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APPENDIX: AN ATTEMPT TOWARDS A MORE EXTENDED INDUCTION OF THE LAWS OF LIFE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

The motion of a pendulum consists of two portions—a downward movement caused by gravitation, and an upward movement, theoretically equal in amount, which is produced by the momentum arising from the former. The essential condition of the sequence of the upward movement is that the downward movement should be resisted in a definite manner. The gravitating motion, not being completed, becomes a motion opposed to gravity.

The molecular changes recognized in living bodies are of two kinds—those which result in that arrangement of the particles which constitutes organic matter, and those which tend to reduce organic matter to the condition of inorganic compounds. The former of these motions (or forms of action) is known as nutrition, the latter as decomposition.

It is sometimes said that decomposition results from the operation of chemical affinity, and that nutrition is the operation of the vital force, I shall for the present use these words with these meanings. If the idea of a resistance to the motion of decomposition be introduced, it may readily be conceived that the chemical and vital actions (as above defined) bear to each other the same relation as that which exists between the downward and upward motions of a pendulum. The chemical motion, not being completed, may become a motion opposed to chemical attraction.

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Life in Nature , pp. 229 - 258
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1862

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