The Philosophy of Radio Activity Or Selective Involution

Cover The Philosophy of Radio Activity Or Selective Involution
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Moulton thinks all the nebulae are spiral. These views are shared by the majority of modern astronomers, though some with them ap- parently Professor Jacobi prefer to think that some systems may be formed in other ways, not seeing "why it must be assumed that all must develop in precisely the same way. " Soddy refers to the reluctance of astronomers to accept Prof. Joly's calculations that the Earth's rocks contain enough radium to supply all the heat lost by radiation, and more.
142 PHILOSOPHY
... OF RADIO-ACTIVITY Page Line Note Theoretically there should be as many "dark bodies" as light bodies in space. Being dark, of course they can not be seen. Prof. Jacobi, March 25, 1914, showed at Columbia College, for the first time, a photograph taken by Prof. Parker, which was ap- parently a dark object between the earth and a nebula.
The Philosophy of Radio- Activity points to the probability that there are not as many dark bodies seeking collision as the astronomers infer.
Prof. Perrin says : "We are sure the sun has not cooled in a billion years, and has heat enough for another billion.


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