Ollege New S = ee eee we VOL. XXI, No. 3 _ BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1934 Sopyright BRYN MAWR COLLEGE -NEWS, 1934. _ PRICE 10 CENTS - | Theory of Atomists Gives Opportunities _ for Varied Criticism ss Bigesis Peres ; : Dr. Veleiidai Uses Integration of Infinitesimals as Escape from Dilemma ELEMENTS ARE RELATED -AS ENTITIES TO WHOLE The. universe must be made up of _ Jeast, or smallest, parts or it will re- duce itself to zeros. The Atomists were faced with this dilemma, said Dr. Veltmann, speaking in the Com- mon Room on Thursday, October 25, because they did not realize that there was still a third way to explain nat- ural phenomena. The escape from the unhappy al- ternative which faced the Atomists lies in the possibility 6f conceiving the world as an integration of infinitesi- mals. These infinitesimals are differ- ential ratios of functional changes. They correspond neither to atoms nor to zeros, but. are fluctuations between being and non-being. Contrary to the independent atoms, these entities de- pend on each other. An infinitesimal divorced from a system, or unrelated ‘to the whole, has absolutely no mean- ing. To have the elements of the world ‘relational entities in a systematic ‘whole is a necessary conception when one considers the defectiveness of the old material arguments. The Atom- ists stated that everything which is complex must be derived from ulti- mate simples. This statement can only retain its validity if complexity and simplicity are absolute and unequi- vocal attributes of reality. It has ~been proved, however, that these so- called attributes are relative and can- not be absolutized. We canot imagine a maximum complexity of simplicity any more than a maximum hardness or softness. In postulating the existence of emp- ty spaces, the Atomists not only -ig- nored the possibility of light and elec- tro-magnetism, but they transcended human experience. Their space was an abstraction of the extension that was attributed.to material objects. They had to postulate this void in order to meet the problem that arose from their conviction that space was necessary to motion. This problem Continued on Page Five Support for Democrats , Urged by Mrs. Manning Now is the time to support the Ad- ministration, if it is to do anything constructive in the next two years. The coming election is therefore of “enormous importance and great fu- ture significance,” as Dean Manning said in chapel on Tuesday, October twenty-third. News from Washington shows that the Democratic victory is taken for Vocational Tea : 8 Miss Dorothy Kahn, Director ’ of the Federal Emergency Relief in Philadelphia, will speak on College Women in Public Serv- ice in the Common Room Friday, November 2, at 4.30. All those who are intaveated are cordially invited to attend. Special invi- tations could be sent only to those who had signed on the lists last year. Miss Kahn will speak informally. Tea will be served at quarter past four. Lecture Recital Given By Mr. Guy Marriner Music Is Emphasized as Means of Evoking Subconscious and Intuition CLASSICAL IS ART MUSIC “A knowledge of music will enable you to interpret your work and your lives as nothing else in the universe can do,”.said Guy Marriner, in open- ing his six week series of lecture-re- citals on the pianoforte music of the three preceding centuries in the Dean-. ery Tuesday afternoon. He went on to emphasize that “music has always been a means of arousing human emo- tions and of evoking without restric- tions the intuition and the subcon- scious.” In other countries throughout the centuries music has been an intrinsic part of every man’s daily life. It brings about a regeneration of the heart and a desire for sympathetic communion that are among the noblest pleasures of life. Music ‘should be not a recreation, but a Re-creation. Piano music is the most universal form of tonal art and its literature is the largest. Although it lacks much that other instruments provide, it is the only essential solo instrument, and it far surpasses the voice and violin in range of melody and concurrent harmonies. Music changes in form and style to meet the spiritual and aesthetic needs. of each generation. At the end of the 16th.century instrumental dance music in the suite form was popular. Even when these became more ab- stract the rhythm of the dance domi- nated them. In the early 18th cen- tury, after thé development of thé clavichord, the Italian sonata had be- come a formal structure whose es- sence was technique. Scarlatti, born two years before Bach, composed the best sonatas, which are generally all in one movement, divided into two main parts. In the Pastorale and the Capriccio, the great virtuoso’s neat, pianistic style and fanciful freshness can easily be seen. Classical is that which stands the test of time, that which is Art music as opposed to the tuneful music of the people. One can always tell —— Calendar a Thursday, November 1. Dr.. Veltmann. 5.00 P. M. Common Room. Thursday, November 1. Play- ers’ Club presents two one-act plays: Riders to the Sea and The Twelve-Pound Look. © 8.20 P. M. Goodhart. Friday, November 2. Miss Kahn on College Women in Pub- lic Service. 4.30 P. M. Com- mon Room. Saturday, November 3. Var- ‘stty Hockey Game with. Merion