Judgment Moves to New Fields.
As applied science rises to higher and higher planes, a good many questions which were once matters of judgment, become subjects of estimate, often precise. A century ago the forms of ships were decided by sheer sagacity; to-day, as we have seen in this book, such forms are of definite approved types, each adapted to specific needs, and never departed from by a prudent designer except in slight and carefully noted variations. Such examples may be drawn from many another field where science and industry join hands, especially in every branch of modern engineering. A new power-plant, in every detail of its installation, is so standardized that a competent corps of erectors, from any part of the civilized world, can readily put it together. Its designers from first to last have sought to make operation easy, and every working part “fool-proof.” In case of accident any item of the structure broken or deranged can be supplied by the builders at once.
All this does not mean that science in its onward march is eliminating the need for judgment, but simply that judgment is constantly passing into territory wholly new. In devising gas-engines of novel principle, in combining chemicals for new economies of illumination, the faculty of judgment enters provinces vastly broader than those from which it has retired as its approximations have given place to exact measurements. Manual skill has of late undergone a similar change of scope. Many a modern machine performs hammering, punching, riveting more effectively and swiftly than human hands, so that here an operator of little skill replaces a mechanic of much skill. But in another and higher field, deftness was never more in request than to-day. In the final adjustments of a voltmeter, of a refractometer, in the last polish given to an observatory lens, a delicacy of touch is demanded compared with which the dexterity of an old-time planisher or file-grinder is mere clumsiness.
CHAPTER XXVI
NEWTON, FARADAY AND BELL AT WORK
Newton, the supreme generalizer . . . Faraday, the master of experiment . . . Bell, the inventor of the telephone, transmits speech by a beam of light.
Having now taken a rapid general view of observation and experiment, of the faculty of sound theorizing, let us enter the presence of two great masters of research and invention, beginning with a man who united the loftiest powers as a mathematician, a physicist, and a generalizer.