Page:The Works of Francis Bacon (1884) Volume 1.djvu/89

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LIFE OF BACON.
lxxxi

but, as natural and experimental history is so copious and diffusive as to confound and distract the understanding, unless digested in proper order, tallies are formed and so digested, that the understanding may commodiously work upon them.


table i.

The first, or Affirmative Table, consists of a general collection of all the known analogous instances which agree in the nature sought, from subjects however dissimilar or sordid they may be supposed to be, and without being deterred by the apparent number of particulars. If, for instance, the nature sought be heat or light, these tables may be thus conceived:

Heat. Light.
The Sun's direct rays.
Forked Lightning.
Flame.
Blood of Terrestrial Animals.
Living Animals.
Pepper masticated,
&c.
The Heavenly Bodies.
Rotten Wood.
Putrid Scales of Fish.
Glow Worms.
Sugar scraped.
Eyes of certain Animals.
Drops of Salt Water fom ours.
Silk Stockings rubbed,
&c.

Such is the object of his first or affirmative table, which, he warns his reader, is not to raise the edifice, but merely to collect the materials, and which is, therefore, to be made without any hasty indulgence of speculation, although the mind may, in proportion to its ingenuity, accidentally, from an inspection of affirmative instances, arrive at a just conclusion.


table ii.

The second, or Negative Table, consists of a collection of all the known instances of similar bodies, which do not agree in the same nature. Thus, let the nature sought be heat.

Affirmative Table. Negative Table.
The Sun's direct rays.
Blood of Terrestrial Animals.
Living Animal
Boiling Water&c. &c.
The Moon's Rays.
Blood of Fish.
Dead Animals.
Ice,
&c. &c.

By observing this table, it appears that the blood of all animals is not hot. This table, therefore, prevents hasty generalization: "As if Samuel should have rested in those sons of Jesse which were brought before him in the house, and should have sought David, who was absent in the field."

By observing the table, it also appears, that boiling water is hot; ice is cold:—living bodies are hot; dead bodies are cold;—but in boiling water and in living bodies there is motion of parts: in ice and dead bodies they are fixed. Another use, therefore, of this table is to discover the nature sought by observing its qualities which are absent in the analogous nature, "like the images of Cassius and Brutus, in the funeral of Junia;" of which, not being represented as many others were, Tacitus saith, "Eo ipso præfulgebant quod non visebantur."


table iii.

The third, or Table of Comparisons, consists of comparison of quantity of the nature sought in the same bodies and in different bodies. Thus,


comparisons of heat.
In different bodies. In the same body.
There is no solid body naturally hot.
All bodies are in different degrees capable of heat.
There is no whole vegetable hot to the external touch.
Living Animals.
Flame.
Anvil struck by hammer.
The continuance of a body in heat.
Boiling water.
Pepper masticated.
Boiling lead.
Gas.
Lightning.
Acids,
&c. &c.

In Animals.

Animal heat varies from minute perceptibility
to about the heat of the hottest day.
It is always endurable. It is increased by food, venery, exercise, fever, &c.
In some fevers the heat is constant,
in others intermitent, &c.
Heat varies in different parts of the same body.
Animals differ in heat &c.

Flame.

1. The lambent flame, related by historians to have appeared on the heads of children, gently playing about the hair.
2. The coruscations seen in a clear night on a sweating horse.
3. Of the glow-worm.
4. Of the ignis fatuus.
5. Of spirits of wine.
6. Of vegetables, straw, dry leaves.
7. Of boiling metals.
8. Of blast furnaces.

By observing this table the cause of the different quantities of the nature sought, some approximation may be made to the nature itself. Thus, vegetables, or common water, do not exhibit heat to the touch, but masticated pepper or boiling water are hot. Flame is hotter than the human body: boiling water than warm. Is there any difference except in the motion of the parts?


table iv.

Or of Exclusions, is of a more complicated nature. Bacon assumes that the quality of any nature can be ascertained by its being always present when the sought nature is present: is always absent when the sought nature is absent: increases always with its increase, and decreases with its decrease.

Upon this principle his table of exclusion is formed, by excluding, 1st, Such particular natures as are not found in any instances where the given nature is present; or, 2d, Such as are found in any instances where that nature is absent; and 3d,