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1. progress of the electrical researches which I have had the honour to present to the Royal Society, brought me to a point at which it was essential for the further prosecution of my inquiries that no doubt should remain of this identity or distinction of electricities excited by different means. It is perfectly true that Cavendish, Wollaston, Colladon and others have in succession removed some of the greatest objections to the acknowledgment of the identity of the common, animal and voltaic electricity, and I believe that most philosophers consider these electricities as really the same. But on the other hand it is also true, that the accuracy of Wollaston's experiments has been denied; and also that one of them, which really is no proper proof of chemical decomposition by common electricity (45, 63), has been that selected by several experimenters as the test of chemical action (72, 82). It is a fact, too, that many philosophers are still drawing distinctions between the electricities from different sources; or at least doubting whether their identity is proved. Sir Humphry Davy, for instance, in his paper on the Torpedo, thought it