I have been induced by various circumstances to collect in One Volume the
Fourteen Series of Experimental Researches in Electricity, which have appeared
in the Philosophical Transactions during the last seven years: the chief reason
has been the desire to supply at a moderate price the whole of these papers,
with an Index, to those who may desire to have them.
The readers of the volume will, I hope, do me the justice to remember that it
was not written as a whole, but in parts; the earlier portions rarely
having any known relation at the time to those which might follow. If I had
rewritten the work, I perhaps might have considerably varied the form, but
should not have altered much of the real matter: it would not, however, then
have been considered a faithful reprint or statement of the course and results
of the whole investigation, which only I desired to supply.
I may be allowed to express my great satisfaction at finding, that the
different parts, written at intervals during seven years, harmonize so well as
they do. There would have been nothing particular in this, if the parts had
related only to matters well-ascertained before any of them were written:—but as
each professes to contain something of original discovery, or of correction of
received views, it does surprise even my partiality, that they should have the
degree of consistency and apparent general accuracy which they seem to me to
present.
The date of a scientific paper containing any pretensions to discovery is
frequently a matter of serious importance, and it is a great misfortune that
there are many most valuable communications, essential to the history and
progress of science, with respect to which this point cannot now be ascertained.
This arises from the circumstance of the papers having no dates attached to them
individually, and of the journals in which they appear having such as are
inaccurate, i.e. dates of a period earlier than that of publication. I may refer
to the note at the end of the First Series, as an illustration of the kind of
confusion thus produced. These circumstances have induced me to affix a date at
the top of every other page, and I have thought myself justified in using that
placed by the Secretary of the Royal Society on each paper as it was received.
An author has no right, perhaps, to claim an earlier one, unless it has received
confirmation by some public act or officer.
Before concluding these lines I would beg leave to make a reference or two;
first, to my own Papers on Electro-magnetic Rotations in the Quarterly Journal
of Science, 1822. xi. 186. 283. 416, and also to my Letter on
Magneto-electric Induction in the Annales de Chimie, li. These might, as to the
matter, very properly have appeared in this volume, but they would have
interfered with it as a simple reprint of the "Experimental Researches" of the
Philosophical Transactions.
Then I wish to refer, in relation to the Fourth Series on a new law of
Electric Conduction, to Franklin's experiments on the non-conduction of ice,
which have been very properly separated and set forth by Professor Bache
(Journal of the Franklin Institute, 1836. xvi.). These, which I did not at
all remember as to the extent of the effect, though they in no way anticipate
the expression of the law I state as to the general effect of liquefaction on
electrolytes, still should never be forgotten when speaking of that law as
applicable to the case of water.
There are two papers which I am anxious to refer to, as corrections or
criticisms of parts of the Experimental Researches. The first of these is one by
Jacobi (Philosophical Magazine, 1838. xii.), relative to the possible
production of a spark on completing the junction of the two metals of a single
pair of plates (915.). It is an excellent paper, and though I have not repeated
the experiments, the description of them convinces me that I must have been in
error. The second is by that excellent philosopher, Marianini (Memoria della
Societa Italiana di Modena, xx, and is a critical and experimental
examination of Series viii, and of the question whether metallic contact is or
is not productive of a part of the electricity of the voltaic pile. I
see no reason as yet to alter the opinion I have given; but the paper is so very
valuable, comes to the question so directly, and the point itself is of such
great importance, that I intend at the first opportunity renewing the inquiry,
and, if I can, rendering the proofs either on the one side or the other
undeniable to all.
Other parts of these researches have received the honour of critical
attention from various philosophers, to all of whom I am obliged, and some of
whose corrections I have acknowledged in the foot notes. There are, no doubt,
occasions on which I have not felt the force of the remarks, but time and the
progress of science will best settle such cases; and, although I cannot honestly
say that I wish to be found in error, yet I do fervently hope that the
progress of science in the hands of its many zealous present cultivators will be
such, as by giving us new and other developments, and laws more and more general
in their applications, will even make me think that what is written and
illustrated in these experimental researches, belongs to the by-gone parts of
science.
MICHAEL FARADAY.
Royal Institution,
March, 1839.