Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PLATES
- PART I THE FORM OF THE EXISTING UNIVERSE
- PART II THE CONSTITUENT MECHANISMS, OR THE PRINCIPLE OF THE VITALITY OF STELLAR ARRANGEMENTS
- PART III THE ORIGIN AND PROBABLE DESTINY OF THE PRESENT FORM OF THE MATERIAL CREATION
- LETTER VI The Nebulæ
- LETTER VII The Nebular Hypothesis
- LETTER VIII Speculation
- NOTES
- Additions and Corrections
LETTER VII - The Nebular Hypothesis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PLATES
- PART I THE FORM OF THE EXISTING UNIVERSE
- PART II THE CONSTITUENT MECHANISMS, OR THE PRINCIPLE OF THE VITALITY OF STELLAR ARRANGEMENTS
- PART III THE ORIGIN AND PROBABLE DESTINY OF THE PRESENT FORM OF THE MATERIAL CREATION
- LETTER VI The Nebulæ
- LETTER VII The Nebular Hypothesis
- LETTER VIII Speculation
- NOTES
- Additions and Corrections
Summary
Let us note the exact amount of evidence constituted by the speculations of the foregoing letter, on behalf of the Hypothesis that all existing stellar bodies sprung by virtue of the law of attraction, from the bosom of a chaos similar to the vague masses I have described. In so far as this Hypothesis undertakes to explain the nebulæ, I do not conceive that much of accessible knowledge is now wanting to confirm it; for, the agreement of the forms of the nebular substance with the natural results of the persevering action of gravity, seems almost demonstrated. But it must not be forgotten that there is another correlative and very extensive inquiry which this truth has not touched; The Hypothesis must alsoexplain the stars. If it is the true Cosmogony, and we have at length approached a right theory of the Formation of Things, we should indeed obtain from it a satisfactory idea of the meaning of that curious progression of structure, which so strikingly characterises the Nebulous masses; but it is no less imperative that it exhibit with proper distinctness, how the mass of stars around us, along with their peculiar features and arrangements, might have been evolved, in obedience to known mechanical laws, by the condensation of Nebulæ.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Views of the Architecture of the HeavensIn a Series of Letters to a Lady, pp. 145 - 192Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1837