Our next task is to study coming-to-be and passing-away.
We are to distinguish the causes, and to state the definitions,
of these processes considered in general-as changes predicable
uniformly of all the things that come-to-be and pass-away by
nature. Further, we are to study growth and 'alteration'. We
must inquire what each of them is; and whether 'alteration' is to be identified
with coming-to-be, or whether to these different names there correspond
two separate processes with distinct natures.
On this question, indeed, the early philosophers are divided. Some
of them assert that the so-called 'unqualified coming-to-be' is 'alteration',
while others maintain that 'alteration' and coming-to-be are distinct.
For those who say that the universe is one something (i.e. those who generate
all things out of one thing) are bound to assert that coming-to-be is 'alteration',
and that whatever 'comes-to-be' in the proper sense of the term is 'being
altered': but those who make the matter of things more than one must distinguish
coming-to-be from 'alteration'. To this latter class belong Empedocles,
Anaxagoras, and Leucippus. And yet Anaxagoras himself failed to understand
his own utterance. He says, at all events, that coming-to-be and passing-away
are the same as 'being altered':' yet, in common with other thinkers, he
affirms that the elements are many. Thus Empedocles holds that the corporeal
elements are four, while all the elements-including those which initiate
movement-are six in number; whereas Anaxagoras agrees with Leucippus and
Democritus that the elements are infinite.
(Anaxagoras posits as elements the 'homoeomeries', viz. bone, flesh,
marrow, and everything else which is such that part and whole are the same
in name and nature; while Democritus and Leucippus say that there are indivisible
bodies, infinite both in number and in the varieties of their shapes, of
which everything else is composed-the compounds differing one from another
according to the shapes, 'positions', and 'groupings' of their
constituents.)
For the views of the school of Anaxagoras seem diametrically opposed
to those of the followers of Empedocles. Empedocles says that Fire, Water,
Air, and Earth are four elements, and are thus 'simple' rather than flesh,
bone, and bodies which, like these, are 'homoeomeries'. But the followers
of Anaxagoras regard the 'homoeomeries' as 'simple' and elements, whilst
they affirm that Earth, Fire, Water, and Air are composite; for each of
these is (according to them) a 'common seminary' of all the
'homoeomeries'.
Those, then, who construct all things out of a single element,
must maintain that coming-tobe and passing-away are 'alteration'. For they
must affirm that the underlying something always remains identical and
one; and change of such a substratum is what we call 'altering' Those,
on the other hand, who make the ultimate kinds of things more than one,
must maintain that 'alteration' is distinct from coming-to-be: for coming-to-be
and passingaway result from the consilience and the dissolution of the
many kinds. That is why Empedocles too uses language to this effect, when
he says 'There is no coming-to-be of anything, but only a mingling and
a divorce of what has been mingled'. Thus it is clear (i) that to describe
coming-to-be and passing-away in these terms is in accordance with their
fundamental assumption, and (ii) that they do in fact so describe them:
nevertheless, they too must recognize 'alteration' as a fact distinct from
coming to-be, though it is impossible for them to do so consistently with
what they say.
That we are right in this criticism is easy to perceive. For 'alteration'
is a fact of observation. While the substance of the thing remains unchanged,
we see it 'altering' just as we see in it the changes of magnitude called
'growth' and 'diminution'. Nevertheless, the statements of those who posit
more 'original reals' than one make 'alteration' impossible. For 'alteration,
as we assert, takes place in respect to certain qualities: and these qualities
(I mean, e.g. hot-cold, white-black, dry-moist, soft-hard, and so forth)
are, all of them, differences characterizing the 'elements'. The actual
words of Empedocles may be quoted in illustration-
The sun everywhere bright to see, and hot,
The rain everywhere dark and cold; and he distinctively characterizes
his remaining elements in a similar manner. Since, therefore, it is not
possible for Fire to become Water, or Water to become Earth, neither will
it be possible for anything white to become black, or anything soft to
become hard; and the same argument applies to all the other qualities.
Yet this is what 'alteration' essentially is.
It follows, as an obvious corollary, that a single matter must
always be assumed as underlying the contrary 'poles' of any change whether
change of place, or growth and diminution, or 'alteration'; further, that
the being of this matter and the being of 'alteration' stand and fall together.
For if the change is 'alteration', then the substratum is a single element;
i.e. all things which admit of change into one another have a single matter.
And, conversely, if the substratum of the changing things is one, there
is 'alteration'.
Empedocles, indeed, seems to contradict his own statements as well
as the observed facts. For he denies that any one of his elements comes-to-be
out of any other, insisting on the contrary that they are the things out
of which everything else comes-to-be; and yet (having brought the entirety
of existing things, except Strife, together into one) he maintains, simultaneously
with this denial, that each thing once more comes-to-be out of the One.
Hence it was clearly out of a One that this came-to-be Water, and that
Fire, various portions of it being separated off by certain characteristic
differences or qualities-as indeed he calls the sun 'white and hot', and
the earth 'heavy and hard'. If, therefore, these characteristic differences
be taken away (for they can be taken away, since they came-to-be), it will
clearly be inevitable for Earth to come to-be out of Water and Water out
of Earth, and for each of the other elements to undergo a similar transformation-not
only then, but also now-if, and because, they change their qualities. And,
to judge by what he says, the qualities are such that they can be 'attached'
to things and can again be 'separated' from them, especially since Strife
and Love are still fighting with one another for the mastery. It was owing
to this same conflict that the elements were generated from a One at the
former period. I say 'generated', for presumably Fire, Earth, and Water
had no distinctive existence at all while merged in
one.
There is another obscurity in the theory Empedocles. Are we to
regard the One as his 'original real'? Or is it the Many-i.e. Fire and
Earth, and the bodies co-ordinate with these? For the One is an 'element'
in so far as it underlies the process as matter-as that out of which Earth
and Fire come-to-be through a change of qualities due to 'the motion'.
On the other hand, in so far as the One results from composition (by a
consilience of the Many), whereas they result from disintegration the Many
are more 'elementary' than the One, and prior to it in their
nature.
Part 2
We have therefore to discuss the whole subject of 'unqualified'
coming-to-be and passingaway; we have to inquire whether these changes
do or do not occur and, if they occur, to explain the precise conditions
of their occurrence. We must also discuss the remaining forms of change,
viz. growth and 'alteration'. For though, no doubt, Plato investigated
the conditions under which things come-to-be and pass-away, he confined
his inquiry to these changes; and he discussed not all coming-to-be, but
only that of the elements. He asked no questions as to how flesh or bones,
or any of the other similar compound things, come-to-be; nor again did
he examine the conditions under which 'alteration' or growth are attributable
to things.
A similar criticism applies to all our predecessors with the single
exception of Democritus. Not one of them penetrated below the surface or
made a thorough examination of a single one of the problems. Democritus,
however, does seem not only to have thought carefully about all the problems,
but also to be distinguished from the outset by his method. For, as we
are saying, none of the other philosophers made any definite statement
about growth, except such as any amateur might have made. They said that
things grow 'by the accession of like to like', but they did not proceed
to explain the manner of this accession. Nor did they give any account
of 'combination': and they neglected almost every single one of the remaining
problems, offering no explanation, e.g. of 'action' or 'passion' how in
physical actions one thing acts and the other undergoes action. Democritus
and Leucippus, however, postulate the 'figures', and make 'alteration'
and coming-to-be result from them. They explain coming-to-be and passing-away
by their 'dissociation' and 'association', but 'alteration' by their 'grouping'
and 'Position'. And since they thought that the 'truth lay in the appearance,
and the appearances are conflicting and infinitely many, they made the
'figures' infinite in number. Hence-owing to the changes of the compound-the
same thing seems different and conflicting to different people: it is 'transposed'
by a small additional ingredient, and appears utterly other by the 'transposition'
of a single constituent. For Tragedy and Comedy are both composed of the
same letters.
Since almost all our predecessors think (i) that coming-to-be is
distinct from 'alteration', and (ii) that, whereas things 'alter' by change
of their qualities, it is by 'association' and 'dissociation' that they
come-to-be and pass-away, we must concentrate our attention on these theses.
For they lead to many perplexing and well-grounded dilemmas. If, on the
one hand, coming-to-be is 'association', many impossible consequences result:
and yet there are other arguments, not easy to unravel, which force the
conclusion upon us that coming-to-be cannot possibly be anything else.
If, on the other hand, coming-to-be is not 'association', either there
is no such thing as coming-to-be at all or it is 'alteration': or else
we must endeavour to unravel this dilemma too-and a stubborn one we shall
find it. The fundamental question, in dealing with all these difficulties,
is this: 'Do things come-to-be and "alter" and grow, and undergo the contrary
changes, because the primary "reals" are indivisible magnitudes? Or is
no magnitude indivisible?' For the answer we give to this question makes
the greatest difference. And again, if the primary 'reals' are indivisible
magnitudes, are these bodies, as Democritus and Leucippus maintain? Or
are they planes, as is asserted in the Timaeus?
To resolve bodies into planes and no further-this, as we have also
remarked elsewhere, in itself a paradox. Hence there is more to be said
for the view that there are indivisible bodies. Yet even these involve
much of paradox. Still, as we have said, it is possible to construct 'alteration'
and coming-to-be with them, if one 'transposes' the same by 'turning' and
'intercontact', and by 'the varieties of the figures', as Democritus does.
(His denial of the reality of colour is a corollary from this position:
for, according to him, things get coloured by 'turning' of the 'figures'.)
But the possibility of such a construction no longer exists for those who
divide bodies into planes. For nothing except solids results from putting
planes together: they do not even attempt to generate any quality from
them.
Lack of experience diminishes our power of taking a comprehensive
view of the admitted facts. Hence those who dwell in intimate association
with nature and its phenomena grow more and more able to formulate, as
the foundations of their theories, principles such as to admit of a wide
and coherent development: while those whom devotion to abstract discussions
has rendered unobservant of the facts are too ready to dogmatize on the
basis of a few observations. The rival treatments of the subject now before
us will serve to illustrate how great is the difference between a 'scientific'
and a 'dialectical' method of inquiry. For, whereas the Platonists argue
that there must be atomic magnitudes 'because otherwise "The Triangle"
will be more than one', Democritus would appear to have been convinced
by arguments appropriate to the subject, i.e. drawn from the science of
nature. Our meaning will become clear as we proceed. For to suppose that
a body (i.e. a magnitude) is divisible through and through, and that this
division is possible, involves a difficulty. What will there be in the
body which escapes the division?
If it is divisible through and through, and if this division is
possible, then it might be, at one and the same moment, divided through
and through, even though the dividings had not been effected simultaneously:
and the actual occurrence of this result would involve no impossibility.
Hence the same principle will apply whenever a body is by nature divisible
through and through, whether by bisection, or generally by any method whatever:
nothing impossible will have resulted if it has actually been divided-not
even if it has been divided into innumerable parts, themselves divided
innumerable times. Nothing impossible will have resulted, though perhaps
nobody in fact could so divide it.
Since, therefore, the be dy is divisible through and through, let
it have been divided. What, then, will remain? A magnitude? No: that is
impossible, since then there will be something not divided, whereas ex
hypothesis the body was divisible through and through. But if it be admitted
that neither a body nor a magnitude will remain, and yet division is to
take place, the constituents of the body will either be points (i.e. without
magnitude) or absolutely nothing. If its constituents are nothings, then
it might both come-to-be out of nothings and exist as a composite of nothings:
and thus presumably the whole body will be nothing but an appearance. But
if it consists of points, a similar absurdity will result: it will not
possess any magnitude. For when the points were in contact and coincided
to form a single magnitude, they did not make the whole any bigger (since,
when the body was divided into two or more parts, the whole was not a bit
smaller or bigger than it was before the division): hence, even if all
the points be put together, they will not make any magnitude.
But suppose that, as the body is being divided, a minute section-a
piece of sawdust, as it were-is extracted, and that in this sense-a body
'comes away' from the magnitude, evading the division. Even then the same
argument applies. For in what sense is that section divisible? But if what
'came away' was not a body but a separable form or quality, and if the
magnitude is 'points or contacts thus qualified': it is paradoxical that
a magnitude should consist of elements, which are not magnitudes. Moreover,
where will the points be? And are they motionless or moving? And every
contact is always a contact of two somethings, i.e. there is always something
besides the contact or the division or the point.
These, then, are the difficulties resulting from the supposition
that any and every body, whatever its size, is divisible through and through.
There is, besides, this further consideration. If, having divided a piece
of wood or anything else, I put it together, it is again equal to what
it was, and is one. Clearly this is so, whatever the point at which I cut
the wood. The wood, therefore, has been divided potentially through and
through. What, then, is there in the wood besides the division? For even
if we suppose there is some quality, yet how is the wood dissolved into
such constituents and how does it come-to-be out of them? Or how are such
constituents separated so as to exist apart from one another? Since, therefore,
it is impossible for magnitudes to consist of contacts or points, there
must be indivisible bodies and magnitudes. Yet, if we do postulate the
latter, we are confronted with equally impossible consequences, which we
have examined in other works.' But we must try to disentangle these perplexities,
and must therefore formulate the whole problem over
again.
On the one hand, then, it is in no way paradoxical that every perceptible
body should be indivisible as well as divisible at any and every point.
For the second predicate will at. tach to it potentially, but the first
actually. On the other hand, it would seem to be impossible for a body
to be, even potentially, divisible at all points simultaneously. For if
it were possible, then it might actually occur, with the result, not that
the body would simultaneously be actually both (indivisible and divided),
but that it would be simultaneously divided at any and every point. Consequently,
nothing will remain and the body will have passed-away into what is incorporeal:
and so it might come-to-be again either out of points or absolutely out
of nothing. And how is that possible?
But now it is obvious that a body is in fact divided into separable
magnitudes which are smaller at each division-into magnitudes which fall
apart from one another and are actually separated. Hence (it is urged)
the process of dividing a body part by part is not a 'breaking up' which
could continue ad infinitum; nor can a body be simultaneously divided at
every point, for that is not possible; but there is a limit, beyond which
the 'breaking up' cannot proceed. The necessary consequence-especially
if coming-to-be and passing-away are to take place by 'association' and
'dissociation' respectively-is that a body must contain atomic magnitudes
which are invisible. Such is the argument which is believed to establish
the necessity of atomic magnitudes: we must now show that it conceals a
faulty inference, and exactly where it conceals it.
For, since point is not 'immediately-next' to point, magnitudes
are 'divisible through and through' in one sense, and yet not in another.
When, however, it is admitted that a magnitude is 'divisible through and
through', it is thought there is a point not only anywhere, but also everywhere,
in it: hence it is supposed to follow, from the admission, that the magnitude
must be divided away into nothing. For it is supposed-there is a point
everywhere within it, so that it consists either of contacts or of points.
But it is only in one sense that the magnitude is 'divisible through and
through', viz. in so far as there is one point anywhere within it and all
its points are everywhere within it if you take them singly one by one.
But there are not more points than one anywhere within it, for the points
are not 'consecutive': hence it is not simultaneously 'divisible through
and through'. For if it were, then, if it be divisible at its centre, it
will be divisible also at a point 'immediately-next' to its centre. But
it is not so divisible: for position is not 'immediately-next' to position,
nor point to point-in other words, division is not 'immediately-next' to
division, nor composition to composition.
Hence there are both 'association' and 'dissociation', though neither
(a) into, and out of, atomic magnitudes (for that involves many impossibilities),
nor (b) so that division takes place through and through-for this would
have resulted only if point had been 'immediately-next' to point: but 'dissociation'
takes place into small (i.e. relatively small) parts, and 'association'
takes place out of relatively small parts.
It is wrong, however, to suppose, as some assert, that coming-to-be
and passing-away in the unqualified and complete sense are distinctively
defined by 'association' and 'dissociation', while the change that takes
place in what is continuous is 'alteration'. On the contrary, this is where
the whole error lies. For unqualified coming-to-be and passing-away are
not effected by 'association' and 'dissociation'. They take place when
a thing changes, from this to that, as a whole. But the philosophers we
are criticizing suppose that all such change is 'alteration': whereas in
fact there is a difference. For in that which underlies the change there
is a factor corresponding to the definition and there is a material factor.
When, then, the change is in these constitutive factors, there will be
coming-to-be or passing-away: but when it is in the thing's qualities,
i.e. a change of the thing per accidents, there will be
'alteration'.
'Dissociation' and 'association' affect the thing's susceptibility
to passing-away. For if water has first been 'dissociated' into smallish
drops, air comes-to-be out of it more quickly: while, if drops of water
have first been 'associated', air comes-to-be more slowly. Our doctrine
will become clearer in the sequel.' Meantime, so much may be taken as established-viz.
that coming-to-be cannot be 'association', at least not the kind of 'association'
some philosophers assert it to be.
Part 3
Now that we have established the preceding distinctions, we must
first consider whether there is anything which comes-to-be and passes-away
in the unqualified sense: or whether nothing comes-to-be in this strict
sense, but everything always comes-to-be something and out of something-I
mean, e.g. comes-to-be-healthy out of being-ill and ill out of being-healthy,
comes-to-be-small out of being big and big out of being-small, and so on
in every other instance. For if there is to be coming-to-be without qualification,
'something' must-without qualification-'come-to-be out of not-being', so
that it would be true to say that 'not-being is an attribute of some things'.
For qualified coming-to-be is a process out of qualified not-being (e.g.
out of not-white or not-beautiful), but unqualified coming-to-be is a process
out of unqualified not-being.
Now 'unqulified' means either (i) the primary predication within
each Category, or (ii) the universal, i.e. the all-comprehensive, predication.
Hence, if'unqualified not-being 'means the negation of 'being' in the sense
of the primary term of the Category in question, we shall have, in 'unqualified
coming-to-be', a coming-to-be of a substance out of not-substance. But
that which is not a substance or a 'this' clearly cannot possess predicates
drawn from any of the other Categories either-e.g. we cannot attribute
to it any quality, quantity, or position. Otherwise, properties would admit
of existence in separation from substances. If, on the other hand, 'unqualified
not-being' means 'what is not in any sense at all', it will be a universal
negation of all forms of being, so that what comes-to-be will have to come-to-be
out of nothing.
Although we have dealt with these problems at greater length in
another work,where we have set forth the difficulties and established the
distinguishing definitions, the following concise restatement of our results
must here be offered: In one sense things come-to-be out of that which
has no 'being' without qualification: yet in another sense they come-to-be
always out of what is'. For coming-to-be necessarily implies the pre-existence
of something which potentially 'is', but actually 'is not'; and this something
is spoken of both as 'being' and as 'not-being'.
These distinctions may be taken as established: but even then it
is extraordinarily difficult to see how there can be 'unqualified coming-to-be'
(whether we suppose it to occur out of what potentially 'is', or in some
other way), and we must recall this problem for further examination. For
the question might be raised whether substance (i.e. the 'this') comes-to-be
at all. Is it not rather the 'such', the 'so great', or the 'somewhere',
which comes-to-be? And the same question might be raised about 'passing-away'
also. For if a substantial thing comes-to-be, it is clear that there will
'be' (not actually, but potentially) a substance, out of which its coming-to-be
will proceed and into which the thing that is passing-away will necessarily
change. Then will any predicate belonging to the remaining Categories attach
actually to this presupposed substance? In other words, will that which
is only potentially a 'this' (which only potentially is), while without
the qualification 'potentially' it is not a 'this' (i.e. is not), possess,
e.g. any determinate size or quality or position? For (i) if it possesses
none of these determinations actually, but all of them only potentially,
the result is first that a being, which is not a determinate being, is
capable of separate existence; and in addition that coming-to-be proceeds
out of nothing pre-existing-a thesis which, more than any other, preoccupied
and alarmed the earliest philosophers. On the other hand (ii) if, although
it is not a 'this somewhat' or a substance, it is to possess some of the
remaining determinations quoted above, then (as we said)' properties will
be separable from substances.
We must therefore concentrate all our powers on the discussion
of these difficulties and on the solution of a further question-viz. What
is the cause of the perpetuity of coming-to-be? Why is there always unqualified,
as well as partial, coming-to-be? Cause' in this connexion has two senses.
It means (i) the source from which, as we say, the process 'originates',
and (ii) the matter. It is the material cause that we have here to state.
For, as to the other cause, we have already explained (in our treatise
on Motion that it involves (a) something immovable through all time and
(b) something always being moved. And the accurate treatment of the first
of these-of the immovable 'originative source'-belongs to the province
of the other, or 'prior', philosophy: while as regards 'that which sets
everything else in motion by being itself continuously moved', we shall
have to explain later' which amongst the so-called 'specific' causes exhibits
this character. But at present we are to state the material cause-the cause
classed under the head of matter-to which it is due that passing-away and
coming-to-be never fail to occur in Nature. For perhaps, if we succeed
in clearing up this question, it will simultaneously become clear what
account we ought to give of that which perplexed us just now, i.e. of unqualified
passingaway and coming-to-be.
Our new question too-viz. 'what is the cause of the unbroken continuity
of coming-to-be?'-is sufficiently perplexing, if in fact what passes-away
vanishes into 'what is not' and 'what is not' is nothing (since 'what is
not' is neither a thing, nor possessed of a quality or quantity, nor in
any place). If, then, some one of the things 'which are' constantly disappearing,
why has not the whole of 'what is' been used up long ago and vanished away
assuming of course that the material of all the several comings-to-be was
finite? For, presumably, the unfailing continuity of coming-to-be cannot
be attributed to the infinity of the material. That is impossible, for
nothing is actually infinite. A thing is infinite only potentially, i.e.
the dividing of it can continue indefinitely: so that we should have to
suppose there is only one kind of coming-to-be in the world-viz. one which
never fails, because it is such that what comes-to-be is on each successive
occasion smaller than before. But in fact this is not what we see
occurring.
Why, then, is this form of change necessarily ceaseless? Is it
because the passing-away of this is a coming-to-be of something else, and
the coming-to-be of this a passing-away of something
else?
The cause implied in this solution must no doubt be considered
adequate to account for coming-to-be and passing-away in their general
character as they occur in all existing things alike. Yet, if the same
process is a coming to-be of this but a passing-away of that, and a passing-away
of this but a coming-to-be of that, why are some things said to come-to-be
and pass-away without qualification, but others only with a
qualification?
The distinction must be investigated once more, for it demands
some explanation. (It is applied in a twofold manner.) For (i) we say 'it
is now passing-away' without qualification, and not merely 'this is passing-away':
and we call this change 'coming-to-be', and that 'passing-away', without
qualification. And (ii) so-and-so 'comes-to-be-something', but does not
'come-to-be' without qualification; for we say that the student 'comes-to-be-learned',
not 'comes-to-be' without qualification.
(i) Now we often divide terms into those which signify a 'this
somewhat' and those which do not. And (the first form of) the distinction,
which we are investigating, results from a similar division of terms: for
it makes a difference into what the changing thing changes. Perhaps, e.g.
the passage into Fire is 'coming-to-be' unqualified, but 'passingaway-of-something'
(e.g. Earth): whilst the coming-to-be of Earth is qualified (not unqualified)
'coming-to-be', though unqualified 'passing-away' (e.g. of Fire). This
would be the case on the theory set forth in Parmenides: for he says that
the things into which change takes place are two, and he asserts that these
two, viz. what is and what is not, are Fire and Earth. Whether we postulate
these, or other things of a similar kind, makes no difference. For we are
trying to discover not what undergoes these changes, but what is their
characteristic manner. The passage, then, into what 'is' not except with
a qualification is unqualified passing-away, while the passage into what
'is' without qualification is unqualified coming-to-be. Hence whatever
the contrasted 'poles' of the changes may be whether Fire and Earth, or
some other couple-the one of them will be 'a being' and the other 'a
not-being'.
We have thus stated one characteristic manner in which unqualified
will be distinguished from qualified coming-to-be and passing-away: but
they are also distinguished according to the special nature of the material
of the changing thing. For a material, whose constitutive differences signify
more a 'this somewhat', is itself more 'substantial' or 'real': while a
material, whose constitutive differences signify privation, is 'not real'.
(Suppose, e.g. that 'the hot' is a positive predication, i.e. a 'form',
whereas 'cold' is a privation, and that Earth and Fire differ from one
another by these constitutive differences.)
The opinion, however, which most people are inclined to prefer,
is that the distinction depends upon the difference between 'the perceptible'
and 'the imperceptible'. Thus, when there is a change into perceptible
material, people say there is 'coming-to-be'; but when there is a change
into invisible material, they call it 'passing-away'. For they distinguish
'what is' and 'what is not' by their perceiving and not-perceiving, just
as what is knowable 'is' and what is unknowable 'is not'-perception on
their view having the force of knowledge. Hence, just as they deem themselves
to live and to 'be' in virtue of their perceiving or their capacity to
perceive, so too they deem the things to 'be' qua perceived or perceptible-and
in this they are in a sense on the track of the truth, though what they
actually say is not true.
Thus unqualified coming-to-be and passingaway turn out to be different
according to common opinion from what they are in truth. For Wind and Air
are in truth more real more a 'this somewhat' or a 'form'-than Earth. But
they are less real to perception which explains why things are commonly
said to 'pass-away' without qualification when they change into Wind and
Air, and to 'come-to-be' when they change into what is tangible, i.e. into
Earth.
We have now explained why there is 'unqualified coming-to-be' (though
it is a passingaway-of-something) and 'unqualified passingaway (though
it is a coming-to-be-of-something). For this distinction of appellation
depends upon a difference in the material out of which, and into which,
the changes are effected. It depends either upon whether the material is
or is not 'substantial', or upon whether it is more or less 'substantial',
or upon whether it is more or less perceptible.
(ii) But why are some things said to 'come to-be' without qualification,
and others only to 'come-to-be-so-and-so', in cases different from the
one we have been considering where two things come-to-be reciprocally out
of one another? For at present we have explained no more than this:-why,
when two things change reciprocally into one another, we do not attribute
coming-to-be and passing-away uniformly to them both, although every coming-to-be
is a passing-away of something else and every passing-away some other thing's
coming-to-be. But the question subsequently formulated involves a different
problem-viz. why, although the learning thing is said to 'come-to-be-learned'
but not to 'come-tobe' without qualification, yet the growing thing is
said to 'come-to-be'.
The distinction here turns upon the difference of the Categories.
For some things signify a this somewhat, others a such, and others a so-much.
Those things, then, which do not signify substance, are not said to 'come-to-be'
without qualification, but only to 'come-to-be-so-and-so'. Nevertheless,
in all changing things alike, we speak of 'coming-to-be' when the thing
comes-to-be something in one of the two Columns-e.g. in Substance, if it
comes-to-be Fire but not if it comes-to-be Earth; and in Quality, if it
comes-to-be learned but not when it comes-to-be ignorant.
We have explained why some things come to-be without qualification,
but not others both in general, and also when the changing things are substances
and nothing else; and we have stated that the substratum is the material
cause of the continuous occurrence of coming to-be, because it is such
as to change from contrary to contrary and because, in substances, the
coming-to-be of one thing is always a passing-away of another, and the
passing-away of one thing is always another's coming-to-be. But there is
no need even to discuss the other question we raised-viz. why coming-to-be
continues though things are constantly being destroyed. For just as people
speak of 'a passing-away' without qualification when a thing has passed
into what is imperceptible and what in that sense 'is not', so also they
speak of 'a coming-to-be out of a not-being' when a thing emerges from
an imperceptible. Whether, therefore, the substratum is or is not something,
what comes-tobe emerges out of a 'not-being': so that a thing comes-to-be
out of a not-being' just as much as it 'passes-away into what is not'.
Hence it is reasonable enough that coming-to-be should never fail. For
coming-to-be is a passing-away of 'what is not' and passing-away is a coming
to-be of 'what is not'.
But what about that which 'is' not except with a qualification?
Is it one of the two contrary poles of the chang-e.g. Earth (i.e. the heavy)
a 'not-being', but Fire (i.e. the light) a 'being'? Or, on the contrary,
does what is 'include Earth as well as Fire, whereas what is not' is matter-the
matter of Earth and Fire alike? And again, is the matter of each different?
Or is it the same, since otherwise they would not come-to-be reciprocally
out of one another, i.e. contraries out of contraries? For these things-Fire,
Earth, Water, Air-are characterized by 'the contraries'.
Perhaps the solution is that their matter is in one sense the same,
but in another sense different. For that which underlies them, whatever
its nature may be qua underlying them, is the same: but its actual being
is not the same. So much, then, on these topics.
Part 4
Next we must state what the difference is between coming-to-be
and 'alteration'-for we maintain that these changes are distinct from one
another.
Since, then, we must distinguish (a) the substratum, and (b) the
property whose nature it is to be predicated of the substratum; and since
change of each of these occurs; there is 'alteration' when the substratum
is perceptible and persists, but changes in its own properties, the properties
in question being opposed to one another either as contraries or as intermediates.
The body, e.g. although persisting as the same body, is now healthy and
now ill; and the bronze is now spherical and at another time angular, and
yet remains the same bronze. But when nothing perceptible persists in its
identity as a substratum, and the thing changes as a whole (when e.g. the
seed as a whole is converted into blood, or water into air, or air as a
whole into water), such an occurrence is no longer 'alteration'. It is
a coming-to-be of one substance and a passing-away of the other-especially
if the change proceeds from an imperceptible something to something perceptible
(either to touch or to all the senses), as when water comes-to-be out of,
or passes-away into, air: for air is pretty well imperceptible. If, however,
in such cases, any property (being one of a pair of contraries) persists,
in the thing that has come-to-be, the same as it was in the thing which
has passedaway-if, e.g. when water comes-to-be out of air, both are transparent
or cold-the second thing, into which the first changes, must not be a property
of this persistent identical something. Otherwise the change will be 'alteration.'
Suppose, e.g. that the musical man passed-away and an unmusical man came-tobe,
and that the man persists as something identical. Now, if 'musicalness
and unmusicalness' had not been a property essentially inhering in man,
these changes would have been a coming-to-be of unmusicalness and a passing-away
of musicalness: but in fact 'musicalness and unmusicalness' are a property
of the persistent identity, viz. man. (Hence, as regards man, these changes
are 'modifications'; though, as regards musical man and unmusical man,
they are a passing-away and a coming-to-be.) Consequently such changes
are 'alteration.' When the change from contrary to contrary is in quantity,
it is 'growth and diminution'; when it is in place, it is 'motion'; when
it is in property, i.e. in quality, it is 'alteration': but, when nothing
persists, of which the resultant is a property (or an 'accident' in any
sense of the term), it is 'coming-to-be', and the converse change is
'passing-away'.
'Matter', in the most proper sense of the term, is to be identified
with the substratum which is receptive of coming-to-be and passingaway:
but the substratum of the remaining kinds of change is also, in a certain
sense, 'matter', because all these substrata are receptive of 'contrarieties'
of some kind. So much, then, as an answer to the questions (i) whether
coming-to-be 'is' or 'is not'-i.e. what are the precise conditions of its
occurrence and (ii) what 'alteration' is: but we have still to treat of
growth.
Part 5
We must explain (i) wherein growth differs from coming-to-be and
from 'alteration', and ii) what is the process of growing and the sprocess
of diminishing in each and all of the things that grow and
diminish.
Hence our first question is this: Do these changes differ from
one another solely because of a difference in their respective 'spheres'?
In other words, do they differ because, while a change from this to that
(viz. from potential to actual substance) is coming-to-be, a change in
the sphere of magnitude is growth and one in the sphere of quality is 'alteration'-both
growth and 'alteration' being changes from what is-potentially to what
is-actually magnitude and quality respectively? Or is there also a difference
in the manner of the change, since it is evident that, whereas neither
what is 'altering' nor what is coming-to-be necessarily changes its place,
what is growing or diminishing changes its spatial position of necessity,
though in a different manner from that in which the moving thing does so?
For that which is being moved changes its place as a whole: but the growing
thing changes its place like a metal that is being beaten, retaining its
position as a whole while its parts change their places. They change their
places, but not in the same way as the parts of a revolving globe. For
the parts of the globe change their places while the whole continues to
occupy an equal place: but the parts of the rowing thing expand over an
ever-increasing place and the parts of the diminishing thing contract within
an ever-diminishing area.
It is clear, then, that these changes-the changes of that which
is coming-to-be, of that which is 'altering', and of that which is growing-differ
in manner as well as in sphere. But how are we to conceive the 'sphere'
of the change which is growth and diminution? The sphere' of growing and
diminishing is believed to be magnitude. Are we to suppose that body and
magnitude come-to-be out of something which, though potentially magnitude
and body, is actually incorporeal and devoid of magnitude? And since this
description may be understood in two different ways, in which of these
two ways are we to apply it to the process of growth? Is the matter, out
of which growth takes place, (i) 'separate' and existing alone by itself,
or (ii) 'separate' but contained in another body?
Perhaps it is impossible for growth to take place in either of
these ways. For since the matter is 'separate', either (a) it will occupy
no place (as if it were a point), or (b) it will be a 'void', i.e. a non-perceptible
body. But the first of these alternatives is impossible. For since what
comes-to-be out of this incorporeal and sizeless something will always
be 'somewhere', it too must be 'somewhere'-either intrinsically or indirectly.
And the second alternative necessarily implies that the matter is contained
in some other body. But if it is to be 'in' another body and yet remains
'separate' in such a way that it is in no sense a part of that body (neither
a part of its substantial being nor an 'accident' of it), many impossibilities
will result. It is as if we were to suppose that when, e.g. air comes-to-be
out of water the process were due not to a change of the but to the matter
of the air being 'contained in' the water as in a vessel. This is impossible.
For (i) there is nothing to prevent an indeterminate number of matters
being thus 'contained in' the water, so that they might come-to-be actually
an indeterminate quantity of air; and (ii) we do not in fact see air coming-to-be
out of water in this fashion, viz. withdrawing out of it and leaving it
unchanged.
It is therefore better to suppose that in all instances of coming-to-be
the matter is inseparable, being numerically identical and one with the
'containing' body, though isolable from it by definition. But the same
reasons also forbid us to regard the matter, out of which the body comes-to-be,
as points or lines. The matter is that of which points and lines are limits,
and it is something that can never exist without quality and without
form.
Now it is no doubt true, as we have also established elsewhere,'
that one thing 'comes-tobe' (in the unqualified sense) out of another thing:
and further it is true that the efficient cause of its coming-to-be is
either (i) an actual thing (which is the same as the effect either generically-or
the efficient cause of the coming-to-be of a hard thing is not a hard thing
or specifically, as e.g. fire is the efficient cause of the coming-to-be
of fire or one man of the birth of another), or (ii) an actuality. Nevertheless,
since there is also a matter out of which corporeal substance itself comes-to-be
(corporeal substance, however, already characterized as such-and-such a
determinate body, for there is no such thing as body in general), this
same matter is also the matter of magnitude and quality-being separable
from these matters by definition, but not separable in place unless Qualities
are, in their turn, separable.
It is evident, from the preceding development and discussion of
difficulties, that growth is not a change out of something which, though
potentially a magnitude, actually possesses no magnitude. For, if it were,
the 'void' would exist in separation; but we have explained in a former
work' that this is impossible. Moreover, a change of that kind is not peculiarly
distinctive of growth, but characterizes coming-to-be as such or in general.
For growth is an increase, and diminution is a lessening, of the magnitude
which is there already-that, indeed, is why the growing thing must possess
some magnitude. Hence growth must not be regarded as a process from a matter
without magnitude to an actuality of magnitude: for this would be a body's
coming-to-be rather than its growth.
We must therefore come to closer quarters with the subject of our
inquiry. We must grapple' with it (as it were) from its beginning, and
determine the precise character of the growing and diminishing whose causes
we are investigating.
It is evident (i) that any and every part of the growing thing
has increased, and that similarly in diminution every part has become smaller:
also (ii) that a thing grows by the accession, and diminishes by the departure,
of something. Hence it must grow by the accession either (a) of something
incorporeal or (b) of a body. Now, if (a) it grows by the accession of
something incorporeal, there will exist separate a void: but (as we have
stated before)' is impossible for a matter of magnitude to exist 'separate'.
If, on the other hand (b) it grows by the accession of a body, there will
be two bodies-that which grows and that which increases it-in the same
place: and this too is impossible.
But neither is it open to us to say that growth or diminution occurs
in the way in which e.g. air is generated from water. For, although the
volume has then become greater, the change will not be growth, but a coming
to-be of the one-viz. of that into which the change is taking place-and
a passing-away of the contrasted body. It is not a growth of either. Nothing
grows in the process; unless indeed there be something common to both things
(to that which is coming-to-be and to that which passed-away), e.g. 'body',
and this grows. The water has not grown, nor has the air: but the former
has passed-away and the latter has come-to-be, and-if anything has grown-there
has been a growth of 'body.' Yet this too is impossible. For our account
of growth must preserve the characteristics of that which is growing and
diminishing. And these characteristics are three: (i) any and every part
of the growing magnitude is made bigger (e.g. if flesh grows, every particle
of the flesh gets bigger), (ii) by the accession of something, and (iii)
in such a way that the growing thing is preserved and persists. For whereas
a thing does not persist in the processes of unqualified coming-to-be or
passing-away, that which grows or 'alters' persists in its identity through
the 'altering' and through the growing or diminishing, though the quality
(in 'alteration') and the size (in growth) do not remain the same. Now
if the generation of air from water is to be regarded as growth, a thing
might grow without the accession (and without the persistence) of anything,
and diminish without the departure of anything-and that which grows need
not persist. But this characteristic must be preserved: for the growth
we are discussing has been assumed to be thus characterized.
One might raise a further difficulty. What is 'that which grows'?
Is it that to which something is added? If, e.g. a man grows in his shin,
is it the shin which is greater-but not that 'whereby' he grows, viz. not
the food? Then why have not both 'grown'? For when A is added to B, both
A and B are greater, as when you mix wine with water; for each ingredient
is alike increased in volume. Perhaps the explanation is that the substance
of the one remains unchanged, but the substance of the other (viz. of the
food) does not. For indeed, even in the mixture of wine and water, it is
the prevailing ingredient which is said to have increased in volume. We
say, e.g. that the wine has increased, because the whole mixture acts as
wine but not as water. A similar principle applies also to 'alteration'.
Flesh is said to have been 'altered' if, while its character and substance
remain, some one of its essential properties, which was not there before,
now qualifies it: on the other hand, that 'whereby' it has been 'altered'
may have undergone no change, though sometimes it too has been affected.
The altering agent, however, and the originative source of the process
are in the growing thing and in that which is being 'altered': for the
efficient cause is in these. No doubt the food, which has come in, may
sometimes expand as well as the body that has consumed it (that is so,
e.g. if, after having come in, a food is converted into wind), but when
it has undergone this change it has passedaway: and the efficient cause
is not in the food.
We have now developed the difficulties sufficiently and must therefore
try to find a solution of the problem. Our solution must preserve intact
the three characteristics of growth-that the growing thing persists, that
it grows by the accession (and diminishes by the departure) of something,
and further that every perceptible particle of it has become either larger
or smaller. We must recognize also (a) that the growing body is not 'void'
and that yet there are not two magnitudes in the same place, and (b) that
it does not grow by the accession of something incorporeal.
Two preliminary distinctions will prepare us to grasp the cause
of growth. We must note (i) that the organic parts grow by the growth of
the tissues (for every organ is composed of these as its constituents);
and (ii) that flesh, bone, and every such part-like every other thing which
has its form immersed in matter-has a twofold nature: for the form as well
as the matter is called 'flesh' or 'bone'.
Now, that any and every part of the tissue qua form should grow-and
grow by the accession of something-is possible, but not that any and every
part of the tissue qua matter should do so. For we must think of the tissue
after the image of flowing water that is measured by one and the same measure:
particle after particle comes-to-be, and each successive particle is different.
And it is in this sense that the matter of the flesh grows, some flowing
out and some flowing in fresh; not in the sense that fresh matter accedes
to every particle of it. There is, however, an accession to every part
of its figure or 'form'.
That growth has taken place proportionally, is more manifest in
the organic parts-e.g. in the hand. For there the fact that the matter
is distinct from the form is more manifest than in flesh, i.e. than in
the tissues. That is why there is a greater tendency to suppose that a
corpse still possesses flesh and bone than that it still has a hand or
an arm.
Hence in one sense it is true that any and every part of the flesh
has grown; but in another sense it is false. For there has been an accession
to every part of the flesh in respect to its form, but not in respect to
its matter. The whole, however, has become larger. And this increase is
due (a) on the one hand to the accession of something, which is called
'food' and is said to be 'contrary' to flesh, but (b) on the other hand
to the transformation of this food into the same form as that of flesh
as if, e.g. 'moist' were to accede to 'dry' and, having acceded, were to
be transformed and to become 'dry'. For in one sense 'Like grows by Like',
but in another sense 'Unlike grows by Unlike'.
One might discuss what must be the character of that 'whereby'
a thing grows. Clearly it must be potentially that which is growing-potentially
flesh, e.g. if it is flesh that is growing. Actually, therefore, it must
be 'other' than the growing thing. This 'actual other', then, has passed-away
and come-to-be flesh. But it has not been transformed into flesh alone
by itself (for that would have been a coming-to-be, not a growth): on the
contrary, it is the growing thing which has come-to-be flesh (and grown)
by the food. In what way, then, has the food been modified by the growing
thing? Perhaps we should say that it has been 'mixed' with it, as if one
were to pour water into wine and the wine were able to convert the new
ingredient into wine. And as fire lays hold of the inflammable, so the
active principle of growth, dwelling in the growing thing that which is
actually flesh), lays hold of an acceding food which is potentially flesh
and converts it into actual flesh. The acceding food, therefore, must be
together with the growing thing: for if it were apart from it, the change
would be a coming-to-be. For it is possible to produce fire by piling logs
on to the already burning fire. That is 'growth'. But when the logs themselves
are set on fire, that is 'coming-to-be'.
'Quantum-in-general' does not come-to-be any more than 'animal'
which is neither man nor any other of the specific forms of animal: what
'animal-in-general' is in coming-to-be, that 'quantum-in-general' is in
growth. But what does come-to-be in growth is flesh or bone-or a hand or
arm (i.e. the tissues of these organic parts). Such things come-to-be,
then, by the accession not of quantified-flesh but of a quantified-something.
In so far as this acceding food is potentially the double result e.g. is
potentially so-much-flesh-it produces growth: for it is bound to become
actually both so-much and flesh. But in so far as it is potentially flesh
only, it nourishes: for it is thus that 'nutrition' and 'growth' differ
by their definition. That is why a body's' nutrition' continues so long
as it is kept alive (even when it is diminishing), though not its 'growth';
and why nutrition, though 'the same' as growth, is yet different from it
in its actual being. For in so far as that which accedes is potentially
'so much-flesh' it tends to increase flesh: whereas, in so far as it is
potentially 'flesh' only, it is nourishment.
The form of which we have spoken is a kind of power immersed in
matter-a duct, as it were. If, then, a matter accedes-a matter, which is
potentially a duct and also potentially possesses determinate quantity
the ducts to which it accedes will become bigger. But if it is no longer
able to act-if it has been weakened by the continued influx of matter,
just as water, continually mixed in greater and greater quantity with wine,
in the end makes the wine watery and converts it into water-then it will
cause a diminution of the quantum; though still the form
persists.
Part 6
(In discussing the causes of coming-tobe) we must first investigate
the matter, i.e. the so-called 'elements'. We must ask whether they really
are clements or not, i.e. whether each of them is eternal or whether there
is a sense in which they come-to-be: and, if they do come-to-be, whether
all of them come-to-be in the same manner reciprocally out of one another,
or whether one amongst them is something primary. Hence we must begin by
explaining certain preliminary matters, about which the statements now
current are vague.
For all (the pluralist philosophers)- those who generate the 'elements'
as well as those who generate the bodies that are compounded of the elements-
make use of 'dissociation' and 'association', and of 'action' and 'passion'.
Now 'association' is 'combination'; but the precise meaning of the process
we call 'combining' has not been explained. Again, (all the monists make
use of 'alteration': but) without an agent and a patient there cannot be
'altering' any more than there can be 'dissociating' and 'associating'.
For not only those who postulate a plurality of elements employ their reciprocal
action and passion to generate the compounds: those who derive things from
a single element are equally compelled to introduce 'acting'. And in this
respect Diogenes is right when he argues that 'unless all things were derived
from one, reciprocal action and passion could not have occurred'. The hot
thing, e.g. would not be cooled and the cold thing in turn be warmed: for
heat and cold do not change reciprocally into one another, but what changes
(it is clear) is the substratum. Hence, whenever there is action and passion
between two things, that which underlies them must be a single something.
No doubt, it is not true to say that all things are of this character:
but it is true of all things between which there is reciprocal action and
passion.
But if we must investigate 'action-passion' and 'combination',
we must also investigate 'contact'. For action and passion (in the proper
sense of the terms) can only occur between things which are such as to
touch one another; nor can things enter into combination at all unless
they have come into a certain kind of contact. Hence we must give a definite
account of these three things- of 'contact', 'combination', and
'acting'.
Let us start as follows. All things which admit of 'combination'
must be capable of reciprocal contact: and the same is true of any two
things, of which one 'acts' and the other 'suffers action' in the proper
sense of the terms. For this reason we must treat of 'contact' first. every
term which possesses a variety of meaning includes those various meanings
either owing to a mere coincidence of language, or owing to a real order
of derivation in the different things to which it is applied: but, though
this may be taken to hold of 'contact' as of all such terms, it is nevertheless
true that contact' in the proper sense applies only to things which have
'position'. And 'position' belongs only to those things which also have
a Place': for in so far as we attribute 'contact' to the mathematical things,
we must also attribute 'place' to them, whether they exist in separation
or in some other fashion. Assuming, therefore, that 'to touch' is-as we
have defined it in a previous work'-'to have the extremes together', only
those things will touch one another which, being separate magnitudes and
possessing position, have their extremes 'together'. And since position
belongs only to those things which also have a 'place', while the primary
differentiation of 'place' is the above' and 'the below' (and the similar
pairs of opposites), all things which touch one another will have 'weight'
or 'lightness' either both these qualities or one or the other of them.
But bodies which are heavy or light are such as to 'act' and 'suffer action'.
Hence it is clear that those things are by nature such as to touch one
another, which (being separate magnitudes) have their extremes 'together'
and are able to move, and be moved by, one another.
The manner in which the 'mover' moves the moved' not always the
same: on the contrary, whereas one kind of 'mover' can only impart motion
by being itself moved, another kind can do so though remaining itself unmoved.
Clearly therefore we must recognize a corresponding variety in speaking
of the 'acting' thing too: for the 'mover' is said to 'act' (in a sense)
and the 'acting' thing to 'impart motion'. Nevertheless there is a difference
and we must draw a distinction. For not every 'mover' can 'act', if (a)
the term 'agent' is to be used in contrast to 'patient' and (b) 'patient'
is to be applied only to those things whose motion is a 'qualitative affection'-i.e.
a quality, like white' or 'hot', in respect to which they are moved' only
in the sense that they are 'altered': on the contrary, to 'impart motion'
is a wider term than to 'act'. Still, so much, at any rate, is clear: the
things which are 'such as to impart motion', if that description be interpreted
in one sense, will touch the things which are 'such as to be moved by them'-while
they will not touch them, if the description be interpreted in a different
sense. But the disjunctive definition of 'touching' must include and distinguish
(a) 'contact in general' as the relation between two things which, having
position, are such that one is able to impart motion and the other to be
moved, and (b) 'reciprocal contact' as the relation between two things,
one able to impart motion and the other able to be moved in such a way
that 'action and passion' are predicable of them.
As a rule, no doubt, if A touches B, B touches A. For indeed practically
all the 'movers' within our ordinary experience impart motion by being
moved: in their case, what touches inevitably must, and also evidently
does, touch something which reciprocally touches it. Yet, if A moves B,
it is possible-as we sometimes express it-for A 'merely to touch' B, and
that which touches need not touch a something which touches it. Nevertheless
it is commonly supposed that 'touching' must be reciprocal. The reason
of this belief is that 'movers' which belong to the same kind as the 'moved'
impart motion by being moved. Hence if anything imparts motion without
itself being moved, it may touch the 'moved' and yet itself be touched
by nothing-for we say sometimes that the man who grieves us 'touches' us,
but not that we 'touch' him.
The account just given may serve to distinguish and define the
'contact' which occurs in the things of Nature.
Part 7
Next in order we must discuss 'action' and 'passion'. The traditional
theories on the subject are conflicting. For (i) most thinkers are unanimous
in maintaining (a) that 'like' is always unaffected by 'like', because
(as they argue) neither of two 'likes' is more apt than the other either
to act or to suffer action, since all the properties which belong to the
one belong identically and in the same degree to the other; and (b) that
'unlikes', i.e. 'differents', are by nature such as to act and suffer action
reciprocally. For even when the smaller fire is destroyed by the greater,
it suffers this effect (they say) owing to its 'contrariety' since the
great is contrary to the small. But (ii) Democritus dissented from all
the other thinkers and maintained a theory peculiar to himself. He asserts
that agent and patient are identical, i.e. 'like'. It is not possible (he
says) that 'others', i.e. 'differents', should suffer action from one another:
on the contrary, even if two things, being 'others', do act in some way
on one another, this happens to them not qua 'others' but qua possessing
an identical property.
Such, then, are the traditional theories, and it looks as if the
statements of their advocates were in manifest conflict. But the reason
of this conflict is that each group is in fact stating a part, whereas
they ought to have taken a comprehensive view of the subject as a whole.
For (i) if A and B are 'like'-absolutely and in all respects without difference
from one another -it is reasonable to infer that neither is in any way
affected by the other. Why, indeed, should either of them tend to act any
more than the other? Moreover, if 'like' can be affected by 'like', a thing
can also be affected by itself: and yet if that were so-if 'like' tended
in fact to act qua 'like'-there would be nothing indestructible or immovable,
for everything would move itself. And (ii) the same consequence follows
if A and B are absolutely 'other', i.e. in no respect identical. Whiteness
could not be affected in any way by line nor line by whiseness-except perhaps
'coincidentally', viz. if the line happened to be white or black: for unless
two things either are, or are composed of, 'contraries', neither drives
the other out of its natural condition. But (iii) since only those things
which either involve a 'contrariety' or are 'contraries'-and not any things
selected at random-are such as to suffer action and to act, agent and patient
must be 'like' (i.e. identical) in kind and yet 'unlike' (i.e. contrary)
in species. (For it is a law of nature that body is affected by body, flavour
by flavour, colour by colour, and so in general what belongs to any kind
by a member of the same kind-the reason being that 'contraries' are in
every case within a single identical kind, and it is 'contraries' which
reciprocally act and suffer action.) Hence agent and patient must be in
one sense identical, but in another sense other than (i.e. 'unlike') one
another. And since (a) patient and agent are generically identical (i.e.
'like') but specifically 'unlike', while (b) it is 'contraries' that exhibit
this character: it is clear that 'contraries' and their 'intermediates'
are such as to suffer action and to act reciprocally-for indeed it is these
that constitute the entire sphere of passing-away and
coming-to-be.
We can now understand why fire heats and the cold thing cools,
and in general why the active thing assimilates to itself the patient.
For agent and patient are contrary to one another, and coming-to-be is
a process into the contrary: hence the patient must change into the agent,
since it is only thus that coming-to be will be a process into the contrary.
And, again, it is intelligible that the advocates of both views, although
their theories are not the same, are yet in contact with the nature of
the facts. For sometimes we speak of the substratum as suffering action
(e.g. of 'the man' as being healed, being warmed and chilled, and similarly
in all the other cases), but at other times we say 'what is cold is 'being
warmed', 'what is sick is being healed': and in both these ways of speaking
we express the truth, since in one sense it is the 'matter', while in another
sense it is the 'contrary', which suffers action. (We make the same distinction
in speaking of the agent: for sometimes we say that 'the man', but at other
times that 'what is hot', produces heat.) Now the one group of thinkers
supposed that agent and patient must possess something identical, because
they fastened their attention on the substratum: while the other group
maintained the opposite because their attention was concentrated on the
'contraries'. We must conceive the same account to hold of action and passion
as that which is true of 'being moved' and 'imparting motion'. For the
'mover', like the 'agent', has two meanings. Both (a) that which contains
the originative source of the motion is thought to 'impart motion' (for
the originative source is first amongst the causes), and also (b) that
which is last, i.e. immediately next to the moved thing and to the coming-to-be.
A similar distinction holds also of the agent: for we speak not only (a)
of the doctor, but also (b) of the wine, as healing. Now, in motion, there
is nothing to prevent the firs; mover being unmoved (indeed, as regards
some 'first' movers' this is actually necessary) although the last mover
always imparts motion by being itself moved: and, in action, there is nothing
to prevent the first agent being unaffected, while the last agent only
acts by suffering action itself. For agent and patient have not the same
matter, agent acts without being affected: thus the art of healing produces
health without itself being acted upon in any way by that which is being
healed. But (b) the food, in acting, is itself in some way acted upon:
for, in acting, it is simultaneously heated or cooled or otherwise affected.
Now the art of healing corresponds to an 'originative source', while the
food corresponds to 'the last' (i.e. 'continuous') mover.
Those active powers, then, whose forms are not embodied in matter,
are unaffected: but those whose forms are in matter are such as to be affected
in acting. For we maintain that one and the same 'matter' is equally, so
to say, the basis of either of the two opposed things-being as it were
a 'kind'; and that that which can he hot must be made hot, provided the
heating agent is there, i.e. comes near. Hence (as we have said) some of
the active powers are unaffected while others are such as to be affected;
and what holds of motion is true also of the active powers. For as in motion
'the first mover' is unmoved, so among the active powers 'the first agent'
is unaffected.
The active power is a 'cause' in the sense of that from which the
process originates: but the end, for the sake of which it takes place,
is not 'active'. (That is why health is not 'active', except metaphorically.)
For when the agent is there, the patient he-comes something: but when 'states'
are there, the patient no longer becomes but already is-and 'forms' (i.e.
lends') are a kind of 'state'. As to the 'matter', it (qua matter) is passive.
Now fire contains 'the hot' embodied in matter: but a 'hot' separate from
matter (if such a thing existed) could not suffer any action. Perhaps,
indeed, it is impossible that 'the hot' should exist in separation from
matter: but if there are any entities thus separable, what we are saying
would be true of them.
We have thus explained what action and passion are, what things
exhibit them, why they do so, and in what manner. We must go on to discuss
how it is possible for action and passion to take place.
Part 8
Some philosophers think that the 'last' agent-the 'agent' in the
strictest sense-enters in through certain pores, and so the patient suffers
action. It is in this way, they assert, that we see and hear and exercise
all our other senses. Moreover, according to them, things are seen through
air and water and other transparent bodies, because such bodies possess
pores, invisible indeed owing to their minuteness, but close-set and arranged
in rows: and the more transparent the body, the more frequent and serial
they suppose its pores to be. Such was the theory which some philosophers
(induding Empedocles) advanced in regard to the structure of certain bodies.
They do not restrict it to the bodies which act and suffer action: but
'combination' too, they say, takes place 'only between bodies whose pores
are in reciprocal symmetry'. The most systematic and consistent theory,
however, and one that applied to all bodies, was advanced by Leucippus
and Democritus: and, in maintaining it, they took as their starting-point
what naturally comes first.
For some of the older philosophers thought that 'what is' must
of necessity be 'one' and immovable. The void, they argue, 'is not': but
unless there is a void with a separate being of its own, 'what is' cannot
be moved-nor again can it be 'many', since there is nothing to keep things
apart. And in this respect, they insist, the view that the universe is
not 'continuous' but 'discretes-in-contact' is no better than the view
that there are 'many' (and not 'one') and a void. For (suppose that the
universe is discretes-in-contact. Then), if it is divisible through and
through, there is no 'one', and therefore no 'many' either, but the Whole
is void; while to maintain that it is divisible at some points, but not
at others, looks like an arbitrary fiction. For up to what limit is it
divisible? And for what reason is part of the Whole indivisible, i.e. a
plenum, and part divided? Further, they maintain, it is equally necessary
to deny the existence of motion.
Reasoning in this way, therefore, they were led to transcend sense-perception,
and to disregard it on the ground that 'one ought to follow the argument':
and so they assert that the universe is 'one' and immovable. Some of them
add that it is 'infinite', since the limit (if it had one) would be a limit
against the void.
There were, then, certain thinkers who, for the reasons we have
stated, enunciated views of this kind as their theory of 'The Truth'....
Moreover, although these opinions appear to follow logically in a dialectical
discussion, yet to believe them seems next door to madness when one considers
the facts. For indeed no lunatic seems to be so far out of his senses as
to suppose that fire and ice are 'one': it is only between what is right
and what seems right from habit, that some people are mad enough to see
no difference.
Leucippus, however, thought he had a theory which harmonized with
sense-perception and would not abolish either coming-to-be and passing-away
or motion and the multiplicity of things. He made these concessions to
the facts of perception: on the other hand, he conceded to the Monists
that there could be no motion without a void. The result is a theory which
he states as follows: 'The void is a "not being", and no part of "what
is" is a "not-being"; for what "is" in the strict sense of the term is
an absolute plenum. This plenum, however, is not "one": on the contrary,
it is a many" infinite in number and invisible owing to the minuteness
of their bulk. The "many" move in the void (for there is a void): and by
coming together they produce "coming to-be", while by separating they produce
"passing-away". Moreover, they act and suffer action wherever they chance
to be in contact (for there they are not "one"), and they generate by being
put together and becoming intertwined. From the genuinely-one, on the other
hand, there never could have come-to-be a multiplicity, nor from the genuinely-many
a "one": that is impossible. But' (just as Empedocles and some of the other
philosophers say that things suffer action through their pores, so) 'all
"alteration" and all "passion" take place in the way that has been explained:
breaking-up (i.e. passing-away) is effected by means of the void, and so
too is growth-solids creeping in to fill the void places.' Empedocles too
is practically bound to adopt the same theory as Leucippus. For he must
say that there are certain solids which, however, are indivisible-unless
there are continuous pores all through the body. But this last alternative
is impossible: for then there will be nothing solid in the body (nothing
beside the pores) but all of it will be void. It is necessary, therefore,
for his 'contiguous discretes' to be indivisible, while the intervals between
them-which he calls 'pores'-must be void. But this is precisely Leucippus'
theory of action and passion.
Such, approximately, are the current explanations of the manner
in which some things 'act' while others 'suffer action'. And as regards
the Atomists, it is not only clear what their explanation is: it is also
obvious that it follows with tolerable consistency from the assumptions
they employ. But there is less obvious consistency in the explanation offered
by the other thinkers. It is not clear, for instance, how, on the theory
of Empedocles, there is to be 'passing-away' as well as 'alteration'. For
the primary bodies of the Atomists-the primary constituents of which bodies
are composed, and the ultimate elements into which they are dissolved-are
indivisible, differing from one another only in figure. In the philosophy
of Empedocles, on the other hand, it is evident that all the other bodies
down to the 'elements' have their coming-to-be and their passingaway: but
it is not clear how the 'elements' themselves, severally in their aggregated
masses, come-to-be and pass-away. Nor is it possible for Empedocles to
explain how they do so, since he does not assert that Fire too (and similarly
every one of his other 'elements') possesses 'elementary constituents'
of itself.
Such an assertion would commit him to doctrines like those which
Plato has set forth in the Timaeus. For although both Plato and Leucippus
postulate elementary constituents that are indivisible and distinctively
characterized by figures, there is this great difference between the two
theories: the 'indivisibles' of Leucippus (i) are solids, while those of
Plato are planes, and (ii) are characterized by an infinite variety of
figures, while the characterizing figures employed by Plato are limited
in number. Thus the 'comings-to-be' and the 'dissociations' result from
the 'indivisibles' (a) according to Leucippus through the void and through
contact (for it is at the point of contact that each of the composite bodies
is divisible), but (b) according to Plato in virtue of contact alone, since
he denies there is a void.
Now we have discussed 'indivisible planes' in the preceding treatise.'
But with regard to the assumption of 'indivisible solids', although we
must not now enter upon a detailed study of its consequences, the following
criticisms fall within the compass of a short digression: i. The Atomists
are committed to the view that every 'indivisible' is incapable alike of
receiving a sensible property (for nothing can 'suffer action' except through
the void) and of producing one-no 'indivisible' can be, e.g. either hard
or cold. Yet it is surely a paradox that an exception is made of 'the hot'-'the
hot' being assigned as peculiar to the spherical figure: for, that being
so, its 'contrary' also ('the cold') is bound to belong to another of the
figures. If, however, these properties (heat and cold) do belong to the
'indivisibles', it is a further paradox that they should not possess heaviness
and lightness, and hardness and softness. And yet Democritus says 'the
more any indivisible exceeds, the heavier it is'-to which we must clearly
add 'and the hotter it is'. But if that is their character, it is impossible
they should not be affected by one another: the 'slightly-hot indivisible',
e.g. will inevitably suffer action from one which far exceeds it in heat.
Again, if any 'indivisible' is 'hard', there must also be one which is
'soft': but 'the soft' derives its very name from the fact that it suffers
a certain action-for 'soft' is that which yields to
pressure.
Ii. But further, not only is it paradoxical (i) that no property
except figure should belong to the 'indivisibles': it is also paradoxical
(ii) that, if other properties do belong to them, one only of these additional
properties should attach to each-e.g. that this 'indivisible' should be
cold and that 'indivisible' hot. For, on that supposition, their substance
would not even be uniform. And it is equally impossible (iii) that more
than one of these additional properties should belong to the single 'indivisible'.
For, being indivisible, it will possess these properties in the same point-so
that, if it 'suffers action' by being chilled, it will also, qua chilled,
'act' or 'suffer action' in some other way. And the same line of argument
applies to all the other properties too: for the difficulty we have just
raised confronts, as a necessary consequence, all who advocate 'indivisibles'
(whether solids or planes), since their 'indivisibles' cannot become either
'rarer' or 'derser' inasmuch as there is no void in
them.
Iii. It is a further paradox that there should be small 'indivisibles',
but not large ones. For it is natural enough, from the ordinary point of
view, that the larger bodies should be more liable to fracture than the
small ones, since they (viz. the large bodies) are easily broken up because
they collide with many other bodies. But why should indivisibility as such
be the property of small, rather than of large, bodies?
Iv. Again, is the substance of all those solids uniform, or do
they fall into sets which differ from one another-as if, e.g. some of them,
in their aggregated bulk, were 'fiery', others earthy'? For (i) if all
of them are uniform in substance, what is it that separated one from another?
Or why, when they come into contact, do they not coalesce into one, as
drops of water run together when drop touches drop (for the two cases are
precisely parallel)? On the other hand (ii) if they fall into differing
sets, how are these characterized? It is clear, too, that these, rather
than the 'figures', ought to be postulated as 'original reals', i.e. causes
from which the phenomena result. Moreover, if they differed in substance,
they would both act and suffer action on coming into reciprocal
contact.
V. Again, what is it which sets them moving? For if their 'mover'
is other than themselves, they are such as to 'suffer action'. If, on the
other hand, each of them sets itself in motion, either (a) it will be divisible
('imparting motion' qua this, 'being moved' qua that), or (b) contrary
properties will attach to it in the same respect-i.e. 'matter' will be
identical in-potentiality as well as numerically-identical.
As to the thinkers who explain modification of property through
the movement facilitated by the pores, if this is supposed to occur notwithstanding
the fact that the pores are filled, their postulate of pores is superfluous.
For if the whole body suffers action under these conditions, it would suffer
action in the same way even if it had no pores but were just its own continuous
self. Moreover, how can their account of 'vision through a medium' be correct?
It is impossible for (the visual ray) to penetrate the transparent bodies
at their 'contacts'; and impossible for it to pass through their pores
if every pore be full. For how will that differ from having no pores at
all? The body will be uniformly 'full' throughout. But, further, even if
these passages, though they must contain bodies, are 'void', the same consequence
will follow once more. And if they are 'too minute to admit any body',
it is absurd to suppose there is a 'minute' void and yet to deny the existence
of a 'big' one (no matter how small the 'big' may be), or to imagine 'the
void' means anything else than a body's place-whence it clearly follows
that to every body there will correspond a void of equal cubic
capacity.
As a general criticism we must urge that to postulate pores is
superfluous. For if the agent produces no effect by touching the patient,
neither will it produce any by passing through its pores. On the other
hand, if it acts by contact, then-even without pores-some things will 'suffer
action' and others will 'act', provided they are by nature adapted for
reciprocal action and passion. Our arguments have shown that it is either
false or futile to advocate pores in the sense in which some thinkers conceive
them. But since bodies are divisible through and through, the postulate
of pores is ridiculous: for, qua divisible, a body can fall into separate
parts.
Part 9
Let explain the way in which things in fact possess the power of
generating, and of acting and suffering action: and let us start from the
principle we have often enunciated. For, assuming the distinction between
(a) that which is potentially and (b) that which is actually such-and-such,
it is the nature of the first, precisely in so far as it is what it is,
to suffer action through and through, not merely to be susceptible in some
parts while insusceptible in others. But its susceptibility varies in degree,
according as it is more or less; such-and such, and one would be more justified
in speaking of 'pores' in this connexion: for instance, in the metals there
are veins of 'the susceptible' stretching continuously through the
substance.
So long, indeed, as any body is naturally coherent and one, it
is insusceptible. So, too, bodies are insusceptible so long as they are
not in contact either with one another or with other bodies which are by
nature such as to act and suffer action. (To illustrate my meaning: Fire
heats not only when in contact, but also from a distance. For the fire
heats the air, and the air-being by nature such as both to act and suffer
action-heats the body.) But the supposition that a body is 'susceptible
in some parts, but insusceptible in others' (is only possible for those
who hold an erroneous view concerning the divisibility of magnitudes. For
us) the following account results from the distinctions we established
at the beginning. For (i) if magnitudes are not divisible through and through-if,
on the contrary, there are indivisible solids or planes-then indeed no
body would be susceptible through and through :but neither would any be
continuous. Since, however, (ii) this is false, i.e. since every body is
divisible, there is no difference between 'having been divided into parts
which remain in contact' and 'being divisible'. For if a body 'can be separated
at the contacts' (as some thinkers express it), then, even though it has
not yet been divided, it will be in a state of dividedness-since, as it
can be divided, nothing inconceivable results. And (iii) the suposition
is open to this general objection-it is a paradox that 'passion' should
occur in this manner only, viz. by the bodies being split. For this theory
abolishes 'alteration': but we see the same body liquid at one time and
solid at another, without losing its continuity. It has suffered this change
not by 'division' and composition', nor yet by 'turning' and 'intercontact'
as Democritus asserts; for it has passed from the liquid to the solid state
without any change of 'grouping' or 'position' in the constituents of its
substance. Nor are there contained within it those 'hard' (i.e. congealed)
particles 'indivisible in their bulk': on the contrary, it is liquid-and
again, solid and congealed-uniformly all through. This theory, it must
be added, makes growth and diminution impossible also. For if there is
to be opposition (instead of the growing thing having changed as a whole,
either by the admixture of something or by its own transformation), increase
of size will not have resulted in any and every part.
So much, then, to establish that things generate and are generated,
act and suffer action, reciprocally; and to distinguish the way in which
these processes can occur from the (impossible) way in which some thinkers
say they occur.
Part 10
But we have still to explain 'combination', for that was the third
of the subjects we originally proposed to discuss. Our explanation will
proceed on the same method as before. We must inquire: What is 'combination',
and what is that which can 'combine'? Of what things, and under what conditions,
is 'combination' a property? And, further, does 'combination' exist in
fact, or is it false to assert its existence?
For, according to some thinkers, it is impossible for one thing
to be combined with another. They argue that (i) if both the 'combined'
constituents persist unaltered, they are no more 'combined' now than they
were before, but are in the same condition: while (ii) if one has been
destroyed, the constituents have not been 'combined'-on the contrary, one
constituent is and the other is not, whereas 'combination' demands uniformity
of condition in them both: and on the same principle (iii) even if both
the combining constituents have been destroyed as the result of their coalescence,
they cannot 'have been combined' since they have no being at
all.
What we have in this argument is, it would seem, a demand for the
precise distinction of 'combination' from coming-to-be and passingaway
(for it is obvious that 'combination', if it exists, must differ from these
processes) and for the precise distinction of the 'combinable' from that
which is such as to come-to-be and pass-away. As soon, therefore, as these
distinctions are clear, the difficulties raised by the argument would be
solved.
Now (i) we do not speak of the wood as 'combined' with the fire,
nor of its burning as a 'combining' either of its particles with one another
or of itself with the fire: what we say is that 'the fire is coming-to-be,
but the wood is 'passing-away'. Similarly, we speak neither (ii) of the
food as 'combining' with the body, nor (iii) of the shape as 'combining'
with the wax and thus fashioning the lump. Nor can body 'combine' with
white, nor (to generalize) 'properties' and 'states' with 'things': for
we see them persisting unaltered. But again (iv) white and knowledge cannot
be 'combined' either, nor any other of the 'adjectivals'. (Indeed, this
is a blemish in the theory of those who assert that 'once upon a time all
things were together and combined'. For not everything can 'combine' with
everything. On the contrary, both of the constituents that are combined
in the compound must originally have existed in separation: but no property
can have separate existence.)
Since, however, some things are-potentially while others are-actually,
the constituents combined in a compound can 'be' in a sense and yet 'not-be'.
The compound may he-actually other than the constituents from which it
has resulted; nevertheless each of them may still he-potentially what it
was before they were combined, and both of them may survive undestroyed.
(For this was the difficulty that emerged in the previous argument: and
it is evident that the combining constituents not only coalesce, having
formerly existed in separation, but also can again be separated out from
the compound.) The constituents, therefore, neither (a) persist actually,
as 'body' and 'white' persist: nor (b) are they destroyed (either one of
them or both), for their 'power of action' is preserved. Hence these difficulties
may be dismissed: but the problem immediately connected with them-whether
combination is something relative to perception' must be set out and
discussed.
When the combining constituents have been divided into parts so
small, and have been juxtaposed in such a manner, that perception fails
to discriminate them one from another, have they then 'been combined Or
ought we to say 'No, not until any and every part of one constituent is
juxtaposed to a part of the other'? The term, no doubt, is applied in the
former sense: we speak, e.g. of wheat having been 'combined' with barley
when each grain of the one is juxtaposed to a grain of the other. But every
body is divisible and therefore, since body 'combined' with body is uniform
in texture throughout, any and every part of each constituent ought to
be juxtaposed to a part of the other.
No body, however, can be divided into its 'least' parts: and 'composition'
is not identical with 'combination', but other than it. From these premises
it clearly follows (i) that so long as the constituents are preserved in
small particles, we must not speak of them as 'combined'. (For this will
be a 'composition' instead of a 'blending' or 'combination': nor will every
portion of the resultant exhibit the same ratio between its constituents
as the whole. But we maintain that, if 'combination' has taken place, the
compound must be uniform in texture throughout-any part of such a compound
being the same as the whole, just as any part of water is water: whereas,
if 'combination' is 'composition of the small particles', nothing of the
kind will happen. On the contrary, the constituents will only be 'combined'
relatively to perception: and the same thing will be 'combined' to one
percipient, if his sight is not sharp, (but not to another,) while to the
eye of Lynceus nothing will be 'combined'.) It clearly follows (ii) that
we must not speak of the constituents as 'combined in virtue of a division
such that any and every part of each is juxtaposed to a part of the other:
for it is impossible for them to be thus divided. Either, then, there is
no 'combination', or we have still to explain the manner in which it can
take place.
Now, as we maintain, some things are such as to act and others
such as to suffer action from them. Moreover, some things-viz. those Which
have the same matter-'reciprocate', i.e. are such as to act upon one another
and to suffer action from one another; while other things, viz. agents
which have not the same matter as their patients, act without themselves
suffering action. Such agents cannot 'combine'-that is why neither the
art of healing nor health produces health by 'combining' with the bodies
of the patients. Amongst those things, however, which are reciprocally
active and passive, some are easily-divisible. Now (i) if a great quantity
(or a large bulk) of one of these easily-divisible 'reciprocating' materials
be brought together with a little (or with a small piece) of another, the
effect produced is not 'combination', but increase of the dominant: for
the other material is transformed into the dominant. (That is why a drop
of wine does not 'combine' with ten thousand gallons of water: for its
form is dissolved, and it is changed so as to merge in the total volume
of water.) On the other hand (ii) when there is a certain equilibrium between
their 'powers of action', then each of them changes out of its own nature
towards the dominant: yet neither becomes the other, but both become an
intermediate with properties common to both.
Thus it is clear that only those agents are 'combinable' which
involve a contrariety-for these are such as to suffer action reciprocally.
And, further, they combine more freely if small pieces of each of them
are juxtaposed. For in that condition they change one another more easily
and more quickly; whereas this effect takes a long time when agent and
patient are present in bulk.
Hence, amongst the divisible susceptible materials, those whose
shape is readily adaptable have a tendency to combine: for they are easily
divided into small particles, since that is precisely what 'being readily
adaptable in shape' implies. For instance, liquids are the most 'combinable'
of all bodies-because, of all divisible materials, the liquid is most readily
adaptable in shape, unless it be viscous. Viscous liquids, it is true,
produce no effect except to increase the volume and bulk. But when one
of the constituents is alone susceptible-or superlatively susceptible,
the other being susceptible in a very slight degree-the compound resulting
from their combination is either no greater in volume or only a little
greater. This is what happens when tin is combined with bronze. For some
things display a hesitating and ambiguous attitude towards one another-showing
a slight tendency to combine and also an inclination to behave as 'receptive
matter' and 'form' respectively. The behaviour of these metals is a case
in point. For the tin almost vanishes, behaving as if it were an immaterial
property of the bronze: having been combined, it disappears, leaving no
trace except the colour it has imparted to the bronze. The same phenomenon
occurs in other instances too.
It is clear, then, from the foregoing account, that 'combination'
occurs, what it is, to what it is due, and what kind of thing is 'combinable'.
The phenomenon depends upon the fact that some things are such as to be
(a) reciprocally susceptible and (b) readily adaptable in shape, i.e. easily
divisible. For such things can be 'combined' without its being necessary
either that they should have been destroyed or that they should survive
absolutely unaltered: and their 'combination' need not be a 'composition',
nor merely 'relative to perception'. On the contrary: anything is 'combinable'
which, being readily adaptable in shape, is such as to suffer action and
to act; and it is 'combinable with' another thing similarly characterized
(for the 'combinable' is relative to the 'combinable'); and 'combination'
is unification of the 'combinables', resulting from their
'alteration'.
We have explained under what conditions 'combination', 'contact', and 'action-passion'
are attributable to the things which undergo natural change. Further, we
have discussed 'unqualified' coming-to-be and passing-away, and explained
under what conditions they are predicable, of what subject, and owing to
what cause. Similarly, we have also discussed 'alteration', and explained
what 'altering' is and how it differs from coming-to-be and passing-away.
But we have still to investigate the so-called 'elements' of
bodies.
For the complex substances whose formation and maintenance are
due to natural processes all presuppose the perceptible bodies as the condition
of their coming-to-be and passing-away: but philosophers disagree in regard
to the matter which underlies these perceptible bodies. Some maintain it
is single, supposing it to be, e.g. Air or Fire, or an 'intermediate' between
these two (but still a body with a separate existence). Others, on the
contrary, postulate two or more materials-ascribing to their 'association'
and 'dissociation', or to their 'alteration', the coming-to-be and passing-away
of things. (Some, for instance, postulate Fire and Earth: some add Air,
making three: and some, like Empedocles, reckon Water as well, thus postulating
four.)
Now we may agree that the primary materials, whose change (whether
it be 'association and dissociation' or a process of another kind) results
in coming-to-be and passingaway, are rightly described as 'originative
sources, i.e. elements'. But (i) those thinkers are in error who postulate,
beside the bodies we have mentioned, a single matter-and that corporeal
and separable matter. For this 'body' of theirs cannot possibly exist without
a 'perceptible contrariety': this 'Boundless', which some thinkers identify
with the 'original real', must be either light or heavy, either cold or
hot. And (ii) what Plato has written in the Timaeus is not based on any
precisely-articulated conception. For he has not stated clearly whether
his 'Omnirecipient" exists in separation from the 'elements'; nor does
he make any use of it. He says, indeed, that it is a substratum prior to
the so-called 'elements'-underlying them, as gold underlies the things
that are fashioned of gold. (And yet this comparison, if thus expressed,
is itself open to criticism. Things which come-to-be and pass-away cannot
be called by the name of the material out of which they have come-tobe:
it is only the results of 'alteration' which retain the name of the substratum
whose 'alterations' they are. However, he actually says' that the truest
account is to affirm that each of them is "gold"'.) Nevertheless he carries
his analysis of the 'elements'-solids though they are-back to 'planes',
and it is impossible for 'the Nurse' (i.e. the primary matter) to be identical
with 'the planes'.
Our own doctrine is that although there is a matter of the perceptible
bodies (a matter out of which the so-called 'clements' come-to-be), it
has no separate existence, but is always bound up with a contrariety. A
more precise account of these presuppositions has been given in another
work': we must, however, give a detailed explanation of the primary bodies
as well, since they too are similarly derived from the matter. We must
reckon as an 'originative source' and as 'primary' the matter which underlies,
though it is inseparable from, the contrary qualities: for the hot' is
not matter for 'the cold' nor 'the cold' for 'the hot', but the substratum
is matter for them both. We therefore have to recognize three 'originative
sources': firstly that which potentially perceptible body, secondly the
contrarieties (I mean, e.g. heat and cold), and thirdly Fire, Water, and
the like. Only 'thirdly', however: for these bodies change into one another
(they are not immutable as Empedocles and other thinkers assert, since
'alteration' would then have been impossible), whereas the contrarieties
do not change.
Nevertheless, even so the question remains: What sorts of contrarieties,
and how many of them, are to be accounted 'originative sources' of body?
For all the other thinkers assume and use them without explaining why they
are these or why they are just so many.
Part 2
Since, then, we are looking for 'originative sources' of perceptible
body; and since 'perceptible' is equivalent to 'tangible', and 'tangible'
is that of which the perception is touch; it is clear that not all the
contrarieties constitute 'forms' and 'originative sources' of body, but
only those which correspond to touch. For it is in accordance with a contrariety-a
contrariety, moreover, of tangible qualities-that the primary bodies are
differentiated. That is why neither whiteness (and blackness), nor sweetness
(and bitterness), nor (similarly) any quality belonging to the other perceptible
contrarieties either, constitutes an 'element'. And yet vision is prior
to touch, so that its object also is prior to the object of touch. The
object of vision, however, is a quality of tangible body not qua tangible,
but qua something else-qua something which may well be naturally prior
to the object of touch.
Accordingly, we must segregate the tangible differences and contrarieties,
and distinguish which amongst them are primary. Contrarieties correlative
to touch are the following: hot-cold, dry-moist, heavy-light, hard-soft,
viscous-brittle, rough-smooth, coarse-fine. Of these (i) heavy and light
are neither active nor susceptible. Things are not called 'heavy' and 'light'
because they act upon, or suffer action from, other things. But the 'elements'
must be reciprocally active and susceptible, since they 'combine' and are
transformed into one another. On the other hand (ii) hot and cold, and
dry and moist, are terms, of which the first pair implies power to act
and the second pair susceptibility. 'Hot' is that which 'associates' things
of the same kind (for 'dissociating', which people attribute to Fire as
its function, is 'associating' things of the same class, since its effect
is to eliminate what is foreign), while 'cold' is that which brings together,
i.e. 'associates', homogeneous and heterogeneous things alike. And moise
is that which, being readily adaptable in shape, is not determinable by
any limit of its own: while 'dry' is that which is readily determinable
by its own limit, but not readily adaptable in shape.
From moist and dry are derived (iii) the fine and coarse, viscous
and brittle, hard and soft, and the remaining tangible differences. For
(a) since the moist has no determinate shape, but is readily adaptable
and follows the outline of that which is in contact with it, it is characteristic
of it to be 'such as to fill up'. Now 'the fine' is 'such as to fill up'.
For the fine' consists of subtle particles; but that which consists of
small particles is 'such as to fill up', inasmuch as it is in contact whole
with whole-and 'the fine' exhibits this character in a superlative degree.
Hence it is evident that the fine derives from the moist, while the coarse
derives from the dry. Again (b) the viscous' derives from the moist: for
'the viscous' (e.g. oil) is a 'moist' modified in a certain way. 'The brittle',
on the other hand, derives from the dry: for 'brittle' is that which is
completely dry-so completely, that its solidification has actually been
due to failure of moisture. Further (c) 'the soft' derives from the moist.
For 'soft' is that which yields to pressure by retiring into itself, though
it does not yield by total displacement as the moist does-which explains
why the moist is not 'soft', although 'the soft' derives from the moist.
'The hard', on the other hand, derives from the dry: for 'hard' is that
which is solidified, and the solidified is dry.
The terms 'dry' and 'moist' have more senses than one. For 'the
damp', as well as the moist, is opposed to the dry: and again 'the solidified',
as well as the dry, is opposed to the moist. But all these qualities derive
from the dry and moist we mentioned first.' For (i) the dry is opposed
to the damp: i.e. 'damp' is that which has foreign moisture on its surface
('sodden' being that which is penetrated to its core), while 'dry' is that
which has lost foreign moisture. Hence it is evident that the damp will
derive from the moist, and 'the dry' which is opposed to it will derive
from the primary dry. Again (ii) the 'moist' and the solidified derive
in the same way from the primary pair. For 'moist' is that which contains
moisture of its-own deep within it ('sodden' being that which is deeply
penetrated by foreign mosture), whereas 'solidigied' is that which has
lost this inner moisture. Hence these too derive from the primary pair,
the 'solidified' from the dry and the 'solidified' from the dry the 'liquefiable'
from the moist.
It is clear, then, that all the other differences reduce to the
first four, but that these admit of no further reduction. For the hot is
not essentially moist or dry, nor the moist essentially hot or cold: nor
are the cold and the dry derivative forms, either of one another or of
the hot and the moist. Hence these must be four.
Part 3
The elementary qualities are four, and any four terms can be combined
in six couples. Contraries, however, refuse to be coupled: for it is impossible
for the same thing to be hot and cold, or moist and dry. Hence it is evident
that the 'couplings' of the elementary qualities will be four: hot with
dry and moist with hot, and again cold with dry and cold with moist. And
these four couples have attached themselves to the apparently 'simple'
bodies (Fire, Air, Water, and Earth) in a manner consonant with theory.
For Fire is hot and dry, whereas Air is hot and moist (Air being a sort
of aqueous vapour); and Water is cold and moist, while Earth is cold and
dry. Thus the differences are reasonably distributed among the primary
bodies, and the number of the latter is consonant with theory. For all
who make the simple bodies 'elements' postulate either one, or two, or
three, or four. Now (i) those who assert there is one only, and then generate
everything else by condensation and rarefaction, are in effect making their
'originative sources' two, viz. the rare and the dense, or rather the hot
and the cold: for it is these which are the moulding forces, while the
'one' underlies them as a 'matter'. But (ii) those who postulate two from
the start-as Parmenides postulated Fire and Earth-make the intermediates
(e.g. Air and Water) blends of these. The same course is followed (iii)
by those who advocate three. (We may compare what Plato does in Me Divisions':
for he makes 'the middle' a blend.) Indeed, there is practically no difference
between those who postulate two and those who postulate three, except that
the former split the middle 'element' into two, while the latter treat
it as only one. But (iv) some advocate four from the start, e.g. Empedocles:
yet he too draws them together so as to reduce them to the two, for he
opposes all the others to Fire.
In fact, however, fire and air, and each of the bodies we have
mentioned, are not simple, but blended. The 'simple' bodies are indeed
similar in nature to them, but not identical with them. Thus the 'simple'
body corresponding to fire is 'such-as-fire, not fire: that which corresponds
to air is 'such-as-air': and so on with the rest of them. But fire is an
excess of heat, just as ice is an excess of cold. For freezing and boiling
are excesses of heat and cold respectively. Assuming, therefore, that ice
is a freezing of moist and cold, fire analogously will be a boiling of
dry and hot: a fact, by the way, which explains why nothing comes-to-be
either out of ice or out of fire.
The 'simple' bodies, since they are four, fall into two pairs which
belong to the two regions, each to each: for Fire and Air are forms of
the body moving towards the 'limit', while Earth and Water are forms of
the body which moves towards the 'centre'. Fire and Earth, moreover, are
extremes and purest: Water and Air, on the contrary are intermediates and
more like blends. And, further, the members of either pair are contrary
to those of the other, Water being contrary to Fire and Earth to Air; for
the qualities constituting Water and Earth are contrary to those that constitute
Fire and Air. Nevertheless, since they are four, each of them is characterized
par excellence a single quality: Earth by dry rather than by cold, Water
by cold rather than by moist, Air by moist rather than by hot, and Fire
by hot rather than by dry.
Part 4
It has been established before' that the coming-to-be of the 'simple'
bodies is reciprocal. At the same time, it is manifest, even on the evidence
of perception, that they do come-to-be: for otherwise there would not have
been 'alteration, since 'alteration' is change in respect to the qualities
of the objects of touch. Consequently, we must explain (i) what is the
manner of their reciprocal transformation, and (ii) whether every one of
them can come to-be out of every one-or whether some can do so, but not
others.
Now it is evident that all of them are by nature such as to change
into one another: for coming-to-be is a change into contraries and out
of contraries, and the 'elements' all involve a contrariety in their mutual
relations because their distinctive qualities are contrary. For in some
of them both qualities are contrary-e.g. in Fire and Water, the first of
these being dry and hot, and the second moist and cold: while in others
one of the qualities (though only one) is contrary-e.g. in Air and Water,
the first being moist and hot, and the second moist and cold. It is evident,
therefore, if we consider them in general, that every one is by nature
such as to come-to-be out of every one: and when we come to consider them
severally, it is not difficult to see the manner in which their transformation
is effected. For, though all will result from all, both the speed and the
facility of their conversion will differ in degree.
Thus (i) the process of conversion will be quick between those
which have interchangeable 'complementary factors', but slow between those
which have none. The reason is that it is easier for a single thing to
change than for many. Air, e.g. will result from Fire if a single quality
changes: for Fire, as we saw, is hot and dry while Air is hot and moist,
so that there will be Air if the dry be overcome by the moist. Again, Water
will result from Air if the hot be overcome by the cold: for Air, as we
saw, is hot and moist while Water is cold and moist, so that, if the hot
changes, there will be Water. So too, in the same manner, Earth will result
from Water and Fire from Earth, since the two 'elements' in both these
couples have interchangeable 'complementary factors'. For Water is moist
and cold while Earth is cold and dry-so that, if the moist be overcome,
there will be Earth: and again, since Fire is dry and hot while Earth is
cold and dry, Fire will result from Earth if the cold
pass-away.
It is evident, therefore, that the coming-to-be of the 'simple'
bodies will be cyclical; and that this cyclical method of transformation
is the easiest, because the consecutive 'clements' contain interchangeable
'complementary factors'. On the other hand (ii) the transformation of Fire
into Water and of Air into Earth, and again of Water and Earth into Fire
and Air respectively, though possible, is more difficult because it involves
the change of more qualities. For if Fire is to result from Water, both
the cold and the moist must pass-away: and again, both the cold and the
dry must pass-away if Air is to result from Earth. So' too, if Water and
Earth are to result from Fire and Air respectively-both qualities must
change.
This second method of coming-to-be, then, takes a longer time.
But (iii) if one quality in each of two 'elements' pass-away, the transformation,
though easier, is not reciprocal. Still, from Fire plus Water there will
result Earth and Air, and from Air plus Earth Fire and Water. For there
will be Air, when the cold of the Water and the dry of the Fire have passed-away
(since the hot of the latter and the moist of the former are left): whereas,
when the hot of the Fire and the moist of the Water have passed-away, there
will be Earth, owing to the survival of the dry of the Fire and the cold
of the Water. So, too, in the same Way, Fire and Water will result from
Air plus Earth. For there will be Water, when the hot of the Air and the
dry of the Earth have passed-away (since the moist of the former and the
cold of the latter are left): whereas, when the moist of the Air and the
cold of the Earth have passed-away, there will be Fire, owing to the survival
of the hot of the Air and the dry of the Earth-qualities essentially constitutive
of Fire. Moreover, this mode of Fire's coming-to-be is confirmed by perception.
For flame is par excellence Fire: but flame is burning smoke, and smoke
consists of Air and Earth.
No transformation, however, into any of the 'simple' bodies can
result from the passingaway of one elementary quality in each of two 'elements'
when they are taken in their consecutive order, because either identical
or contrary qualities are left in the pair: but no 'simple' body can be
formed either out of identical, or out of contrary, qualities. Thus no
'simple' body would result, if the dry of Fire and the moist of Air were
to pass-away: for the hot is left in both. On the other hand, if the hot
pass-away out both, the contraries-dry and moist-are left. A similar result
will occur in all the others too: for all the consecutive 'elements' contain
one identical, and one contrary, quality. Hence, too, it clearly follows
that, when one of the consecutive 'elements' is transformed into one, the
coming-to-be is effected by the passing-away of a single quality: whereas,
when two of them are transformed into a third, more than one quality must
have passedaway.
We have stated that all the 'elements' come-to-be out of any one
of them; and we have explained the manner in which their mutual conversion
takes place. Let us nevertheless supplement our theory by the following
speculations concerning them.
Part 5
If Water, Air, and the like are a 'matter' of which the natural
bodies consist, as some thinkers in fact believe, these 'clements' must
be either one, or two, or more. Now they cannot all of them be one-they
cannot, e.g. all be Air or Water or Fire or Earth-because 'Change is into
contraries'. For if they all were Air, then (assuming Air to persist) there
will be 'alteration' instead of coming-to-be. Besides, nobody supposes
a single 'element' to persist, as the basis of all, in such a way that
it is Water as well as Air (or any other 'element') at the same time. So
there will be a certain contrariety, i.e. a differentiating quality: and
the other member of this contrariety, e.g. heat, will belong to some other
'element', e.g. to Fire. But Fire will certainly not be 'hot Air'. For
a change of that kind (a) is 'alteration', and (b) is not what is observed.
Moreover (c) if Air is again to result out of the Fire, it will do so by
the conversion of the hot into its contrary: this contrary, therefore,
will belong to Air, and Air will be a cold something: hence it is impossible
for Fire to be 'hot Air', since in that case the same thing will be simultaneously
hot and cold. Both Fire and Air, therefore, will be something else which
is the same; i.e. there will be some 'matter', other than either, common
to both.
The same argument applies to all the 'elements', proving that there
is no single one of them out of which they all originate. But neither is
there, beside these four, some other body from which they originate-a something
intermediate, e.g. between Air and Water (coarser than Air, but finer than
Water), or between Air and Fire (coarser than Fire, but finer than Air).
For the supposed 'intermediate' will be Air and Fire when a pair of contrasted
qualities is added to it: but, since one of every two contrary qualities
is a 'privation', the 'intermediate' never can exist-as some thinkers assert
the 'Boundless' or the 'Environing' exists-in isolation. It is, therefore,
equally and indifferently any one of the 'elements', or else it is
nothing.
Since, then, there is nothing-at least, nothing perceptible-prior
to these, they must be all. That being so, either they must always persist
and not be transformable into one another: or they must undergo transformation-either
all of them, or some only (as Plato wrote in the Timacus).' Now it has
been proved before that they must undergo reciprocal transformation. It
has also been proved that the speed with which they come-to-be, one out
of another, is not uniform-since the process of reciprocal transformation
is relatively quick between the 'elements' with a 'complementary factor',
but relatively slow between those which possess no such factor. Assuming,
then, that the contrariety, in respect to which they are transformed, is
one, the elements' will inevitably be two: for it is 'matter' that is the
'mean' between the two contraries, and matter is imperceptible and inseparable
from them. Since, however, the 'elements' are seen to be more than two,
the contrarieties must at the least be two. But the contrarieties being
two, the 'elements' must be four (as they evidently are) and cannot be
three: for the couplings' are four, since, though six are possible, the
two in which the qualities are contrary to one another cannot
occur.
These subjects have been discussed before:' but the following arguments
will make it clear that, since the 'elements' are transformed into one
another, it is impossible for any one of them-whether it be at the end
or in the middle-to be an 'originative source' of the rest. There can be
no such 'originative element' at the ends: for all of them would then be
Fire or Earth, and this theory amounts to the assertion that all things
are made of Fire or Earth. Nor can a 'middle-element' be such an originative
source'-as some thinkers suppose that Air is transformed both into Fire
and into Water, and Water both into Air and into Earth, while the 'end-elements'
are not further transformed into one another. For the process must come
to a stop, and cannot continue ad infinitum in a straight line in either
direction, since otherwise an infinite number of contrarieties would attach
to the single 'element'. Let E stand for Earth, W for Water, A for Air,
and F for Fire. Then (i) since A is transformed into F and W, there will
be a contrariety belonging to A F. Let these contraries be whiteness and
blackness. Again (ii) since A is transformed into W, there will be another
contrariety: for W is not the same as F. Let this second contrariety be
dryness and moistness, D being dryness and M moistness. Now if, when A
is transformed into W, the 'white' persists, Water will be moist and white:
but if it does not persist, Water will be black since change is into contraries.
Water, therefore, must be either white or black. Let it then be the first.
On similar grounds, therefore, D (dryness) will also belong to F. Consequently
F (Fire) as well as Air will be able to be transformed into Water: for
it has qualities contrary to those of Water, since Fire was first taken
to be black and then to be dry, while Water was moist and then showed itself
white. Thus it is evident that all the 'elements' will be able to be transformed
out of one another; and that, in the instances we have taken, E (Earth)
also will contain the remaining two 'complementary factors', viz. the black
and the moist (for these have not yet been coupled).
We have dealt with this last topic before the thesis we set out
to prove. That thesis-viz. that the process cannot continue ad infinitum-will
be clear from the following considerations. If Fire (which is represented
by F) is not to revert, but is to be transformed in turn into some other
'element' (e.g. into Q), a new contrariety, other than those mentioned,
will belong to Fire and Q: for it has been assumed that Q is not the same
as any of the four, E W A and F. Let K, then, belong to F and Y to Q. Then
K will belong to all four, E W A and F: for they are transformed into one
another. This last point, however, we may admit, has not yet been proved:
but at any rate it is clear that if Q is to be transformed in turn into
yet another 'element', yet another contrariety will belong not only to
Q but also to F (Fire). And, similarly, every addition of a new 'element'
will carry with it the attachment of a new contrariety to the preceding
elements'. Consequently, if the 'elements' are infinitely many, there will
also belong to the single 'element' an infinite number of contrarieties.
But if that be so, it will be impossible to define any 'element': impossible
also for any to come-to-be. For if one is to result from another, it will
have to pass through such a vast number of contrarieties-and indeed even
more than any determinate number. Consequently (i) into some 'elements'
transformation will never be effected-viz. if the intermediates are infinite
in number, as they must be if the 'elements' are infinitely many: further
(ii) there will not even be a transformation of Air into Fire, if the contrarieties
are infinitely many: moreover (iii) all the 'elements' become one. For
all the contrarieties of the 'elements' above F must belong to those below
F, and vice versa: hence they will all be one.
Part 6
As for those who agree with Empedocles that the 'elements' of body
are more than one, so that they are not transformed into one another-one
may well wonder in what sense it is open to them to maintain that the 'elements'
are comparable. Yet Empedocles says 'For these are all not only
equal...'
If it is meant that they are comparable in their amount, all the
'comparables' must possess an identical something whereby they are measured.
If, e.g. one pint of Water yields ten of Air, both are measured by the
same unit; and therefore both were from the first an identical something.
On the other hand, suppose (ii) they are not 'comparable in their amount'
in the sense that so-much of the one yields so much of the other, but comparable
in 'power of action (a pint of Water, e.g. having a power of cooling equal
to that of ten pints of Air); even so, they are 'comparable in their amount',
though not qua 'amount' but qua Iso-much power'. There is also (iii) a
third possibility. Instead of comparing their powers by the measure of
their amount, they might be compared as terms in a 'correspondence': e.g.
'as x is hot, so correspondingly y is white'. But 'correspondence', though
it means equality in the quantum, means similarity in a quale. Thus it
is manifestly absurd that the 'simple' bodies, though they are not transformable,
are comparable not merely as 'corresponding', but by a measure of their
powers; i.e. that so-much Fire is comparable with many times-that-amount
of Air, as being 'equally' or 'similarly' hot. For the same thing, if it
be greater in amount, will, since it belongs to the same kind, have its
ratio correspondingly increased.
A further objection to the theory of Empedocles is that it makes
even growth impossible, unless it be increase by addition. For his Fire
increases by Fire: 'And Earth increases its own frame and Ether increases
Ether." These, however, are cases of addition: but it is not by addition
that growing things are believed to increase. And it is far more difficult
for him to account for the coming-to-be which occurs in nature. For the
things which come-to-be by natural process all exhibit, in their coming-to-be,
a uniformity either absolute or highly regular: while any exceptions any
results which are in accordance neither with the invariable nor with the
general rule are products of chance and luck. Then what is the cause determining
that man comes-to-be from man, that wheat (instead of an olive) comes-to-be
from wheat, either invariably or generally? Are we to say 'Bone comes-to-be
if the "elements" be put together in such-and such a manner'? For, according
to his own estatements, nothing comes-to-be from their 'fortuitous consilience',
but only from their 'consilience' in a certain proportion. What, then,
is the cause of this proportional consilience? Presumably not Fire or Earth.
But neither is it Love and Strife: for the former is a cause of 'association'
only, and the latter only of 'dissociation'. No: the cause in question
is the essential nature of each thing-not merely to quote his words) 'a
mingling and a divorce of what has been mingled'. And chance, not proportion,
'is the name given to these occurrences': for things can be 'mingled'
fortuitously.
The cause, therefore, of the coming-to-be of the things which owe
their existence to nature is that they are in such-and-such a determinate
condition: and it is this which constitutes, the 'nature' of each thing-a
'nature' about which he says nothing. What he says, therefore, is no explanation
of 'nature'. Moreover, it is this which is both 'the excellence' of each
thing and its 'good': whereas he assigns the whole credit to the 'mingling'.
(And yet the 'elements' at all events are 'dissociated' not by Strife,
but by Love: since the 'elements' are by nature prior to the Deity, and
they too are Deities.)
Again, his account of motion is vague. For it is not an adequate
explanation to say that 'Love and Strife set things moving, unless the
very nature of Love is a movement of this kind and the very nature of Strife
a movement of that kind. He ought, then, either to have defined or to have
postulated these characteristic movements, or to have demonstrated them-whether
strictly or laxly or in some other fashion. Moreover, since (a) the 'simple'
bodies appear to move 'naturally' as well as by compulsion, i.e. in a manner
contrary to nature (fire, e.g. appears to move upwards without compulsion,
though it appears to move by compulsion downwards); and since (b) what
is 'natural' is contrary to that which is due to compulsion, and movement
by compulsion actually occurs; it follows that 'natural movement' can also
occur in fact. Is this, then, the movement that Love sets going? No: for,
on the contrary, the 'natural movement' moves Earth downwards and resembles
'dissociation', and Strife rather than Love is its cause-so that in general,
too, Love rather than Strife would seem to be contrary to nature. And unless
Love or Strife is actually setting them in motion, the 'simple' bodies
themselves have absolutely no movement or rest. But this is paradoxical:
and what is more, they do in fact obviously move. For though Strife 'dissociated',
it was not by Strife that the 'Ether' was borne upwards. On the contrary,
sometimes he attributes its movement to something like chance ('For thus,
as it ran, it happened to meet them then, though often otherwise"), while
at other times he says it is the nature of Fire to be borne upwards, but
'the Ether' (to quote his words) 'sank down upon the Earth with long roots'.
With such statements, too, he combines the assertion that the Order of
the World is the same now, in the reign of Strife, as it was formerly in
the reign of Love. What, then, is the 'first mover' of the 'elements'?
What causes their motion? Presumably not Love and Strife: on the contrary,
these are causes of a particular motion, if at least we assume that 'first
mover' to be an originative source'.
An additional paradox is that the soul should consist of the 'elements',
or that it should be one of them. How are the soul's 'alterations' to take
Place? How, e.g. is the change from being musical to being unmusical, or
how is memory or forgetting, to occur? For clearly, if the soul be Fire,
only such modifications will happen to it as characterize Fire qua Fire:
while if it be compounded out of the elements', only the corporeal modifications
will occur in it. But the changes we have mentioned are none of them
corporeal.
Part 7
The discussion of these difficulties, however, is a task appropriate
to a different investigation:' let us return to the 'elements' of which
bodies are composed. The theories that 'there is something common to all
the "elements"', and that they are reciprocally transformed', are so related
that those who accept either are bound to accept the other as well. Those,
on the other hand, who do not make their coming-to-be reciprocal-who refuse
to suppose that any one of the 'elements' comes-to-be out of any other
taken singly, except in the sense in which bricks come-to-be out of a wall-are
faced with a paradox. How, on their theory, are flesh and bones or any
of the other compounds to result from the 'elements' taken
together?
Indeed, the point we have raised constitutes a problem even for
those who generate the 'elements' out of one another. In what manner does
anything other than, and beside, the 'elements' come-to-be out of them?
Let me illustrate my meaning. Water can come-to-be out of Fire and Fire
out of Water; for their substralum is something common to them both. But
flesh too, presumably, and marrow come-to-be out of them. How, then, do
such things come to-be? For (a) how is the manner of their coming-to-be
to be conceived by those who maintain a theory like that of Empedocles?
They must conceive it as composition-just as a wall comes-to-be out of
bricks and stones: and the 'Mixture', of which they speak, will be composed
of the 'elements', these being preserved in it unaltered but with their
small particles juxtaposed each to each. That will be the manner, presumably,
in which flesh and every other compound results from the 'elements'. Consequently,
it follows that Fire and Water do not come-to-be 'out of any and every
part of flesh'. For instance, although a sphere might come-to-be out of
this part of a lump of wax and a pyramid out of some other part, it was
nevertheless possible for either figure to have come-to-be out of either
part indifferently: that is the manner of coming-to-be when 'both Fire
and Water come-to-be out of any and every part of flesh'. Those, however,
who maintain the theory in question, are not at liberty to conceive that
'both come-to-be out of flesh' in that manner, but only as a stone and
a brick 'both come-to-be out of a wall'-viz. each out of a different place
or part. Similarly (b) even for those who postulate a single matter of
their 'elements' there is a certain difficulty in explaining how anything
is to result from two of them taken together-e.g. from 'cold' and hot',
or from Fire and Earth. For if flesh consists of both and is neither of
them, nor again is a 'composition' of them in which they are preserved
unaltered, what alternative is left except to identify the resultant of
the two 'elements' with their matter? For the passingaway of either 'element'
produces either the other or the matter.
Perhaps we may suggest the following solution. (i) There are differences
of degree in hot and cold. Although, therefore, when either is fully real
without qualification, the other will exist potentially; yet, when neither
exists in the full completeness of its being, but both by combining destroy
one another's excesses so that there exist instead a hot which (for a 'hot')
is cold and a cold which (for a 'cold') is hot; then what results from
these two contraries will be neither their matter, nor either of them existing
in its full reality without qualification. There will result instead an
'intermediate': and this 'intermediate', according as it is potentially
more hot than cold or vice versa, will possess a power-of-heating that
is double or triple its power-of-cooling, or otherwise related thereto
in some similar ratio. Thus all the other bodies will result from the contraries,
or rather from the 'elements', in so far as these have been 'combined':
while the elements' will result from the contraries, in so far as these
'exist potentially' in a special sense-not as matter 'exists potentially',
but in the sense explained above. And when a thing comes-to-be in this
manner, the process is cobination'; whereas what comes-to-be in the other
manner is matter. Moreover (ii) contraries also 'suffer action', in accordance
with the disjunctively-articulated definition established in the early
part of this work.' For the actually-hot is potentially-cold and the actually
cold potentially-hot; so that hot and cold, unless they are equally balanced,
are transformed into one another (and all the other contraries behave in
a similar way). It is thus, then, that in the first place the 'elements'
are transformed; and that (in the second place) out of the 'elements' there
come-to-be flesh and bones and the like-the hot becoming cold and the cold
becoming hot when they have been brought to the 'mean'. For at the 'mean'
is neither hot nor cold. The 'mean', however, is of considerable extent
and not indivisible. Similarly, it is qua reduced to a 'mean' condition
that the dry and the moist, as well as the contraries we have used as examples,
produce flesh and bone and the remaining compounds.
Part 8
All the compound bodies-all of which exist in the region belonging
to the central body-are composed of all the 'simple' bodies. For they all
contain Earth because every 'simple' body is to be found specially and
most abundantly in its own place. And they all contain Water because (a)
the compound must possess a definite outline and Water, alone of the 'simple'
bodies, is readily adaptable in shape: moreover (b) Earth has no power
of cohesion without the moist. On the contrary, the moist is what holds
it together; for it would fall to pieces if the moist were eliminated from
it completely.
They contain Earth and Water, then, for the reasons we have given:
and they contain Air and Fire, because these are contrary to Earth and
Water (Earth being contrary to Air and Water to Fire, in so far as one
Substance can be 'contrary' to another). Now all compounds presuppose in
their coming-to-be constituents which are contrary to one another: and
in all compounds there is contained one set of the contrasted extremes.
Hence the other set must be contained in them also, so that every compound
will include all the 'simple' bodies.
Additional evidence seems to be furnished by the food each compound
takes. For all of them are fed by substances which are the same as their
constituents, and all of them are fed by more substances than one. Indeed,
even the plants, though it might be thought they are fed by one substance
only, viz. by Water, are fed by more than one: for Earth has been mixed
with the Water. That is why farmers too endeavour to mix before watering.
Although food is akin to the matter, that which is fed is the 'figure'-i.e.
the 'form' taken along with the matter. This fact enables us to understand
why, whereas all the 'simple' bodies come-to-be out of one another, Fire
is the only one of them which (as our predecessors also assert) 'is fed'.
For Fire alone-or more than all the rest-is akin to the 'form' because
it tends by nature to be borne towards the limit. Now each of them naturally
tends to be borne towards its own place; but the 'figure'-i.e. the 'form'-Of
them all is at the limits.
Thus we have explained that all the compound bodies are composed
of all the 'simple' bodies.
Part 9
Since some things are such as to come-to-be and pass-away, and
since coming-to-be in fact occurs in the region about the centre, we must
explain the number and the nature of the 'originative sources' of all coming-to-be
alike: for a grasp of the true theory of any universal facilitates the
understanding of its specific forms.
The 'originative sources', then, of the things which come-to-be
are equal in number to, and identical in kind with, those in the sphere
of the eternal and primary things. For there is one in the sense of 'matter',
and a second in the sense of 'form': and, in addition, the third 'originative
source' must be present as well. For the two first are not sufficient to
bring things into being, any more than they are adequate to account for
the primary things.
Now cause, in the sense of material origin, for the things which
are such as to come-to-be is 'that which can be-and-not-be': and this is
identical with'that which can come-to-be-and-pass-away', since the latter,
while it is at one time, at another time is not. (For whereas some things
are of necessity, viz. the eternal things, others of necessity are not.
And of these two sets of things, since they cannot diverge from the necessity
of their nature, it is impossible for the first not to he and impossible
for the second to he. Other things, however, can both be and not he.) Hence
coming-to-be and passing-away must occur within the field of 'that which
can be-and not-be'. This, therefore, is cause in the sense of material
origin for the things which are such as to come-to-be; while cause, in
the sense of their 'end', is their 'figure' or 'form'-and that is the formula
expressing the essential nature of each of them.
But the third 'originative source' must be present as well-the
cause vaguely dreamed of by all our predecessors, definitely stated by
none of them. On the contrary (a) some amongst them thought the nature
of 'the Forms' was adequate to account for coming-to-be. Thus Socrates
in the Phaedo first blames everybody else for having given no explanation;
and then lays it down; that 'some things are Forms, others Participants
in the Forms', and that 'while a thing is said to "be" in virtue of the
Form, it is said to "come-to-be" qua sharing in," to "pass-away" qua "losing,"
the 'Form'. Hence he thinks that 'assuming the truth of these theses, the
Forms must be causes both of coming-to-be and of passing-away'. On the
other hand (b) there were others who thought 'the matter' was adequate
by itself to account for coming-to-be, since 'the movement originates from
the matter'.
Neither of these theories, however, is sound. For (a) if the Forms
are causes, why is their generating activity intermittent instead of perpetual
and continuous-since there always are Participants as well as Forms? Besides,
in some instances we see that the cause is other than the Form. For it
is the doctor who implants health and the man of science who implants science,
although 'Health itself' and 'Science itself' are as well as the Participants:
and the same principle applies to everything else that is produced in accordance
with an art. On the other hand (b) to say that 'matter generates owing
to its movement' would be, no doubt, more scientific than to make such
statements as are made by the thinkers we have been criticizing. For what
'alters' and transfigures plays a greater part in bringing, things into
being; and we are everywhere accustomed, in the products of nature and
of art alike, to look upon that which can initiate movement as the producing
cause. Nevertheless this second theory is not right
either.
For, to begin with, it is characteristic of matter to suffer action,
i.e. to be moved: but to move, i.e. to act, belongs to a different 'power'.
This is obvious both in the things that come-to-be by art and in those
that come to-be by nature. Water does not of itself produce out of itself
an animal: and it is the art, not the wood, that makes a bed. Nor is this
their only error. They make a second mistake in omitting the more controlling
cause: for they eliminate the essential nature, i.e. the 'form'. And what
is more, since they remove the formal cause, they invest the forces they
assign to the 'simple' bodies-the forces which enable these bodies to bring
things into being-with too instrumental a character. For 'since' (as they
say) 'it is the nature of the hot to dissociate, of the cold to bring together,
and of each remaining contrary either to act or to suffer action', it is
out of such materials and by their agency (so they maintain) that everything
else comes-to-be and passes-away. Yet (a) it is evident that even Fire
is itself moved, i.e. suffers action. Moreover (b) their procedure is virtually
the same as if one were to treat the saw (and the various instruments of
carpentry) as 'the cause' of the things that come-to-be: for the wood must
be divided if a man saws, must become smooth if he planes, and so on with
the remaining tools. Hence, however true it may be that Fire is active,
i.e. sets things moving, there is a further point they fail to observe-viz.
that Fire is inferior to the tools or instruments in the manner in which
it sets things moving.
Part 10
As to our own theory-we have given a general account of the causes
in an earlier work,' we have now explained and distinguished the 'matter'
and the 'form'. Further, since the change which is motion has been proved'
to be eternal, the continuity of the occurrence of coming-to-be follows
necessarily from what we have established: for the eternal motion, by causing
'the generator' to approach and retire, will produce coming-to-be uninterruptedly.
At the same time it is clear that we were right when, in an earlier work,'
we called motion (not coming-to-be) 'the primary form of change'. For it
is far more reasonable that what is should cause the coming-to-be of what
is not, than that what is not should cause the being of what is. Now that
which is being moved is, but that which is coming-to-be is not: hence,
also, motion is prior to coming-to-be.
We have assumed, and have proved, that coming-to-be and passing-away
happen to things continuously; and we assert that motion causes coming-to-be.
That being so, it is evident that, if the motion be single, both processes
cannot occur since they are contrary to one another: for it is a law of
nature that the same cause, provided it remain in the same condition, always
produces the same effect, so that, from a single motion, either coming-to-be
or passing-away will always result. The movements must, on the contrary,
be more than one, and they must be contrasted with one another either by
the sense of their motion or by its irregularity: for contrary effects
demand contraries as their causes.
This explains why it is not the primary motion that causes coming-to-be
and passingaway, but the motion along the inclined circle: for this motion
not only possesses the necessary continuity, but includes a duality of
movements as well. For if coming-to-be and passing-away are always to be
continuous, there must be some body always being moved (in order that these
changes may not fail) and moved with a duality of movements (in order that
both changes, not one only, may result). Now the continuity of this movement
is caused by the motion of the whole: but the approaching and retreating
of the moving body are caused by the inclination. For the consequence of
the inclination is that the body becomes alternately remote and near; and
since its distance is thus unequal, its movement will be irregular. Therefore,
if it generates by approaching and by its proximity, it-this very same
body-destroys by retreating and becoming remote: and if it generates by
many successive approaches, it also destroys by many successive retirements.
For contrary effects demand contraries as their causes; and the natural
processes of passing-away and coming-to-be occupy equal periods of time.
Hence, too, the times-i.e. the lives-of the several kinds of living things
have a number by which they are distinguished: for there is an Order controlling
all things, and every time (i.e. every life) is measured by a period. Not
all of them, however, are measured by the same period, but some by a smaller
and others by a greater one: for to some of them the period, which is their
measure, is a year, while to some it is longer and to others
shorter.
And there are facts of observation in manifest agreement with our
theories. Thus we see that coming-to-be occurs as the sun approaches and
decay as it retreats; and we see that the two processes occupy equal times.
For the durations of the natural processes of passing-away and coming-to-be
are equal. Nevertheless it Often happens that things pass-away in too short
a time. This is due to the 'intermingling' by which the things that come-to-be
and pass-away are implicated with one another. For their matter is 'irregular',
i.e. is not everywhere the same: hence the processes by which they come-to-be
must be 'irregular' too, i.e. some too quick and others too slow. Consequently
the phenomenon in question occurs, because the 'irregular' coming-to-be
of these things is the passing-away of other things.
Coming-to-be and passing-away will, as we have said, always be
continuous, and will never fail owing to the cause we stated. And this
continuity has a sufficient reason on our theory. For in all things, as
we affirm, Nature always strives after 'the better'. Now 'being' (we have
explained elsewhere the exact variety of meanings we recognize in this
term) is better than 'not-being': but not all things can possess 'being',
since they are too far removed from the 'originative source. 'God therefore
adopted the remaining alternative, and fulfilled the perfection of the
universe by making coming-to-be uninterrupted: for the greatest possible
coherence would thus be secured to existence, because that 'coming-to-be
should itself come-to-be perpetually' is the closest approximation to eternal
being.
The cause of this perpetuity of coming-to-be, as we have often
said, is circular motion: for that is the only motion which is continuous.
That, too, is why all the other things-the things, I mean, which are reciprocally
transformed in virtue of their 'passions' and their 'powers of action'
e.g. the 'simple' bodiesimitate circular motion. For when Water is transformed
into Air, Air into Fire, and the Fire back into Water, we say the coming-to-be
'has completed the circle', because it reverts again to the beginning.
Hence it is by imitating circular motion that rectilinear motion too is
continuous.
These considerations serve at the same time to explain what is
to some people a baffling problem-viz. why the 'simple' bodies, since each
them is travelling towards its own place, have not become dissevered from
one another in the infinite lapse of time. The reason is their reciprocal
transformation. For, had each of them persisted in its own place instead
of being transformed by its neighbour, they would have got dissevered long
ago. They are transformed, however, owing to the motion with its dual character:
and because they are transformed, none of them is able to persist in any
place allotted to it by the Order.
It is clear from what has been said (i) that coming-to-be and passing-away
actually occur, (ii) what causes them, and (iii) what subject undergoes
them. But (a) if there is to be movement (as we have explained elsewhere,
in an earlier work') there must be something which initiates it; if there
is to be movement always, there must always be something which initiates
it; if the movement is to be continuous, what initiates it must be single,
unmoved, ungenerated, and incapable of 'alteration'; and if the circular
movements are more than one, their initiating causes must all of them,
in spite of their plurality, be in some way subordinated to a single 'originative
source'. Further (b) since time is continuous, movement must be continuous,
inasmuch as there can be no time without movement. Time, therefore, is
a 'number' of some continuous movement-a 'number', therefore, of the circular
movement, as was established in the discussions at the beginning. But (c)
is movement continuous because of the continuity of that which is moved,
or because that in which the movement occurs (I mean, e.g. the place or
the quality) is continuous? The answer must clearly be 'because that which
is moved is continuous'. (For how can the quality be continuous except
in virtue of the continuity of the thing to which it belongs? But if the
continuity of 'that in which' contributes to make the movement continuous,
this is true only of 'the place in which'; for that has 'magnitude' in
a sense.) But (d) amongst continuous bodies which are moved, only that
which is moved in a circle is 'continuous' in such a way that it preserves
its continuity with itself throughout the movement. The conclusion therefore
is that this is what produces continuous movement, viz. the body which
is being moved in a circle; and its movement makes time
continuous.
Part 11
Wherever there is continuity in any process (coming-to-be or 'alteration'
or any kind of change whatever) we observe consecutiveness', i.e. this
coming-to-be after that without any interval. Hence we must investigate
whether, amongst the consecutive members, there is any whose future being
is necessary; or whether, on the contrary, every one of them may fail to
come-to-be. For that some of them may fail to occur, is clear. (a) We need
only appeal to the distinction between the statements 'x will be' and 'x
is about to which depends upon this fact. For if it be true to say of x
that it 'will be', it must at some time be true to say of it that 'it is':
whereas, though it be true to say of x now that 'it is about to occur',
it is quite possible for it not to come-to-be-thus a man might not walk,
though he is now 'about to' walk. And (b) since (to appeal to a general
principle) amongst the things which 'are' some are capable also of 'not-being',
it is clear that the same ambiguous character will attach to them no less
when they are coming-to-be: in other words, their coming-to-be will not
be necessary.
Then are all the things that come-to-be of this contingent character?
Or, on the contrary, is it absolutely necessary for some of them to come-to-be?
Is there, in fact, a distinction in the field of 'coming-to-be' corresponding
to the distinction, within the field of 'being', between things that cannot
possibly 'not-be' and things that can 'not-be'? For instance, is it necessary
that solstices shall come-to-be, i.e. impossible that they should fail
to be able to occur?
Assuming that the antecedent must have come-to-be if the consequent
is to be (e.g. that foundations must have come-to-be if there is to be
a house: clay, if there are to be foundations), is the converse also true?
If foundations have come-to-be, must a house come-to-be? The answer seems
to be that the necessary nexus no longer holds, unless it is 'necessary'
for the consequent (as well as for the antecedent) to come-to-be-'necessary'
absolutely. If that be the case, however, 'a house must come to-be if foundations
have come-to-be', as well as vice versa. For the antecedent was assumed
to be so related to the consequent that, if the latter is to be, the antecedent
must have come-tobe before it. If, therefore, it is necessary that the
consequent should come-to-be, the antecedent also must have come-to-be:
and if the antecedent has come-to-be, then the consequent also must come-to-be-not,
however, because of the antecedent, but because the future being of the
consequent was assumed as necessary. Hence, in any sequence, when the being
of the consequent is necessary, the nexus is reciprocal-in other words,
when the antecedent has come-to-be the consequent must always come-to-be
too.
Now (i) if the sequence of occurrences is to proceed ad infinitum
'downwards', the coming to-be of any determinate 'this' amongst the later
members of the sequence will not be absolutely, but only conditionally,
necessary. For it will always be necessary that some other member shall
have come-to-be before 'this' as the presupposed condition of the necessity
that 'this' should come-to-be: consequently, since what is 'infinite' has
no 'originative source', neither will there be in the infinite sequence
any 'primary' member which will make it 'necessary' for the remaining members
to come-to-be.
Nor again (ii) will it be possible to say with truth, even in regard
to the members of a limited sequence, that it is 'absolutely necessary'
for any one of them to come-to-be. We cannot truly say, e.g. that 'it is
absolutely necessary for a house to come-to-be when foundations have been
laid': for (unless it is always necessary for a house to be coming-to-be)
we should be faced with the consequence that, when foundations have been
laid, a thing, which need not always be, must always be. No: if its coming-to-be
is to be 'necessary', it must be 'always' in its coming-to-be. For what
is 'of necessity' coincides with what is 'always', since that which 'must
be' cannot possibly 'not-be'. Hence a thing is eternal if its 'being' is
necessary: and if it is eternal, its 'being' is necessary. And if, therefore,
the 'coming-to-be' of a thing is necessary, its 'coming-to-be' is eternal;
and if eternal, necessary.
It follows that the coming-to-be of anything, if it is absolutely
necessary, must be cyclical-i.e. must return upon itself. For coming to-be
must either be limited or not limited: and if not limited, it must be either
rectilinear or cyclical. But the first of these last two alternatives is
impossible if coming-to-be is to be eternal, because there could not be
any 'originative source' whatever in an infinite rectilinear sequence,
whether its members be taken 'downwards' (as future events) or 'upwards'
(as past events). Yet coming-to-be must have an 'originative source' (if
it is to be necessary and therefore eternal), nor can it be eternal if
it is limited. Consequently it must be cyclical. Hence the nexus must be
reciprocal. By this I mean that the necessary occurrence of 'this' involves
the necessary occurrence of its antecedent: and conversely that, given
the antecedent, it is also necessary for the consequent to come-to-be.
And this reciprocal nexus will hold continuously throughout the sequence:
for it makes no difference whether the reciprocal nexus, of which we are
speaking, is mediated by two, or by many, members.
It is in circular movement, therefore, and in cyclical coming-to-be
that the 'absolutely necessary' is to be found. In other words, if the
coming-to-be of any things is cyclical, it is 'necessary' that each of
them is coming-to-be and has come-to-be: and if the coming-to-be of any
things is 'necessary', their coming-to-be is cyclical.
The result we have reached is logically concordant with the eternity
of circular motion, i.e. the eternity of the revolution of the heavens
(a fact which approved itself on other and independent evidence),' since
precisely those movements which belong to, and depend upon, this eternal
revolution 'come-to-be' of necessity, and of necessity 'will be'. For since
the revolving body is always setting something else in motion, the movement
of the things it moves must also be circular. Thus, from the being of the
'upper revolution' it follows that the sun revolves in this determinate
manner; and since the sun revolves thus, the seasons in consequence come-to-be
in a cycle, i.e. return upon themselves; and since they come-to-be cyclically,
so in their turn do the things whose coming-to-be the seasons
initiate.
Then why do some things manifestly come to-be in this cyclical
fashion (as, e.g. showers and air, so that it must rain if there is to
be a cloud and, conversely, there must be a cloud if it is to rain), while
men and animals do not 'return upon themselves' so that the same individual
comes-to-be a second time (for though your coming-to-be presupposes your
father's, his coming-to-be does not presuppose yours)? Why, on the contrary,
does this coming-to-be seem to constitute a rectilinear
sequence?
In discussing this new problem, we must begin by inquiring whether
all things 'return upon themselves' in a uniform manner; or whether, on
the contrary, though in some sequences what recurs is numerically the same,
in other sequences it is the same only in species. In consequence of this
distinction, it is evident that those things, whose 'substance'-that which
is undergoing the process-is imperishable, will be numerically, as well
as specifically, the same in their recurrence: for the character of the
process is determined by the character of that which undergoes it. Those
things, on the other hand, whose 'substance' is perish, able (not imperishable)
must 'return upon themselves' in the sense that what recurs, though specifically
the same, is not the same numerically. That why, when Water comes-to-be
from Air and Air from Water, the Air is the same 'specifically', not 'numerically':
and if these too recur numerically the same, at any rate this does not
happen with things whose 'substance' comes-to-be-whose 'substance' is such
that it is essentially capable of not-being.