Part 17 (1/2)
Momentum, 184.
Monocular vision, 98.
Monotheism of the Christians and Jews, 187.
Montagues and Capulets, 87.
Moon, eclipse of, 219; lightness of bodies on, 4; the study of the, 90, 284.
Moreau, 307.
Mosaic of thought, 192.
Motion, a perpetual, 181; quant.i.ty of, 184; the Eleatics on, 158; Wundt on, 158; the Herbartians on, 158.
Motions, natural and violent, 226; their familiar character, 157.
Mountains of the earth, would crumble if very large, 3; weight of bodies on, 112.
Mozart, 44, 279.
MAller, Johann, 291.
Multiplication-table, 195.
Multiplier, 132.
Music, band of, its tempo accelerated and r.e.t.a.r.ded, 53; the principle of repet.i.tion in, 99 et seq.; its notation, mathematically ill.u.s.trated, 103-104.
Musical notes, reversion of, 101 et seq.; their economy, 192.
Musical scale, a species of one-dimensional s.p.a.ce, 105.
Mystery, in physics, 222; science can dispense with, 189.
Mysticism, numerical, 33; in the principle of energy, 184.
Mythology, the mechanical, of philosophy, 207.
Nagel, von, 364.
Nansen, 296.
Napoleon, picture representing the tomb of, 36.
Nations, intercourse and ideas of, 336-337.
Natural constants, 193.
Natural law, a, not contained in the conformity of the energies, 175.
Natural laws, abridged descriptions, 193; likened to type, 193.
Natural motions, 225.
Natural selection in scientific theories, 63, 218.
Nature, experience the well-spring of all knowledge of, 181; fas.h.i.+ons of, 64; first knowledge of, instinctive, 189; general interconnexion of, 182; has many sides, 217; her forces compared to purposes, 14-15; likened to a good man of business, 15; the economy of her actions, 15; how she appears to other animals, 83 et seq.; inquiry of, viewed as a torture, 48-49; view of, as something designedly concealed from man, 49; like a covetous tailor, 9-10; magic powers of, 189; our view of, modified by binocular vision, 82; the experimental method a questioning of, 48.
Negro hamlet, the science of a, 237.
Neptune, prediction and discovery of the planet, 29.
New views, 296 et seq.
Newton, describes polarisation, 242; expresses his wealth of thought in Latin, 341; his discovery of gravitation, 225 et seq.; his solution of dispersion, 362; his principle of the equality of pressure and counterpressure, 191; his view of light, 227-228; on absolute time, 204; selections from his works for use in instruction, 368; also 270, 274, 279, 285, 289.
n.o.bility, they displace Latin, 342.
Notation, musical, mathematically ill.u.s.trated, 103-104.
Numbers, economy of, 195; their connexion with consonance, 32.
Numerical mysticism, 33.
Nursery, the questions of the, 199.
Observation, 310.
Observation, in science, 261.
Ocean-stream, 272.
Oettingen, Von, 103.
Ohm, on electric currents, 249.
Ohm, the word, 343.
Oil, alcohol, water, and, employed in Plateau's experiments, 4; free ma.s.s of, a.s.sumes the shape of a sphere, 12; geometrical figures of, 5 et seq.
One-eyed people, vision of, 98.
Ophthalmoscope, 18.
Optic nerves, 96.
Optimism and pessimism, 234.
Order of physics, 197.