820 GEOLOGICAL REFORM X 



speculation within these walls has been of doubtful 

 beneficence. 



The sort of geological speculation to which I am 

 now referring (geological aetiology, in short) was 

 created, as a science, by that famous philosopher 

 Immanuel Kant, when, in 1775, he wrote his 

 "General Natural History and Theory of the 

 Celestial Bodies ; or an Attempt to account for 

 the Constitutional and the Mechanical Origin of 

 the Universe upon Newtonian principles." 1 



In this very remarkable but seemingly little- 

 known treatise, 2 Kant expounds a complete cosmo- 

 gony, in the shape of a theory of the causes which 

 have led to the development of the universe 

 from diffused atoms of matter endowed with simple 

 attractive and repulsive forces. 



" Give me matter," says Kant, " and I will build 

 the world ; " and he proceeds to deduce from the 

 simple data from which he starts, a doctrine in all 

 essential respects similar to the well-known 

 " Nebular Hypothesis " of Laplace. 1 He accounts 

 for the relation of the masses and the densities of 

 the planets to their distances from the sun, for the 

 eccentricities of their orbits, for their rotations, for 



1 Grant (History of Physical Astronomy, p. 574) makes but 

 the briefest reference to Kant. 



a " Allgemeine Naturgeschicfre und Theorie des Himinels ; 

 oder Yersuch von der Verfa.'suDg und dem mechanischen 

 Ursprunge des ganzen Weltgebaudes nach Newton'schen Grand - 

 satzen abgehandelt. " KANT'S tiammtlwhe Werke, P>d. i. p. 

 207. 8 Syst&me du Monde, tome ii. chaD. 6. 



