ANIMAL ELECTRICITY:
READ IN THE
INSTITUTE OF BOLOGNA,
IN THE YEAR 1794,
By J. ALDINI.
I. The philosophers of the present period are so sanguine in their expectations, that when a new theory is proposed, unless it be presented to them perfect and fully proved, they either attack it in part, or entirely reject it. Such has been the case with animal electricity, discovered by Galvani. It is urged against it by its opponents, that it is subject to variations; and because they do not find it obedient to all those laws established by the laborious researches of a Franklin, a Beccaria and an Æpinus, they assert either that it has no foundation, or that it is contrary to nature. It has therefore
been conceived that an accurate comparison of animal and common electricity, in order to ascertain whether there be any difference between them, might be the best means of obviating such objections. For this purpose I made various experiments in animal electricity under the air pump, employing proper conductors, and I compared its phænomena with those exhibited by the Leyden flask. In a word, while I endeavoured to pursue my researches agreeably to the general theory of common electricity, my principal object was to prove the constancy of animal electricity, by discovering, if possible, an agreement in the physical laws of both.
II. As it had been proved by a great many experiments, that common electricity could be obtained from non-conducting bodies in the most perfect vacuum possible to be formed by means of an air pump, experiments were undertaken in order to ascertain whether the same phænomenon was common also to animal electricity, and with this view attempts were made to excite the latter in vacuo[7]. Muscati indeed had deprived animals of life in vacuo, and afterwards found them susceptible of Galvanism in the open air; but he made no attempt to determine whether the animal electricity could be manifested in vacuo. I employed for my experiments a glass vessel; [Plate IV.] fig. 6., furnished with a metallic rod, which could be, raised up or pushed down at pleasure. To the extremity
of the rod, within the receiver, was affixed at right angles a metallic wire, from one end of which an armed frog was suspended by the muscles, and from the other a small metallic chain a little longer than the frog, a plate of silver being placed below both the frog and the chain. When as perfect a vacuum as possible had been obtained, the metallic rod was pushed down, so that the small chain and the spinal marrow of the suspended frog were made to touch the silver plate, and by these means the latter formed an arc in the exhausted receiver. In this experiment, the power of Galvanism was found to be the same as in the open air, so that as often as the rod was pushed down contractions were excited in the frog. By this method it was easy to ascertain what repeated contact could produce by forming new arcs: for though the small chain and the extremity of the spinal marrow touched the silver plate; yet, when removed from that position ever so little, by moving the rod new contractions took place, which could not have been expected unless new contact on moving the rod had produced as it were new arcs. This kind of apparatus seemed the most convenient for performing in vacuo all those experiments which Galvani had performed in the open air.
III. But it was as yet difficult to determine, whether the contractions which took place were stronger in rarefied than in common air; for the difference between the electricity was so small, that it was impossible to say which was the more powerful. I therefore resolved to clear up this point by other