parts of carnate life, it is no more proved that they start together and end together, than the same is proved of a railroad and river that somewhere keep each other company. The question soon ends in paradox, as questions on the borderland of knowledge always do: for the germ of the mind was in parent and parent's parent, back at least to pro- toplasm, and probably to star dust and beyond. Huxley suggested the name epiphenomenalism. But either name might apply to the opposite theory, of animism, that the soul is independent of the body: for if that is true, it is still true that during the limited period of the brain's activity, there is some approach, though apparently an irreg- Ch. Ill] Parallelism 35 ular approach, to parallelism or epiphenomenalism between its actions and those of the soul. But we shall meet later, serious, though not necessarily fatal, objections to believing that this approach is constant that all operations of what we call the individual mind are even accompanied by transmutation of brain tissue. Moreover, we shall meet reasons very strong recent reasons for believing that soul and body, though very closely identified during mortal life, may be so fundamentally in- dependent of each other, that when the body stops work and enters upon dissolution, the soul may " leave the body " and continue to exist independently, and instead of suffering by the disconnection, be merely relieved of certain trammels and limitations, notably those of time and space and matter. It looks a good deal as if the degree of parallelism may vary inversely as the grade of the psychic process, because (a) Low psychic processes like fear and anger use up force and tissue at a tremendous rate. On the other hand high processes courage, joy, sympathy, even artistic production, are stimulating and invigorating. It is true, however, that even the advent of a poem is sometimes attended by birth- throes. Lowell wrote the 1 " Commemoration Ode" almost at a one-night sitting, and he said that it " took the virtue out of " him fearfully. But undue deprivation of sleep did that, and if he had had a night of fear or sorrow, probably " the virtue " would have gone vastly worse. (b) Take another case which long puzzled me, until I found a provisional key. At a dinner well constituted socially and gastronomically, the brain and the stomach each can be doing its very best without at all interfering with the other. We are taught that either, to do its best, needs all the blood it can get, yet here both do their best at once! This makes it look more and more as if the higher sort of psychical function (and is it too much to call that normal psychical function?) involved very little transmutation of brain matter as if it were somehow largely independent of brain function. (c) But the main consideration is yet to come. A man can dream the most tremendous dreams, provided only they 36 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I be happy ones, and awake in better trim than if he had not dreamed at all not only without the slightest indication of fatigue or hunger, but stimulated and invigorated. This has been noticed after some of the mediumistic phenomena that would have been expected to be most exhausting. Now doesn't all this suggest strong probabilities that, as said, parallelism or epiphenomenalism and all that sort of thing, vary inversely as what we will call, until we know more, the dignity of the psychosis in other words, that there's no parallelism at all, but merely propinquity only while the streams that started at identity in the protoplasm have not yet definitely branched into the physical and psychical, and especially that after they branch, the psychical runs parallel with the physical only in so far as the psychical does not throw off branches of higher thought, and, especially, is not concerned with what we must so far regard as somewhat transcendental psychosis, as experienced in dreams and vari- ous extraordinary dream states in short, that the dream states are largely independent of the body that even when we lose strength in bad dreams and nightmares, it is because of the physical conditions which give rise to the psychoses, and not because of the psychoses themselves ? But there are other dreams of a happier and higher order, not traceable to physical conditions, and apparently involving no waste, but rather bringing recuperation. Now here for a page or two back, I have been asserting and denying both monism and dualism. The possibility the inevitability of so doing, seems to prove both true rather than both false. I have the very moderate grace to admit all this to appear very much like nonsense. As just said, we never get very far from everyday experience without reaching the land of paradox: what is generally called philosophy is mostly made up of it ; and at best consists of fumbling. This present piece of fumbling, however, seems to suggest a recon- ciliation in the greater including the less. Now let us fumble a little more at the relations of soul and body. Get all the mechanics and chemistry that are behind a Ch. Ill] Differences between Thoughts and Things 37 thought, and you haven't got the thought. A violinist's brain, the nerves leading to his arms and fingers, the muscles moving them, his violin and its bow, the vibrations in the air, the vibrations in the ear, the transfer of them to the hearer's brain, the changes in the brain : I've probably named everything mechanical that takes place, and yet I haven't even named the music. A big pile of rock, over it a lot of fog banks, behind both the setting sun; vibrations eastward from the whole affair; a poet's eyes receiving them and reporting them to his brain, and changes in his brain resulting : that's all of the mechan- ical : the poem is no part of them. The chasm between the instrument and the music, or the sunset and the poem, is absolutely impassable a chasm whose bottom never can be reached for crossing. Even if, as seems growing more and more reasonable to fancy, the sunset is merely a vehicle for the expressions of the cosmic mind, as a blush or a smile are expressions of the individual mind, the sunset is not the poem ; or the violin, the tune; any more than the blood in the maiden's cheek, or the smile of her mouth, are the joy in the lover's heart But here we are again on the edge of a swamp of paradox, as we were when we followed the track of monism and dualism to the limits of our circumscribed knowledge. But for vari- ety, let us start from the same center on still a third track. A lot of little lines and dots representing a poem, ether waves from them into an eye, transfers and changes in a brain. The same poem has reached its goal through an en- tirely different set of mechanical vehicles another illustration of the absolute separateness of thoughts and things. As does the poet, so the composer of the music puts down a lot of little prosy dots and lines, the violinist gets im- pressions from them into his mechanical eye and brain that you wouldn't finger for something pretty, and passes them along through his mechanical nerves and muscles to prosy catgut and horsehair ; and behold ! the heavenly music, and into many minds joy and inspiration ! And yet some philos- ophers would have us believe that the tune and the poem are so nearly of the nature of the signs on paper, and the 38 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I horsehair, and the catgut, and the brain, that when all these are gone, the tune and poem are gone. We know better, not as a speculation but as a fact. Mind, then, I for one cannot help regarding as distinct from Matter and Force a third fundamental element in the constitution of man. This apparently disproportionate attention to the nature of mind especially its source in mind-potential, may be justified in our later study of some mysterious psychical phenomena. Meanwhile let us see if the hypothesis that mind comes from outside is supported by a brief survey of its evolution. (&) The Perceptions and the Intellect Of course in sketching a few indications of the evolution of the senses, I incidentally touched some of the germs in the evolution of mind. The first reaction of organic life to anything in the en- vironment, would appear to be the first reaction between soul and universe. A primitive cell's experiences consist in expanding to heat and contracting to cold or touch, and, most of the time, in freedom from perceptible touch or change of temperature. It has probably some consciousness of at least the active conditions the changes, and possibly "late in life" some recognition of them as having been experienced before. With- out some sort of recognition of difference of condition, there could not be the reflex action to touch, which we generally regard as the most primitive response of organism to environ- ment, or, as I have chosen to phrase it, of soul to universe. Whether the response be what we would call conscious or not, there is some recognition of changed conditions, or there could be no response to them. There is Force, in the contraction; there is Matter transmuted, as in every physical change. These have come from outside to become part of the organism. We have seen that probably there also came with them something else that brought about the reaction, and the gradations are gradual and coherent from it to Newton's re- actions to the fall of the apple, or Darwin's to biological phenomena, or Spencer's to the phenomena of mind and Ch. Ill] Evolution of Perceptions 39 society, or Rembrandt's to lights and shadows, or Beethoven's to the bird's song and the thunder. Professor Whitman in Animal Behavior said: "The pri- mary roots of instincts reach back to the constitutional prop- erties of protoplasm." Professor Holmes says (op. cit., 180f.) : " Along whatever line organization reaches a certain degree of development intelligence appears on the scene. . . . In- telligence is not an entirely new power unrelated to the other activities of organic life, but a process growing out of " [The present writer would say accompanying] " other organic functions and having the same end as these other functions; it is, as Spencer has so well emphasized, but a higher phase of those processes of adjustment and regulation which make up the life of the animal." The simplest knowledge is of a single fact, yet the first consciousness, whether it appears in protoplasm or higher in the scale of life, it seems necessary to think, is not abso- lutely simple, but must contain in itself some sense of differ- ence from an immediately preceding state, and as soon as this sense of difference appears, an idea is evolved. When, for instance, a change of temperature passes, it is succeeded by a condition similar to that which preceded it, and when the experience takes place in a consciousness sufficiently evolved to associate the two conditions, a second grade of knowledge arises consciousness of likeness. The experience, say of heat, takes place in an organism high enough to recognize the antecedent and subsequent con- ditions as similar. A general idea is evolved. Countless generations later it gets a name cold; or vice versa, if the experience is of a fall of temperature, the earlier and later experiences correspond to what we give the name of heat; but the first conception of either cold or heat must be so foggy that it would probably not be noticed at all among the vastly clearer ideas of the vastly higher organism that gives it a name. The sun's heat is accompanied by light, and when a creature is evolved with some notion of heat, that is inevitably soon followed by an association with light; and a new idea is born. This too must be such a vague conception that it would 40 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I not be thought of in our own more mature experience, unless special attention were directed to it; but there it is in the primitive creature a general idea, faint and rudimentary as you please, but a general idea, as distinct from a specific experience. Imagination and the laboratory can both follow these little sensations and ideas. Suppose a primitive nervous system, with two centers con- nected, one experiencing the difference which we call rise of temperature, the other experiencing the difference which we call increase of light some such sense of it as we feel with our eyes shut: these senses of difference are associated by the nerve-fiber connecting the two centers which feel them. This makes possible some psychical change consequent upon the simultaneous experience of light and heat, there arises in that being something that would not have arisen but for association of heat and light something different from the single association of heat with heat or cold with cold, or either with the other something perhaps unnoticed the first time it appears, but something that in the course of genera- tions is going to lead the creature's evolved descendant, when it wants heat, to seek light, and when it wants coolness, to seek shade. This something, as has been said, is not a mere sensation it is a coupling of sensations, and that coupling is the germ of a thought of a concept that heat and light are associated. From that it is but a step to another con- cept that heat and light are not always associated; and many, but actual, steps to the concept that the change of condition meaning heat, generally takes place when there is a reddish or yellowish round light thing up above; and a step farther, that the change meaning heat does not take place when the round light thing up above is whitish. But all this involves the evolution and connection of several nerve centers; and of several more to notice that the two balls seldom appear in the sky at the same time. Thousands, perhaps millions, of generations later, those primitive concepts have grown into a generalization, and in time words have been found for it, which mean: fire burns. It takes thousands of generations more for fire to imply the combination of atoms of carbon with atoms of oxygen and indeed it means that to comparatively few people, even yet. Ch. Ill] Thought based on Likeness and Difference 41 The first word, whatever it was, which meant fire (whatever that then meant) came into existence only by virtue of vastly more nervous centers being evolved, and connected with the first two which had already made possible some change con- sequent upon the simultaneous experience of light and heat. Meanwhile, much earlier, and of preliminary necessity, arises a discrimination between good-to-eat and not-good- to-eat, and in time is made a distinction between likely-to-eat- me and not-likely-to-eat-me. The recognition of good-to-eat as distinct from not-good-to-eat, probably waits for the evolution of some sense of soft and hard, or even is pre- ceded by it in the rejection of, say, a grain of sand as contrasted with a thing soft enough to assimilate. But crea- tures are seen to feed long before any distinction is made. To the earlier forms, all is grist that comes to the mill : they let the water flow into the opening that is the precursor of the smiling mouth, and let it bring what it will " they eats 'em skins and all "; assimilable matter is assimilated, and the rest passes on. But despite the complexity of high types, let us keep well in mind that the elements of all thought are sensation, and consciousness of likeness and difference. The combination of these three elements, remembered in relation to various phenomena, make up the mental life of a Newton or a Spencer. Thought, then, is simply the arrangement of items of knowledge into classes, according to the test of likeness or difference. The most primitive thoughts that we have dealt with put the sensation of heat to-day into the class with the like sensation of yesterday, and the sensation of cold into a different class. So with the sensations of light and dark, and those of resistance, associated with floating bodies and the shore, and comparative non-resistance associated with the water. Let us farther illustrate the process of mind-building, from thoughts of a higher order. A straight line is the shortest distance between two points. This is but a perception of unlikeness all other lines between two points are found to be unlike straight. The shortest 42 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I one, wherever we find it, we class with others like it, and call it straight. A straight line is one whose direction never varies. All lines whose directions vary we find are different from straight. We classify accordingly. Lines which are not straight we classify as zigzag or curved. We now recognize three kinds by the differences of each from the others, and the likenesses of those in each group to each other. Now for something more subtle: a line has direction, but no dimensions. This is a recognition of differences. As soon as we imagine breadth or thickness of a line, we recog- nize that we can divide such breadth or thickness, and still preserve the line that consequently breadth and thickness are different from the line; and we can cut these different things in two endlessly, and still retain something which is different from the line : we cannot reach the line until we imagine the something which differs from it all split away. Let us take a little course of thought less abstract than our recent mathematical one. First recognize that the whole material of mental action consists of thoughts and things. Each of these two sets, the mind groups because of their likeness, and separates the two sets because of their unlike- ness. Then follow down " things " (as the simpler group) by new recognitions of likeness and difference into animal, vegetable, and mineral; then follow down animals, still by recognitions of likeness and difference, into mammals, birds, reptiles, fishes, and articulates; then mammals, still by recognitions of likeness and difference, into any of the well- known classifications, and you will recognize how the whole vast department of thought called Natural History, has grown up by recognition of likeness and difference, from (if you will fix a provisional point) the early recognition by eater and eaten of a difference between them. Similarly, simply by classifications of likenesses and differences, you can roughly trace the growth of any other department of knowledge, or thought, or even emotion, from mathematics or chemistry up to poetry or the most ethereal charms of sex. Take a fair approximation to all the material of language, say Eoget's Thesaurus. You will find but classified lists of Ch. Ill] Thought and Language 43 words according to their likenesses, which face opposing lists of differing words which are also classified according to their likenesses. Now all these words represent thoughts and shades of thought that have been evolved by the discovery or evolu- tion of newer and finer shades of likeness or difference. And in fact, without going to all this trouble, you might, perhaps, seize the gist of the whole matter by reflecting a little on the fact that a definition, if a good one, is very apt to state what a thing or a thought is, and then what it is not. Now by similarly rejecting one thing as unlike, and accept- ing another as like, the world has gradually built up all its thinking. Some very good illlustrations are in Fiske's Cosmic Philosophy. Great efforts have been made, even by men among the first to declare that " there are no hard-and-fast lines in Nature," to split off mental evolution by a hard-and-fast line between man and beast. Thinkers have long found it comfortable to call a con- sciousness of sensation a percept, and the mental association of two or more percepts, a concept. Some affect to find the hard and fast line in concepts, declaring that there is no con- cept that is not embodied in a word, and that as beasts have no words, they can have no concepts. Some try to draw the line at instincts. All the time I care to spend over these discussions is to state their existence, and to state that many beasts have concepts and have words too, and to depend for readers upon people that recognize that they have. The concepts of the creatures below man are rudimentary, and so is their lan- guage. But if they do not possess both concepts and language, such as they are, and with them arts and sciences and even philosophies, such as they are, evolution covers less ground and covers it in a more halting way, and is, on the whole, a cheaper conception, than it appears to me. There are minds fond of trying to discover where things start. Ap- parently wider minds go beyond any conception that they started at all, and hold that any point for beginning their treatment is, like all classifications, merely a question of con- venience, and often a very difficult and profound one. 44 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I (c) The Emotions and the Will The evolution of the emotions is inextricably contempo- raneous with that of the perceptions and the intelligence, and necessarily has been somewhat anticipated in what has already been said. For purposes of discussion, the best point to assume for their start is probably, as with the thoughts, the first reaction. As all mind is built up of simple recognitions of likeness and difference, so all emotion is built up of likes and dislikes. The complexities of both are merely the complexities of their objects. Probably amoebae hate being poked or chilled, as wiser people do, only in greater degree. A time comes when the sensation of contact with a smooth surface turns into the very different sense of contact with a needle's point where mere sense of contact expands into sense of pain; and a time comes where sense of contact also expands into sense of pleasure. With the earliest sensations of touch or density or temper- ature or light, must come feelings of like or dislike: for, as easily tested in the laboratory, very early creatures show their preferences between heat and cold, and light and dark- ness, and even between different-colored lights. Light and heat and good-to-eat have a common quality which is felt many generations before it gets the name agreeable, and the converse is true of dark and cold and inedible. In time, to the good-to-eat class is added the quality sapid and other details constituting good-to-eat ; and if the creature during this "thinking" had language, he would be capable of a remark quite up to the intellectual small-change of ball-rooms, in : / float into pleasant bright warm places and find there soft things good to eat. These emotions of like and dislike, this sense of agreeable and disagreeable, are the germs of confidence and fear, love and hate, worship and exorcism, praying and cursing of the emotions of Job, Cleopatra, Paracelsus, and Hildebrand. Just where, in the ascending scale of being, inclination, disinclination, purpose, come in, cannot be determined. The lowest creatures give evidence of hardly anything more than Ch. IIIJ Likes and Dislikes 45 such reactions as take place in inorganic matter. The worm and the mosquito, however, seem to have something like a definite idea where they are going, and what they are going for. Professor Holmes makes a very just remark to the effect that though a contact reaction by an amoeba's pseudopod differs very materially from one by the heels of a mule, the two have an element in common. That element is self-de- termination, proverbially prominent in the mule, but only a foreshadowing in the amoeba. But even there, it is interesting in many ways. It is the germ of an independent soul. As we have said, the body's production and nutrition are largely independent of any symptom of its volition are largely de- pendent on " God," meaning by that venerable term at least all the power we know which is not subject to animal volition even to the extent Kipling goes in " McAndrews's Hymn." But the contraction and restoration of the protoplasm, while we call it involuntary, nevertheless has an element out of proportion to any outside force, and with a germ of inde- pendence which later evolves into self-control or voluntary action. It is individual betokens an individuality, and lies away back of Descartes' " Cogito, ergo sum." With like and dislike, comes in preference ; and with prefer- ence, will, purpose, and behavior. Distinct purpose seems to come in later than the amceba and protozoa generally. The restless wandering about of the earliest forms capable of real activity serves to throw them in the way of whatever food is within reach, but it is apparently unconscious. Professor Holmes says, however (op. cit. f pp. 64-65) : " Instinct, memory, fear, and a certain degree of intelligence are among the psychic endowments with which Binet credits the protozoa. A good sample of his interpretation of protozoan behavior is the following : ' The Bodo caudatus is a voracious Flagellate possessed of extraordinary audacity; it combines in troops to attack animalcule one hundred times as large as itself, as the Colpods, for instance, which are veritable giants when placed alongside of the Bodo. Like a horse attacked by a pack of wolves, the Colpod is soon rendered powerless; twenty, thirty, forty Bodos throw themselves upon him, eviscer- ate and devour him completely (Stein). " ' All these faots are of primary importance and interest, but it is plain that their interpretation presents difficulties. 46 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I It may be asked whether the Bodos combine designedly in groups of ten or twenty, understanding that they are more powerful when united than when divided. But it is more probable that voluntary combinations for purposes of attack do not take place among these organisms; that would be to grant them a high mental capacity. We may more readily admit that the meeting of a number of Bodos happens by chance; when one of them begins an attack upon a Colpod, the other animalcule lurking in the vicinity dash into the combat to profit by a favorable opportunity.' " More recent investigations have shown that the behavior of protozoa gives no evidence of the high psychic development assumed by Binet. There has been a strong tendency on the part of certain investigators to explain the behavior of these low forms as due in large measure to comparatively simple physical and chemical factors. Others contend that the phe- nomena are much more complex and at present defy analysis into physical and chemical processes, while a few go further and maintain that we must assume some super-physical agency, a vital principle, or entelechy of some sort, to explain the results." Let us now look at some of the indications of the dawn of other qualities, and I will venture on some suggestions more serious than at first they may seem, of the lines of evolution they point to. As we search the examples which Professor Holmes has collected, we seem to get within sight of the first prodigal, the first conservative, the first radical, the first coquette, and the first of many other types. The first prodigal perhaps we find in Nereis, who loves narrow places, and to whom sunlight is death. Yet give him some nice little glass tubes in sunlight, and he will crawl into them and stay there and die for it. Earwigs are very similarly constituted : they don't thrive in light, and do like crevices so much that they will leave an open space in shadow, and crawl under a glass plate, though it exposes them to full light. And where does fear begin? In creatures who similarly early avoid everything new ? Are these the first conservatives ? Or are they the first of the skeptics ? Probably both : it's not inconceivable that long ago some amoeba split into parts, one of which was the ancestor of lions and the other of lambs. That is: it would not be inconceivable if the cross Ch. Ill] Primitive Conduct 47 pairing on the way down did not make so many remote beings, ancestors of each present being. Where does the monkey's (and our) imitativeness begin? Soon after creatures show any reaction to light, some are apt to follow, so far as they can, objects or shadows which cross their range of vision. Eughna viridis has a red eye spot, but not at the end that goes first. It seeks soft light and follows it, but avoids strong light. Many protozoa show the same reaction, and others its reverse. Perhaps coquettishness starts in some of those which (or who?) love the light but swim toward it backwards. Higher organisms larval lobsters for instance, do the same thing. Fiddler crabs take it perhaps more coquettishly still sideways. Among the amoebae we find a suggestion of the first drama. Holmes says (op. cit. t p. 69) : " Amoeba, like higher animals, may follow its food. Jennings describes an Amoeba attempting to engulf a spherical cyst of Euglena. As the Amoeba came in contact with it the cyst rolled away; the Amoeba followed; the cyst continued to be pushed ahead, now one way and now another, and the Amoeba changed its course accordingly. After the cyst had been rolled against an obstacle and the Amoeba was about to suc- ceed in capturing it, a large infusorian appeared on the scene and swept it away." When we come to the question of the origin of Ethics, we find the biologists constantly speaking of the "be- havior " of primitive organisms. The word implies standards of conduct, and where there's a standard of conduct, there's ethics, though the standard may be no higher than "what is usual " ; and in that sense, the physicists and chemists and geologists apply the word " behavior " to inanimate matter. But is not " the usual thing " also a standard too much of a standard, in high society? The right search for happiness, and avoidance of unhappi- ness, are the fundamental causes of development; and the wrong searches, of destruction. Ethics begin in self-preserva- tion: that's a duty: and many steps up in insects, we see the start of altruism, in helping the preservation of others 48 Sketch of Human Evolution [Bk. I helping each other out of scrapes, and co-operation in various enterprises. Nobody can draw a line between the self-conserving re- flexes of the most primitive creatures, and the poet's fine frenzy or the policies of popes and emperors. The genealogy of Napoleon has not been traced back to the myriad drops of protoplasm which marked one stage of his evolution, and still less has it to the transition from inorganic matter to organic matter which probably was a stage in the evolution of the protoplasm. But beginning with the drops of mercury and chloroform that we considered in Chapter II, a set of specimens from them to Napoleon could be arranged with much more gradual differences than those in Marsh's line, in the Yale Museum, of horses, from the little five-toe up to Dexter, or in his famous " infant class " from monkey to man. Of course with our present knowledge, there would not be a strict hereditary line along the series, but the series could be made to look as if there were; and as knowledge advances, an actual line can be more and more approxi- mated. It may be interesting to dwell a moment on the evolution most involving emotions and ethics that of sex. It be- gan, as it persists, in division of the personality. The cell of amosba gradually divides itself into two; and the latest great romancer makes his hero, the morning after his union with his beloved, ask himself : " Am I two ? " Through all evolution, the mere physical reproduction has consisted of the parent organism giving up part of itself; and when the emotional stage becomes pronounced, the male and the female begin to give up, not only their tissue, but their rest and comfort, for each other and for the child. The evolution of monogamy seems, in a rough way, to accompany the evolution of beauty, intelligence, and character: among the leaders in these respects, in the lower creatures, as well as in mankind, monogamy is most frequently found ; the most noticeable instances being the birds generally, in their pairing season, and the swans for life; and the lions till the cubs are reared, and in some instances, it is believed, longer. With the ants and the bees, the overgrown intelligence Ch. Ill] Monogamy a Test of Progress 49 seems to have shut love out of the general experience, and evolved polyandry with a vengeance. With mankind, the prevalence of monogamy is the most distinct test of progress, not only as a characteristic of na- tions, but even of social sets. At the two extremes of life, among those debased by low nutrition and impoverished sen- sation, and among those at the other extreme, debased by excess of nutrition and sensation, monogamy languishes. Where bodies are healthiest, sensations and habits nearest normal, intelligence broadest, morals highest, and sensibilities keenest and most catholic, love in its whole blessed range, from parents to each other and to offspring, is deepest and most enduring; there monogamy has been the chief cause of the peculiar evolution, and is itself most thoroughly evolved ; and the family, as the foundation for the development of the individual and the state, is nearest intact. This development simply means the enlargement of the Cosmic Relations. Thus we have marked a few of the steps from the lowest manifestations to the highest, of the soul which reacts with the universe. Now let us turn our taper light upon a few fragmentary aspects nearest related to our purpose, of the universe. CHAPTER IV EVOLUTION OP THE UNIVERSE As comprehensive a word as universe is sure to be used in many senses. When I write here of the evolution of the universe, I do not mean the cosmogony the process that we generally assume to have begun when our bunch of the star dust began gravitating toward centers, and which has prepared the apparatus through which the Cause now manifests the objective half of the phenomena appreciable to-day. I mean the evolution of the soul's knowledge of these phenomena. Here again classification is arbitrary. The senses, intellect, and emotions all three respond to, and work upon, vibrations flowing in from an outside something. In this relation, it is really not the outside something, but the vibrations flowing from it, that the soul works upon; and in this sense, the sensations are the Universe; and it is this mass of sensations (and the memory of them), that, for the purposes of this treatise, I mean by the universe. As a plain matter of fact, what have we in mind as universe, when we speak of the interactions between the soul and the universe? Obviously that portion of the totality of things with which the soul interacts. Each soul then has its own universe, which is plainly that soul's portion of a greater universe; but souls of the same general development have much in common, and, roughly speaking, the knowledge of phenomena, and deductions from them, which are held in common by civilized people, is what is generally meant by the term "The Universe." But probably the soul reacts with more of the universe than it is aware of. This, however, need not affect our reasonings : they will, except by acknowledged inference, re- late only to what we know, though it is obvious that if they do that with fair success, they will probably be correct regarding the uncertain fringe on the outer edge of what we know. 50 Ch. IV] Each Consciousness has its own Universe 51 I don't propose to go into the evolution or the working laws of the objective universe. For those, read Spencer. The " universal " phenomena that have been discovered since he wrote the wider range of wave motion and radiation, follow the " universal " laws that he indicated, and no genius has shown us any new ones since. And I shall speculate very little regarding the universe in the sense of the totality of things. What I have read of such speculations has been mainly nonsense made up of words which are mere confessions of ignorance, and much of this nonsense has come from misdirected efforts of abler minds than mine. I only want to call attention to some of the Cosmic Relations between universe as we know it, whatever its laws, and soul as we know it. Plainly, as already hinted, the objective universe is not the same to any two people or any two organisms. Each organism has its own. The arnu-ba has its, and Humboldt has his, and we have every reason to believe that outside of the one that anybody has, or those that everybody has, is still left more universe than our imaginations can in any way compass. Its spaces range beyond our telescopes, and even the qualities of the little space we thoughtlessly claim to know, range far beyond our microscopes and our specu- lations. The dimensions and other characteristics of each creature's universe, are of course determined primarily by the sense organs, and secondarily by the nervous structures which register, accumulate, and compare the impressions received by the organs. At one end of our living world is a universe of only a few elements, or rather the difference between degrees of one element, of resistance and non-resistance, or of penetrability and impenetrability of water that the creature can float through, or of earth or log that it cannot : or possibly the difference is one of heat and cold water that is warm, or water that is cold; or of light and dark places that have a glow, or places that have not. At the other end are the universes of Newton, Humboldt, Helmholtz, Michel- angelo, and Shakspere. Each individual's universe is evolved with his mind, but 52 Evolution of the Universe [Bk. I don't let that make us, with some philosophers, " believe " that the mind and the universe are the same. More than one philosopher is deemed to have won a claim to undying fame by demonstrating that there is a universe external to the mind. Anybody can find a simpler demonstration than theirs, by going toward an open door in the dark, with his arms stretched out parallel to guard against it, and so moving that his arms will pass on the respective sides of the door, and leave him to strike it with his face. Yet, despite such demonstrations, this external universe seems to be losing its old contracted character of " matter," and becoming simply another mind; but there is not much question now, even among those given to that questioning of obvious facts which they call philosophy, that it has an existence outside of our minds. We know it only by its phenomena, and they are constantly in both our minds and the something external. A phenomenon results only from an interaction between an object and a perceiving subject. We will find reason as we go on, for get- ting as clear an idea of this as we can. I will attempt a simple demonstration. A boy goes into the pantry after a pie. There something gives him a sight-sensation of a round flat object, and an odor-sensation of an agreeable something proceeding from the object. If he pursues his investigation farther, he gets sensations of touch, of sound, as he cuts or breaks the pie, and then happily of taste. All he knows of the pie is these sensations. They constitute the complex phenomenon pie. They are, so far as concerns him (or us), the pie, and without them, there would be, at least for him and us, no pie. Some philosophers go so far as to say that there would be no pie at all that the pie exists only when, and as, somebody ex- periences these sensations. If they are right, the conclusion is a saddening one for the boy: for if he went away leaving half of the pie, there could be no half for him to come back to. The truth is that while he is away, there do not remain in the pantry any of the sensations which we call pie, but something remains which, when he comes back, can again arouse the sensations we agreed to call pie; and the happy Ch. IV] Realism and Idealism 53 fact that that something remains, proves that there is a universe outside of the mind. On the other hand, if a log of wood be shoved into the room, but no boy, there are still in the room none of the sensations which we agree to call pie. To arouse those sen- sations, the bit of the objective universe still there must be visited by a bit of the subjective universe. The boy comes in with that bit of the subjective universe eagerly acting in his brain and on his salivary glands, and again are created the sensations we call pie. The bearing of this disquisition on pie (a subject for which I have an Emersonian fondness) upon the wider questions of our Cosmic Relations, will be more obvious as your patience holds out I shall never forget my feeling when the extreme idealistic theory was first presented to me. As a boy I had just re- turned from my first trip to the Adirondacks. Probably not three hundred people a year went into those mountains then, and probably not three hundred lived in them. The impressions left in my mind were nearly all of glorious solitudes where I had been alone watching the runways of the deer. The memory of those solitudes, and the hope of being again amid them, were very precious to me. When I first was indoctrinated with the theory that the external universe has no existence except as seen by an intelligent mind, I said to myself: As, then, no one sees those lakes and mountains now, they no longer exist they are not there. The feeling was horrible. Even under the happy inspirations the lakes and mountains had brought, there always had been a heavy oppressive undertone of loneliness, which the rec- ollection of them revived; and it had not been free from some of the sense of terror of the supernatural fostered in those superstitious days. But this suggestion that those beautiful yet awful solitudes had disappeared when we dis- appeared, had in it something more eerie and terrible than could come to a boy from the cry of loon or owl or panther, or even from the silence and the loneliness that, in occa- sional moments of perverse imaginings, became more dreadful still. Against the unholy magic suggested by the doctrine, the 54 Evolution of the Universe [Bk. I boy's reason made little headway, and the philosophic diffi- culty did not take its place among clearly settled things until, to the old man musing on the boy's perplexities, came the suggestion of the pie, which, very wrongly, seems not to have occupied as large a space in the boy's horizon as the Adirondacks did. CHAPTER V THE KNOWN UNIVERSE AND THE UNKNOWN UNIVERSE THE Adirondacks existed after I left them, and before I saw them : so the whole universe visible to us must have ex- isted essentially the same as now, though different in some details, before there was an eye to see it ; and it has been slowly, slowly revealing itself to us as eyes have been evolved, and seems to have been evolving eyes for that express purpose. Let us imagine ourselves living in darkness relieved at times by just enough suggestion of light to make the darkness more visible, with no more sense of sound than an occasional vibration somewhere in our interior economy; about the same satisfaction from food and drink as has the patient who is nourished by anointing his surface with an odorless oil, and with no sensations beyond these, except a faint con- sciousness of contact with objects, and support from earth or water. Such experiences constituted the universe of most of our ancestors, and still constitute that of most of our contemporaries. Next assume a distinct sense of shadow between the rudi- mentary eye and the source of light. What an immense resource this is in seeking food and avoiding danger, not to speak of variety of life and of pleasure, as compared with the creature who has only the sense of touch! How im- mensely larger and more interesting is the universe of the later creature! To get some realization of this, recall even your own feeling at some time over the mere simple ex- perience of light after darkness, and yet you have so many more complex feelings, that this one appears by contrast insignificant. Very early comes in a sense of different kinds of light of color. Think of the contrast between engravings and oil- paintings. Imagine the landscape of the moon-lit night shifting to that of noon. But even in the senses of sight 55 56 The Known Universe and the Unknown [Bk. I alone, not to speak of other senses, this is but the beginning. With each sense evolved, a new universe is known. And now, for contrast (for which, through all my tedious exposition I have had a motive that will appear later), let us jump to the universe of to-day as I see it at this moment. As I look North, between the beautiful pillars of a Doric summer-house, two immense pines, light green with dark shadows, are in the panel at the left, soughing in the summer breeze. A mass of lower foliage is this side of them, con- spicuously a great round laburnum, above and beyond which a narrow sharp arbor-vitas shoots up, in lighter green against the darker pines. Above all, blue sky with white clouds. I would like to have it all painted. At the right are two more panels, of lawn and distant wood, with my distant neigh- bor's beautiful buildings with their peaked turrets, brownstone against the green, and then in another panel, where I could toss my pencil, rises a pretty little spruce, on whose spire a pretty little bird has been chattering at me a pretty little song nearly all the time I have been writing, and the pines have soughed their accompaniment. Then at the left of all I have described, as I now look West, comes the massive square corner pillar of the summer-house, and next it a fluted Doric column. They shut out the left edge of the left pine ; and on their other side opens a picture of absolutely different character, whose limit is, instead of a hundred feet, some sixty miles. The lower quarter of the panel is foreground my hill sloping rapidly in light green to where the men with horses, bay against the green, are turning the pretty cow-pond among the trees into a swimming-hole for my young people and their mother and me; then, above in the perspective, a field of buckwheat still green, then one of yellow stubble from the oats just cut. In the perspective, these fields appear al- most wooded with small locusts along some roads, and a few great maples and pines; then my woods so beautiful, the rolling light green deciduous trees making the jagged pines shooting up here and there in front and above, look almost black. Beyond, over the woods, stretches the pearly surface of Lake Champlain, with long faint blue lines of current. At the right, just above the trees, a low dark green island, Ch. V] Protozoan and Human Universes Contrasted 57 with a white lighthouse and keeper's home, reaches across about a quarter of the picture. A little higher in the per- spective, touching the left edge, is a smaller island. Beyond, far off, comes the other side of the lake in what the fore- shortening makes a virtually straight line across the picture ; and above it rise in faint misty blue, fold upon fold, miles upon miles until we come to rounded and peaked summits, the Adirondacks. Above them, white clouds with bluish gray shadows, the upper edges broken with the dark blue of a clear sky. One more panel between the pillars, to the left, is a beautiful variant of the one I have just described. Where I turn South, there rise from the plain two of those picturesque mountains of tilted strata that slope on one side and are precipitous on the other ; and as I turn farther to the East I come to the Green Mountains first, the beautiful reposeful gently-three-peaked Lincoln; next, the unsurpassed gracefulness of the Couching Lion, not the biggest mountain I know, but the one with the most uplift; then after a few lower summits to (though fast becoming shut-out by growing trees) Mansfield, with an outline that seems really ingeniously bulky, sometimes looks bigger than the Jungfrau, and yet in winter, in that strange green twilight that now and then comes over the snow, makes one think of fairies. Now contrast these lovely things open to my eyes and ears, with our ancestor's universe of darkness and silence. Then suppose that he had varied the monotony of his existence by splitting himself into a family, and contrast his experience of it with mine if my little daughter should happen to get off her pony and be chased down here by my six-foot boys. To emphasize once more the emotional contrast (for all of the contrasts, a reason will appear presently) : this beauti- ful universe, of which I have tried to give you some faint notion, is mine mine mine, even the miles and miles of mountains are as much mine to all significant intents, as if I owned them in fee simple. Compare this joy with the protozoon's right, title, and interest in his puddle. And then with all he can do, compare my privilege of making roads to all this loveliness, which was not accessible before, and leav- ing my gate open to all who care to come. 58 The Known Universe and the Unknown [Bk. I Then think of the joy of doing, however badly, what amid all this, I am trying to do with my pencil (among my joys I prize that of not writing with a pen), which has nothing in the primitive universe even to contrast with it. Then reflect that the scene before me is but a small part of the universe open to-day Niagara and the Grand Canyon and the Yosemite and the wonderful Pacific coast, and the Canadian Eockies, and the Alps, the Mediterranean, the Himalayas the whole wonderful world, and the ocean and the night. Then the great architecture and sculpture and pictures; beautiful men and women; the drama spoken and danced and sung; and Liszt's Preludes and the Pilgerchor and Beethoven's last quartets. Then, on the more intellectual side, the great books, long talks with great people, and with others who, like not a few of the great ones, are better than great. Keflect that beyond the joy of contemplating our universe, men have had the higher joy of creating no little of it all the art and thought and love. Nature supplied the material and gave the hints, but the production was our own. So I might go on for many pages more, describing the universe of the modern man, and contrasting it with the universe of the primitive animal; but perhaps I have taxed your patience even more than my purpose requires. And now for my purpose in trying to awaken some feeling of the contrast. It is to impress that, as our universe has been a gradual revelation, up step by step from the protozoon's, ours is presumably only a part of one as much beyond ours, as ours is beyond the protozoon's. The amphioxus must have vague feelings of something beyond what it can sense; and far more certainly do we. As the early creatures must have in their sight, faint presages of what we call color, or in their hearing faint presages of what we call timbre, we certainly have presages far wider. Are we not constantly feeling fore- tastes of we know not what, except that it seems high and good? There was certainly something prophetic, though not nec- essarily prophetic of my personal experience, in the exaltation brought me before sunrise this morning in the pearl-gray h. V] Enjoyment of Nature. Compensation 59 sky holding one throbbing planet over dark Mount Mansfield there was something beyond my eyes, as surely as there was beyond those of the tadpole in my pond. After I saw this, I found " something beyond " in another sense, but still in the same sense. I could not sleep, and so I wrote what happened. The dawn, which is seldom reported in words or pictures, is, other things even, more interesting than the sunset certainly more cheering, as com- ing light is more cheering than coming darkness. But there is a difference in the other direction too, as the night is poetry, and the daylight prose. As I watch, above the mountains the gray turns to yellow; the yellow to pink, the blue higher up growing more intense, and the mountains growing blue with it; and then the blue far up in the sky gradually comes down and absorbs the lighter colors. Across the wide valley below the deep blue mountains, the black trees rise here and there above the mists. The mist* spread over the swamps and the lines of streams. The cattle in the pastures begin lowing, and the dog barks, as he herds them for their milking. Now the mists have grown so that, beyond the low foothills, they make, over the Winooski River, a gray line against the great blue mountains. This side of the foothills, in the fields, the light greens and yellows of different crops begin to show all offset by gray in the pastures, and by the nearer mists with the black trees jutting from them. The sky over the mountains is very light now, but shades fast into the dark blue of the zenith. The planet has climbed far up into that, and is still bright there. The scene began to take on its everyday look before the sun came. I did not wait for him, but went to bed. But how richly I had been compensated for a restless night, and even for the mischief it is going to raise in an exacting day! And I must illustrate one of the truths for the sake of which I am writing this book, by saying that much as the slight infirmity which causes me restless nights and early wakings, has eaten into working power much even as it may eat into the fag-end of old age, I have, in ways similar to last night's, and in many widely different ways, 60 The Known Universe and the Unknown [Bk. I been richly paid. He is a wise man who knows unerringly what to call a misfortune. But to return to our demonstration. In the first place, the difference between the tadpole's sight and mine having come by a slow evolution, is there any reason whatever to believe that the evolution is finished at just the colors my sight responds to now? There are plenty of existing eyes otherwise normal that do not respond to all the colors to which most eyes already do : even to-day some people see only brown where others see red or green, and a daylight landscape appears to them only much as an extra-bright moonlight one. Still such defective eyes do respond better than, probably within historic times, eyes in general did. This point has had a very interesting but, as we shall see, somewhat questionable treatment by Dr. Bucke (Cosmic Con- sciousness: Philadelphia, 1901 and 1905). He first quotes on p. 28, Max Miiller (Science of Thought, I, 229) : " It is well known that the distinction of color is of late date ; that Xenophanes knew of three colors of the rainbow only purple, red, and yellow; that even Aristotle spoke of the tri- colored rainbow; and that Democritus knew of no more than four colors black, white, red, and yellow." Then Dr. Bucke goes on to say: " Geiger (Contributions to the History of the Development of the Human Race. Translated by David Asher, London, 1880, p. 48) points out that it can be proved by examination of lan- guage that as late in the life of the race as the time of the primi- tive Aryans, perhaps not more than fifteen or twenty thousand years ago, man was only conscious of, only perceived, one color. That is to say, he did not distinguish any difference in tint be- tween the blue sky, the green trees and grass, the brown or gray earth, and the golden and purple clouds of sunrise and sunset. So Pictet (Les Origines Indo-Europeennes, Paris, 1877, II) finds no names of colors in primitive Indo-European speech. And Max Miiller (op. cit., II, 616) finds no Sanskrit root whose mean- ing has any reference to color." Then Dr. Bucke continues, without specific references : " At a later period, but still before the time of the oldest lit- erary compositions now extant, the color sense was so far de- veloped beyond this primitive condition that red and black were Ch. V] Evolution of Sight 61 recognized as distinct. Still later, at the time when the bulk of the Rig Veda was composed, red, yellow, and black were recog- nized as three separate shades, but these three included all color that man at that age was capable of appreciating. Still later white was added to the list and then green; but throughout the Rig Veda, the Zend Avesta, the Homeric poems, and the Bible the color of the sky is not once mentioned, therefore, apparently, was not recognized. For the omission can hardly be attributed to accident; the ten thousand lines of the Rig Veda are largely occupied with descriptions of the sky ; and all its features sun, moon, stars, clouds, lightning, sunrise, and sunset are men- tioned hundreds of times. So also the Zend Avesta, to the writers of which light and fire, both terrestrial and heavenly, are sacred objects, could hardly have omitted by chance all mention of the blue sky. In the Bible the sky and heaven are mentioned more than four hundred and thirty times, and still no mention is made of the color of the former. In no part of the world is the blue of the sky more intense than in Greece and Asia Minor, where the Homeric poems were composed. Is it possible to conceive that a poet (or the poets) who saw this as we see it now could write the forty-eight long books of the Iliad and Odyssey and never once either mention or refer to itf But were it possible to believe that all the poets of the Rig Veda, Zend Avesta, Iliad, Odyssey, and Bible could have omitted the mention of the blue color of the sky by mere accident, etymology would step in and assure us that four thousand years ago, or, perhaps, three, blue was unknown, for at that time the subse- quent names for blue were all merged in the names for black. " The English word Hue and the German blau descend from a word that meant black. The Chinese hi-u-an, which now means sky-blue, formerly meant black. The word nil, which now in Persian and Arabic means blue, is derived from the name Nile, that is, the black river, of which same word the Latin Niger is a form." Homer certainly had a word for blue, though he may not have applied it to the sky. This last statement that I ever got transformed into g makes me prick up my ears, but perhaps it would not if I knew more; and we need not let it fatally affect the whole paragraph, or the statements (op. tit., 30, 31) : " As the sensations red and black came into existence by the division of an original unital color sensation, so in process of time these divided. First red divided into red-yellow, then that red into red-white. Black divided into black-green, then black again into black-blue, and during the last twenty-five hundred years these six (or rather these four red, yellow, green, blue) 62 The Known Universe and the Unknown [Bk. I have split up into the enormous number of shades of color which are now recognized and named " The power of exciting vision of the red rays is several thousand times as great as the energy of the violet, and there is a regular and rapid decrease of energy as we pass down the spectrum from red to violet. It is plain that if there has been such a thing as a growing perfection in the sense of vision in virtue of which, from being insensible to color the eye became gradually sensible of it, red would necessarily be the first color perceived, then yellow, then green, and so on to violet; and this is exactly what both ancient literature and etymology tell us took place." But in the face of all this pretty demonstration and these great authorities, stand the facts that the Egyptians used color very well four or five thousand years before Christ, and that the people in the Dordogne caves used it as much, prob- ably, as twenty thousand years before. Moreover, recent savages in a state presumably far behind that of the peoples whose writings are quoted by Dr. Bucke and his authorities, use many colors, and often with skill that puts civilized man to his trumps. Among them, however, we should be slow to put our wampum-making Indians: for they used the colored beads which we gave them. But we found them with their senses far enough evolved to appreciate those beads, as good William Penn knew to his profit. Yet although Dr. Bucke may claim too much, what he gives us is interesting and suggestive and in the general line of evolution; and as we go on, we shall meet growing reason to look for truth on both sides in most conflicts between theories, and even between theories and facts. It is an interesting question whether the eye as we know it, is to be farther differentiated to report more colors, or whether we must depend for farther knowledge of the invisible ends of the spectrum, upon instruments of our own devising. Somehow phenomena for which we have to depend on instruments, do not seem as really parts of our very own universe, as phenomena reported directly by our senses. It seems more in accord with the beneficence so prominent throughout previous evolution, that our senses shall be expanded. Yet on the other hand, while that would be more joy, it would not exercise our new and ineffably Ch. V] Senses still Evolving 63 valuable power of inventing instruments and hypotheses, and finding laws for ourselves. As with the eye, so with the ear. Is it going to stop at ten octaves, when even some insects appear to hear higher tones than we can, and the whale lower? So with the other senses. All are of course, like sight and hearing, the products of an evolution in response to the en- vironment. Almost equally of course, then, they are yet but small parts of a possible even probable development. In dreams, when separated from the activities of the body, consciousness approaches such experience of new faculties the surmounting of time and space and gravitation; and we cannot declare it impossible that consciousness separated alto- gether from the body should have such experiences, even to a degree compared with which the difference between a creature with one sense and a creature with six senses, is trifling. Men now living have seen striking evidence that such development is going on. Some very competent observers think they are now watching the most tremendous of all evolutions yet known in the faculties themselves, of which more later. As with the faculties, so, as already intimated, with the universe. As nearly all the universe we know is outside the protozob'n's, are not the indications virtually conclusive that, outside of the one we know, there is more, bearing to ours a ratio greater than ours bears to the protozoon's? What reason have we to believe that all the universe revealable to a possible sense of sight, is revealed to ours? We have excellent reason to believe that it is not. By photography and the Roentgen apparatus, we can now find at the ends of the spectrum, rays from which our eyes as yet get no direct sensation whatever. Instruments show us longer and shorter, and slower and quicker vibrations than those of which our senses take direct cognizance. And even between the two extremes that we do cognize, there seem to be gaps that we do not. This amounts to an almost mathematical reinforcement of the demonstration already given that the sensizable uni- verse, with its bounteous gifts to the intellect and the emo- 64 The Known Universe and the Unknown [Bk. I tions, with the numberless avenues for exploration that it offers the adventurous soul, and with the numberless new gifts it undoubtedly holds at the ends of those avenues, is, after all, but a mere foretaste of a universe waiting for the enjoyment of eyes evolved beyond ours, and containing intel- lectual and emotional exaltations that our blind gropings even now touch without understanding. Truths similar to those illustrated regarding the visible universe, must hold even more strongly regarding the audible universe, because music is far the youngest of the arts: it has no masterpiece two hundred years old, while all the other arts have masterpieces over two thousand. And yet are degrees between fragments so small in com- parison with the probable wholes, worth considering? The phraseology, however, assumes that the wholes are open to human conception a weakness haunting the phraseology of philosophic speculation. The evidence, then, seems conclusive from the evolution of the recognized faculties, not to speak of the vague new ones now the objects of so much research, that in proportion to our senses, we know virtually as little of the universe around us, as, in proportion to his senses, does the jelly-fish floating in the dancing sunlit water among the yachts and the bathers, and touching the loveliest of them with the same sensation as if she were a floating log. And yet the myriad particulars, objective and subjective, which make our universe so different from the jelly-fish's, would probably, when compared with the whole universe (so far as our minds can grasp the idea of a " whole " universe) show a ratio smaller than does the jelly-fish's universe when compared with ours. In a word, evolution has demonstrated the existence of a Heaven, and instead of being up above us (which meant something before Copernicus and Newton) it is all around us and in us, only waiting for faculty to recognize it. Nay, we have been living in it all the time. If to the Heaven I tried to describe from my summer-house and my east window, could be added reunion with those I have lost, and gratifica- tion of divine curiosities just fast enough to prevent dulling them, I, for one, don't want any better Heaven. Ch. V] Senses Reveal but Parts of Reality 65 Or from another point of view, did human imagination ever devise an entrance into Heaven, to be compared with the experience of a person born blind, suddenly restored to sight in presence of a beautiful landscape, or better still, of a beautiful and beloved person? Yet experiences of the same nature, but immeasurably greater, cannot be held im- possible to a creature without a sense, or with only one, or two, or five, or any number. Whatever the number, we cannot conceive the impossibility of another sense being added to the organism, or another field of response existing in the objective universe. But while the universe of the higher organism is a heaven compared with the universe of the lower organism, it is not generally appreciated as such: for in only exceptional cases has it had the benefit of the immediate contrast between blind- ness and sight, or deafness and hearing. However, each appearance has been only an appearance a quality : the " thing in itself " is unknown to us, and appar- ently must remain unknown to us, except so far as its phenomena are revealed. Put yourself on Lake Champlain or one of the few lakes to compare with it, or in the Yosemite, or by the Grand Canyon, or at Zermatt, realize that the immeasurable source of strong, beautiful, beneficent (is it too much to say benevolent?) Power, is revealing itself to you in the vibrations entering your eyes; regard the scene as simply a lovely aspect of an infinite source of loveliness partially re- vealing itself to you, and probably to reveal to our descendants immeasurably more of itself in ways that beggar our imagina- tion; or go and listen to great music, and realize it as a revelation, through the composer, of the same Power; saturate your soul with such revelations, and then, that you may appreciate them all the better, contrast them with the gross and fantastic and often hideous pictures with which, under the name of revelations, barbarous priests have imposed the awful power of mystery on barbarous peoples. But the powers of mystery are lovely as well as awful. The mists and mountains and dark shadows opposite me as I write, are both. I do not read their meaning, as I read the meaning of a 2 -f 2ab + b 2 , but they lift and expand 66 The Known Universe and the Unknown [Bk. I and deepen the soul as do no meanings that I can read ; and while they raise the most terrible questions, they answer them with : " Peace ! Wait ! Work ! Earn the rest that you feel is in Us! All will be well!" CHAPTER VI SOME ETHICAL ASPECTS OP EVOLUTION WITH suggestion of the Beneficence which has been breed- ing from our deaf and blind ancestors a progeny that enjoys the universe open to us, comes the question: What need of the ancestors' being deaf and blind? Perhaps an answer whose consistency with the fact would not be its sole merit would be : " None of your business." But really it is no detraction from the Beneficence (or any other name that you may see fit to spell with a capital) doing the evolution, that the evolution did not begin higher up. We cannot conceive its doing so, any more than we can really conceive a creation. Just at what point would our wisdom have the evolution begin, and what reason have we to believe that it could begin in any other way than it did, or that the inflow of the Cosmic Soul into us can be attained in any other way than through just that evolution? The Power does not seem to have been able to make the universe perfect, and yet we assume the power to be unlimited what- ever that may mean, in spite of all the evidence indicating that it is not Here comes in the inconsistency that we allege between an all-wise, all-good, and all-powerful God, and the existence of suffering. What do we know about " all," except all of some limited thing? The very phrase is part of that nonsense-jabbering that we always fall into when we use words greater than our actual conceptions. We merely assume such a God, despite the facts that we cannot conceive one, and we never saw any evidence of the existence of one. We simply see the greatest power we know, but a power we know to be imperfect, evolving the greatest universe we know, but a universe we know to be imperfect. We have much reason to believe that we are to see more ; but to juggle with words that imply having seen all, or having seen what we have not, is to babble idiocy. 67 68 Some Ethical Aspects of Evolution [Bk. I All this suggested to Mill a deputy god of inferior powers a queer suggestion for a man of his ability to entertain: for the need of a deputy arises only from the principal's limitations : so why not admit them at once, without lugging in the deputy, or bothering ourselves to reconcile them with the gratuitous pseud-ideas of an almighty and all-benevolent cause and regulator of the universe? For our purposes, the Cause is just powerful enough and just benevolent enough to produce, so far, the universe as we know it, no more and no less; and if we are not satisfied with that amount of power and benevolence, after we have watched life long enough to realize the good evolved from its evils, and to catch glimpses of the possibilities of vastly greater future good, we are pretty hard to please. The real indications are of the obvious fact that our powers of apprehension are not unlimited. We are even so stupid that we are in the habit of saying that the universe is full of imperfections and suffering and death, when it is no such thing: it does contain imperfections, suffering, and death, but anybody who says it is " full of " them, simply has diseased perceptions. The sad facts play a very minor part. As I write this in my summer-house, the sheep are bleating as they feed in the sunlight down the hill, sleek and happy. All summer I've enjoyed watching them enjoy themselves. During that time half a dozen have been killed by dogs. There are scores of them left. Shall I say that their universe is "full of" dogs and death? More of them have been killed for my table. Am I proved capable of nothing but ruthless murder? Despite the misery in the universe, the joy is there, and immensely preponderant; and we constantly see the misery working out good. This is a fact apt to be denied by the inexperienced and unreflecting, and realized only as life grows longer and richer. Yet assertions of it abound in the utterances of those whose thought is wisest and deepest. For proofs of it, however, one is generally thrown back on his own ex- perience: because such proofs are most frequent and con- vincing in the things locked in each one's own breast. They Ch. VI] Detailed Reach of Natural Law 69 are seldom known to the biographers, and still more seldom given by the autobiographers and when the fundamental facts are known, their relations are seldom realized. Pious souls and many souls have been made pious by such ex- perience often delight in pouring out their convictions of the beneficence of God in bringing good from evil, but where their convictions rest on their actual experiences of real life, and not on mere religious ecstasy, they are natu- rally slow to expose the experiences to the world, espe- cially as the secrets of others are so often interwoven with them. Many must have wondered if it was not a duty to do violence to their own feelings, and give the world the benefit of such experience ; but if, as an extreme instance, the prema- ture death of someone useful and admirable and loved, has been demonstrated in the course of many years to have made possible for the survivors, shifts in the kaleidoscope of life so good that the lost one would gladly have died to effect them, to proclaim the particulars might not only expose to the cold world the tenderest feelings of many survivors, but might appear an underestimate of the life that is lost, and a lack of affection for the memory. And yet there is probably nobody of much experience and reflection, who does not know of just such instances. Moreover, in many such cases, the preponderance of good rests on the assumption that the life is continued beyond: I do not mean the easy general assumption that the lost one has entered into a state of bliss beside which the agonies of illness and death, and the sufferings of survivors, are as nothing ; but I mean a set of very obvious consequences which would be rational in the extreme if there is a future existence very much like this one to round them out, while without the possibility of such consequences in an after life, the present life often seems like chaos. And yet even that chaos can often be resolved by bravely and candidly offsetting life's joys against its sorrows, finding it as good as it generally is, and assuming the peace of oblivion at the end. That, however, is not the whole matter: for the educating influence of suffering in life here, as we know it, is highly 70 Some Ethical Aspects of Evolution [Bk. I valued by the best souls, and its recognition is so general as to be almost a commonplace. Yet when one realizes that the universe is governed by law, it is hard to realize a law comprehensive enough to reach down into the details of each life, and make its reverses what the character needs to pick out among all the apparent jumble of microbes and snakes and tigers and bad machines and explosions, just the one and at just the time, that each human being needs it to do him or his survivors good. Equally hard is it to imagine a law which much oftener sends the apparent " accidents " of happiness in the same way. And yet some of the wisest of earth very strongly and deliberately suspect not a few of them hold as a belief founded on frequent verification, that the Law and the Power great enough to swing the stars, is also delicate enough to do just those little things. It has often been found worth while to search life and conscience closely for the evidences. Among the things hard to realize a generation ago and much harder the generations ago when the litanies were com- posed, would have been the attitude now growing more general toward one more hard subject. *We know now that among the greatest humbugs ever imposed upon humanity by human- ity, or inhumanity, has been the horror of death. As the views inculcated by the priest for his revenue's sake are gradually disappearing, we are gradually realizing that death is a much- maligned institution, and that, except in its apparent incon- gruities with the useful and hopeful, it has, everything considered, much to commend it. As evolution is making life more normal, death becomes more normal nearer a mere long-awaited and welcome release from weariness and ennui. Weariness and ennui are inevitable under limited conditions: the wider the conditions, however, the longer it takes to get tired of them; but the time must come. The question therefore is really : Why are our conditions limited ? and our answer is: Whatever impressions like the worm's impressions of scenery and music, we may get outside of time, space, matter, motion, and force, while we are subject to them, no mortal mind can really conceive of unlimited conditions. It seems to follow, absurd as it may at first Ch. VI] Legitimacy of Speculation 71 appear, that no mortal mind can conceive of conditions under which death must not in time be a blessing. That now it o often comes prematurely as to seem, and probably to be, a curse, is a corollary of imperfect evolution. But if, in our erring judgments, we must regard it as worse or better than it is, what have we to gain by regarding it as worse? There is a rapidly reviving impression that we don't know much about it anyhow, and that the little we do know is the worst there is to know. Part of the bad is the apparent fact that the universe beyond our senses must remain unenjoyed by us if death ends all. This tends to make the faith in such a universe more tantalizing than inspiring; but as we proceed, we may find some reasons why it should not be tantalizing. We have now been through such a summary as conditions permit of the reactions between soul and universe covered by our present knowledge by our recognized faculties on one side, and such phenomena as we have been able to correlate, on the other. But it is a plain corollary of evolution that there should at times appear germs of faculty but faintly and rarely apprehended, giving rise to phenomena new, strange, doubt- ful. In this vague field lie many, perhaps most, of our future possibilities, and it would be a very chary review of our cosmic relations that should leave it out, or that even should refrain from any inferences regarding the unknown that our faint glimpses of it may legitimately suggest. It is even true that as the old forms of belief regarding the cause and fate of the universe and the soul, are nearly all gone, the old fervors and the old despairs are nearly all gone too; and with them seem gone nearly all great productive powers of the spirit; and the world, with its great new mechanical inventions, is absorbed as never before since Rome fell, in the luxuries of material things. The making of inferences regarding the unsensed universe, notwithstanding their inevitable uncertainty and unverifia- bility, has been, the vast majority think, of great benefit to mankind: for the universe we do not know is presumably far more important possibly even to us in ways dimly sensed 72 Some Ethical Aspects of Evolution [Bk. I than the universe we do know, and the vague borderland between the known and the unknown is the field of much of poetry and the other arts. Every good strong emotion and possibly every bad strong emotion (which must be a misapplication or an excess of a good one) brings the soul to the borders of the unknown to the frame of mind where one is very apt to cry out: " God ! " and sometimes as apt to cry it out in oath as in prayer. De Quincey speaks of literature as giving " exercise and expansion to your own latent capacity of sympathy with the infinite, where every pulse and each separate influx is a step upwards, a step ascending as upon a Jacob's ladder from earth to mysterious altitudes above the earth/' This is at least equally the effect of great music, painting, sculp- ture, even architecture of beauty in all its forms, most perhaps of the great aspects of Nature, including humanity. Certain it is that without an abiding consciousness that the known mass of phenomena is not all, and that behind them is a cause transcending our imaginations, life loses some of its best emotions, the imagination grows arid, and the moral impulses shrink. While what we know, and the in- creasing of it, can more than occupy all our working powers, they work all the better for an occasional dream of greater and less troubled things. When imaginations of the unknown world have most filled the consciousness, mankind has done its greatest creative work. For three thousand years, under both classical mythol- ogy and Christianity, the great outpourings of genius sprang from a consciousness saturated with relationships assumed, whether truly or falsely, to personal gods and immortal life. That consciousness built the Greek temples and the Gothic cathedrals; it carved the Apollo Belvedere and painted the Sistine Madonna; it wrote the Iliad and the Inferno and the Paradise Lost; it composed the masses of Haydn and Beethoven and the Stabat Mater; and it has done more to shape the conduct of mankind than all the science, all the codes, and all the armies: for though it has not shaped the sciences, it has inspired the codes, and impelled most of the armies. These relations to the unknown have often been lost sight Ch. VI] Inspiring Interest in the Unknown 73 of and ignored, but yet so generally and persistently have they been felt that until lately they constituted most of the atmosphere in which even the skeptic led his moral and emotional life; their fervors and their terrors made virtually all of man's existence vibrant: whatever may have been his speculations, ambitions, lusts, there was no escaping the con- sciousness of the mysteries of the universe and the obligations of the moral law, with all their power to terrify or inspire. The robber baron built a church, the Sicilian brigand prayed for the success of his expeditions, and even yet the " criminal rich," as well as the rich not criminal, give freely for re- ligious uses. These emotions have probably been the greatest of world-influences since men began to take the universe seriously. When, in the rhythmic course of Nature, great waves of them have rolled up, they have generally come nearly at the same time with great epochs of literature and art. The struggles of the early church were followed by the literary inspirations of St. Augustine. Baphael and Luther were born the same year, and Michelangelo only eight years before. The harrowing of the English Church by Henry VIII was the precursor of Shakespere and his companions; the Huguenot persecutions brought the age of the great French dramatists and pulpit orators; the wars of the Cavaliers and Puritans bred Milton, and presaged the literature of Queen Anne; the great school of American writers was born of the struggle of the free spirit against Puritanism; the Victorian age in Literature was the age of conflict between Moses on the one hand, and Lyell, Darwin, and Spencer on the other. Be it noted in passing that, very often, these outbursts of literary and artistic genius did not take place in the times of greatest agitation, but a generation later. This, as I have suggested before (Outlook for Nov. 24, 1906), may go a long way to account for genius : it seems to be born not made by its own experiences, but by fervors experienced by its pro- genitors. During all these birth-throes of the spirit, whatever differ- ences of opinion there were regarding the nature of God and of immortality, both were believed in, and enough things believed regarding both, to keep most of the world's active 74 Some Ethical Aspects of Evolution [Bk. I minds busy ; and to accompany the good results of such beliefs with a terrible amount of bad ones, including some of the worst tragedies in history. Conflicting assertions regarding the supra-phenomenal unsheathed the sword of Islam, and gave western Europe the most terrible wars and persecutions in history; for hundreds of years such assertions turned friend against friend, brother against brother, parent against child. As a typical instance so recently as John Fiske's youth in the late fifties, in a small Connecticut city, his denial of orthodox Christianity ostracized him from social intercourse. But the reaction from all these extremes has been only less deplorable than the extremes themselves. After so many bad experiences from speculations regarding the unknown, it was not a strange reaction to deny such speculations any legitimacy at all. As knowledge widens, men depend more upon knowledge, and tend to believe that absorption in the Beyond, where we have no knowledge, is the deepest folly, because it is founding our greatest interests in our ignorance. The systems of belief reared regarding the Beyond have taxed so many of the best powers of the race, and have so generally come to nothing, that at last many of their most ardent admirers, while insisting that their building has the highest value, have come to admit that the value is not in what is built, but in the act of building just as it was generally held, a couple of generations ago, that the highest value of education is not in what is learned, but in the act of learning. To say that there is not a grain of truth in these positions would be fatuous as fatuous perhaps as the claim that the pre- ponderance of truth is in them. The best known expression of this attitude is of course Lessing's preference of "search for truth" to truth itself. No sane man really accepts this, yet it has been made famous by the unquestionable poetry of its expression, and notorious by the passion of mankind for the intellectual titillation given by epigrams with a spice of truth and a sharper spice of contradiction of what is known to be true. The acceptance of such an epigram makes the vulgar feel wiser than the acceptance of a plain truth that everybody can see. Yet the Ch. VI] Reactions from such Interests 75 innate stupidity of the epigram in question is entirely in keeping with the denouement of the masterwork in which it occurs. Despite all the poets have done for us, and no men have done more, many of them have a terrible amount to answer for. But it is almost superfluous to reiterate that, wasted and worse-than-wasted poetry and philosophy have been but a small part of the negative effects of absorption in the Beyond. Dogmatic statements regarding it have clashed; and quarrels when neither side can be proved wrong are interminable, and their passions illimitable. In reaction against all this, a little after the middle of the last century, arose a school led by perhaps the most powerful mechanical intellect yet known one the immensity of whose processes touched poetry. This school declared : " This uni- verse, so far as we know it, can all be expressed in mechanical terms, and we have found the terms or at least enough of them to show that in time the rest may be found; we are plainly on the track of principles that cover all we know, or can know with our tools for knowing. Those tools will never carry us beyond phenomena. Most of the wasted strength of historic ages has been in speculating beyond phe- nomena, and most of their miseries have come from conflict of opinions on alleged questions beyond phenomena. Now as truth there if not attainable, agreement is impossible. Let us stop all this waste and worry, and busy ourselves with the correlation of phenomena by the mighty new engine of truth we have just discovered after guessing at it for three thousand years in Evolution." This reaction differed from those led by Copernicus and Luther. That of Copernicus related primarily to the question of the earth's place and man's place, at the center of the universe. That led by Luther related mainly to the abuses in the church. Neither revolution materially disturbed philo- sophic opinions regarding man's origin, daily duties, or des- tiny, or the universe beyond phenomena, and neither offered an engine like evolution for the revision of opinions. Since Luther's day the course of thought had vastly widened, and yet it had been so dammed back in the churches, in the schools, and even in social relations, that when the 76 Some Ethical Aspects of Evolution [Bk. I dams were finally thrown down by Lyell, Darwin, Spencer, Huxley, and their friends, the flood of associations on which the old faiths depended, swept the faiths along with them, and the absurdities, abuses, persecutions, and horrors which, in the Christian and Moslem worlds, had attended speculation regarding God and Immortality, were so intensely reacted from, that for half a century some of the strongest minds have regarded such speculation as subversive of Philosophy, Morals, and general well-being. Nevertheless, the intellectual habits which had bred those speculations were so deep-seated that most of our contempo- rary philosophers have inherited more of them than they realize, and affect to ignore Spencer even while they habitually use his terms, and test all things by principles which, though faintly appearing as guesses from the beginning of philosophy, were first demonstrated as facts in mind, morals and society by him : indeed so much of his work has got into the very air that everybody, according to capacity, breathes in his principles, often without realizing whence they came. This ignorant, not to say ungrateful, attitude of many contemporaries regarding Spencer, is partly due to the brain evolved on the old philosophy being in many ways imperme- able to the new. But it is also due, and perhaps in a greater degree, to Spencer having poured out the child with the bath; while insisting on the consciousness of the Beyond, and not denying, though not asserting, the Hereafter, he rigidly refrains from any speculation regarding the details of eithei; and what little light he flashes toward both, is brief and cold and dry. Though his daily walk and conversation were very much informed by the esthetic side of Nature, his philosophy was very little ; and as it offers none of the beautiful assump- tions in which men have so long delighted, and deals very little in poetry, except as its immensities are poetic, people who cannot supply its poetical implications for themselves, are apt to reject it as bare and arid. But now comes along M. Bergson and covers the colossal structure with flowers a task for which the giant who reared it was not fitted. When I said this to M. Bergson, he supplemented it with one of his Ch. VI] Unknown and Unknowable 77 inimitable touches "I try to show how flowers inevitably grow out of it." It is the proverbial fate of genius to have to make its own constituency ; and while, in our day, that fate is not as heavy as it was in the days of Socrates and Christ, the work against habit and heredity is still hard and slow. It must be rhythmic too, as Spencer was the first clearly to demonstrate. All these things make it easy to understand how, in spite of the revolu- tion wrought in philosophy by him, in spite of the contempo- rary spread of his doctrines over Europe, America, India, and Japan, there has been a reaction since his death a reaction even among men who have for their main stock in trade, how- ever unconsciously accumulated and assorted, the principles that Spencer first clearly established, and even the terminology that he mainly created. While the principal cause of this superficial and ignorant unconsciousness of Spencer's influence has undoubtedly been his refusal to pander to the appetite for transcendental spec- ulation, he yet provided the word Unknowable with a capital U, which lifted it from a negation into an assertion, and gave us a new word for something beyond the little contents of our consciousness, to believe in and lift our emotions toward. But why doesn't the word Unknown answer the same pur- pose? As a negation, Unknowable is nothing but a truism: it cannot mean more than unknowable in the present state of our knowledge, and that is a matter of course: for when any item of the unknown becomes known, the state of our knowledge is changed. And to assert that no matter how many items become known, there will still remain an unknown residuum, and therefore that there must ever be an Un- knowable, is to make one of those assertions involving the pseud-idea of "infinity," in which the pre-Spencerian phil- osophy did its reasonings in circles, and which it is one of the first principles of scientific philosophy to avoid. If, again, the word means that the number of things not now known is greater than can be learned while our race lasts, it rises from a truism or a pseud-idea, into a guess, but only a guess, even if one with which most men would agree. 78 Some Ethical Aspects of Evolution [Bk. I But to assert that beyond our experience and knowledge there is presumably an immensity of truth and beauty and happiness, beside which our knowledge is as nothing, is only to assert what we have almost as much reason to believe from our experience, as we have to believe the experience itself. And we have nearly the same reason to believe also that we, or at least our descendants, will have an increasing share in that transcendent beatitude. Regarding our own chances, some guesses will be ventured in later pages. I say guesses : for when, as was the fashion with our ancestors, such speculations assume the certainty that we now seldom attribute to anything but hypothesis checked by verification, they have their dangers. To the universe which transcends phenomena, the name transcendent naturally has been applied. Of course more nonsense has been talked about it than any other subject; and in spite of the best intentions, I probably have talked my share, and shall probably talk some more. The term connotes two ideas (a) the unknown residuum of cause, etc., behind phenomena; (6) the portion of the universe whence we have as yet received no phenomena. Despite Transcendentalism being a jaw-breaking term, it cut a great figure on Boston Sundays a couple of generations ago ; but for everyday use in our time, The Unknown might serve better. The Spiritual World is of course another term for the same thing, at least for its psychic side, if you wish to draw a distinction which to me grows more and more shadowy every day. When savages have had anything come to them from their Unknown, even if it were but a bullet from a musket, they have called it the work of spirits, and a large portion of civilized mankind does not materially differ from them to-day. That world, being Unknown, however, does not quite justify Spencer in calling it Unknowable, though we may be justified in spelling both with capitals. And our limited intellects are apt to get on high horses and say that, in any event, it must be Unknowable in its totality, just as if the word totality in the connection were an idea, instead of a pseud-idea. As to the universe which transcends our knowledge, the Ch. VI] No Magic Keys. Uses of Speculation 79 world's records abound in confident expectations of finding "keys" and "passwords" that shall at a flash make all the unknown, known ; and no end of " systems " of " know- ledge " of it have been built, which were, of course, nothing but card-houses with words on the cards. The only stable knowledge has been built of classified phenomena; and the only progress into the transcendent universe has been step by step. Thus only has some of the universe which was at first all transcendent to our ancestors, become known to us, and thus only, so far as we can see, will some of the universe which is transcendent to us, become known to our de- scendants. But speculation concerning the transcendent universe, when honestly regarded as speculation, is justified by several con- siderations : I. We never know when a speculation on the transcendent universe is going to bring a valuable slice of it into or Universe into the Known (capitals have their uses). The speculation of to-day points the way to the demonstration of to-morrow sometimes. II. Characteristics pervade phenomena which may be held to justify, though they may not strictly verify, some classes of conclusions regarding their cause. For instance, the general prevalence of beauty and happiness obvious to a healthy mind, prove the cause beneficent, and therefore give much reason to believe that it is benevolent. Such beliefs, however, must be held and enforced only in proportion to their verifiability. III. Some speculations beyond phenomena have verifiable advantages they unquestionably enlarge and intensify our interests; and beyond possible waste of time, which they share with all speculation and even all experiment, their only disadvantages arise when they impose rules of conduct whose advantages are unverifiable. IV. What is more, we must speculate, at least on the re- lations of the uncorrelated phenomena that are constantly coming from the transcendental universe toward the universe of knowledge that constitute the borderland of knowledge. But while science has been in the very act of demonstrating the legitimacy of guarded speculation, many have said that 80 Some Ethical Aspects of Evolution [Bk. I science was killing the imagination. Others, however, insist that science has been the healthiest stimulus of the imagina- tion, not only in hypothesis, but even in poetry : certainly it gave a new and very deep note to the poetry of Tennyson. But equally certainly, it has diverted the imagination into new channels, and these have not yet become so familiar so much a part of the general consciousness which responds to poetry, as to inspire it habitually and powerfully. Poetry does not come from, or appeal to, deep learning or high ingenuity, but to the common emotions of mankind. True there is poetry in the spectroscope showing us the composition of the farthest visible star, there is poetry in the fact that what we call that star may be only light that has reached us from the star since it was burnt out and dead; but such facts, although science is pouring them upon the poet in profusion, are as yet so unfamiliar that he responds not so much by feeling their emotional implications and turning them into poetry, as by efforts to comprehend them. Poetry does not go hand in hand with knowledge, but skips all along the way, sometimes following in the paths which knowledge has opened and smoothed, sometimes going ahead, and throwing its vague lights into mysteries yet to be explored. BOOK II UNCORHELATED KNOWLEDGE CHAPTER VII INTRODUCTION WHAT do we mean when we say we know a thing? That we recollect enough of its qualities to be sure that when we find an object possessing those we recollect, and no others inconsistent with them, it will be the thing we know, or one like it one in the class of things with which our recol- lections correlate it. Far off at the edge of the woods I see a moving object. I cannot make out another quality. I simply correlate it with the class moving objects. Otherwise I don't know what it is. It emerges from the shadow, and I see that I can correlate it with the smaller class of dark moving objects. A little nearer, and I am able to correlate it with the still smaller class of brown moving objects, but I don't know how high the grass around it is, and don't know whether to correlate it with cattle or deer or dogs. It begins to run toward me, and its motion correlates it with dogs. Its coming toward the house tends to correlate it with my dogs. That, taken in connection with its color, narrows the correlation down to collies: the color excludes it from the class Scottish terriers to which my third dog belongs. But among collies, I can't tell before it draws nearer whether it is Laddie or his son Shep; but as he runs up to me, his very long hair and comparative lack of white, and large head, and affection for me, correlate him with my recollections of Laddie, and I "know" him. Now here are successively the qualities visibility, motion, color, brown color, the addi- tional mass of visible qualities that go to make up dog, the invisible one of tendency to come to my home, which 81 82 Introduction to Boole II [Bk. II marks it as my dog, the specific colors which mark it as my collie dog, and the long hair and preponderance of brown and big head, which mark it as Laddie. Dear old fellow ! He was literally old, and within a month of my writing that passage, he fell miserably and incurably ill, and we had to chloroform him, which is more than we would do for each other under similar circumstances. Let the passage stand as a monument, however perishable, to as loving and constant a friend as I ever had. Now when I say I " knew " this dear dog, it is because the whole mass of qualities enumerated were correlated with my recollections of a corresponding mass of qualities which constituted Laddie. Had they not been, I should have had to say, if asked : " I don't know the dog." All the knowledge up to that point would have been uncorrelated with the knowledge essential to my knowing him. Now when certain people are present, there are crackings and tappings going on around the room. There is nothing visible or discoverable to account for them ; so we can't safely correlate them with mechanically caused noises. They are too frequent to be correlated with the shrinkage of wood- work. Jones, who has heard similar noises before, correlates them with certain qualities he has experienced before, and says he "knows" them that they are noises caused by spirits. I on the other hand having never heard anything of the kind, and having nothing to correlate the noises with, don't " know " what they are : to me it is uncorrelated knowledge. And as, so far, Jones and the rest of us know precious, little, if anything, about " spirits," I suspect that in some important respects it is really uncorrelated knowledge with him. Similarly I see tables move in presence of certain people who touch them very lightly or not at all : so I cannot correlate the moving power with muscular force. Nor can I correlate it with electricity: for electricity doesn't act on wood; or with anything else I know. So for me, the little knowledge I have of it is correlated with so little of what I know about modes of force, that I can't say that I "know" it. We say we know things, when what we know about them is correlated with what else we know, and the Ch. VII] How Knowledge Takes Shape 83 wider and closer the correlation, the better we know the things. Now as Jones thinks he knows all about spirits, and that what he knows about this force correlates itself with what he knows about spirits, and that therefore the force comes from spirits, there is no use in my telling him that it comes from the medium because the medium is as tired as if he had done the work with his muscles. Because the noise takes place only when the medium is present, I can only correlate it with human forces, though with none I had known before. Jones prefers spirits. Well, we have a good deal of such uncorrelated or half- correlated or miscorrelated knowledge it makes the border- land between knowledge and conjecture, and consists largely of both. As to knowledge and possible knowledge, we are each in the midst of two concentric spheres not perfect ones, but with irregular surfaces. Of course the spheres of no two men are alike. Each lives in one consisting of what he knows, or thinks he knows of his sensed and correlated knowledge. This shades into an including sphere made up of scraps of uncorrelated knowledge but partly sensed, of intuitions and impressions some of them little more than emotions many of them, however, undoubtedly the germs of knowledge yet to mature. Then, we have every reason to believe, beyond this sphere must be a measureless infinity outside of not only our sensed and partly-sensed knowledge, but of our intuitions and emotions. Most of the rest of our book will relate to the including sphere, and will consist largely of suggestions for correlating its vague knowledge with that of the sphere of things we know. The borders of the sphere of knowledge and the sphere surrounding knowledge, overlap in both experience and feel- ing, or intuition, or whatever you see fit to call it. When some of our ancestors attained a general sense of light, they must have had some vague impressions which have developed into our sense of color; so when they got as far as a clear general impression of sound, they must have had vague im- pressions of what are to us pitch and timbre and even har- '84 Introduction to Book II [Bk. II mony and discord. Now we, in experiences that exercise our present faculties to the full before great aspects of Nature, or great pictures, statuary, or music, are filled with exaltations of "we know not what" beyond our distinct sensations. Similarly in the laboratory, the workshop, the study, the forum, even the market-place, something just be- yond always invites us, and in overtaking it, we become vaguely and tantalizingly conscious of yet more beyond. This "beyond" presents itself partly in open questions solvable by our present clearly-evolved faculties, and partly through faculties but little evolved and little understood. The groups of course merge into each other, as we have so often had occasion to notice that subdivisions do. In the first group are the phenomena whose genuineness nobody doubts, but that are not yet correlated, like the Aurora Borealis ; or phenomena not yet actually witnessed, but clearly ascertained, like the Pole before Peary, or Neptune when Adams and Leverrier had told where it was, but no man had seen it. At these questions explorers and scientific men in general are working, with faculties like those of other men, though often superior in degree. In addition to this physical group of uncorrelated know- ledge, there is a similarly uncorrelated psychical group of phenomena considerably known and accepted, which includes visions sleeping and waking somnambulism, and both the foregoing under hypnotism and suggestion. But beyond that group of phenomena well known but poorly correlated, is a mass of phenomena newly and rarely observed which are as yet so strange that they are generally attributed to illusion or deceit. These phenomena are in the borderland of faculty, as well as in the borderland of knowledge. They depend upon human powers whose exist- ence is but lately suspected, and still generally doubted, and which, if they exist, are the very latest and rarest fruits of evolution. The fact that people vary enormously in their powers, is obvious to all but the immense majority having inferior powers. That great ability of any kind is rare, is probably a corollary of evolution (though I have not yet happened Ch. VII] Differences in Men's Sensibilities 85 on any demonstration of such a connection) : so it is to be expected that new powers should be manifested by but few people. That such is the case regarding certain powers to be described later, has been used as an argument against their genuineness. There may be other arguments against it that are good, but this one, as far as it goes, is certainly for it. Intellectually and emotionally men differ among themselves more widely than any other genus of animals. I don't mean merely the difference between ordinary men and Beethovens and Shaksperes, who have faculties in high degree which almost everybody has in perceptible degree, but I mean that some men seem to possess faculties which most men seem not to possess at all. One of these most marked differences is in the premonitions of the unsensed universe. Even on the emotional side, some men have virtually no such pre- monitions, while they illumine the faces of others so that you can often pick out such men on the street. Such premo- nitions are of course vague, and tend to become fantastic "such stuff as dreams are made of," and in the efforts to give them precision, many systems have been built; and too often those not built in the laboratories, have fallen to pieces with great destruction to the reasonable faiths that were built in with unreasonable ones, and to the accompany- ing systems of morality. In truth, so far, the laboratory, the observatory, and their kindred have been the only places of permanently successful effort to increase our knowledge of the Beyond. But in the laboratory and the study, feeling the Beyond is greatly " sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought." Yet not only is the recognition of its existence a commonplace of healthy mental function, but emotional relations with it often seem essential to a worthy and symmetrical personality. It may well be questioned whether, even in the most common- place and humble people who command our respect, this feel- ing is not always very definite. Certainly the vast majority of them, even many of them who scoff at the ordinary mani- festations of religion, are religious in their way, having a fidelity to such ideals as they have, that rises to the mystical. There are indeed few human beings who are not some- 86 Introduction to Book 11 [Bk. II where, somehow, sometime, exalted by this mystical com- munion. It may be in a Gothic cathedral or a Methodist meeting-house, or in the chapel where the brigand prays for success in his expedition; it may be before the Matterhorn or the Sistine Madonna ; before McAndrews's engine or " a weed's plain heart." The person experiencing it may be a Saint Francis or an Uncle Tom; the occasions may be few in a life-time, or they may include almost every conscious moment; they may drive out of life almost every duty and responsibility, or they may overcrowd it with them, and in- tensify and sanctify them all, the humblest as truly as the greatest. But where, when, how, to whom, the feeling comes, it comes some time to nearly all; and whatever its name, it is a recognition of something beyond what we know, and greater than we know. And yet, while he who has not intensely felt his oneness with all conscious being, has not felt the Best, the attempt to live entirely in this feeling has on the whole been counter to the best uses of life narrowing, enervating, and even bestializing. While mysticism includes the roses of Saint Elizabeth, it also includes the filth of Stylites, and the un- natural ecstasies of the celestial marriage. But by no means all the persons who have had this mystic sense have been vagabonds and parasites. Some of them have left work of inestimable value, though of the value of much of it there have been enormous differences of opinion. James in his Varieties of Religious Experience, quotes with approval from Dr. Bucke's book which I have already cited. It contains some interesting theories, and quite interesting accounts of a couple of dozen people, from the prophet Moses to Walt Whitman, who have attained the Cosmic Con- sciousness, which Dr. Bucke places as the third plane in terrestrial experience, the first being mere consciousness of the environment, which beasts share with us ; the second, the ordi- nary human subjective consciousness, the name of which in our translation from German philosophy is very unfortunate " self consciousness " being well established as signifying awk- ward feelings in society. Dr. Bucke seems to think that Cosmic Consciousness the feeling of oneness with Nature our forces, its forces; our Ch. VII] Cosmic Consciousness 87 thoughts, its thoughts; our life, its life, universal and eter- nal ; our consciousness, all consciousness is the endowment of but a few favored beings, and that they generally get it at the culminating time of life, between thirty-five and forty-five, by some such knock-down experience as St. Paul's, and gener- ally accompanied with an apparent blaze of glory, subjective at least. I suspect that more people are* blest with it than he supposes. He says himself that it is not necessarily accom- panied with any extraordinary general capacities. I (anybody writing of these things, ought to contribute what he can to the sum of experience) I cannot remember when I did not have the rudiments of it before great scenery and great music, and it culminated in me ten years before the usual period he assigns. It came with the blaze of light, but the light was from the natural sunset which, however, seemed that evening not confined to the far-off clouds, but to pervade the whole atmosphere and all other things, including me, and to be per- vaded by energy and mind and sympathy. Dr. Bucke says, rightly, I think, that the influence lasts in its fullness but minutes, seldom hours, but is never lost, and is sometimes renewed and reinforced. But I wouldn't advise anybody wishing to retain it vividly, to plunge into the competition of American business ; and even into studies of practical affairs economics, politics, and the like: I suspect one has to keep his eyes pretty wide open to be fairly conscious of any Cosmic Relations that may inhere in such interests. It is not during the comparatively brief period covered by human records, that most of the impressions that have been in advance of knowledge during all evolution, have oeen overtaken by the understanding. With the exception of some indication that the color sense has developed some- what since Homer, our recognized senses and physical powers generally seem about the same in number and quality that they were at the earliest period we know of. Yet the pro- gress of mankind as we generally know it, has been some- what in the development of them. Everybody who sees much of ordinary laborers, knows that the best class of mankind has gone past the vast majority even in the ordinary senses of sight and hearing. 88 Introduction to Boole II [Bk. II But in the nineteenth century, especially late in it, began to appear indications that, in a few exceptional individuals, evolution had brought the human organism to a point where it exercises modes of force before little known, if at all; manifests a complexity of personality and relations to other personalities, before unsuspected ; and receives knowledge not only through new channels, but of a new kind. Yet these new faculties seem to belong in an old range beginning in knowing good people from bad " by instinct/' or knowing when there's an unseen cat in the room, and now extending up to seeing things without using eyes, hearing things without using ears, and getting, in other ways we don't know, impressions of the unsensed universe, including what appear to be innumerable personalities. These impressions may come from the recollec- tions (often unexpressed and even unconscious, so far as we know) of other people, or from discarnate intelligences, or in some other way that we cannot conjecture much more than a worm with only color pigments can conjecture the visions of Turner. In the presence of the latest of these phenomena, a man is like such a worm exposing his pigment-spot to the reflected lights which make our visible universe ; or like an insect with a rudimentary sense of hearing, fluttering in a hall where an orchestra is playing. They must have some stirrings which hold about the same place in their interests and sensations, that our wonderings do before these matters of which our senses give us such faint inklings, and among which our curiosities do such clumsy fumblings. In proceeding to the study of the borderland of knowledge, and to some conjectures of what may lie beyond the border- land, I shall attempt nothing but the study of phenomena, and a few cautious inferences from them. I lack the inclination and, I suspect, the capacity, to take a lot of words like "infinite," "eternal," "absolute," which are simply denials of knowledge, or " omniscience," " omnipresence," " omnipo- tence," which are assertions of something the human mind cannot grasp, and by keeping such words a long time in the air, as jugglers do their balls, construct a system of Philoso- phy. Previous to Spencer, and to some extent since, thinkers Ch. VII] Guesswork and Philosophy 89 have done so much of this that, despite suggestions like Kant's of the cosmogony, most of their work simply doubled on itself in circles, its predicates being merely its subjects in different phraseology; and its conclusions, like its premises, pseud- ideas with no possibilities of forecast in them. And yet for three thousand years the imagination has been the main instrument of philosophy, and curiosity beyond phenomena its main motive both to such an extent that minds devoted to the subject have, both by habit and sur- vival, been so shaped for such vaporings, that it is still rare to find a mind inclined to philosophy which does not habitu- ally seek those mists. And it is equally rare to find a mind so open to the implications of evolution as to be guided by them in all its speculations, and thus saved from clueless wandering in the fog. The more I read of philosophy and histories of philosophy, the harder I find it to understand why men now trouble themselves with the guesses that were made on the material thinkers had before the recent knowledge of the physiology of the senses, and the persistence of force, and its relations to nerve function. Until those discoveries, men certainly knew nothing worth considering regarding the fundamental question of the relations of mind and matter: so there could be no enduring basis for psychological speculation, nor the elements of a substantial organic body of doctrine to bear the name Philosophy. There was nothing but a chaotic fluttering mass of contradictions, without a single established principle on which to base a rule of conduct, much less any coherent body of ethics founded on what is, for us, universal law. Fragmentary rules of conduct had been derived from ex- perience, and embodied by men of genius in immortal phrases ; and those rules had been in various degrees wrought into sporadic and usually fleeting systems ; but the foundation for any universal and universally acknowledged systems of psy- chology, philosophy, or ethics, was unknown. I shall therefore not follow fashions still too current, by encumbering what I have to say with many citations of guesses that were .made before our recent knowledge. Among the good reasons why I don't cite them, is that I know, and care to know, very little about them. Even many guesses 90 Introduction to Book II [Bk. II that were made so recently as just before the accumulation and verification of facts by the Society for Psychical Re- search, are often too antiquated for our present purpose. I shall try, therefore, to make my examination of the subjects which tempt to the old-fashioned philosophy as free from it as I can. But that is no easy task : for everything we know each science into which we have classified it, shades off somewhere into the unknown, and much that we have to deal with has hardly emerged from it. The new questions are tangled up with questions older than our records, but which have had little scientific consideration until some thirty years ago, and have not had as much since as their importance may be found to justify. They have, however, to some ex- tent, been named and classified, which is the beginning of science, and are, some of them at least, being slowly cor- related with our present knowledge. Certainties have a tendency to grow commonplace. Even mountains and oceans satisfy for but a time : so the flights of great and venturesome souls tend to the shifting skies of un- verified beliefs. These are sometimes misleading, but often inspiring, and it is one of the highest of intellectual delights to watch them through history, gradually becoming brighter and more definite; and helping make them so is perhaps the highest of intellectual functions. BOOK II PART I TELEKINESIS CHAPTER VIII MOLAR TELEKINESIS WHILE the past half-century seems to have shown us more of our Cosmic Relations, and to have widened them more, than all preceding time since man was far enough evolved to write his history, most attention has been attracted by the revolutionary discoveries affecting transportation of mat- ter, and the communication of ordinary intelligence by molecular forces of which we had long had some sort of con- ception. Of late, however, much attention has been devoted to new faculties and new means of communication. Included with the phenomena out of which knowledge is built, is the evolution of the senses which take cognizance of those phenomena ; and during the last half-century much attention has been drawn to indications of an evolution of senses, or sensibilities, that take cognizance of phenomena before unknown, and that may perhaps surpass in importance (if comparisons can reasonably be made) any of the avenues of knowledge previously known. But in passing to the consideration of these matters, let it be distinctly understood that we are to consider only phe- nomena, and not mere speculations on assumptions regard- ing the transcendent world, which have made the bulk of what has been called philosophy. I shall deal freely in pro- visional assumptions, but only regarding phenomena, and I shall not use such words as infinite and eternal and un- conditioned, in any other sense than as indicating directions, regarding whose goals I shall not even knowingly make as- sumptions. To cut it short : beyond this point, this book, so 91 92 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I far as it is not record of fact, is mainly candid guesswork regarding fact. Yet in being so, it admits no affiliation with the famous masses of guesswork which announce themselves as established truth. On the borderland of our knowledge, we shall meet many strange and startling statements, among which there is un- doubtedly a substantial mass of fact, but just what that mass is, we shall find hard to determine, and after we have done our best to separate it, we shall find it equally hard to cor- relate it with our established knowledge. To the statements, the winnowing, and the correlation, we will now apply our- selves. And let us do so with the hope that we may find some new inspirations to lift us, if not back to our outworn creeds, at least to all in them which promoted our higher interests, and perhaps to more enlightened creeds promoting interests higher still. Early writings and traditions abound in accounts of magical control of nature, mysterious visions, and spiritual communi- cations and possessions, which may have been partly the results of some rudimentary senses or susceptibilities akin to those which, about the middle of the last century, were manifested in America, and since have appeared sporadically through Europe. At first persons occupying the two extremes of mental habit theologians and scientists, alike generally scouted these alleged phenomena as fraudulent, and refused even to investi- gate them. But the genuineness of some of them may now be considered established in the scientific world, and that of several others held fairly open to consideration. The phenomena are both physical and psychical, though with some mysterious connection between them: for most persons, though not all, manifesting one group, have mani- fested the other. The physical group is in the powers (I) to move material objects by some extra-muscular force, and often without con- tact; (II) to pass matter through matter without disintegrat- ing either mass; (III) to cause motion in the air without any obvious agency. The aforesaid changes effected by the mys- terious force or forces are molar. It is claimed that there are Ch. VIII] Kinds of Telekinesis 93 powers to produce also the following which are molecular: (IV) when near to certain objects notably running water and gold, and probably some others yet to be ascertained to establish involuntarily between the operator and the object, some sort of current not yet named, but apparently akin to magnetism, which not only makes the operator aware of the nearness of the object, but causes in him nervous and mus- cular reactions; (V) to produce sounds from tangible objects and from the air, by some agency as yet unknown; (VI) sim- ilarly to produce lights; (VII) also changes of the air's tem- perature; (VIII) also evanescent unmaterial semblances of material objects. To the first of these powers is now generally applied the name telekinesis. The tele, however, is not to be regarded in the frequent sense of distant from, but merely as not in contact with. And as the objects concerned in all of the eight cate- gories are not in contact with the operator's body, we may tentatively consider all these modes of force as telekinetic, though as more is known about them, such of them as survive scrutiny may receive separate names. The first of these alleged modes of force I have seen in action, and know to be genuine. There is plenty of honest testimony to the rest ; the only questions arise over the possi- bilities of illusion. The testimony to the fourth (" dowsing ") and fifth (sound) is strong enough to have convinced me. That to the sixth (light) I consider in some cases very good, but in most not yet convincing. For the rest, the testimony does not seem to me convincing, perhaps because the allega- tions are so improbable, but the testimony is too strong to be ignored. The telekinetic forces ex vi termini act outside the body. The following forces are alleged to have acted through the will upon the body itself. I venture to suggest the name autokinetic. They are said (I) to lift the body independently of any known agency; (II) to resist the effects of heat; (III) to produce stigmata and blisters. The testimony to the third seems convincing, also that to one class of incidents of the second ; to the first, as to some sorts of telekinesis, it is not as strong as the great improbability requires, and yet too strong to be ignored. 94 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I There is another new force of which we see evidences in the activities of the alleged spiritual mediums. I call it psychokinesis. It will be described in due course. The uncorrelated psychical phenomena we will consider in Part III of this Book II. I am fortunate in being able to begin an account of teleki- nesis from my own experience one which, in boyhood, in- augurated an interest in these subjects that has endured through a long life. In the winter of 1856-7 or the spring of 1857, on a Sunday afternoon, I was one of a dozen or so of the pupils of General Russell's school in New Haven who were loafing in one of the recitation rooms, when one of them said to P : " Ghost, show us the spirits ! " The boy addressed was a delicate-looking chap of medium height, some sixteen or seventeen years old, whose gentle and truthful nature had made him a favorite with us all to a greater degree perhaps than any other boy in the school. The subject once opened, there was a quite general talk about raps being heard about his bed, and similar stories. It was news to me. I had previously supposed that his nick- name of " Ghost " was the result of his comparatively shadowy appearance, but I was to learn better. He objected to giving the exhibition because, he said, it tired him so ; but at last he was persuaded. There were some music-stands in the room, probably two or three, over which we did our fluting and fiddling. Cer- tainly they contained no hidden batteries and connections. Each consisted of a wooden slab some two inches thick, and some fifteen by eighteen in width and length, resting on the floor ; then from this a stick some two by three, rising to the height required by the average player; and on top of the stick, an inclined piece about the size of the base, but much thinner, serving as a desk for the music. The whole thing was made, probably, of white pine, and unpainted. P stood before one of these stands, placing his fingers and thumbs lightly on the desk, which sloped with the top away from him. Soon, he said : " If there are any spirits pres- ent, will they please tip the stand?" No response. After Ch. VIII] P '* Music-Stand 95 several repetitions of the question, the stand tipped gently o- ward him. Now, as the desk sloped away from him, its tipping toward him by his muscular force was absolutely impossible. After a time the stand would tip in response to all sorts of questions, and spell words in response to letters as the alphabet was repeated. Later knowledge leads me to believe that these tippings were in response to P 's unconscious volition. Soon P *s arms began to jerk convulsively, so that his hands ceased their permanent contact with the stand, and began to tap it with increasing frequency and strength. Soon the stand ceased to fall back into its natural position of stand- ing on the floor, but even in the intervals between the tap- pings, while his hands did not touch it, remained tipping toward him, not rising and falling as his hands rose and fell, but tipped permanently. The force produced this sus- pension without contact literally was telekinesis. The jerkings increased in frequency and violence to a rapid tattoo of his fingers on the stand, the distances away from it between the beats increasing to nearly or quite a foot, and the stand steadily tipping more and more toward him until, probably, the top had passed the center of gravity, and yet it did not fall toward him or back toward its natural position, but was virtually held in what all previous knowledge would have declared an impossible position. Then he said : " Try to pull it down," and the strongest boy among us on one side of the base, and I, who was perhaps the heaviest, on the other, tried to turn the base back to the floor. We could not. We spread ourselves on the floor, throwing our hands and the weight of our bodies over the raised bottom of the stand, but we could only sway it a little, while his hands continued playing their tattoo both hands irregularly, not systematically relieving each other so as to exercise a continuous pressure, but leaving the stand, at in- tervals of perhaps a quarter of a second each, alternately with and without contact with him. The contest between the mus- cular force of the strong boys at the base, and P 's mysteri- ous force at the desk, continued for a minute or two, until the base of the structure was broken off or the nails drawn out, and P sank into a chair exhausted. The frail fellow had 96 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I put forth more force of some kind than the muscular force of two boys, each of much more than his weight and many times his muscular strength. We were out of breath and tired too. I don't remember whether P held the upper part suspended in the air, or whether a mysterious circuit with the earth was broken when we broke off the base. Fatigue like P 's is generally mentioned as following experiences like his, and the other manifestations of tele- kinesis. There are a few instances, however, where appar- ently no fatigue is experienced. I remember realizing at the time that his force could not be electrical, as it acted through wood. There was no cabinet, no subdued light, no machinery but a commonplace piece of furniture familiar to all of us, no money paid for the show, nothing but an honest and kindly boy sacrificing himself for the entertainment of his mates. The broken stand remained there as evidence that we had not been hypnotized, and I seem to remember some incon- venience from being unable to use it before it was mended. Now if I have not told those things exactly as they occurred, I never told any other concatenation of as many things exactly as they occurred. The fact of his putting forth more of his mysterious force than we did of our mus- cular force, is as indubitable as any fact in my experience. The manifestation was so simple and coherent that not only was room for error conspicuously lacking at the time, but room for failure or distortion of memory has been conspicu- ously lacking since. A decade ago, Podmore would probably have urged against this testimony that it has no confirmation; that the parties were all boys ; that the only witness was convicted during his youth of writing verses, and has since written fiction; that the testimony is nearly sixty years after the event, and that it was given when the witness was presumably in his dotage. Regarding the last objection I am not entitled to an opinion, and the others are all facts. The other witnesses of P 's phenomena I have entirely lost sight of, and indeed forgotten who they were, except the boy who helped me break the stand. He was a Spanish-American, and went back to his own people. Ch. VIII] Another Amateur Table Tipper 97 For anybody, however, who, in spite of all that, is rash enough to accept the testimony, telekinesis is proved. If I doubt that occurrence, I must doubt every other ex- perience I ever had. My certainty regarding those phenomena cannot be increased. But if it could be, it of course would be by the vast accumulation since then, of evidence of similar phenomena. There have been many ludicrous efforts to account for such things by mechanical means, and regarding my experience with P , I have been asked in many polite ways if I am a fool. But all this was long ago: of late the evidence for telekinesis is so strong as to have put an end to skepticism in a large part of the educated world. Manifestations of telekinesis have been known to come from many persons, and whatever the supplementary tricks of Eusapia Palladino the " medium " most noted at present there seems no extravagance in assuming that this mode of force is sometimes manifested by her, and is the foundation of anything genuine in her performances. Here is an account furnished by one of my sisters of an occurrence somewhat similar to mine, witnessed by her : " The remarkable ' table tipping ' of which I have told you occurred many years ago in the home of one of my school friends. She had an older, invalid sister, a charming, mag- netic woman, whose room was the center of all the life and gaiety of the family. One day a number of us girls were seated, as was our wont, around her bed an old-fashioned 'four-poster' (for it was an old-fashioned home), when the conversation drifted to ' spiritual rappings,' ghosts, etc. One of our number (Miss A.), who had recently displayed remark- able powers in moving and tipping furniture, was challenged to make a small but very heavy oval marble-topped table, probably three or three-and-a-half feet in its long diameter, move over to the bed and mount it. She accepted the chal- lenge, while we all watched with laughing incredulity. She simply rested the tips of the fingers of both hands on the table, and in a short time it began to move, she following. When it reached the foot of the bed it began at once slowly to wriggle up the side I can describe its motion in no better way until it lay on its side at the feet of the startled invalid. 98 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I " On inquiring of Miss A. what her sensations were while the table was moving, we were told that she felt as if a stream of cold water were running from her finger tips up her arms, and she now felt quite exhausted. "Not one of us could have lifted the table onto the bed, using all the strength we possessed. She was soon after for- bidden to make such experiments on account of the exhaustion which followed." The other witnesses of Miss A/s phenomena are all dead. But since that day so much well-authenticated evidence of similar phenomena has accumulated, that one witness is worth more now than a dozen were then. I have been somewhat surprised at the number of private persons free from all suspicion of deceit, and not working for money, who have manifested such phenomena. While I have been busy at this book, the conversation around the sup- per-table at the Authors' Club has more than once turned on experiences which have not yet been correlated with estab- lished knowledge, and probably half the men present have related some. The next case will be taken from the Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research, but before giving it, it will be well to give some idea of that society and its publications, citations from which will constitute a large part of the remainder of this work. Of course, like all other phenomena, these we are con- sidering have their recurrent waves (Professor Newbold says at intervals of about six centuries) of frequency and scarcity, as required by the law of vibration, or " rhythm of motion " as Spencer calls it; and probably the only new thing about them is that the latest wave happened, as already stated, to start up in the middle of the last century, and roll into the ken of modern science. Under the present faith in facts, there has been accumulated a vast array of those connected with these subjects. But apparently unlike most other matters of wide curiosity, until comparatively lately few systematic attempts were made to " explain " them to correlate them with established knowledge. About 1880, a group of friends connected with the Uni- versities of Cambridge and Dublin, met for the investigation Ch. VIII] The Society for Psychical Research 99 of obscure phenomena. It will not be surprising if the future regards the gathering of these friends as epoch-making. In 1882 they founded the Society for Psychical Research. The name Psychical was too narrow : for physical phenomena have also been examined and reported upon. Up to that time, so far as I know, neither class of phenomena uncorrelated with existing science had received the attention of any organ- ized body of workers. In October, 1882, the society issued the first " Part " of its " Proceedings," to be hereafter alluded to in these pages so frequently as to require the abbreviation " Pr. S. P. R.," and later merely Pr. The first volume was completed in December, 1883. The twenty-sixth volume was completed in 1913.* The Society has also issued a " Journal " exclusively for its members, of which the fifteenth volume was completed in 1912. The general intellectual culture concentrated in the Society has seldom been equalled in any learned organization. The reports almost without exception are models of reasoning and diction. For their cultural effect alone most of them are well worth reading. The idea of vulgar and ignorant credulity in connection with the authors is ludicrous. Nor is it possible to feel regarding the reports as a mass, the misgivings ger- mane to the conclusions of purely literary persons regarding practical affairs : for though Frederic Myers, for instance, held a high position in literature ; Henry Sidgwick held one equally * The 8. P. R. was singularly fortunate in its founders. They were all remarkable persons. Among them, in addition to Professor (now Sir William) Barrett of the University of Dublin, who called them to- gether, were Professor Henry Bidpwick of the University of Cambridge, and Messrs. F. W. H. Mvers and Edmund Gurney, ex-fellows of Cam- bridge. Soon after the start, the Cambridge group was increased by Mrs. Sidgwickand Professor and Mrs. Verrall. all of whom, especially the ladies, contributed important matter to the Proceedings. Mrs. Verrall's are quite voluminous, and their scientific value is illuminated by rare literary charm Closely associated with those already named soon became America's greatest psychologist, Professor William James, and Dr. Richard Hodgson, who in many respects surpassed any of those named earlier, yet he did not, like some of them, leave an important book as A monu- ment, or, like others, attain fame in sciences outside of "Psychical Re- search." But in devotion to the cause, in acuteness of the intelligence which he brought to it. especially in the detection of fraud : and in grasp of the indications of general principle scattered among its bewil- dering phenomena, he was perhaps 3 first of all. James said that he 100 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I high in the sciences of mind and society; Sir William Crookes, Sir Oliver Lodge, and Sir William Barrett have all received knighthood for their eminence in the physical sciences, and the position in psychology of Professors James, Royce, and Morton Prince I almost feel like asking the reader's pardon for naming in an American book. That such a society should have spent its time over trifling or unverified stories would be ridiculous to presume. The twenty-six volumes of the society's Proceedings, and its Journal, contain also pretty much everything of great con- sequence on the subject that has been reported elsewhere. There is also a similar single volume of reports of a very eminent American society that existed from 1885 to 1889, and several volumes of reports of a later American society. So much of these later American reports is duplicated or sum- marized in the English reports, that I have not made a thor- ough study of them. In addition to these various reports, the literature of the subject in English is already considerable, though until the last fifth of the last century, with the excep- tion of a few books on Mesmerism (or Hypnotism) and Som- nambulism, and the usual quack mystical works, it was mainly restricted to the general treatises on Psychology. The con- tinental reports and literature are worth attention, though until lately most continental investigators reported through the S. P. R. knew no handling of a large mass of elusive matter to surpass Hodg- son's report in Pr. XIII. Hodgson began as the hardest-headed of the skeptics, exposed more frauds than any other man, and eventually be- came an enthusiastic spiritist. The last dozen years or so of his life were spent in America as Secretary of the American Branch of the S. P. R Other officers and members hare been Lord Rayleigh ; Professors Bowditch. Cope, Crookes, Fullerton, L. P. Jacks, Langley, Lodge, Gilbert Murray, Newbold, Newcomb, Purapelly, Royce ; Drs. W. T. Harris, L. Emmett Holt, and Morton Prince ; and Messrs. Thomas Da- vidson, W. E. Gladstone, J. G. Piddington, Frank Podmore, and A. R. Wallace. Of the active members: Sidgwick, Podmore, Gurney, Myers, Hodg- son, and James have gone from earth perhaps into the deepest of the mysteries which absorbed so much of their interest. Professors Lodge, Crookes, and Barrett, who were all of the early group, and have contributed much to the Proceedings, still survive with years and honors thick upon them. Sir Oliver Lodge, approaching the subject with the usual scientific skepticism, became a convinced spiritist, and has written a volume on The Survival of Man. Ch. VIII] As to the Evidence 101 That large portion of the scientific world which has refused to study the phenomena, of course scouts the questions alto- gether. Professor Sidgwick, in his inaugural address as first Pres- ident of the Society, said (Pr. I, 8) : "It is a scandal that the dispute as to the reality of these phenomena should still be going on, that so many competent witnesses should have declared their belief in them, that so many others should be profoundly interested in having the question determined, and yet that the educated world, as a body, should still be simply in the attitude of incredulity." Probably no equal authority would find it worth while to express himself to that effect now. Throughout the early volumes of the Pr. S. P. R. a great deal of attention was given to questions of intentional fraud, and an enormous deal of it was unearthed. But gradually enough unquestionable phenomena and reliable " mediums " were found to leave the society little time or temptation to bother with others. The day for extreme skepticism regarding the actuality of most of the phenomena is now past. To doubt it is now, as in the oft-quoted phrase of Schopenhauer regarding telopsis, not skepticism, but ignorance. I shall not waste much space in attempts to authenticate them. Men have been very properly and profitably hung on the unsupported evidence of children, the only additional requirement being confirmative circumstances. Such circumstances, the existence of parallel verified cases, the character of the witness, and consistency of the general conditions, I shall try to regard in giving unsupported evidence. Yet the principle illustrated is the essential thing, and if it is so well supported as to deserve illustrating at all, it might sometimes be better illustrated for the general reader by even an impressive fictitious narra- tive, than by a squalid or malodorous fact. It is often impossible within the limits to give a fair ex- position of evidence on both sides. Persons caring for that must go to originals. I will give only what appear to me the points worth considering, with as fair an exhibition of the tendency of evidence as the space and my capacities permit. 102 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I We now proceed to some other cases of telekinesis taken from the Proceedings. I shall occasionally obtrude a query or suggestion or explanation in square brackets with my initials [thus: H. H.]. The first account is virtually identical with my experience with P and the music-stand. It is by Mr. George Allman Armstrong, of 8, Leesonplace, Dublin, and Ardnacarrig, Bandon . . . June 1, 1887. (Pr. VII, 158-9) : " This manifestation . . . required a great amount of concen- trated will power, and when successful the results were startling, and the apparent physical force developed really wonderful The table slowly swayed from side to side like a pendulum, stopped completely, and then, as if imbued with life, and quite suddenly, rose completely off the floor to a height of a foot or fourteen inches at least, and nearly always came down with immense force, which ... on several occasions proved destructive to itself, as the broken limbs of the table we used . . . could testify. This table, I may add, was a round, rather heavy, walnut one, with a central column, standing on three claw legs, and it would have been impossible for us unaided to have de- veloped the force (by muscular energy) required to produce this manifestation On several occasions I have succeeded in raising the table without contact, the latter rising to our fingers held over it at a height of several inches, like the keeper to a strong electro-magnet; in these instances the table swayed slowly in mid-air for many seconds before coming down with a crash Frequently . . . the table would rise on one leg, in which position I willed it to remain, the united efforts of the rest to press it down to its normal position being utterly fruitless, and often resulting in a fracture." In Pr. S. P. R. and elsewhere are given scores, probably hundreds, of authenticated accounts of phenomena similar to those just described, and due to both non-professional and professional mediums. There are two specially good ones in Pr. IV, 29, and IX, 259. The presumption for the genuineness of such phenomena is of course greater where the mediums are persons least likely to deceive, such as children, and my young friend P . There are many such cases. The two following accounts are furnished by Professor Alexander of the Uni- versity of Rio Janeiro (Pr. VII, 175f.) : Ch. VIII] The Davis Children 103 " At tea the dining-room table, round which were seated Mr. Davis, Mrs. Davis, their five little daughters, Mrs. Z., and I, swayed backward and forward, or rose at one end in sudden emphatic movements." A very homogeneous party! It will often be seen later that these phenomena are generally better as the sitters are more homogeneous. Professor Alexander's account continues: " I requested C., who was seated two places from me, her little sister D. being between us, to place her hand on the back of my chair, which she did, touching it with apparent lightness. The chair began at once to sway from side to side, and continued to do so after I had taken my feet from the ground. There was an application of great power All this while C. sat immovable; and it was very manifest that she made not the slightest effort. The next evening Mr. X., who is very muscular, took C.'s seat, while I retained my own; and he then tried" [By muscular force. H. H.} "to produce the same effect under exactly the same conditions, with the result that his chair slid back, while mine remained immov- able. My weight, which I suppose has not changed to any considerable degree since then, I find to be 13st." [182 Ibs. H. H.] " The high chair in which Amy, a child then thirteen months old, was seated was moved backwards and forwards about 10 or 12 inches, between the table and the wall, this being done so abruptly that the chair was sometimes forced partly under the table and threatened to fall backwards. The child, instead of being alarmed, chuckled and laughed, though we older people were sometimes rather anxious lest she should be hurt On the right hand of the child was seated Mrs. Z., on the left A. The chair, while moving, . . . was not twisted round as would be the case if it were drawn forward on one side only by the foot of either of the neighbors 1 have tried moving the same chair myself, when seated beside Amy, and find that, although I have rather more than the average strength in my lower limbs, the push can be given only with considerable difficulty, and has the effect of turning the chair half round." In the following case (Pr. VII, 160f.) this force apparently acted in the absence of a medium; but the last three para- graphs seem to indicate a medium after all. The word medium is a handy one if it is not taken to mean too much. Here of course it means only the medium prob- ably the generator of an unknown force. Later it will mean other things. " Our informant is a gentleman occupying a responsible position; his name may be given to inquirers. 104 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I " On Friday, September 23d, I took my four pupils to a circus, . . . leaving my two servants at home All but myself returned at about 5:30, and found the two servants on the doorstep, telling the boys not to go in by the area door . . . and explaining that all the bells were ringing violently, no one touching them, and they had been doing so almost ever since we left. I left home, I think, at about 7 o'clock. At about 9 :30 . . . the cook came over ... to say that we must come back, as there were such dreadful knockings going on in the house It sounded like a mallet on a wooden floor, speaking loosely. The laundryman came in soon after it began and was, I believe, quite scared A teacher in the board school was so scared by the knocking that he would not stay in the house, but went on the doorstep When I came back I found the same state of things; the servants almost in hysterics, and the bells ringing. The bells hang all in one row, just inside the area door and opposite the kitchen door, nine of them As to the possibility of cats or rats doing it: this is a new house. . . . We have never seen or heard the slightest trace of a rat, nor have we ever to our knowledge had a strange cat in ; nor, indeed, could one, as far as I know, get into the floor anywhere The bell hanger entirely agreed with me that it would be an im- possibility for any animal, or even animals, to ring them all as they were rung 1 ought to say that the wires of the bells distinctly pulled it was not only the bells or clappers moving; indeed, in one or two cases they could be heard grating under the floor. The bell-handles were not moved "Next day Mrs. K. took the boys to service, and when they came back . . . the cook told her (and I believe she is perfectly trustworthy, as far as truthfulness goes) that soon after they left the bells had begun to ring; two of them, at least, and so violently that at last she got the steps and got two of the bells off After that they heard the wires pulled in the floor, &c. " Then they went upstairs to do the bedrooms, Mary (the housemaid) clinging to her, as she did all the time, being too scared to go about by herself. When they had got half- way up the ' knocking ' began, just as on the previous occa- sion, and as I had heard it, in sets of two and three quickly repeated raps, or, rather, blows. They ran downstairs directly, in a fright. At last they summoned courage enough to go up, and going into the bedroom where two of the boys sleep they found the hairbrush belonging to one of them on the floor by the fireplace, smashed in half " I cannot help now connecting the occurrences with the housemaid 1 am, as I have said, perfectly certain that she had nothing to do voluntarily with the bell ringing ; indeed, . . . it would be literally impossible for her to ring the bells as they were rung, even apart from any necessity to conceal the method of doing so. Ch. VIII] Daniel Dunglas Home 105 " If any further proof of her freedom from complicity were needed, her state on the Saturday night would be enough. ...She was delirious all night... till 4 in the morning;... clearly asleep, though most of the time her eyes were wide open, I suppose in the ordinary ' somnambulist ' state. She talked incessantly all night, very much about the bells, &c., and in such a way as to show she was completely alarmed and terrified at it. ... The occurrences have taken place almost always, if not always, when she has been in a state of nervous excitement ; . . . she had been upset in her nerves for some days previously." The phenomena so far cited have had nothing to do with professional mediums or persons who could have had any possible motive to deceive. There are on record hundreds of cases from similar agents, but to quote more would tend toward monotony: so let us proceed to allegations of even more remarkable manifestations, from persons so unusually endowed as to make them notorious, and not only objects of legitimate curiosity, but important in the relation their per- sonal qualities bear to the qualities of the phenomena. There- fore I will give some account of the principal ones as we meet them. Perhaps the most numerous and remarkable exhibitions of queer things during the present cycle of them in America and Europe, were given by Daniel Dunglas Home. He was born in Scotland in 1833, brought to America when nine years old, lived for some time in Norwich, Conn., and is alleged to have exhibited in many places in America and Europe pretty much everything of the marvelous that has been exhibited by anybody. In addition to such phe- nomena as those already described, he is credited, or charged, with telepathy, telopsis (clairvoyance), prophecy, seeing and conversing with spirits, spirit possession, healing, and a habit of getting himself married and adopted by rich women. He also had a remarkable power of ingratiating himself with important people, even being a favorite at the courts of France and Russia. Many of the claims made for and by him seem so ex- travagant, and one side of his life, as hinted toward the end of the last paragraph, is so open to suspicion, that persons who directly know nothing of superusual phenomena, are tempted to dismiss all connected with him as humbug. 106 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Ft. I Before I read his autobiography (Incidents in My Life) I thought of him as a modern Cagliostro, but even Cagliostro, like pretty much everybody else, has lately been whitewashed; and after carefully reading Home's book, which quotes from competent sitters many accounts ranging from skepticism to enthusiasm, I am inclined to think that he was about as honest as a half-educated, anaemic, neurotic, woman-hunted sentimentalist is able to be, and this opinion is concurred in by nearly all the most able investigators, although Robert Browning, for instance, who certainly was not one of them, based " Sludge the Medium " on Home. As my own observa- tion forces me to accept some of these wonders, I do not find it easy to determine where to draw the line at the others. Some accounts of Home's are so full of gush as to seem on their face worthless; but they are supported by others from calm lawyers and men of science, which testify to things just as marvelous as those recounted by the gushers. Here is a description of Home's personality from Stainton Moses (Pr. IX, 295) of whom an account will be given a few- pages further on. " Mr. D. D. Home is a striking-looking man. His head is a good one. He shaves his face with the exception of a moustache, and his hair is bushy and curly. He gives me the impression of an honest, good person, whose intellect is not of a high order He resolutely refuses to believe in anything that he has not seen for himself. For instance, he refuses to believe in the passage of matter through matter, and when pressed concludes the argument by saying, ' I have never seen it.' . . . He accepts the theory of the return in rare instances of the departed, but believes with me that most of the manifestations proceed from a low order of spirits who hover near the earth sphere. He does not believe in Mrs. Guppy's passage through matter, nor in her honesty. He thinks that regular manifestations are not possible. Conse- quently, he disbelieves public mediums generally He said be was thankful to know that his mantle had fallen on me, and urged me to prosecute the inquiry and defend the faith. Altogether he made quite an Elijah and Elisha business of my reception. He plays and sings very nicely, and recites well. He wore several handsome diamonds, gifts from royal and distinguished persons. He is a thoroughly good, honest, weak, and very vain man, with but little intellect, and no ability to argue or defend his faith." Ch. VIII] Sir William Crookes on Home 107 There is a very interesting account of Home's personal character in Jour. S. P. R., VI, 107. Sir William Crookes says (Researches in the Phenomena of Spiritualism, p. 99) : " Mr. Home has frequently been searched before and after the seances, and he always offers to allow it. During the most remarkable occurrences I have occasionally held both his hands, and placed my feet on his feet. On no single occasion hare I proposed a modification of arrangements for the purpose of rendering trickery less possible, which he has not at once assented to, and frequently he has himself drawn attention to tests which might be tried. " I speak chiefly of Mr. Home, as he is so much more power- ful than most of the other mediums I have experimented with. But with all I have taken such precautions as to place trickery out of the list of possible explanations." The best evidential accounts of Home's phenomena, though there have been many others, are those by Sir William Crookes. On page 85 he gives the following instances of telekinetic molar effects produced by Home. But before I quote them, let me say that Sir William does not attribute them to " spirits." His " researches " were into what others called " spiritualism," not what he did. He says : P. 85 : " Tables, chairs, sofas, etc., have been moved when the medium has not been touching them 1 have had several repetitions of the experiment considered by the Committee of the Dialectical Society to be conclusive, viz., the movement of a heavy table in full light, the chairs turned with their backs on the table, about a foot off, and each person kneeling on his chair, with hands resting over the backs of the chair, but not touching the table. On one occasion this took place when I was moving about so as to see how every one was placed P. 88 : " On five separate occasions, a heavy dining-table rose between a few inches and one and a half feet off the floor, under special circumstances, which rendered trickery impos- sible. On another occasion, a heavy table rose from the floor in full light, while I was holding the medium's hands and feet On another occasion, the table rose from the floor, not only when no person was touching it, but under conditions which I had prearranged so as to assure unquestionable proof of the fact." P. 90 : "A medium, walking into my dining-room, cannot, while seated in one part of the room with a number of persons 108 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I keenly watching him, by trickery make an accordion play in my own hand when I hold it key downwards, or cause the same accordion to float about the room playing all the time." [The character of the playing will be described later. H. H.] " He cannot introduce machinery which will wave window-curtains or pull up Venetian blinds eight feet off, tie a knot in a hand- kerchief and place it in a far corner of the room, sound notes on a distant piano, cause a card-plate to float about the room, raise a water-bottle and tumbler from the table, make a coral necklace rise on end, cause a fan to move about and fan the company, or set in motion a pendulum when enclosed in a glass case firmly cemented to the wall." Here are the particulars about the necklace, etc. (Pr. VI, 113.) Miss Bird writes : " I remember the circumstances stated in this seance. I had noticed that the necklace worn by Mrs. William Crookes looked green. I asked her why her beads were green. She assured me they were her corals, and to convince me the neck- lace was passed into my hands. Instead of passing the neck- lace back I simply put it opposite me in the middle of the table. Almost as soon as I had placed the necklace it rose in a spiral shape. I called out eagerly to my brother, Dr. Bird, to look at the extraordinary conduct of the threaded corals, and whilst I was endeavoring to get his attention the erect necklace quietly subsided in a coil on the table. I have often recalled the incident, and although a skeptic by instinct, this one strange experience has made it impossible for me to doubt the assertions of others whose judgment is clear and whose uprightness is above suspicion. " ALICE L. BIRD." To this Dr. Bird adds: "I recollect my sister calling out to me: 'Look, look, at the necklace,' but at that moment my attention was directed elsewhere, and I did not actually see the phenomenon in question. " GEORGE BIRD." (C.) [I preface this paragraph with Sir William Crookes's initial, and shall frequently preface other paragraphs similarly, to indicate where the principal narrator takes up an interrupted theme. H. H.] " At the moment this occurred I was writing my notes and only caught sight of the necklace as it was set- tling down from its first movement. It made one or two slight movements afterwards, and, as I state, it seemed to me as if it had been moved from below. I mentioned this at the time and was then told by Miss Bird and others that the necklace had behaved as is now described by her. Not having seen it myself, I did not alter the statement in my note-book." Ch. VIII] Home in the Crookes Laboratory 109 Sir William published in the Quarterly Journal for Science for July 1, 1871, an account of some experiments carefully and frequently repeated in his laboratory, which demonstrated that Home could greatly increase or decrease the weight of a body by touching it. He later describes an experiment in which Home conveyed pressure not by touching the object moved, but merely by touching water that was in contact with the object, and later still without any contact whatever with any- thing related to the object moved, unless with the air and the ether. A description of the apparatus is given, but is not easy for the non-technical reader to understand. It can be found by the few who would study it, in the Journal for Science or in Mr. (as he was then) Crookes's book, the Researches, already cited. His dealings with his opponents, especially on pp. 46-8, are almost as interesting perhaps to the average reader more interesting, than his accounts of his experiments. He offered no explanation of the phenomena, simply at- tributed them to a mode of force previously unknown, which he suggested should be termed Psychic, and called upon his scientific brethren and all persons interested to assist in its investigation. The accounts, though they were subsequently confirmed by Mr. Huggins, the astronomer royal, and Mr. E. W. Cox, an eminent sergeant at law, were received with much de- rision. The author was called a spiritualist; explanations more improbable than the facts were offered by various per- sons, scientific and non-scientific; the author's farther papers on the subject were rejected by the Royal Society; sundry proceedings were taken by members of the Society for which the Society later passed a formal resolution of regret; and the whole affair was one of the most discreditable in the annals of science, except where science has been identified with theology. Sir William gave very full details of all the experiments and their reception. He said (Researches, p. 40) : "In the case of Mr. Home, the development of this force varies enormously, not only from week to week, but from hour to hour; on some occasions the force is unappreciable by my tests for an hour or more, and then suddenly reappears in 110 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Ft. I great strength. It is capable of acting at a distance from Mr. Home (not infrequently as far as two or three feet), but is always strongest close to him." (Op. cit., 10): "It has but seldom happened that a result obtained on one occasion could be subsequently confirmed and tested with apparatus especially contrived for the purpose. (Op. cit., 16-17): "A committee of scientific men met Mr. Home some months ago at St. Petersburg. They had one meeting only, which was attended with negative results; and on the strength of this they published a report highly unfavor- able to Mr. Home. The explanation of this failure, which is all they have accused him of, appears to me quite simple. Whatever the nature of Mr. Home's power, it is very variable, and at times entirely absent. It is obvious that the Russian experiment was tried when the force was at a minimum. The same thing has frequently happened within my own experi- ence. A party of scientific men met Mr. Home at my house, and the results were as negative as those at St. Petersburg. Instead, however, of throwing up the inquiry, we patiently repeated the trial a second and a third time, when we met with results which were positive. " To witness exhibitions of this force it is not necessary to have access to known psychics. The force itself is prob- ably possessed by all human beings, although the individuals endowed with an extraordinary amount of it are doubtless few. Within the last twelve months I have met in private families five or six persons possessing a sufficiently vigorous development to make me feel confident that similar results might be produced through their means to those here recorded, provided the experimentalist worked with more delicate ap- paratus, capable of indicating a fraction of a grain instead of recording pounds and ounces only. " Being firmly convinced that there could be no manifesta- tion of one form of force without the corresponding expendi- ture of some other form of force, I for a long time searched in vain for evidence of any force or power being used up in the production of these results. " Now, however, . . . after witnessing the painful state of nervous and bodily prostration in which some of these ex- periments have left Mr. Home after seeing him lying in an almost fainting condition on the floor, pale and speechless I could scarcely doubt that the evolution of psychic force is accompanied by a corresponding drain on vital force." [The reader will remember the similar cases already given. H.H.] " I have ventured to give this new force the name of Psychic Force, because of its manifest relationship to certain psycho- logical conditions." He farther quoted several eminent men of science as Ch. VIII] Bartldt's Life of Foster 111 having reached by experiment conclusions similar to his own, of whom one, 31. Thury, Professor at the Academy of Geneva, had, as early as 1855, proposed for the newly manifested force the name ectenic, because it acted in ezterno at a distance, without contact. Since then, however, the name telekinetic seems to have been settled upon by common use, though it is far from a fortunate name: for several forces already correlated are telekinetic. At the dispersal of the library of my late friend Dr. Richard Hodgson, Secretary of the American Branch of the Society for Psychical Research, there came into my possession a little book now out of print, called "The Salem Seer. Reminis- cences of Charles H. Foster, by George C. Bartlett." The subject of this book was very well known from about 1865 to 1880. He traveled freely in America, England, and Australia, received all comers, and had a business agent the author of the little book referred to. Thirty years ago I should have hesitated to quote from this book, because few of its accounts have the standard of authenticity then considered essential. Of most of the events Mr. Bartlett, the author, who was generally present, is the only known witness, the other witnesses generally being news- paper reporters whose names are not given; but of course the presumption is that they saw what they reported, so that the testimony approaches very close to the standard two mutually confirmatory witnesses, and some of it is highly intelligent. Few of the witnesses were professed spiritualists, and nearly all of them began by doubting. Mr. Bartlett also quotes not a few who continued to doubt, and gives other evidence of his own sincerity. His book was probably not composed in awe of literary criticism, but is ingenuous to a degree that encourages confidence not the most " scientific " of evidence; but the skepticism regarding the phenomena to-day is rather regarding their alleged spiritistic source than their genuineness. In regard to Mr. Bartlett's testimony, moreover, it is to be said that he is still living at Tolland, Connecticut, where he enjoys the confidence and respect of his neighbors, and 112 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I where, though he has about reached his threescore years and ten, he is much given to playing tennis. We have exchanged several letters, and he called upon me during a recent visit to New York. I do not often meet a man who inspires me with as much confidence in his sincerity. It does not detract from the weight of his evidence that, notwithstanding the marvels it contains, he does not accept the spiritistic solution. But even assuming the accounts given and quoted by him to be unreliable, they describe occurrences so much like many later ones which have been abundantly verified, that they are almost as safe to reason or guess from. It is further to be said that the evidence now necessary to make one of these stories worth attention, is small beside what was necessary before the S. P. E. had accumulated such overwhelming evidence of similar occurrences. Now the bur- den of proof is rather on those who deny than on those who assert. I find that those who deny are almost invariably those who never saw the phenomena at all. So true is this, that now when I find anybody vociferously denying the pos- sibility of such things, and ask him if he ever saw any manifestation of them from accredited agents, I expect a negative answer, and am seldom disappointed. I have met people who say : " Oh, Foster is entirely discredited," and so far, not one of them had ever seen a manifestation of the strange powers from him or anybody else. Mr. Bartlett says that Foster spent a long time with Bulwer, and was the original of " Margrane " in A Strange Story. Bartlett says (op. cit., 24, 38, 49) : " Mediums who can easily become entranced, or be controlled successfully by this mysterious influence, can as easily be con- trolled by their associates in this life If their associations are in the higher and better walks of life, their lives will average well. On the contrary, if they are associated with the immoral, they are easily led down the stream. It has been my observation that when a man or woman has been controlled by these peculiar influences, they are inclined to be weak, dissipated, and im- moral. They are almost invariably kind-hearted, generous, and childlike." Those of sufficient importance to be investigated by the S. P. K. have been very decent people, perhaps partly from Ch. VIII] Fosters Character and Heredity 113 being in such good company, and some of the heteromatic writers of the very highest character and attainments. Bart- lett goes on : " It has been said, ' Money flowed into his coffers like water, and as freely flowed out, leaving nothing behind.' I wish to state most emphatically that not a dollar did Mr. Foster squan- der in gambling While he had many faults, gambling was not one of them. He did not even know the Ace of Spades from the Queen of Hearts " [which is much more than can be said of the researchers into Thought Transference or of the present writer on these profundities. H.H.]. Bartlett continues: " Foster stood apart from all men While he was like others he was also peculiarly unlike all others. He was extravagantly dual. He was not only Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, but he repre- sented half-a-dozen different Jekylls and Hydes He was an unbalanced genius, and at times, I should say, insane. He had a heart so large indeed that it took in the world : tears for the afflicted; money for the poor; the chords of his heart were touched by every sigh. At other times, his heart shrunk up until it disappeared. He would . . . with the petulance of a child . . . abuse his best friends. He wore out many of his friends. . . . He was not vicious, but absolutely uncontrollable. He would go his own way, which way was often the wrong way. Like a child he seemed to have no forethought. He seemed to live for to-day, caring nothing for to-morrow He seemed impervious to the opinions of others, and apparently yielded to every desire; but after all he did not abuse himself much, as he continued in perfect health until the final breaking up." The sort of stock he came of is interestingly indicated by Bartlett (op. cit., 44-5) : " The next day we left for Salem. Mr. Foster's father was a particularly kind and pleasing man, without guile, and in his younger days followed the sea. We were sitting together one morning . . . [when] he remarked that he had passed a bad night. ...I inquired what was the matter? He replied that Aunt Bessie had annoyed him and mother (his wife) all night. I replied that I had heard Charles speak frequently of Aunt Bessie, but I had supposed she had died some years ago. ' Oh, yes,' he said, ' but she keeps coming back at night ; goes in and out of our room, pulls open the bureau drawers, and fusses over her old things.' He continued, 'We have asked her repeatedly to keep away, and not disturb us while we were sleeping, but every little while she comes back and makes a night of it.' Very innocently he said to me, ' Do you 114 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I not see spirits?' 'Why no,' I said, 'certainly not.' He re- plied that he did, and that he supposed every one did. That his family had ever since he could remember, and that he did not suppose his family differed in that respect from other families. I certainly think he was perfectly sincere, and that he saw visions. His wife, Mrs. Foster, mother of Charles, told me she had talked with spirits all her life, and that her mother and father also conversed with them. She said when Charles was a baby that she was too poor to hire a girl, and having to do her own work her spirit friends often came to her assistance, and that they had often rocked Charlie's cradle ~by the hour. To hear them speak of the other life, and of their communications with those who had passed to the other shore, made the intercourse between the two worlds seem as real as between Europe and America." This is telekinesis with a vengeance. I incline to assume that Mrs. Foster supplied the force. That assumption may not appear so strange later, as it does now. I had a seance with Foster in the early seventies, which will be described later under Telepathy. At that seance there were no phenomena of the mysterious force that had been ex- hibited before me by P , but there were other phenomena even more remarkable, and I was impressed that Foster was honest, and had powers beyond the recognized normal. Of virtually all the strange kinds of phenomena that we shall meet, there are many well authenticated instances on record. In selecting typical ones, I shall sometimes venture to select Foster's, so far as they cover the ground, despite his being a " paid medium " (as, for that matter, is Mrs. Piper), and despite his manifestations having transpired too early to be passed upon by the S. P. R., or any other authori- tative body. At the same time, I don't ask anybody to believe everything in them : even regarding some of the very passages I quote, my own judgment is certainly very much in reserve. I shall take more illustrations from Foster than I otherwise would, for the additional reason that the testimony regard- ing other leading " mediums " is easily accessible elsewhere, while that regarding Foster is not ; also because I know from personal observation, if I know anything, that he showed to me some of the powers as yet called supernormal; I wish anybody disposed to scout my quoting a book perhaps pur- posely neglected by more competent writers, might read it. Ch. VIII] Foster's Molar TeleUnesis 115 This is quoted by Bartlett (op. cit, p. 112) from Ash- burner's Notes and Studies in the Philosophy of Animal Magnetism and Spiritualism, in which are many references to Foster. The phenomena took place without Foster being in contact with the objects. " The table was lifted into the air, and remained there for some seconds. Then, it gently descended into the place it had before occupied, with the difference that the top was turned downwards, and rested on the carpet Some busts, as large as life, resting upon book-cupboards seven feet high, were taken from their places. One was suddenly put upon Mrs. W. C.'s lap; others, on my obtaining a light, were found on the table." The very simple molar phenomena already described are among the first of a series which merge, as do all things in nature, by insensible degrees into something very different in this case into psychical phenomena. The course of this merging which I shall try to follow in the treatment (though the topics are so mixed with each other that so doing is not always possible) is molar-physical; molecular-physical including materialization and levitation; molar-psychical, including alleged communications by moving heavy ob- jects; molecular-psychical, including alleged communications through raps, lights, and sounds. This will eventually bring us into the psychic universe, where we will unroll a fresh chart. First a few more cases of molar telekinesis: From Bartlett (op. cit., 112) : " About 12 o'clock one summer night we met Oregon Wilson and one or two friends on Broadway. Mr. Wilson, as usual, was in a lively frame of mind, and insisted upon our going to his studio to look at some new curios. . . . This, however, was only a pretext, as his real object was to induce Mr. Foster to give some physical manifestations He had often tried to persuade Mr. Foster to give him and his friends a dark seance; but Mr. Foster had always refused. We had been in the studio a few moments only when Mr. Wilson turned off the gas without giving any warning, and we were in utter darkness. What occurred that night will not be for- gotten by any of us, for it seemed for a few moments as though the world had come to an end; that the building had been blown up by dynamite, or that an earthquake was upon us! It seemed as though everything in the studio would be broken and ruined. Even I was frightened, for it seemed as 116 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I though there was danger of being hurt. We simultaneously said, ' Wilson, light the gas/ and when the gas was lighted, we found only a few things disarranged; and it is a mystery to this day how to account for the hurlubrelu. Poor Foster was faint. He could hardly stand, was pale as death, and there was a cold perspiration on his forehead." [Compare this with P 's and Miss A.'s exhaustion after their mani- festation. We shall meet many similar experiences. H. H.] ..." I know positively that no amount of money would induce Mr. Foster to sit in the dark for the purpose of producing physical manifestations. He did not wish to stand the pressure, and while we might say his reason was not afraid, his heart This matter of the light may be of much importance. / do not recall another case where darkness has caused the medium suffering, but on the other hand, all through the literature of the subject there seems some incompatibility between light and the phenomena. The incompatibility is obvious where fraud is attempted, but many experiences be- sides Foster's look as if there were some reason better than fraud. Light is by no means always inimical: it was not in my experience or my sister's, or in many, perhaps most, of those connected with the supposedly honest "mediums." Sir William Crookes says (op. cit., p. 85) : "It is a well-ascertained fact that when the force is weak, a bright light exerts an interfering action on some of the phenomena. The power possessed by Mr. Home is sufficiently strong to withstand this antagonistic influence; consequently, he always objects to darkness at his seances. Indeed, except on two occasions, when, for some particular experiments of my own, light was excluded, everything which I have witnessed with him has taken place in the light. I have had many opportunities of testing the action of light of different sources and colors, such as sunlight, diffused daylight, moonlight, gas, lamp, and candle light, electric light from a vacuum tube, homogeneous yellow light, etc. The interfering rays appear to be those at the extreme end of the spectrum." Bartlett gives another astounding account of telekinesis (op. tit., 44) : " The day before Mr. Foster left for his summer home in Salem, Mass., he purchased two empty champagne baskets for the purpose of packing therein his extra luggage. We were both awakened that night . . . there was a terrible commotion. Ch. VIII] Podmore. Poltergeists 11? The champagne baskets commenced running around the room. They flew up in the air, crashing against each other, . . . and in shorter time than it takes to relate it, all the chairs 'were piled upon our bed. No harm was done, however." The bell-ringing on page 104 and Foster's champagne baskets and the racket in Wilson's studio remind one of the alleged performances of the poltergeists (riotous ghosts) of which the literature of the subject is full. An interesting collection, with criticisms, is given by Mr. Podmore in Pr. XII, 45ff.* Poltergeists have been regarded with much skepticism, but as the phenomena attributed to them are more and more noticed to happen only when certain individuals (mediums?) are present, the doings are likely to find a place under recognized telekinetic phenomena. It may even be granted that my friend P was a "polterer" when he (or we?) broke the music-stand, and Foster certainly was when he had the rackets just recounted. In fact, telekinetic manifesta- tions shade off from simple table-tippings to those alleged wild riots of flying objects of all sorts. There is, however, a pretty definite class of these latter occurring generally in the * And here let me introduce Mr. Podmore. He was among the most active of the 8. P. It., and from the first till his death in 1911 the skep- tical critic. His principal works are Modern Spiritualitm (1902) and The Newer Spiritualitm (1911), largely a repetition of the former. But, despite their titles, the author was no spiritualist. Like Myers' great book, to be described later, these digest the Pr. 8. P. R., but not nearly so completely, and they go farther into the early phenomena kindred to those there recounted. He also published 8t'tdit in Psychical Hetenrch. Apparition* and Thought Trantference, and Naturalization of the Supernatural, and contributed very volumi- nously to the Pr. 8. P. R. In the consistories where attempts have been made to give the sanctity of spiritualism to our phenomena, he steadily bore the part of devil's advocate, and be performed it with rare labori- ousness, conscientiousness, and skill. Being human, he did not entirely rise superior to bias. Up to his death, however, his skepticism was gradually giving way. his last noteworthy expression, near the end of The Newer Spiritualitm, beintr : "If we reject, for the present, at any rate, the explanation ... of communication from the dead . . . there remains only the agency which has been provisionally named tele- pathy." He puts telekinesis and telepsychosis in the same boat, as the work of alleged spirits, while in my opinion the indications that tele- kinesis has anything to do with spirits, except as all consciousness and all force may be one, are not worth considering, while the indications that some telepsychoses have to do with postcarnate intelligence, are well worth considering. 118 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I presence of the uneducated, starting with the pranks of children or servants, and upsetting the judgment and exciting the imagination of superstitious and excitable people who tell wondrous stories, and whose excitement reacts upon and stimulates the original perpetrators. The next medium from whom I shall draw some illustra- tions possessed, of all yet known, the greatest combination of high gifts with high privileges of education, social opportunity, and social endorsement. I refer to William Stainton Moses. I go into considerable detail regarding him, as he will appear in our investigations more frequently and, on the whole, with perhaps more importance, than either Foster or Home. And yet by an irony of fate, the testimony to his manifestations is perhaps less satisfactory than in the case of the others. He led a very retired life and had few sitters, though they were of high character. The accounts of his experiences are mainly in his own note-books, and are so marvelous, but at the same time so apparently honest, and so well vouched for, that one is sometimes tempted to think: Perhaps he dreamt it. And yet his part in the Pr. S. P. R., whether for or against spiritism, is too important to ignore. The following particulars are condensed from an account by F. W. H. Myers * : * Myers was perhaps, up to his death in 1901. the most active con- tributor to the Pr. 8. P. R., and his alleged spirit has been very active since. He left a work which many regard as monumental, called Human Personality and Its Survival of Bodily Death. This work di- gested the fourteen volumes of Proceedings which had then accumu- lated. Its interpretations are frankly spiritistic, and it is constructive rather than critical: in fact, the author is often charged with having, in matters of evidence, entirely subordinated the critical sense to his spirit- istic convictions. He must at least have felt a temptation that I have felt in the present work, and sometimes yielded to, to admit question- able evidence pretty freely when it accords with established evidence, but keeping the reader fairly apprised of its nature, and letting him judge it for himself. Myers was no mean scholar and poet, and the beautiful style of his magnum opus often breeds a concurrence that its unassisted arguments might not always sustain. This book is much the most thorough and elaborate of all the text writings from the S. P. R evidence. It so arranges all the matter as to build up a systematic argument for the survival of the personality. Podmore's works constitute a running commentary upon the Pr. S. P. R.. with extracts from the beginning through Vol. XXIV, which was the last published before his death. Myers' book goes only through Vol. XIV. Ch. VIII] W. Stainton Moses 119 Moses was born in England in 1839, of an old Lincolnshire family (not, as the name suggests, a Jewish one). His father had been headmaster of a grammar school. The boy was given to sleep-walking and writing essays good ones for a boy in his sleep. Though fairly robust, he broke down in health at Oxford, and left without graduating. During some time of wandering he spent six months in a monastery on Mount Athos. He regained his health, returned to Oxfor'd, took his degree, was ordained, and at twenty-four became a curate on the Isle of Man. From '63 to '70 he was a good and self-sacrificing clergyman, beloved by his people, when an attack of whooping cough interfered with his preaching, which he relinquished permanently. He took a mastership in University College School and held it for nearly twenty years till his health broke down finally about 1889. He died in 1892. Myers says (Pr. IX, 250 et seq.) : " The physical phenomena about to be described began in 1872, and continued with gradually lessening frequency until 1881. The automatic script began in 1873, and finally died out, so far as we know, in 1883. During these later years Mr. Hoses was active in contributing to, and afterwards in edit- ing, the weekly newspaper Light; and he took a leading part in several spiritistic organizations. Of one of these the Lon- don Spiritualist Alliance he was president at the time of his death. In 1882 he aided in the foundation of the Society for Psychical Research; but he left that body in 1886, on account of its attitude towards Spiritualism, which he regarded as unduly critical. It is worth remarking that although, as the fact of his withdrawal shows, many members of the Society held an intellectual position widely differing from that of Mr. Moses, and although his own published records were of a kind not easily credible, no suspicion as to his personal probity and veracity was ever, so far as I know, either expressed or entertained. " Mr. Moses never married, and went very little into general society. His personal appearance offered no indication of his peculiar gift. He was of middle stature, strongly made, with somewhat heavy features, and thick dark hair and beard His expression of countenance was honest, manly, and reso- lute " 120 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I " Dr. Johnson, of Bedford, writes to me : "68, High-street, Bedford. "March 24th, 1893. " Dear Sir, As the intimate friend and medical adviser of the late Stainton Moses I have had ample opportunities of thoroughly knowing his character and his mental state. " He was a man even in temper, painstaking and methodi- cal, of exceptional ability, and utterly free from any halluci- nation or anything to indicate other than a well-ordered brain "I have attended him in several very severe illnesses, but never, in sickness or at other times, has his brain shown the slightest cloudiness or suffered from any delusion. "WM. G. JOHNSON." " University College School, Gower-street, London, W. C. "May 16th, 1893. " Dear Sir, ... He always impressed me with the idea that he was thoroughly earnest and conscientious, and I believe that perfect reliance can be placed on all his statements. Yours faithfully, " F. W. LEVANDER." Myers says elsewhere (Pr. IX, 253) : " I have heard him described as lacking in the grace of humil- ity, and in that spirituality of tastes and character which should seem appropriate to one living much in the commerce of the Unseen. But I have never heard anyone who had even the slightest acquaintance with Mr. Moses impugn his sanity or his sincerity, his veracity or his honor " With the even tenor of this straightforward and reputable life was inwoven a chain of mysteries which, as I have before said, in what way soever they be explained, make that life one of the most extraordinary which our century has seen " For almost all the sittings which -he describes, and for some which he does not describe, there is ... a second de- tailed, independent, contemporary record, by Mrs. Stanhope Speer, and for many of the sittings a third record, also independent and contemporaneous, although very brief, by Dr. Speer. For some few of them there is also a sim- ilar record by Mr. Percival, whose memory also confirms the other accounts. Parts of Mr. Moses' own record, indeed, are avowedly derived from the other sitters, since he depended upon them for information as to what went on when he was in trance. But he has always, I think, made this distinction clear in his notes. " The evidence for all the incidents is practically the same ; the whole group of witnesses are as fully pledged, say to the falling of pearls from the air as to the automatic script or the trance-phenomena., I at least can see no via media which can Ch. V1I1J Evidence regarding Moses. His Character 121 be plausibly taken. The permanent fraud of the whole group, or the substantial accuracy of all the records, are the only hypotheses which seem to me capable of covering the facts. * Some dozen other persons, who cannot plausibly be held to be all in the fraud, witnessed the phenomena. It is true that some of these witnesses are now dead or inaccessible. But Serjeant Cox left a printed statement; Dr. Thomson, of Clifton, proved his belief by continued collaboration; Mr. Percival, Mrs. Garratt, Miss Collins, and Mrs. Honeywood are still living, and cannot with any plausibility be treated as accomplices. Mr. Percival's evidence, in particular, is that of an outside and occasional member of the group, who is honorably known in academic and official life, and who would have had everything to lose and nothing to gain by complicity in such a fraud. " [Moses] was very reticent about exhibiting his powers, and consequently almost the only records are his own and those of his physician, Dr. Stanhope Speer, Mrs. Speer, and their son, Mr. Charlton T. Speer, Associate of the Royal Acad- emy of Music all persons of undoubted capacity and pro- bity " Dr. Speer's cast of mind was thoroughly materialistic, and it is remarkable that his interest in Mr. Moses' phenomena was from first to last of a purely scientific, as contrasted with an emotional or religious nature." In another place, however, Myers says of Moses (Pr. VIII, 599) : " He lacked and he readily and repeatedly admitted to me that he lacked all vestige of scientific, or even of legal, instinct. The very words ' first-hand evidence,' ' contemporary record,' ' corroborative testimony,' were to him as a weariness to the flesh. His attitude was that of the preacher who is already so thoroughly persuaded in his own mind that he treats any alleged fact which falls in with his views as the uncriticised text for fresh exhortation Having watched his conduct at critical moments, I see much ground for impugning his judg- ment, but no ground whatever for doubting that he has narrated with absolute good faith the story of his experience." (Pr.IX,258) : " The phenomena here to be described, strange ... as they often seem, cannot be called meaningless. The alleged operators are at pains throughout to describe what they re- garded as the end, and what merely as the means to that end. Their constantly avowed object was the promulgation through Mr. Moses of certain religious and philosophical views; and the physical manifestations are throughout described as de- signed merely as a proof of power, and a basis for the authority claimed for the serious teachings." 122 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Ft. I In some of the molecular phenomena, especially those of light, as will be seen later, the claims made for and by Moses, surpass those made for or by Foster and Home. But the molar telekinetic phenomena were not as prominent with Moses as with the others, or as his molecular phenomena; in fact he records his dislike " to violent physical manifesta- tions." More on this subject will appear later. Detailed accounts of all classes are given by Myers in Pr. IX and XI. I will give but a line to the molar in the following scraps from Moses' note-books (quoted in Pr. XI, 34 and 266) : " As soon as the gas was put out, a book from a closed cupboard at the corner farthest from me, and immediately behind Dr. Speer, was brought out and struck him on the shoulder, and fell near Mrs. S. This is the first attempt to bring an object from behind a sitter opposite to me. Usually the power seems to be behind me The objects come over my head when brought into the room, and movements of articles occur behind and near me. [Sounds occur] behind and near me usually, though at times . . . far away. " My records of seances during the latter half of the month of August show over fifty instances in which objects from different parts of the house were placed upon the table round which we were sitting. They were invariably small, and were generally thrown on the table." The records of Stainton Moses in Pr. IX, 269-72 contain accounts of his having, without any muscular action, brought from unknown sources into his seance rooms, and there scat- tered, bits of coral, seed pearls, powdered musk, and some aerial perfumes. This was done in dim light and sometimes with the " cabinet " of the fake mediums. But the character of Moses and of his witnesses makes it difficult to believe the phenomena fraudulent, and that they were not illusory is proved, I understand, by some of the articles being kept by persons present. Moses quotes Judge Edmunds in his book on Spiritualism, as bearing witness to odors being brought into " spiritual " seances, without any visible mechanical agency. Breezes are very frequently alleged to accompany other tele- kinetic phenomena. CHAPTER IX MOLAR TELEKINESIS (Continued) Dowsing UNDER Molar Telekinesis I venture tentatively to include another strange mode of force that has long been known, but manifested, so far as I know, by none of the " mediums " of other modes so far treated, and indeed by so few people as to be little credited. It appears to have some telekinetic qualities. To the modern mind, it may seem to find one pole in the system of an occasional human being, and the other in one of sundry inorganic substances, including especially running water. The passing of the current between the two poles is not always dependent on any intermediate conductor, any more than when ordinary magnetism passes between two separated pieces of iron, or telekinesis between a medium (using the word merely as medium of a force, not of any alleged spiritual communication) and an untouched object. But these alleged manifestations are said to be sometimes facilitated by a rod of wood or metal between the poles; and indeed to be with some " mediums " sometimes possible with that intermediary, and impossible without it. Note here the fact that the recognized telekinetic force seems sometimes to have its non-human pole in wood, as in P 's case, and wooden-table-tipping generally; or in mineral, as in Miss A.'s marble-topped table and others. We shall later apparently find one in metal. Where rods of wood have served as conductors, the force has deflected them sometimes strongly enough to crack or break them. To the person participating, the flow of the current has generally, but not always, been accompanied by fatigue, as in other exercises of the telekinetic power, and frequently by nausea and other physical discomforts, appar- ently more than in the other manifestations of the power. Most readers have anticipated that the foregoing para- graphs are an attempt to put into "scientific" shape the 128 124 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I performances of the " dowsers " who for centuries have been alleged to discover springs and metals underground. My guess at the kinship of the phenomena with those of telekinesis is, however, as will be explained later, at variance with the guesses of some of the theorists, but not with the impressions of nearly, if not quite all, of the actors and most of the observers; and I suspect that the discoveries reported in the Pr. S. P. E. have materially affected the later guesses of the theorists. Now the above allegations, like nearly all allegations of things unknown to general experience, have very properly been flouted by the vast majority of laymen who have not wit- nessed the occurrences, and accounted for by some scientists who have, on various hypotheses less probable than that the phenomena really indicate something new. But that fashion of accounting for things has been losing popularity since Edison, Bell, and Marconi. Dowsing, however, happens to have been certified to by, among others, so eminent a physicist as Professor (now Sir William) Barrett, after a very thorough investigation, which he reported in Pr. XIII and XV, and by other eminent men of science, among them Dr. Rossiter Raymond, Secretary of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, and several Fellows of the Royal and Geographical Societies of England. Professor Barrett says (Pr. XIII, 2f.) : " At first sight few subjects appear to be so unworthy of serious notice and so utterly beneath scientific investigation. . . . Nevertheless, it is impossible to read the voluminous evi- dence, . . . without coming to the conclusion . . . that the evidence for the success of ' dowsing ' as a practical art is very strong and there seems to be an unexplained residuum when all possible deductions have been made. "In 1814, Dr. C. Hutton, F. R. S., after examining the then accessible evidence . . . and witnessing Lady Milbanke's success with the rod, published a statement of his own be- lief in the practical value of the divining rod, though un- able to explain its behavior. And recently, in 1883, Dr. R. Raymond read a paper before the American Institute of Min- ing Engineers in which, after considerable investigation, the conclusion is arrived at : ' That there is a residuum of scientific value, after making all necessary deductions for exaggeration, self-deception, and fraud.' Ch. IX] Sir William Barrett on Dowsing 125 "In like manner, it is impossible to study this subject historically without being impressed by the number of those who have accepted as indisputable the practical value of the rod, during the four centuries it has been in use. . . . Among them were some of the most learned writers and the most painstaking investigators of their day, together with an array of practical miners and well-sinkers, men who ought to have known what they were talking about " At the present day, as in the past, those who have had the opportunity of examining most closely the practical use of the ' dowser's art ' are not to be found among the scoffers. The opinion expressed to me by many well-informed and critical observers who live in that region of the southwest of England where the ' rod ' has been longest in use, ... is by no means contemptuous or even unfavorable With some, like the late John Mullins, the number of failures seems to have been very few ; with others, . . . far more frequent. This is what might be expected if there be a peculiar instinct or faculty in certain persons which is not common to all. Moreover, as an easy way of earning a living without the trouble of any education, the class of professional dowsers is sure to be recruited by a number of rogues and charlatans It will also be noticed that a ' dows- ing faculty,' if such there be, is not confined to any particular age, sex, or class of society. Thus in case No. 1," [as num- bered in Prof. Barrett's article. H.H.] "the dowser was a clergyman; in No. 2, a judge; in No. 3, a local manufacturer; in Nos. 4, 13, 14, 18, and 19, a lady; in Nos. 5 and 9, a gar- dener; in No. 6, a deputy-lieutenant; in No. 8, a respected member of the Society of Friends; in No. 12, a miller; in No. 10, a little girl; in Nos. 11 and 15, a boy; in No. 20, a French count, etc In the lengthy list of those who have employed him [Mullins] to find water, and have been led by actual experience to have faith in the dowsing rod, will be found nearly a score of distinguished noblemen, more than a dozen owners of breweries and distilleries, or of paper and cloth mills and print works; town commissioners, and clergy- men; and landlords and their agents by the dozen." Professor Barrett's second paper says (Pr. XV, 136) : "Upwards of 200 cases of water-finding by dowsers in recent years have been investigated; in each case the inde- pendent evidence of disinterested persons . . . was sought. Gen- erally speaking, such evidence was obtained, the witnesses allowing their names and addresses to be given. . . . Omitting a remarkably successful series of cases by an American dowser, which Dr. Hodgson kindly investigated, 105 cases of British professional dowsers were given in my former paper; of these 95 were successful and 10 were failures " 126 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I Pr. II also contains confirmatory papers on the same sub- ject by Professor W. J. Sollas and Messrs. Edward R. Pease and E. Vaughan Jenkins. Mr. Jenkins collected in eighteen months twenty-two well authenticated cases of successful dowsing. "In an article published in Light for August 4th, 1S83, p. 349, it is stated that Professor Lochman, of the University of Christiania, who is described as a distinguished physiologist, recently read a paper on the divining rod before a scientific society in Christiania, in which he stated that his skepticism on this subject had lately been overcome by the discovery that he himself could use the rod successfully " From a letter to Professor Barrett by Mr. H. W. Whitaker, a well-known geologist, whom Professor Barrett calls "an utter disbeliever in the dowsing-rod, or in any practical good resulting from its use" (Pr. XIII, 75) : " John Mullins, ... if allowed to follow the indication of his rod, agreed, I understood, to receive no payment for sink- ing a well if a good supply of water were not obtained. When one remembers the heavy outlay involved in making a well, often through solid rock to a depth of 70 to 100 feet, or more, this agreement is a forcible illustration of the faith Mullins had in his divining rod " I will now give some typical cases. The Hon. M. E. G. Finch Hatton, M.P., writes thus of an experience with Mullins (Pr. II, 101) : "23 Ennismore Gardens, S. W., February 29th, 1884. "First he cut a forked twig from a living tree, and held it between his hands, the center point downwards and the two ends protruding between the fingers of each hand: He then stooped forward and walked over the ground to be tried. Suddenly he would stop and the central point would revolve in a half-circle until it pointed the reverse way. This he stated to be owing to the presence of a subterranean spring, and further that by the strength of the movement he could gage the approximate depth. " My brother, Hon. Harold Finch Hatton, and I each took hold of one of the ends, protruding as stated above, and held them fast while the phenomenon took place, to make sure that it was not caused by a movement, voluntary or otherwise, of the man's own hand or fingers. The tendency to twist itself, on the twig's part, was so great that, on our holding firmly Ch. IX] John and H. W. Mullins, Dowsers 127 on to the ends, the twig split and finally broke off. The same thing occurred when standing on a bridge over a running stream. " Stagnant water, he states, has no effect on the twig " On our way to the kitchen garden Mullins discovered a spring on the open lawn, whose existence was unknown to me, it had been closed in so long, but was subsequently attested by an old laborer on the place who remembered it as a well, and had seen it bricked in many years before. On reaching the kitchen garden I knew that a lead pipe, leading water to a tap outside the wall, crossed the gravel path at a certain spot. On crossing it the twig made no sign. I was astonished at first, till I remembered what Mullins had said about stagnant water, and that the tap was not running, I sent to have it turned on, reconducted Mullins over the ground, when the twig immediately indicated the spot. " When Mullins had passed on, I carefully marked the exact spot indicated by the twig. When he had left the garden, I said, 'Now, Mullins, may we blindfold you and let you try?' He said, ' Oh yes, if you don't lead me into a pond or any- thing of that sort.' We promised. Several skeptical persons were present who took care the blindfolding was thoroughly done. " I then reconducted him, blindfold, to the marked spot by a different route, leaving the tap running, with the result that the stick indicated with mathematic exactness the same spot. At first he slightly overran it a foot or so, and then felt round, as it were, and seemed to be led back into the exact center of influence by the twig. All present considered the trial entirely conclusive of two things: First, of the man's perfect good faith. Secondly, that the effect produced on the twig emanated from an agency outside of himself, and ap- peared due to the presence of running water. " My brother, Mr. Harold Finch Hatton, is present as I write, and confirms what I say one of the Misses Words- worth tried the twig, and was surprised to find that an influence of a similar nature, though not so strong, was imparted to it (Pr. XIII, 89) : " The Lincolnshire Chronicle of June 8th, 1895, contains a long report of a visit of Mr. H. W. Mullins, the son of John Mullins, to Catley Abbey. The newspaper report, which I have abridged, is as follows : " ' It was told to Mullins that his father asserted the seltzer spring flowed under a hedge on the other side of the field, in which we were then standing, and he was asked to indicate the place He had gone about 100 yards when the twig began to play, and digging his heel in the ground, he thus marked the spot. Mr. Allen, who was present when Mullins, Sr., also located the spring, sent a man for a spade, and a stake 128 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I was dug up, which eight years ago was driven in by Mr. Allen to mark the place. Mullins, Jr., had touched the spot exactly.' " From Mr. E. Vaughan Jenkins (Pr. II, 106) : " October 7th, 1882. " About thirty years ago I purchased a plot of land on a hill slope two acres in extent whereon to erect a residence of considerable value " The ' knowing ones '. . . did not consider there was the least possible chance of water being obtained on the plot of land any- where. In this dilemma, the foreman of the masons, a native of Devon or Cornwall I forget which exclaimed, ' Why don't you try the divining rod? '. . .He said his little boy, eleven years old, possessed the power in a remarkable degree The lad, an honest, innocent, and nice-looking little fellow, . . . placing the ends of the rod between the thumb and forefinger of each hand, bending it slightly and holding it before him at a short distance from the ground, started on his expedition, I and others follow- ing him and watching every movement closely. After going up and down, crossing and re-crossing the ground several times, but never on the same lines, the lad stopped, and, to our great surprise, we saw the rod exhibit signs of motion, the fingers and thumbs being perfectly motionless. The motion or trembling of the rod increasing, it slowly began to revolve, then at an accelerated pace, fairly twisting itself to such an extent that the lad, although he tried his best to retain it, was obliged to let it go, and it fled to some distance The next day . . . the well-sinkers . . . had the gratification of striking on a strong spring of pure and beautiful water coming in so fast as to cause them to make a hurried exit The father stated that when he was a boy he possessed the same power, but entirely lost it at sixteen years of age 1 was then, and I am now, fully convinced ... of the full integrity of the whole transac- tion, no fee or reward being asked for or expected, and I there- fore cannot avoid entertaining the opinion that there must be ' something in it,' that something being dependent upon some peculiar magnetic or other condition of the human agent employed " Mr. John Wood thus wrote to Mr. Vaughan Jenkins (Pr. XIII, 34) : " Whitfield Estate Office, February 4th, 1890. " The next thing was for each of the company to try with the rod, but not one of us had the ' faculty/ excepting my little daughter May. Subsequently the rod indicated water in several places, both in the hands of May and Mullins May finding it first sometimes and at other times Mullins. . . . May is now thirteen years of age. She has proved successful Ch. IX] Lady Milbanke and Bleton, Dowsers 129 in numerous cases; four wells have been sunk where she said there was water, and each one was a success n Here is the testimony of Dr. Hutton alluded to on page 124 regarding his experience with the divining-rod as used by Lady Milbanke (Pr. XIII, 42) : " Lady Milbanke showed the experiment several times in different places In the places where I had good reason to know that no water was to be found the rod was always quiescent, but in other places, where I knew there was water below the surface, the rods turned slowly and regularly . . . till the twigs twisted themselves off below the fingers, which were considerably indented by so forcibly holding the rod between them. " All the company stood close to Lady M., with all eyes intensely fixed on her hands and the rods to watch if any particular motion might be made by the fingers, but in vain; nothing of the kind was perceived, and all the company could observe no cause or reason why the rods should move in the manner they were seen to do." The capacity of Bleton, the celebrated French dowser of the eighteenth century, was discovered when he was a child", by his having " la fievre " when seated by a certain rock under which later a spring was found, and there are many similar cases (Pr. XIII, 272 et seq.). (Pr. XV, 265) : " The Chevalier de M. describes in detail one of several tests he made; he brought Bleton to his own house, arriving after dark; in passing through the village, which Bleton had not visited before, Bleton suddenly stopped and said water was there; he followed it in the darkness and arrived at a spot where he declared the spring existed; he was right; it was, in fact, the source of the fountain of the castle. Other tests are also given: altogether a remarkable and weighty testimony." Dr. Thouvenal (Pr. XV, 263) says of Bleton: " Sometimes, in order to try and deceive him, if his senses were concerned, I placed false marks as if to indi- cate a spring; sometimes after he had followed a spring across several fields I moved the pegs some feet away without his knowledge. Nevertheless, he was never led astray and always rectified such errors. In fine, I tried all sorts of ways to deceive him, and I can testify that in more than six hundred trials I did not succeed in doing so one single time." Here are a few of the many cases of dowsing for metals. 130 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I W. J. Brown, of Middlehill House, Box, Wilts, a member of the councils of several public bodies, says (Pr. XIII, 94) : " Some friends and myself arranged to test Mullins's capac- ity for discovering metal. In his absence we took ten stones off the top of a wall, and, having placed them on the road, we deposited a sovereign under three of them. Mullins passed his rod over the top of each stone, and without the slightest hesitation told us at once under which stones the sovereigns were. When he came to a stone under which there was no sovereign, he at once said, ' Nothing here, master/ but when he got to the others, he remarked, ' All right, master, thankee,' turned the stone over and put the sovereign in his pocket." Mr. H. B. Napier, agent for Sir Gabriel Goldney, thus wrote Professor Barrett (Pr. XIII, 148) : " Chippenham, Wilts, May llth, 1896. "At Gloucester some years ago a sovereign was lost under the board floor in the Finance Office. The members of the Council did not themselves know exactly where to find it, and sent for Mr. Tompkins, who indicated a particular spot on the floor, and on a carpenter being sent for the sovereign was found to be immediately beneath the spot " Mr. W. G. Hellier, of Wick St. Lawrence, near Weston- super-Mare, Bailiff of the Merchant Venturers of Bristol, states (Pr. XIII, 51) : " Whilst the dowser was tracing this spring, walking back- wards and forwards across the line of its course, I hid my pocket compass in the long grass in his track, and, when he came to it, the rod turned over, and he said, ' There is summat here/ I am certain that he did not see the compass until afterwards, when I showed it to him hidden." Now for various opinions on the causes of these phenomena. Thus Mr. Sollas, Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, Professor of Geology in the University of Dublin, says (Pr. II, 73) : "I am confident, from what I observed, that the sole im- mediate cause for the turning of the rod is to be found in the muscular contraction of the hand of the operator." Professor Barrett declared in his first paper (Pr. XIII, 253): " Doubtless a subconscious suggestion, of some kind, evoked Ch. IX] Exceptional Sensibilities in Dowsing 131 in the dowser's mind, excites the reflex action to which the actual moTement of the rod is due. " The recent discovery of a new type of obscure radiation from certain bodies, such as uranium salts, and also from numerous common bodies with which we are sur- rounded, renders it conceivable that a radiation, to which opaque bodies are permeable, may be emitted by water and metals, which unconsciously impresses some persons " Could not such a "radiation" affect the rod as well as the person? Dr. Lauder Bninton says (Pr. XIII, 8) : " When we hear that a man is able to discover water at a considerable distance below the ground on which he stands, we are at first apt to scout the idea as ridiculous, while if we were told that a caravan was crossing a desert, and that all at once the thirsty camels started off quickly, and at a distance of a mile or more water was found, we look upon the occur- rence as natural. In the same way we regard as very remark- able the story of a man tracing criminals with a divining rod, but it becomes quite ordinary if we put a bloodhound in the man's place." Probably it was also Dr. Bninton who said (Ibid., 276) : "I believe that the almost incredible acuteness of sight, scent, and hearing, which a.re found universally in certain classes of the lower animals, and are not uncommon in savage races, are occasionally possessed by certain individuals amongst civilized races. For instance: the presence of water-vapor in the air over certain spots makes itself evident to everyone as a visible fog in early morning. Now / am acquainted with a rheumatic patient who, on passing over such a spot during the day, when no vapor is visible, feels pains in her joints. Of course, such a condition of hyperesthesia is very rare in- deed." This doesn't account for the movement of the rod. Then the writer takes a different tack: " The moving of the rod in a diviner's fingers depends simply upon the bodily condition of the diviner himself, just as the rigidity of a pointer's tail when scenting game depends entirely upon the excitement of the dog." The dog's tail is directly in contact with his nervous system contains a part of it, in fact. The rod is not. Moreover, the tail stands still, whereas the rod moves violently. 132 Molar Telekinesis [Bk. II, Pt. I And here speaks that acute observer, great naturalist, and saintly soul, Dr. Wallace, who wrote to Professor Barrett as follows (Pr. XV, 217) : "If the rod does move wholly by muscular action, it does not at all affect the power of the dowser in finding water, but the fact should be proved. To me, the evidence you adduce shows that it is not muscular action, and if this can be proved it, of course, places the dowser in the ranks of a physical 'medium,' which I have always held him to be. If the two facts you state are facts: (1) That the motion of the rod cannot be intentionally produced (by any novice) without visible muscular action of an energetic kind; and (2) that in an outsider's hands, holding the rod for the first time, it will often move if the dowser holds his wrists, and with no con- scious, and little visible, muscular action on the experimenter's part, then it follows that the motion is not produced by muscular action at all, but is a physical phenomenon analogous to hundreds of others occurring in the presence of ' mediums.' "I think you should have said: "The obvious explanation, of course, is that the rod is moved by the hands of the operator, acting consciously or unconsciously. .There are, however, many difficulties in the way of this view, and many facts which seem directly opposed to it.' After which your various statements would follow naturally. Now, they seem to me to be in the nature of a non sequitur! " Of course, I am a confirmed lunatic in these matters, so excuse the ravings of a lunatic, but sincere, friend. "ALFRED R. WALLACE." Professor Barrett says (Pr. XV, 311) : *' The probability that an explanation is to be found in some extension of our knowledge of human personality, some- thing new to science, and something akin to what has been termed clairvoyance, gains considerable weight from a critical study of cognate phenomena." But how about the rod? The first step regarding the correlation of these phenomena with familiar ones is to determine whether the rod is really moved independently of the conscious or unconscious volition of the dowser. On this subject early testimony is conflicting, but that recently accumulated seems to be overwhelming in favor of the independence of the force. True to the conditions of their craft, and very properly so, most of the scientific men who have been very familiar Ch. IX] Docs the Dowser Move the Rodf 133 with the processes by which things become not what they seem, or rather seem what they are not, have voted the dowser's force to be involuntary muscular contraction, re- sponse to clairvoyant vision, and several other things, some of which are harder to accept than a new and as yet un- correlated mode of force. Professor Barrett says (Pr. XIII, 24) that the movement of the rod is " an automatic action that occurs under certain conditions in certain individuals." Perhaps his meaning would have been expressed more precisely if he had said in connection with "certain individuals": for he goes on to produce a mass of evidence that the action is independent of the will and of muscular control is the influence upon the rod of a current between the organism and the object sought. Here are two bits of evidence that, so far as they go, seem to dispose of the case. Testimony of Sir E. Welby Gregory (Pr. II, 99) : " The lines of water indicated by Mullins had been marked by pegs 60 yards or 70 yards apart, and just visible above the grass. These lines Towers and his twig emphatically con- firmed, and I proceeded to test him. I had the projecting extremities of the prongs of the twig held tight by pincers, so that there could be no voluntary action on Towers' part when crossing the marked lines. Despite of this, the point of the twig twisted itself upwards, till the bark was wrinkled and almost split, while the strain and pressure upon the muscles of the man's hands were most apparent." The following from Mr. F. Bastable, 14, Foskelt Road, Fulham, appeared in the Carpenter and Builder of Septem- ber 30th, 1892 : (Pr.XIII,86):