XVIII. 3] INTERPRETATION OF THE QUANTUM 249
What will be the issue of the struggle ? It may happen that
one of the two theories will occupy step by step the territory of
the other. Schrodinger in 1922 made some progress in this
direction when he gave an explanation of Doppler’s principle by
the theory of quanta. Kramers in 1924 made an attempt to
account for the law of dispersion of light by employing Bohr’s
principle of correspondence. On the other hand, it may happen
that some artificial reunion can be effected between the two
theories, and several investigators have worked in this direction.
Probably, in this conflict as in that between other antagonistic
physical theories, a new and more comprehensive theory will be
found which will embody the more important principles of the
two rivals. It seems that already the work of de Broglie and of
Schrodinger is pointing the way towards such an all-embracing
theory.
3. Atomic Models
Physicists in general take up the pragmatic standpoint
illustrated by the quotation from Sir Joseph Thomson which
stands at the head of the present chapter. For them a working
theory is a theory that works, in the sense that it co-ordinates
known facts and suggests new lines of investigation. But this
need not abrogate the quest for a more complete and all-embracing
synthesis.
An excellent illustration of the development of theory is
afforded by the history of the attempts that have been made to
devise a model of the atom. In the older model of Kelvin and
J. J. Thomson the electrons were at rest in a sphere of positive
electricity. Later on J. J. Thomson devised a kinetic model in
which the electrons revolved in orbits controlled by the positive
charge. These models served a most useful purpose, especially
in providing a physical interpretation of the periodic classifica
tion of the elements. Static models, though somewhat out of
favour, may still serve a useful purpose, and may even be
employed for approximate calculations (Chapter IX). The work
of Ritz, though left uncompleted, emphasized the magnetic
aspects of the problem of atomic structure, which for a time
tended to become somewhat obscured.
The extraordinary success which has attended the theory of
the nuclear atom developed by Rutherford must not blind us
to the fact that we have here to do with an atomic model, which
is probably only a crude representation of the actual facts of
intra-atomic structure. The law of the inverse square of the
distance on which the model is based may be interpreted in
other ways than by the assumption of point charges (Chapter