登陆注册
15694100000075

第75章 THE AGONY(13)

Planchette was a tall, thin man, a poet of a surety, lost in one continual thought, and always employed in gazing into the bottomless abyss of Motion. Commonplace minds accuse these lofty intellects of madness; they form a misinterpreted race apart that lives in a wonderful carelessness of luxuries or other people's notions. They will spend whole days at a stretch, smoking a cigar that has gone out, and enter a drawing-room with the buttons on their garments not in every case formally wedded to the button-holes. Some day or other, after a long time spent in measuring space, or in accumulating Xs under Aa-Gg, they succeed in analyzing some natural law, and resolve it into its elemental principles, and all on a sudden the crowd gapes at a new machine; or it is a handcart perhaps that overwhelms us with astonishment by the apt simplicity of its construction. The modest man of science smiles at his admirers, and remarks, "What is that invention of mine? Nothing whatever. Man cannot create a force; he can but direct it; and science consists in learning from nature."The mechanician was standing bolt upright, planted on both feet, like some victim dropped straight from the gibbet, when Raphael broke in upon him. He was intently watching an agate ball that rolled over a sun-dial, and awaited its final settlement. The worthy man had received neither pension nor decoration; he had not known how to make the right use of his ability for calculation. He was happy in his life spent on the watch for a discovery; he had no thought either of reputation, of the outer world, nor even of himself, and led the life of science for the sake of science.

"It is inexplicable," he exclaimed. "Ah, your servant, sir," he went on, becoming aware of Raphael's existence. "How is your mother? You must go and see my wife.""And I also could have lived thus," thought Raphael, as he recalled the learned man from his meditations by asking of him how to produce any effect on the talisman, which he placed before him.

"Although my credulity must amuse you, sir," so the Marquis ended, "Iwill conceal nothing from you. That skin seems to me to be endowed with an insuperable power of resistance.""People of fashion, sir, always treat science rather superciliously,"said Planchette. "They all talk to us pretty much as the incroyable did when he brought some ladies to see Lalande just after an eclipse, and remarked, 'Be so good as to begin it over again!' What effect do you want to produce? The object of the science of mechanics is either the application or the neutralization of the laws of motion. As for motion pure and simple, I tell you humbly, that we cannot possibly define it. That disposed of, unvarying phenomena have been observed which accompany the actions of solids and fluids. If we set up the conditions by which these phenomena are brought to pass, we can transport bodies or communicate locomotive power to them at a predetermined rate of speed. We can project them, divide them up in a few or an infinite number of pieces, accordingly as we break them or grind them to powder; we can twist bodies or make them rotate, modify, compress, expand, or extend them. The whole science, sir, rests upon a single fact.

"You see this ball," he went on; "here it lies upon this slab. Now, it is over there. What name shall we give to what has taken place, so natural from a physical point of view, so amazing from a moral?

Movement, locomotion, changing of place? What prodigious vanity lurks underneath the words. Does a name solve the difficulty? Yet it is the whole of our science for all that. Our machines either make direct use of this agency, this fact, or they convert it. This trifling phenomenon, applied to large masses, would send Paris flying. We can increase speed by an expenditure of force, and augment the force by an increase of speed. But what are speed and force? Our science is as powerless to tell us that as to create motion. Any movement whatever is an immense power, and man does not create power of any kind.

Everything is movement, thought itself is a movement, upon movement nature is based. Death is a movement whose limitations are little known. If God is eternal, be sure that He moves perpetually; perhaps God is movement. That is why movement, like God is inexplicable, unfathomable, unlimited, incomprehensible, intangible. Who has ever touched, comprehended, or measured movement? We feel its effects without seeing it; we can even deny them as we can deny the existence of a God. Where is it? Where is it not? Whence comes it? What is its source? What is its end? It surrounds us, it intrudes upon us, and yet escapes us. It is evident as a fact, obscure as an abstraction; it is at once effect and cause. It requires space, even as we, and what is space? Movement alone recalls it to us; without movement, space is but an empty meaningless word. Like space, like creation, like the infinite, movement is an insoluble problem which confounds human reason; man will never conceive it, whatever else he may be permitted to conceive.

"Between each point in space occupied in succession by that ball,"continued the man of science, "there is an abyss confronting human reason, an abyss into which Pascal fell. In order to produce any effect upon an unknown substance, we ought first of all to study that substance; to know whether, in accordance with its nature, it will be broken by the force of a blow, or whether it will withstand it; if it breaks in pieces, and you have no wish to split it up, we shall not achieve the end proposed. If you want to compress it, a uniform impulse must be communicated to all the particles of the substance, so as to diminish the interval that separates them in an equal degree. If you wish to expand it, we should try to bring a uniform eccentric force to bear on every molecule; for unless we conform accurately to this law, we shall have breaches in continuity. The modes of motion, sir, are infinite, and no limit exists to combinations of movement.

Upon what effect have you determined?"

同类推荐
  • 庄公

    庄公

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说救拔焰口饿鬼陀罗尼经

    佛说救拔焰口饿鬼陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 海游记

    海游记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 两湖麈谈录

    两湖麈谈录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 六十种曲白兔记

    六十种曲白兔记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 尼克松传

    尼克松传

    理查德·尼克松,美国第37位总统,访问新中国的第一位美国总统,登上《时代周刊》封面次数最多的人物。他的政治生涯因水门事件被迫画上句号,而在此之前,他带领的这代美国,又是怎样的情景呢?本书为您一一呈现。 本书是美国最佳历史类图书奖获得者里克·伯尔斯坦所著,他以惊人的研究和非凡的叙述才能,为我们分析美国分裂的政治局面是如何形成的。 里克·伯尔斯坦以引人入胜的笔法、凭着敏锐的政治洞察力,再现了上世纪六十年代和七十年代早期,美国动荡不安的政治局面;披露了尼克松是如何从政治困境中突围,获得总统要职的。
  • 和武相公中秋夜西蜀

    和武相公中秋夜西蜀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 狂妃有毒

    狂妃有毒

    她是毒医,人人皆知的毒医,有让人起死回生的本事,阎王都抢不走她要救的人!这一面,她是个毒医,另一面,却只是个普普通通的大学生罢了,却无一人所知。就是这么个神存在,回家时却被一搓衣板砸穿了……穿也就穿个漂亮点的吧,偏偏还是人人皆知的第一丑女加花痴?还是个爹不疼娘早逝的?庶妹姨娘欺压?又因为早逝娘的缘故,太后圣旨一下,就与个渣王爷有了婚约?那渣男偏偏还就喜欢自己二妹?剧情为何如此狗血!爹不疼?她要他的疼爱干甚?又不是银子!庶妹姨娘欺压?银针甩两把!渣男王爷想抗旨?对的!抗旨这种杀头罪,留与渣男刚刚好!可是……这个美颜腹黑男是哪冒出来的?!
  • 书情上李苏州

    书情上李苏州

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 漕运通志

    漕运通志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 终极血脉

    终极血脉

    人们总是圈养着各种动物用来填饱自己的胃口,却很少有人想过,如果有一天,人类发现,自己也不过是被圈养的食物,将会出现怎么样的结果?当世界变成一座沙城,当灾难不断的毁灭着未来,他带着古老的龙之血脉,踏上了一条充满荆棘的道路。为了追寻自由,不仅是自己的,同样是整个人类的----自由。
  • 笑里轻轻语

    笑里轻轻语

    寻父的迢迢路上,无意来到大汉都城——长安。成君先后遇到吊儿郎当、漫不经心的卫太子遗孤刘病已,和温文尔雅、卓逸不凡的丞相之子杨恽。落魄之际被杨恽所救,发现温润如玉的杨恽竟患有天生残疾——哑疾。为了感恩,也出于同情,名医之后的成君决心为杨恽专研治疗。期间,先是爱上了温润的杨恽,后知杨恽的有心利用,心灰意冷之际再次陷入刘病已默默守护的暖意之中。阳光之后是暴风雨,本已决定和刘病已闲云野鹤之时,刘病已青梅竹马的许平君却怀了他的孩子,平复的内心再次受创。接二连三的是汉昭帝刘弗的驾崩,皇位的悬空,刘病已的真实身份……权利相争的残酷之下,是谁笑到了最后,谁又成为了牺牲品…
  • 凤凰涅槃1

    凤凰涅槃1

    由于一场怪异的地震,22世纪的大学生单梅魂穿成了人人唾弃的她。。。单梅的座右铭是:人欺我一寸,我还人一尺。于是,在风羽大陆掀起了一场腥风血雨,她,杀莲花,整前夫,惩狼父,杀人夺宝,直到他出现。。。。。。“娘子,这种血腥的事还是交给为夫好了。”“滚,别乱叫。”当腹黑遇到腹黑,高手遇到高手,会擦出怎样的火花呢?
  • EXO青星之允

    EXO青星之允

    林清依进入了一个很大的娱乐公司,却成了偶像(朴灿烈)的死对头(吴世勋)的助理。偶像的频频示好,霸道总裁吴亦凡的保护,青梅竹马鹿晗次次关心,神秘人边伯贤的古怪行踪。林清依能和他走到最后吗?
  • The Mirror of Kong Ho

    The Mirror of Kong Ho

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。