122 IIIE INDUCTIONS OF BIOLOGY. 



of nutritii'e matter whicli the pre-existing structure of fui 

 organism enables it to absorb ; and it is a necessary corollary 

 from the persistence of force, that the matter accumulated as 

 growth, cannot exceed that surplus which remains unde- 

 composed, after the production of the required amounts of 

 sensible and insensible motion. This, which would 



bo rigorously true under all conditions, if exactly the sams 

 substances were used in exactly the same proportions, for the 

 production of force and for the formation of tissue, requires, 

 however, to be taken with the qualification, that some of the 

 force- evolving substances are not constituents of tissue ; and 

 that thus, there may be a genesis of force which is not at the 

 expense of potential growth. But since organisms (or at 

 least animal organisms, with which we are here chiefly 

 concerned,) have a certain power of selective absorption, 

 which, partially in an individual and more completely in a 

 race, adapts the proportions of the substances absorbed to the 

 needs of the system ; then if a certain habitual expenditure 

 of force, leads to a certain habitual absorption of force- 

 evolving matters that are not available for growth ; and if, 

 were there less need for such matters, the ability to absorb 

 matters available for growth would be increased to an equi- 

 valent extent ; it follows that the antagonism described, does, 

 m the long run, hold even without this qualification. Hence, 

 growth is substantially equivalent to the absorbed nutriment, 

 minus the nutriment used up in action. 



This, however, is no answer to the question — why has ■ 

 individual growth a limit ? The antagonism described, does 

 not manifestly account for the fact, that in every domestic 

 animal the increments of growth bear continually decreasing 

 ratios to the mass, and finally come to an end. Nevertheless, 

 it is demonstrable that the excess of absorbed over expended 

 autriment, must, other things equal, become less as the size of 

 the animal becomes greater. In similarly-shaped bodies, 



the masses vary as the cubes of the dimensions ; whereas the 

 strengths vary as the squares of the dimensions. See here 



