GROWTH. 



121 



organizable materials it contains, but on the quantity of 

 the material most needed ; that given a right proportion of 

 materials, the pro-existing structure of the organism limits 

 their availability ; and that the higher the structure, the 

 sooner is this limit reached. 



46. But why should the growth of every organism be 

 finally arrested ? Though the rate of increase may, in each 

 case, be necessarily restricted within a narrow range of varia 

 tion though the increment that is possible in a given time, 

 cannot exceed a certain amount ; yet why should the incre 

 ments decrease, and finally become insensible ? Why should 

 not all organisms, when supplied with sufficient materials, 

 continue to grow as long as they live ? To find an answer 

 to this question, we must first revert to the nature and 

 functions of organic matter. 



In the first three chapters of Part L, it was shown that 

 plants and animals mainly consist of substances in states of 

 unstable equilibrium substances which have been raised to 

 this unstable equilibrium by the expenditure of the forces we 

 know as solar radiations, and which give out these forces in 

 other forms, on falling into states of stable equilibrium. 

 Leaving out the water, which serves as a vehicle for these 

 materials and a medium for their changes ; and excluding 

 those mineral matters that play either passive or subsidiary 

 parts ; organisms are built up of compounds which are stores 

 of force. Those complex colloids and crystalloids which, as 

 united together, form organized bodies, are the same colloids 

 and crystalloids which give out, on their decomposition, the 

 forces expended by organized bodies. Thus these 



nitrogeneous and carbonaceous substances, being at once 

 the materials for organic growth and the sources of organic 

 force ; it results that as much of them as is used up for the 

 genesis of force, is taken away from the means of growth ; 

 and as much as is economized by diminishing the genesis of 

 force, is available for growth. Given that limited quantity 



