The beginning of the victorious career
of modern science was very largely due to the making
of two stimulating discoveries at the close of the
Middle Ages. One was the discovery of the earth:
the other the discovery of the universe. Men
were confined, like molluscs in their shells, by a
belief that they occupied the centre of a comparatively
small disk some ventured to say a globe which
was poised in a mysterious way in the middle of a
small system of heavenly bodies. The general
feeling was that these heavenly bodies were lamps hung
on a not too remote ceiling for the purpose of lighting
their ways. Then certain enterprising sailors Vasco
da Gama, Maghalaes, Columbus brought
home the news that the known world was only one side
of an enormous globe, and that there were vast lands
and great peoples thousands of miles across the ocean.
The minds of men in Europe had hardly strained their
shells sufficiently to embrace this larger earth when
the second discovery was reported. The roof of
the world, with its useful little system of heavenly
bodies, began to crack and disclose a profound and
mysterious universe surrounding them on every side.
One cannot understand the solidity of the modern doctrine
of the formation of the heavens and the earth until
one appreciates this revolution.
Before the law of gravitation had
been discovered it was almost impossible to regard
the universe as other than a small and compact system.
We shall see that a few daring minds pierced the veil,
and peered out wonderingly into the real universe
beyond, but for the great mass of men it was quite
impossible. To them the modern idea of a universe
consisting of hundreds of millions of bodies, each
weighing billions of tons, strewn over billions of
miles of space, would have seemed the dream of a child
or a savage. Material bodies were “heavy,”
and would “fall down” if they were not
supported. The universe, they said, was a sensible
scientific structure; things were supported in their
respective places. A great dome, of some unknown
but compact material, spanned the earth, and sustained
the heavenly bodies. It might rest on the distant
mountains, or be borne on the shoulders of an Atlas;
or the whole cosmic scheme might be laid on the back
of a gigantic elephant, and if you pressed the
elephant might stand on the hard shell of a tortoise.
But you were not encouraged to press.
The idea of the vault had come from
Babylon, the first home of science. No furnaces
thickened that clear atmosphere, and the heavy-robed
priests at the summit of each of the seven-staged
temples were astronomers. Night by night for
thousands of years they watched the stars and planets
tracing their undeviating paths across the sky.
To explain their movements the priest-astronomers
invented the solid firmament. Beyond the known
land, encircling it, was the sea, and beyond the sea
was a range of high mountains, forming another girdle
round the earth. On these mountains the dome
of the heavens rested, much as the dome of St. Paul’s
rests on its lofty masonry. The sun travelled
across its under-surface by day, and went back to
the east during the night through a tunnel in the
lower portion of the vault. To the common folk
the priests explained that this framework of the world
was the body of an ancient and disreputable goddess.
The god of light had slit her in two, “as you
do a dried fish,” they said, and made the plain
of the earth with one half and the blue arch of the
heavens with the other.
So Chaldaea lived out its 5000
years without discovering the universe. Egypt
adopted the idea from more scientific Babylon.
Amongst the fragments of its civilisation we find
representations of the firmament as a goddess, arching
over the earth on her hands and feet, condemned to
that eternal posture by some victorious god. The
idea spread amongst the smaller nations which were
lit by the civilisation of Babylon and Egypt.
Some blended it with coarse old legends; some, like
the Persians and Hebrews, refined it. The Persians
made fire a purer and lighter spirit, so that the
stars would need no support. But everywhere the
blue vault hemmed in the world and the ideas of men.
It was so close, some said, that the birds could reach
it. At last the genius of Greece brooded over
the whole chaos of cosmical speculations.
The native tradition of Greece was
a little more helpful than the Babylonian teaching.
First was chaos; then the heavier matter sank to the
bottom, forming the disk of the earth, with the ocean
poured round it, and the less coarse matter floated
as an atmosphere above it, and the still finer matter
formed an “aether” above the atmosphere.
A remarkably good guess, in its very broad outline;
but the solid firmament still arched the earth, and
the stars were little undying fires in the vault.
The earth itself was small and flat. It stretched
(on the modern map) from about Gibraltar to the Caspian,
and from Central Germany where the entrance
to the lower world was located to the Atlas
mountains. But all the varied and conflicting
culture of the older empires was now passing into
Greece, lighting up in succession the civilisations
of Asia Minor, the Greek islands, and then Athens and
its sister states. Men began to think.
The first genius to have a glimpse
of the truth seems to have been the grave and mystical
Pythagorus (born about 582 B.C.). He taught his
little school that the earth was a globe, not a disk,
and that it turned on its axis in twenty-four hours.
The earth and the other planets were revolving round
the central fire of the system; but the sun was a
reflection of this central fire, not the fire itself.
Even Pythagoras, moreover, made the heavens a solid
sphere revolving, with its stars, round the central
fire; and the truth he discovered was mingled with
so much mysticism, and confined to so small and retired
a school, that it was quickly lost again. In
the next generation Anaxagoras taught that the sun
was a vast globe of white-hot iron, and that the stars
were material bodies made white-hot by friction with
the ether. A generation later the famous Democritus
came nearer than any to the truth. The universe
was composed of an infinite number of indestructible
particles, called “atoms,” which had gradually
settled from a state of chaotic confusion to their
present orderly arrangement in large masses. The
sun was a body of enormous size, and the points of
light in the Milky Way were similar suns at a tremendous
distance from the earth. Our universe, moreover,
was only one of an infinite number of universes, and
an eternal cycle of destruction and re-formation was
running through these myriads of worlds.
By sheer speculation Greece was well
on the way of discovery. Then the mists of philosophy
fell between the mind of Greece and nature, and the
notions of Democritus were rejected with disdain; and
then, very speedily, the decay of the brilliant nation
put an end to its feverish search for truth.
Greek culture passed to Alexandria, where it met the
remains of the culture of Egypt, Babylonia, and Persia,
and one more remarkable effort was made to penetrate
the outlying universe before the night of the Middle
Ages fell on the old world.
Astronomy was ardently studied at
Alexandria, and was fortunately combined with an assiduous
study of mathematics. Aristarchus (about 320-250
B.C.) calculated that the sun was 84,000,000 miles
away; a vast expansion of the solar system and, for
the time, a remarkable approach to the real figure
(92,000,000) Eratosthenes (276-196 B.C.) made an extremely
good calculation of the size of the earth, though he
held it to be the centre of a small universe.
He concluded that it was a globe measuring 27,000
(instead of 23,700) miles in circumference. Posidonius
(135-51 B.C.) came even nearer with a calculation that
the circumference was between 25,000 and 19,000 miles;
and he made a fairly correct estimate of the diameter,
and therefore distance, of the sun. Hipparchus
(190-120 B.C.) made an extremely good calculation of
the distance of the moon.
By the brilliant work of the Alexandrian
astronomers the old world seemed to be approaching
the discovery of the universe. Men were beginning
to think in millions, to gaze boldly into deep abysses
of space, to talk of vast fiery globes that made the
earth insignificant But the splendid energy gradually
failed, and the long line was closed by Ptolemaeus,
who once more put the earth in the centre of the system,
and so imposed what is called the Ptolemaic system
on Europe. The keen school-life of Alexandria
still ran on, and there might have been a return to
the saner early doctrines, but at last Alexandrian
culture was extinguished in the blood of the aged
Hypatia, and the night fell. Rome had had no
genius for science; though Lucretius gave an immortal
expression to the views of Democritus and Epicurus,
and such writers as Cicero and Pliny did great service
to a later age in preserving fragments of the older
discoveries. The curtains were once more drawn
about the earth. The glimpses which adventurous
Greeks had obtained of the great outlying universe
were forgotten for a thousand years. The earth
became again the little platform in the centre of a
little world, on which men and women played their
little parts, preening themselves on their superiority
to their pagan ancestors.
I do not propose to tell the familiar
story of the revival at any length. As far as
the present subject is concerned, it was literally
a Renascence, or re-birth, of Greek ideas. Constantinople
having been taken by the Turks (1453), hundreds of
Greek scholars, with their old literature, sought
refuge in Europe, and the vigorous brain of the young
nations brooded over the ancient speculations, just
as the vigorous young brain of Greece had done two
thousand years before. Copernicus (1473-1543)
acknowledges that he found the secret of the movements
of the heavenly bodies in the speculations of the old
Greek thinkers. Galilei (1564-1642) enlarged
the Copernican system with the aid of the telescope;
and the telescope was an outcome of the new study of
optics which had been inspired in Roger Bacon and
other medieval scholars by the optical works, directly
founded on the Greek, of the Spanish Moors. Giordano
Bruno still further enlarged the system; he pictured
the universe boldly as an infinite ocean of liquid
ether, in which the stars, with retinues of inhabited
planets, floated majestically. Bruno was burned
at the stake (1600); but the curtains that had so long
been drawn about the earth were now torn aside for
ever, and men looked inquiringly into the unfathomable
depths beyond. Descartes (1596-1650) revived
the old Greek idea of a gradual evolution of the heavens
and the earth from a primitive chaos of particles,
taught that the stars stood out at unimaginable distances
in the ocean of ether, and imagined the ether as stirring
in gigantic whirlpools, which bore cosmic bodies in
their orbits as the eddy in the river causes the cork
to revolve.
These stimulating conjectures made
a deep impression on the new age. A series of
great astronomers had meantime been patiently and
scientifically laying the foundations of our knowledge.
Kepler (1571-1630) formulated the laws of the movement
of the planets; Newton (1642-1727) crowned the earlier
work with his discovery of the real agency that sustains
cosmic bodies in their relative positions. The
primitive notion of a material frame and the confining
dome of the ancients were abandoned. We know
now that a framework of the most massive steel would
be too frail to hold together even the moon and the
earth. It would be rent by the strain. The
action of gravitation is the all-sustaining power.
Once introduce that idea, and the great ocean of ether
might stretch illimitably on every side, and the vastest
bodies might be scattered over it and traverse it
in stupendous paths. Thus it came about that,
as the little optic tube of Galilei slowly developed
into the giant telescope of Herschel, and then into
the powerful refracting telescopes of the United States
of our time; as the new science of photography provided
observers with a new eye a sensitive plate
that will register messages, which the human eye cannot
detect, from far-off regions; and as a new instrument,
the spectroscope, endowed astronomers with a power
of perceiving fresh aspects of the inhabitants of
space, the horizon rolled backward, and the mind contemplated
a universe of colossal extent and power.
Let us try to conceive this universe
before we study its evolution. I do not adopt
any of the numerous devices that have been invented
for the purpose of impressing on the imagination the
large figures we must use. One may doubt if any
of them are effective, and they are at least familiar.
Our solar system the family of sun and planets
which had been sheltered under a mighty dome resting
on the hill-tops has turned out to occupy
a span of space some 16,000,000,000 miles in diameter.
That is a very small area in the new universe.
Draw a circle, 100 billion miles in diameter, round
the sun, and you will find that it contains only three
stars besides the sun. In other words, a sphere
of space measuring 300 billion miles in circumference we
will not venture upon the number of cubic miles contains
only four stars (the sun, alpha Centauri,
21,185 Lalande, and 61 Cygni). However, this
part of space seems to be below the average in point
of population, and we must adopt a different way of
estimating the magnitude of the universe from the number
of its stellar citizens.
Beyond the vast sphere of comparatively
empty space immediately surrounding our sun lies the
stellar universe into which our great telescopes are
steadily penetrating. Recent astronomers give
various calculations, ranging from 200,000,000 to
2,000,000,000, of the number of stars that have yet
come within our faintest knowledge. Let us accept
the modest provisional estimate of 500,000,000.
Now, if we had reason to think that these stars were
of much the same size and brilliance as our sun, we
should be able roughly to calculate their distance
from their faintness. We cannot do this, as they
differ considerably in size and intrinsic brilliance.
Sirius is more than twice the size of our sun and
gives out twenty times as much light. Canopus
emits 20,000 times as much light as the sun, but we
cannot say, in this case, how much larger it is than
the sun. Arcturus, however, belongs to the same
class of stars as our sun, and astronomers conclude
that it must be thousands of times larger than the
sun. A few stars are known to be smaller than
the sun. Some are, intrinsically, far more brilliant;
some far less brilliant.
Another method has been adopted, though
this also must be regarded with great reserve.
The distance of the nearer stars can be positively
measured, and this has been done in a large number
of cases. The proportion of such cases to the
whole is still very small, but, as far as the results
go, we find that stars of the first magnitude are,
on the average, nearly 200 billion miles away; stars
of the second magnitude nearly 300 billion; and stars
of the third magnitude 450 billion. If this fifty
per cent increase of distance for each lower magnitude
of stars were certain and constant, the stars of the
eighth magnitude would be 3000 billion miles away,
and stars of the sixteenth magnitude would be 100,000
billion miles away; and there are still two fainter
classes of stars which are registered on long-exposure
photographs. The mere vastness of these figures
is immaterial to the astronomer, but he warns us that
the method is uncertain. We may be content to
conclude that the starry universe over which our great
telescopes keep watch stretches for thousands, and
probably tens of thousands, of billions of miles.
There are myriads of stars so remote that, though
each is a vast incandescent globe at a temperature
of many thousand degrees, and though their light is
concentrated on the mirrors or in the lenses of our
largest telescopes and directed upon the photographic
plate at the rate of more than 800 billion waves a
second, they take several hours to register the faintest
point of light on the plate.
When we reflect that the universe
has grown with the growth of our telescopes and the
application of photography we wonder whether we may
as yet see only a fraction of the real universe, as
small in comparison with the whole as the Babylonian
system was in comparison with ours. We must be
content to wonder. Some affirm that the universe
is infinite; others that it is limited. We have
no firm ground in science for either assertion.
Those who claim that the system is limited point out
that, as the stars decrease in brightness, they increase
so enormously in number that the greater faintness
is more than compensated, and therefore, if there
were an infinite series of magnitudes, the midnight
sky would be a blaze of light. But this theoretical
reasoning does not allow for dense regions of space
that may obstruct the light, or vast regions of vacancy
between vast systems of stars. Even apart from
the evidence that dark nebulae or other special light-absorbing
regions do exist, the question is under discussion
in science at the present moment whether light is
not absorbed in the passage through ordinary space.
There is reason to think that it is. Let us leave
precarious speculations about finiteness and infinity
to philosophers, and take the universe as we know it.
Picture, then, on the more moderate
estimate, these 500,000,000 suns scattered over tens
of thousands of billions of miles. Whether they
form one stupendous system, and what its structure
may be, is too obscure a subject to be discussed here.
Imagine yourself standing at a point from which you
can survey the whole system and see into the depths
and details of it. At one point is a single star
(like our sun), billions of miles from its nearest
neighbour, wearing out its solitary life in a portentous
discharge of energy. Commonly the stars are in
pairs, turning round a common centre in periods that
may occupy hundreds of days or hundreds of years.
Here and there they are gathered into clusters, sometimes
to the number of thousands in a cluster, travelling
together over the desert of space, or trailing in
lines like luminous caravans. All are rushing
headlong at inconceivable speeds. Few are known
to be so sluggish as to run, like our sun, at only
8000 miles an hour. One of the “fixed”
stars of the ancients, the mighty Arcturus, darts along
at a rate of more than 250 miles a second. As
they rush, their surfaces glowing at a temperature
anywhere between 1000 and 20,000 degrees C., they
shake the environing space with electric waves from
every tiny particle of their body at a rate of from
400 billion to 800 billion waves a second. And
somewhere round the fringe of one of the smaller suns
there is a little globe, more than a million times
smaller than the solitary star it attends, lost in
the blaze of its light, on which human beings find
a home during a short and late chapter of its history.
Look at it again from another aspect.
Every colour of the rainbow is found in the stars.
Emerald, azure, ruby, gold, lilac, topaz, fawn they
shine with wonderful and mysterious beauty. But,
whether these more delicate shades be really in the
stars or no, three colours are certainly found in
them. The stars sink from bluish white to yellow,
and on to deep red. The immortal fires of the
Greeks are dying. Piercing the depths with a
dull red glow, here and there, are the dying suns;
and if you look closely you will see, flitting like
ghosts across the light of their luminous neighbours,
the gaunt frames of dead worlds. Here and there
are vast stretches of loose cosmic dust that seems
to be gathering into embryonic stars; here and there
are stars in infancy or in strenuous youth. You
detect all the chief phases of the making of a world
in the forms and fires of these colossal aggregations
of matter. Like the chance crowd on which you
may look down in the square of a great city, they
range from the infant to the worn and sinking aged.
There is this difference, however, that the embryos
of worlds sprawl, gigantic and luminous, across the
expanse; that the dark and mighty bodies of the dead
rush, like the rest, at twenty or fifty miles a second;
and that at intervals some appalling blaze, that dims
even the fearful furnaces of the living, seems to
announce the resurrection of the dead. And there
is this further difference, that, strewn about the
intermediate space between the gigantic spheres, is
a mass of cosmic dust minute grains, or
large blocks, or shoals consisting of myriads of pieces,
or immeasurable clouds of fine gas that
seems to be the rubbish left over after the making
of worlds, or the material gathering for the making
of other worlds.
This is the universe that the nineteenth
century discovered and the twentieth century is interpreting.
Before we come to tell the fortunes of our little
earth we have to see how matter is gathered into these
stupendous globes of fire, how they come sometimes
to have smaller bodies circling round them on which
living things may appear, how they supply the heat
and light and electricity that the living things need,
and how the story of life on a planet is but a fragment
of a larger story. We have to study the birth
and death of worlds, perhaps the most impressive of
all the studies that modern science offers us.
Indeed, if we would read the whole story of evolution,
there is an earlier chapter even than this; the latest
chapter to be opened by science, the first to be read.
We have to ask where the matter, which we are going
to gather into worlds, itself came from; to understand
more clearly what is the relation to it of the forces
or energies gravitation, electricity, etc. with
which we glibly mould it into worlds, or fashion it
into living things; and, above all, to find out its
relation to this mysterious ocean of ether in which
it is found.
Less than half a century ago the making
of worlds was, in popular expositions of science,
a comparatively easy business. Take an indefinite
number of atoms of various gases and metals, scatter
them in a fine cloud over some thousands of millions
of miles of space, let gravitation slowly compress
the cloud into a globe, its temperature rising through
the compression, let it throw off a ring of matter,
which in turn gravitation will compress into a globe,
and you have your earth circulating round the sun.
It is not quite so simple; in any case, serious men
of science wanted to know how these convenient and
assorted atoms happened to be there at all, and what
was the real meaning of this equally convenient gravitation.
There was a greater truth than he knew in the saying
of an early physicist, that the atom had the look of
a “manufactured article.” It was
increasingly felt, as the nineteenth century wore
on, that the atoms had themselves been evolved out
of some simpler material, and that ether might turn
out to be the primordial chaos. There were even
those who felt that ether would prove to be the one
source of all matter and energy. And just before
the century closed a light began to shine in those
deeper abysses of the submaterial world, and the foundations
of the universe began to appear.