OF FORCE. 193 



intelligence to life, or a quality analogous to it, by which it foresees what it should do. An 

 erroneous view of forces has undoubtedly been propagated in consequence of the diversity 

 which may be recognized in their phenomena : thus the aeration of the black blood in the 

 lungs has been regarded as due to vitality. The digestion of food is still more so; yet 

 both processes may be instances of pure chemical action. The vitality of the apparatus, in 

 these cases, is dwelt upon, and is undoubtedly the basis upon which the vital doctrine rests. 

 But we may discard such a view, for it is not the vitality of the apparatus, but the pro- 

 perties of the bodies mingling together in the apparatus, which gives rise to the pheno- 

 mena indicating the change they have undergone. We might as well say that the forma- 

 tion of ether, when alcohol and sulphuric acid are mixed, is due to the sides of the retort, 

 as that food is digested in the stomach by virtue of organs, independent of the substance 

 taken into it. The organs which contain fluids are destitute of power over the thing con- 

 tained, except to confine and convey, just as much so as glass and copper tubes, and re- 

 torts and flasks. This may look too much like inorganic phenomena, although the inor- 

 ganic stand in opposition to organic. The first certainly performs no function, while it is 

 the peculiar property of the latter to exercise one ; it is essentially functional and active, 

 while the inorganic is inert and at rest. But it is not through the organ in its activeness that 

 activity exists, or that force is manifested. The organ is not transformed as a whole ; but 

 transformations are going on in its minute parts, as the cell : it is not the force of tlie 

 organ, any more than it is the force of the retort when transformations occur in it, but each 

 integral cell has activity, and the sum total of these activities, is the measure of the activity 

 of the organ. 



As in chemistry there is a combining and an arranging force, termed polarity, so in or- 

 ganic bodies there is a formative and directive force, which has been called vital. The 

 combining and formative forces are analogous to each other, and so are the polar and di- 

 rective forces also analogous in their respective spheres. 



Mulder says that function depends as much upon form as upon matter ; that the acora 

 of the oak forms tannic acid, the capsule of the poppy, opium, notwithstanding they may 

 grow upon the same soil and be nourished by the same elements. This common result is 

 due to the form of the cell as well as to the matter of the cell, and hence it follows, ac- 

 cording to MuLDEK, that form has force. This view seems to be sustained by the fact that 

 each species has its peculiar cell, and its peculiar combination of cells. The embryo which 

 is formed by the parent, has both the form of the cull, and the arrangement determined, 

 before the forces which develoji the future individual come into action. Here then is the 

 origin of the power which individualizes the species. The parent can only produce its 

 like ; it forms the cell, combines and arranges the groups, and in the cell the directive 

 force slumbers till called into action by heat and moisture. It may be said that the cell and 

 its combinations in the embryo, in conjunction with the matter, can only develop the in- 

 dividual like the parent, though the activities are merely chemical and independent of a 

 virtual force ; that it is not philosophical to suppose each being is endowed with a specific 

 [AGRicoLTiniAi, Report — Vol. ni.] 25 



