ATOMS IDEALLY REPRESENTED. 1 7 



the material world may be traced back, we stumble on 

 insoluble contradictions. An atom contemplated as a 

 minute, indivisible, inert mass, from which forces ema- 

 nate, is a chimera. In the impossibility of compre- 

 hending the nature of matter and force lies the only 

 limit to the knowledge of natural science." 



These propositions require some elucidation. Eeyond 

 the subdivision mechanically possible, we must think of 

 substance or matter as consisting of particles ultimately 

 indivisible. Of these atoms, according to the present 

 standpoint of science, we are obliged to admit as many 

 different species as are not chemically reducible to more 

 simple elements. Now there is no doubt that these 

 atoms are, in the actual sense of the word, imaginary, 

 hypothetical quantities ; and theory seems to indicate 

 that all matter, in the most different phenomena in the 

 material world, is based on a single species of atom. 



Every manual of physics or physiology will show 

 that, in order to understand and calculate the properties 

 of these atoms and their combinations into the ingre- 

 dients of compound bodies, susceptible of chemical 

 analysis, they are ideally represented under various 

 material forms, spherical, cubical, &c. ; furthermore, that 

 in their combinations and co-operations as bodies, they 

 must be contemplated as surrounded by a rarefied 

 atmosphere of an universally diffused ether. But the 

 atom itself, and therefore the nature of matter, is 

 something incomprehensible, unattainable. In these 

 atoms, forces are inherent, which display themselves in 

 attractions and repulsions, and in motion in general. 

 But the final cause of these motions, and how far these 

 motions are, as it were, identical with the existence of 



