Metaphysics
By Aristotle
Part 1
"ALL men by nature desire to know. An indication
of this is the delight we take in our senses; for even apart
from their usefulness they are loved for themselves; and above
all others the sense of sight. For not only with a view to action,
but even when we are not going to do anything, we prefer seeing
(one might say) to everything else. The reason is that this,
most of all the senses, makes us know and brings to light many
differences between things.
"By nature animals are born
with the faculty of sensation, and from sensation memory is produced
in some of them, though not in others. And therefore the former
are more intelligent and apt at learning than those which cannot
remember; those which are incapable of hearing sounds are intelligent
though they cannot be taught, e.g. the bee, and any other race
of animals that may be like it; and those which besides memory
have this sense of hearing can be taught.
"The animals
other than man live by appearances and memories, and have but
little of connected experience; but the human race lives also
by art and reasonings. Now from memory experience is produced
in men; for the several memories of the same thing produce finally
the capacity for a single experience. And experience seems pretty
much like science and art, but really science and art come to
men through experience; for 'experience made art', as Polus says,
'but inexperience luck.' Now art arises when from many notions
gained by experience one universal judgement about a class of
objects is produced. For to have a judgement that when Callias
was ill of this disease this did him good, and similarly in the
case of Socrates and in many individual cases, is a matter of
experience; but to judge that it has done good to all persons
of a certain constitution, marked off in one class, when they
were ill of this disease, e.g. to phlegmatic or bilious people
when burning with fevers-this is a matter of art.
"With
a view to action experience seems in no respect inferior to art,
and men of experience succeed even better than those who have
theory without experience. (The reason is that experience is
knowledge of individuals, art of universals, and actions and
productions are all concerned with the individual; for the physician
does not cure man, except in an incidental way, but Callias or
Socrates or some other called by some such individual name, who
happens to be a man. If, then, a man has the theory without the
experience, and recognizes the universal but does not know the
individual included in this, he will often fail to cure; for
it is the individual that is to be cured.) But yet we think that
knowledge and understanding belong to art rather than to experience,
and we suppose artists to be wiser than men of experience (which
implies that Wisdom depends in all cases rather on knowledge);
and this because the former know the cause, but the latter do
not. For men of experience know that the thing is so, but do
not know why, while the others know the 'why' and the cause.
Hence we think also that the masterworkers in each craft are
more honourable and know in a truer sense and are wiser than
the manual workers, because they know the causes of the things
that are done (we think the manual workers are like certain lifeless
things which act indeed, but act without knowing what they do,
as fire burns,-but while the lifeless things perform each of
their functions by a natural tendency, the labourers perform
them through habit); thus we view them as being wiser not in
virtue of being able to act, but of having the theory for themselves
and knowing the causes. And in general it is a sign of the man
who knows and of the man who does not know, that the former can
teach, and therefore we think art more truly knowledge than experience
is; for artists can teach, and men of mere experience cannot.
"Again, we do not regard any of the senses as Wisdom;
yet surely these give the most authoritative knowledge of particulars.
But they do not tell us the 'why' of anything-e.g. why fire is
hot; they only say that it is hot.
"At first he who invented
any art whatever that went beyond the common perceptions of man
was naturally admired by men, not only because there was something
useful in the inventions, but because he was thought wise and
superior to the rest. But as more arts were invented, and some
were directed to the necessities of life, others to recreation,
the inventors of the latter were naturally always regarded as
wiser than the inventors of the former, because their branches
of knowledge did not aim at utility. Hence when all such inventions
were already established, the sciences which do not aim at giving
pleasure or at the necessities of life were discovered, and first
in the places where men first began to have leisure. This is
why the mathematical arts were founded in Egypt; for there the
priestly caste was allowed to be at leisure.
"We have
said in the Ethics what the difference is between art and science
and the other kindred faculties; but the point of our present
discussion is this, that all men suppose what is called Wisdom
to deal with the first causes and the principles of things; so
that, as has been said before, the man of experience is thought
to be wiser than the possessors of any sense-perception whatever,
the artist wiser than the men of experience, the masterworker
than the mechanic, and the theoretical kinds of knowledge to
be more of the nature of Wisdom than the productive. Clearly
then Wisdom is knowledge about certain principles and causes.
Part 2
"Since we are seeking this knowledge, we must inquire
of what kind are the causes and the principles, the knowledge
of which is Wisdom. If one were to take the notions we have about
the wise man, this might perhaps make the answer more evident.
We suppose first, then, that the wise man knows all things, as
far as possible, although he has not knowledge of each of them
in detail; secondly, that he who can learn things that are difficult,
and not easy for man to know, is wise (sense-perception is common
to all, and therefore easy and no mark of Wisdom); again, that
he who is more exact and more capable of teaching the causes
is wiser, in every branch of knowledge; and that of the sciences,
also, that which is desirable on its own account and for the
sake of knowing it is more of the nature of Wisdom than that
which is desirable on account of its results, and the superior
science is more of the nature of Wisdom than the ancillary; for
the wise man must not be ordered but must order, and he must
not obey another, but the less wise must obey him.
"Such
and so many are the notions, then, which we have about Wisdom
and the wise. Now of these characteristics that of knowing all
things must belong to him who has in the highest degree universal
knowledge; for he knows in a sense all the instances that fall
under the universal. And these things, the most universal, are
on the whole the hardest for men to know; for they are farthest
from the senses. And the most exact of the sciences are those
which deal most with first principles; for those which involve
fewer principles are more exact than those which involve additional
principles, e.g. arithmetic than geometry. But the science which
investigates causes is also instructive, in a higher degree,
for the people who instruct us are those who tell the causes
of each thing. And understanding and knowledge pursued for their
own sake are found most in the knowledge of that which is most
knowable (for he who chooses to know for the sake of knowing
will choose most readily that which is most truly knowledge,
and such is the knowledge of that which is most knowable); and
the first principles and the causes are most knowable; for by
reason of these, and from these, all other things come to be
known, and not these by means of the things subordinate to them.
And the science which knows to what end each thing must be done
is the most authoritative of the sciences, and more authoritative
than any ancillary science; and this end is the good of that
thing, and in general the supreme good in the whole of nature.
Judged by all the tests we have mentioned, then, the name in
question falls to the same science; this must be a science that
investigates the first principles and causes; for the good, i.e.
the end, is one of the causes.
"That it is not a science
of production is clear even from the history of the earliest
philosophers. For it is owing to their wonder that men both now
begin and at first began to philosophize; they wondered originally
at the obvious difficulties, then advanced little by little and
stated difficulties about the greater matters, e.g. about the
phenomena of the moon and those of the sun and of the stars,
and about the genesis of the universe. And a man who is puzzled
and wonders thinks himself ignorant (whence even the lover of
myth is in a sense a lover of Wisdom, for the myth is composed
of wonders); therefore since they philosophized order to escape
from ignorance, evidently they were pursuing science in order
to know, and not for any utilitarian end. And this is confirmed
by the facts; for it was when almost all the necessities of life
and the things that make for comfort and recreation had been
secured, that such knowledge began to be sought. Evidently then
we do not seek it for the sake of any other advantage; but as
the man is free, we say, who exists for his own sake and not
for another's, so we pursue this as the only free science, for
it alone exists for its own sake.
"Hence also the possession
of it might be justly regarded as beyond human power; for in
many ways human nature is in bondage, so that according to Simonides
'God alone can have this privilege', and it is unfitting that
man should not be content to seek the knowledge that is suited
to him. If, then, there is something in what the poets say, and
jealousy is natural to the divine power, it would probably occur
in this case above all, and all who excelled in this knowledge
would be unfortunate. But the divine power cannot be jealous
(nay, according to the proverb, 'bards tell a lie'), nor should
any other science be thought more honourable than one of this
sort. For the most divine science is also most honourable; and
this science alone must be, in two ways, most divine. For the
science which it would be most meet for God to have is a divine
science, and so is any science that deals with divine objects;
and this science alone has both these qualities; for (1) God
is thought to be among the causes of all things and to be a first
principle, and (2) such a science either God alone can have,
or God above all others. All the sciences, indeed, are more necessary
than this, but none is better.
"Yet the acquisition of
it must in a sense end in something which is the opposite of
our original inquiries. For all men begin, as we said, by wondering
that things are as they are, as they do about self-moving marionettes,
or about the solstices or the incommensurability of the diagonal
of a square with the side; for it seems wonderful to all who
have not yet seen the reason, that there is a thing which cannot
be measured even by the smallest unit. But we must end in the
contrary and, according to the proverb, the better state, as
is the case in these instances too when men learn the cause;
for there is nothing which would surprise a geometer so much
as if the diagonal turned out to be commensurable.
"We
have stated, then, what is the nature of the science we are searching
for, and what is the mark which our search and our whole investigation
must reach.
Part 3
"Evidently we have to acquire knowledge of the original
causes (for we say we know each thing only when we think we recognize
its first cause), and causes are spoken of in four senses. In
one of these we mean the substance, i.e. the essence (for the
'why' is reducible finally to the definition, and the ultimate
'why' is a cause and principle); in another the matter or substratum,
in a third the source of the change, and in a fourth the cause
opposed to this, the purpose and the good (for this is the end
of all generation and change). We have studied these causes sufficiently
in our work on nature, but yet let us call to our aid those who
have attacked the investigation of being and philosophized about
reality before us. For obviously they too speak of certain principles
and causes; to go over their views, then, will be of profit to
the present inquiry, for we shall either find another kind of
cause, or be more convinced of the correctness of those which
we now maintain.
"Of the first philosophers, then, most
thought the principles which were of the nature of matter were
the only principles of all things. That of which all things that
are consist, the first from which they come to be, the last into
which they are resolved (the substance remaining, but changing
in its modifications), this they say is the element and this
the principle of things, and therefore they think nothing is
either generated or destroyed, since this sort of entity is always
conserved, as we say Socrates neither comes to be absolutely
when he comes to be beautiful or musical, nor ceases to be when
loses these characteristics, because the substratum, Socrates
himself remains. just so they say nothing else comes to be or
ceases to be; for there must be some entity-either one or more
than one-from which all other things come to be, it being conserved.
"Yet they do not all agree as to the number and the nature
of these principles. Thales, the founder of this type of philosophy,
says the principle is water (for which reason he declared that
the earth rests on water), getting the notion perhaps from seeing
that the nutriment of all things is moist, and that heat itself
is generated from the moist and kept alive by it (and that from
which they come to be is a principle of all things). He got his
notion from this fact, and from the fact that the seeds of all
things have a moist nature, and that water is the origin of the
nature of moist things.
"Some think that even the ancients
who lived long before the present generation, and first framed
accounts of the gods, had a similar view of nature; for they
made Ocean and Tethys the parents of creation, and described
the oath of the gods as being by water, to which they give the
name of Styx; for what is oldest is most honourable, and the
most honourable thing is that by which one swears. It may perhaps
be uncertain whether this opinion about nature is primitive and
ancient, but Thales at any rate is said to have declared himself
thus about the first cause. Hippo no one would think fit to include
among these thinkers, because of the paltriness of his thought.
"Anaximenes and Diogenes make air prior to water, and
the most primary of the simple bodies, while Hippasus of Metapontium
and Heraclitus of Ephesus say this of fire, and Empedocles says
it of the four elements (adding a fourth-earth-to those which
have been named); for these, he says, always remain and do not
come to be, except that they come to be more or fewer, being
aggregated into one and segregated out of one.
"Anaxagoras
of Clazomenae, who, though older than Empedocles, was later in
his philosophical activity, says the principles are infinite
in number; for he says almost all the things that are made of
parts like themselves, in the manner of water or fire, are generated
and destroyed in this way, only by aggregation and segregation,
and are not in any other sense generated or destroyed, but remain
eternally.
"From these facts one might think that the
only cause is the so-called material cause; but as men thus advanced,
the very facts opened the way for them and joined in forcing
them to investigate the subject. However true it may be that
all generation and destruction proceed from some one or (for
that matter) from more elements, why does this happen and what
is the cause? For at least the substratum itself does not make
itself change; e.g. neither the wood nor the bronze causes the
change of either of them, nor does the wood manufacture a bed
and the bronze a statue, but something else is the cause of the
change. And to seek this is to seek the second cause, as we should
say,-that from which comes the beginning of the movement. Now
those who at the very beginning set themselves to this kind of
inquiry, and said the substratum was one, were not at all dissatisfied
with themselves; but some at least of those who maintain it to
be one-as though defeated by this search for the second cause-say
the one and nature as a whole is unchangeable not only in respect
of generation and destruction (for this is a primitive belief,
and all agreed in it), but also of all other change; and this
view is peculiar to them. Of those who said the universe was
one, then none succeeded in discovering a cause of this sort,
except perhaps Parmenides, and he only inasmuch as he supposes
that there is not only one but also in some sense two causes.
But for those who make more elements it is more possible to state
the second cause, e.g. for those who make hot and cold, or fire
and earth, the elements; for they treat fire as having a nature
which fits it to move things, and water and earth and such things
they treat in the contrary way.
"When these men and the
principles of this kind had had their day, as the latter were
found inadequate to generate the nature of things men were again
forced by the truth itself, as we said, to inquire into the next
kind of cause. For it is not likely either that fire or earth
or any such element should be the reason why things manifest
goodness and, beauty both in their being and in their coming
to be, or that those thinkers should have supposed it was; nor
again could it be right to entrust so great a matter to spontaneity
and chance. When one man said, then, that reason was present-as
in animals, so throughout nature-as the cause of order and of
all arrangement, he seemed like a sober man in contrast with
the random talk of his predecessors. We know that Anaxagoras
certainly adopted these views, but Hermotimus of Clazomenae is
credited with expressing them earlier. Those who thought thus
stated that there is a principle of things which is at the same
time the cause of beauty, and that sort of cause from which things
acquire movement.
Part 4
"One might suspect that Hesiod was the first to look
for such a thing-or some one else who put love or desire among
existing things as a principle, as Parmenides, too, does; for
he, in constructing the genesis of the universe, says:-
"
"Love first of all the Gods she planned.
"
"And Hesiod says:- "
"First of all things was chaos made, and then
"Broad-breasted
earth...
"And love, 'mid all the gods pre-eminent,
"
which implies that among existing things there must be
from the first a cause which will move things and bring them
together. How these thinkers should be arranged with regard to
priority of discovery let us be allowed to decide later; but
since the contraries of the various forms of good were also perceived
to be present in nature-not only order and the beautiful, but
also disorder and the ugly, and bad things in greater number
than good, and ignoble things than beautiful-therefore another
thinker introduced friendship and strife, each of the two the
cause of one of these two sets of qualities. For if we were to
follow out the view of Empedocles, and interpret it according
to its meaning and not to its lisping expression, we should find
that friendship is the cause of good things, and strife of bad.
Therefore, if we said that Empedocles in a sense both mentions,
and is the first to mention, the bad and the good as principles,
we should perhaps be right, since the cause of all goods is the
good itself.
"These thinkers, as we say, evidently grasped,
and to this extent, two of the causes which we distinguished
in our work on nature-the matter and the source of the movement-vaguely,
however, and with no clearness, but as untrained men behave in
fights; for they go round their opponents and often strike fine
blows, but they do not fight on scientific principles, and so
too these thinkers do not seem to know what they say; for it
is evident that, as a rule, they make no use of their causes
except to a small extent. For Anaxagoras uses reason as a deus
ex machina for the making of the world, and when he is at a loss
to tell from what cause something necessarily is, then he drags
reason in, but in all other cases ascribes events to anything
rather than to reason. And Empedocles, though he uses the causes
to a greater extent than this, neither does so sufficiently nor
attains consistency in their use. At least, in many cases he
makes love segregate things, and strife aggregate them. For whenever
the universe is dissolved into its elements by strife, fire is
aggregated into one, and so is each of the other elements; but
whenever again under the influence of love they come together
into one, the parts must again be segregated out of each element.
"Empedocles, then, in contrast with his precessors, was
the first to introduce the dividing of this cause, not positing
one source of movement, but different and contrary sources. Again,
he was the first to speak of four material elements; yet he does
not use four, but treats them as two only; he treats fire by
itself, and its opposite-earth, air, and water-as one kind of
thing. We may learn this by study of his verses.
"This
philosopher then, as we say, has spoken of the principles in
this way, and made them of this number. Leucippus and his associate
Democritus say that the full and the empty are the elements,
calling the one being and the other non-being-the full and solid
being being, the empty non-being (whence they say being no more
is than non-being, because the solid no more is than the empty);
and they make these the material causes of things. And as those
who make the underlying substance one generate all other things
by its modifications, supposing the rare and the dense to be
the sources of the modifications, in the same way these philosophers
say the differences in the elements are the causes of all other
qualities. These differences, they say, are three-shape and order
and position. For they say the real is differentiated only by
'rhythm and 'inter-contact' and 'turning'; and of these rhythm
is shape, inter-contact is order, and turning is position; for
A differs from N in shape, AN from NA in order, M from W in position.
The question of movement-whence or how it is to belong to things-these
thinkers, like the others, lazily neglected.
"Regarding
the two causes, then, as we say, the inquiry seems to have been
pushed thus far by the early philosophers.
Part 5
"Contemporaneously with these philosophers and before
them, the so-called Pythagoreans, who were the first to take
up mathematics, not only advanced this study, but also having
been brought up in it they thought its principles were the principles
of all things. Since of these principles numbers are by nature
the first, and in numbers they seemed to see many resemblances
to the things that exist and come into being-more than in fire
and earth and water (such and such a modification of numbers
being justice, another being soul and reason, another being opportunity-and
similarly almost all other things being numerically expressible);
since, again, they saw that the modifications and the ratios
of the musical scales were expressible in numbers;-since, then,
all other things seemed in their whole nature to be modelled
on numbers, and numbers seemed to be the first things in the
whole of nature, they supposed the elements of numbers to be
the elements of all things, and the whole heaven to be a musical
scale and a number. And all the properties of numbers and scales
which they could show to agree with the attributes and parts
and the whole arrangement of the heavens, they collected and
fitted into their scheme; and if there was a gap anywhere, they
readily made additions so as to make their whole theory coherent.
E.g. as the number 10 is thought to be perfect and to comprise
the whole nature of numbers, they say that the bodies which move
through the heavens are ten, but as the visible bodies are only
nine, to meet this they invent a tenth--the 'counter-earth'.
We have discussed these matters more exactly elsewhere.
"But
the object of our review is that we may learn from these philosophers
also what they suppose to be the principles and how these fall
under the causes we have named. Evidently, then, these thinkers
also consider that number is the principle both as matter for
things and as forming both their modifications and their permanent
states, and hold that the elements of number are the even and
the odd, and that of these the latter is limited, and the former
unlimited; and that the One proceeds from both of these (for
it is both even and odd), and number from the One; and that the
whole heaven, as has been said, is numbers.
"Other members
of this same school say there are ten principles, which they
arrange in two columns of cognates-limit and unlimited, odd and
even, one and plurality, right and left, male and female, resting
and moving, straight and curved, light and darkness, good and
bad, square and oblong. In this way Alcmaeon of Croton seems
also to have conceived the matter, and either he got this view
from them or they got it from him; for he expressed himself similarly
to them. For he says most human affairs go in pairs, meaning
not definite contrarieties such as the Pythagoreans speak of,
but any chance contrarieties, e.g. white and black, sweet and
bitter, good and bad, great and small. He threw out indefinite
suggestions about the other contrarieties, but the Pythagoreans
declared both how many and which their contraricties are.
"From
both these schools, then, we can learn this much, that the contraries
are the principles of things; and how many these principles are
and which they are, we can learn from one of the two schools.
But how these principles can be brought together under the causes
we have named has not been clearly and articulately stated by
them; they seem, however, to range the elements under the head
of matter; for out of these as immanent parts they say substance
is composed and moulded.
"From these facts we may sufficiently
perceive the meaning of the ancients who said the elements of
nature were more than one; but there are some who spoke of the
universe as if it were one entity, though they were not all alike
either in the excellence of their statement or in its conformity
to the facts of nature. The discussion of them is in no way appropriate
to our present investigation of causes, for. they do not, like
some of the natural philosophers, assume being to be one and
yet generate it out of the one as out of matter, but they speak
in another way; those others add change, since they generate
the universe, but these thinkers say the universe is unchangeable.
Yet this much is germane to the present inquiry: Parmenides seems
to fasten on that which is one in definition, Melissus on that
which is one in matter, for which reason the former says that
it is limited, the latter that it is unlimited; while Xenophanes,
the first of these partisans of the One (for Parmenides is said
to have been his pupil), gave no clear statement, nor does he
seem to have grasped the nature of either of these causes, but
with reference to the whole material universe he says the One
is God. Now these thinkers, as we said, must be neglected for
the purposes of the present inquiry-two of them entirely, as
being a little too naive, viz. Xenophanes and Melissus; but Parmenides
seems in places to speak with more insight. For, claiming that,
besides the existent, nothing non-existent exists, he thinks
that of necessity one thing exists, viz. the existent and nothing
else (on this we have spoken more clearly in our work on nature),
but being forced to follow the observed facts, and supposing
the existence of that which is one in definition, but more than
one according to our sensations, he now posits two causes and
two principles, calling them hot and cold, i.e. fire and earth;
and of these he ranges the hot with the existent, and the other
with the non-existent.
"From what has been said, then,
and from the wise men who have now sat in council with us, we
have got thus much-on the one hand from the earliest philosophers,
who regard the first principle as corporeal (for water and fire
and such things are bodies), and of whom some suppose that there
is one corporeal principle, others that there are more than one,
but both put these under the head of matter; and on the other
hand from some who posit both this cause and besides this the
source of movement, which we have got from some as single and
from others as twofold.
"Down to the Italian school,
then, and apart from it, philosophers have treated these subjects
rather obscurely, except that, as we said, they have in fact
used two kinds of cause, and one of these-the source of movement-some
treat as one and others as two. But the Pythagoreans have said
in the same way that there are two principles, but added this
much, which is peculiar to them, that they thought that finitude
and infinity were not attributes of certain other things, e.g.
of fire or earth or anything else of this kind, but that infinity
itself and unity itself were the substance of the things of which
they are predicated. This is why number was the substance of
all things. On this subject, then, they expressed themselves
thus; and regarding the question of essence they began to make
statements and definitions, but treated the matter too simply.
For they both defined superficially and thought that the first
subject of which a given definition was predicable was the substance
of the thing defined, as if one supposed that 'double' and '2'
were the same, because 2 is the first thing of which 'double'
is predicable. But surely to be double and to be 2 are not the
same; if they are, one thing will be many-a consequence which
they actually drew. From the earlier philosophers, then, and
from their successors we can learn thus much.
Part 6
"After the systems we have named came the philosophy
of Plato, which in most respects followed these thinkers, but
had pecullarities that distinguished it from the philosophy of
the Italians. For, having in his youth first become familiar
with Cratylus and with the Heraclitean doctrines (that all sensible
things are ever in a state of flux and there is no knowledge
about them), these views he held even in later years. Socrates,
however, was busying himself about ethical matters and neglecting
the world of nature as a whole but seeking the universal in these
ethical matters, and fixed thought for the first time on definitions;
Plato accepted his teaching, but held that the problem applied
not to sensible things but to entities of another kind-for this
reason, that the common definition could not be a definition
of any sensible thing, as they were always changing. Things of
this other sort, then, he called Ideas, and sensible things,
he said, were all named after these, and in virtue of a relation
to these; for the many existed by participation in the Ideas
that have the same name as they. Only the name 'participation'
was new; for the Pythagoreans say that things exist by 'imitation'
of numbers, and Plato says they exist by participation, changing
the name. But what the participation or the imitation of the
Forms could be they left an open question.
"Further,
besides sensible things and Forms he says there are the objects
of mathematics, which occupy an intermediate position, differing
from sensible things in being eternal and unchangeable, from
Forms in that there are many alike, while the Form itself is
in each case unique.
"Since the Forms were the causes
of all other things, he thought their elements were the elements
of all things. As matter, the great and the small were principles;
as essential reality, the One; for from the great and the small,
by participation in the One, come the Numbers.
"But he
agreed with the Pythagoreans in saying that the One is substance
and not a predicate of something else; and in saying that the
Numbers are the causes of the reality of other things he agreed
with them; but positing a dyad and constructing the infinite
out of great and small, instead of treating the infinite as one,
is peculiar to him; and so is his view that the Numbers exist
apart from sensible things, while they say that the things themselves
are Numbers, and do not place the objects of mathematics between
Forms and sensible things. His divergence from the Pythagoreans
in making the One and the Numbers separate from things, and his
introduction of the Forms, were due to his inquiries in the region
of definitions (for the earlier thinkers had no tincture of dialectic),
and his making the other entity besides the One a dyad was due
to the belief that the numbers, except those which were prime,
could be neatly produced out of the dyad as out of some plastic
material. Yet what happens is the contrary; the theory is not
a reasonable one. For they make many things out of the matter,
and the form generates only once, but what we observe is that
one table is made from one matter, while the man who applies
the form, though he is one, makes many tables. And the relation
of the male to the female is similar; for the latter is impregnated
by one copulation, but the male impregnates many females; yet
these are analogues of those first principles.
"Plato,
then, declared himself thus on the points in question; it is
evident from what has been said that he has used only two causes,
that of the essence and the material cause (for the Forms are
the causes of the essence of all other things, and the One is
the cause of the essence of the Forms); and it is evident what
the underlying matter is, of which the Forms are predicated in
the case of sensible things, and the One in the case of Forms,
viz. that this is a dyad, the great and the small. Further, he
has assigned the cause of good and that of evil to the elements,
one to each of the two, as we say some of his predecessors sought
to do, e.g. Empedocles and Anaxagoras.
Part 7
"Our review of those who have spoken about first principles
and reality and of the way in which they have spoken, has been
concise and summary; but yet we have learnt this much from them,
that of those who speak about 'principle' and 'cause' no one
has mentioned any principle except those which have been distinguished
in our work on nature, but all evidently have some inkling of
them, though only vaguely. For some speak of the first principle
as matter, whether they suppose one or more first principles,
and whether they suppose this to be a body or to be incorporeal;
e.g. Plato spoke of the great and the small, the Italians of
the infinite, Empedocles of fire, earth, water, and air, Anaxagoras
of the infinity of things composed of similar parts. These, then,
have all had a notion of this kind of cause, and so have all
who speak of air or fire or water, or something denser than fire
and rarer than air; for some have said the prime element is of
this kind.
"These thinkers grasped this cause only; but
certain others have mentioned the source of movement, e.g. those
who make friendship and strife, or reason, or love, a principle.
"The essence, i.e. the substantial reality, no one has
expressed distinctly. It is hinted at chiefly by those who believe
in the Forms; for they do not suppose either that the Forms are
the matter of sensible things, and the One the matter of the
Forms, or that they are the source of movement (for they say
these are causes rather of immobility and of being at rest),
but they furnish the Forms as the essence of every other thing,
and the One as the essence of the Forms.
"That for whose
sake actions and changes and movements take place, they assert
to be a cause in a way, but not in this way, i.e. not in the
way in which it is its nature to be a cause. For those who speak
of reason or friendship class these causes as goods; they do
not speak, however, as if anything that exists either existed
or came into being for the sake of these, but as if movements
started from these. In the same way those who say the One or
the existent is the good, say that it is the cause of substance,
but not that substance either is or comes to be for the sake
of this. Therefore it turns out that in a sense they both say
and do not say the good is a cause; for they do not call it a
cause qua good but only incidentally.
"All these thinkers
then, as they cannot pitch on another cause, seem to testify
that we have determined rightly both how many and of what sort
the causes are. Besides this it is plain that when the causes
are being looked for, either all four must be sought thus or
they must be sought in one of these four ways. Let us next discuss
the possible difficulties with regard to the way in which each
of these thinkers has spoken, and with regard to his situation
relatively to the first principles.
Part 8
"Those, then, who say the universe is one and posit one
kind of thing as matter, and as corporeal matter which has spatial
magnitude, evidently go astray in many ways. For they posit the
elements of bodies only, not of incorporeal things, though there
are also incorporeal things. And in trying to state the causes
of generation and destruction, and in giving a physical account
of all things, they do away with the cause of movement. Further,
they err in not positing the substance, i.e. the essence, as
the cause of anything, and besides this in lightly calling any
of the simple bodies except earth the first principle, without
inquiring how they are produced out of one anothers-I mean fire,
water, earth, and air. For some things are produced out of each
other by combination, others by separation, and this makes the
greatest difference to their priority and posteriority. For (1)
in a way the property of being most elementary of all would seem
to belong to the first thing from which they are produced by
combination, and this property would belong to the most fine-grained
and subtle of bodies. For this reason those who make fire the
principle would be most in agreement with this argument. But
each of the other thinkers agrees that the element of corporeal
things is of this sort. At least none of those who named one
element claimed that earth was the element, evidently because
of the coarseness of its grain. (Of the other three elements
each has found some judge on its side; for some maintain that
fire, others that water, others that air is the element. Yet
why, after all, do they not name earth also, as most men do?
For people say all things are earth Hesiod says earth was produced
first of corporeal things; so primitive and popular has the opinion
been.) According to this argument, then, no one would be right
who either says the first principle is any of the elements other
than fire, or supposes it to be denser than air but rarer than
water. But (2) if that which is later in generation is prior
in nature, and that which is concocted and compounded is later
in generation, the contrary of what we have been saying must
be true,-water must be prior to air, and earth to water.
"So
much, then, for those who posit one cause such as we mentioned;
but the same is true if one supposes more of these, as Empedocles
says matter of things is four bodies. For he too is confronted
by consequences some of which are the same as have been mentioned,
while others are peculiar to him. For we see these bodies produced
from one another, which implies that the same body does not always
remain fire or earth (we have spoken about this in our works
on nature); and regarding the cause of movement and the question
whether we must posit one or two, he must be thought to have
spoken neither correctly nor altogether plausibly. And in general,
change of quality is necessarily done away with for those who
speak thus, for on their view cold will not come from hot nor
hot from cold. For if it did there would be something that accepted
the contraries themselves, and there would be some one entity
that became fire and water, which Empedocles denies.
"As
regards Anaxagoras, if one were to suppose that he said there
were two elements, the supposition would accord thoroughly with
an argument which Anaxagoras himself did not state articulately,
but which he must have accepted if any one had led him on to
it. True, to say that in the beginning all things were mixed
is absurd both on other grounds and because it follows that they
must have existed before in an unmixed form, and because nature
does not allow any chance thing to be mixed with any chance thing,
and also because on this view modifications and accidents could
be separated from substances (for the same things which are mixed
can be separated); yet if one were to follow him up, piecing
together what he means, he would perhaps be seen to be somewhat
modern in his views. For when nothing was separated out, evidently
nothing could be truly asserted of the substance that then existed.
I mean, e.g. that it was neither white nor black, nor grey nor
any other colour, but of necessity colourless; for if it had
been coloured, it would have had one of these colours. And similarly,
by this same argument, it was flavourless, nor had it any similar
attribute; for it could not be either of any quality or of any
size, nor could it be any definite kind of thing. For if it were,
one of the particular forms would have belonged to it, and this
is impossible, since all were mixed together; for the particular
form would necessarily have been already separated out, but he
all were mixed except reason, and this alone was unmixed and
pure. From this it follows, then, that he must say the principles
are the One (for this is simple and unmixed) and the Other, which
is of such a nature as we suppose the indefinite to be before
it is defined and partakes of some form. Therefore, while expressing
himself neither rightly nor clearly, he means something like
what the later thinkers say and what is now more clearly seen
to be the case.
"But these thinkers are, after all, at
home only in arguments about generation and destruction and movement;
for it is practically only of this sort of substance that they
seek the principles and the causes. But those who extend their
vision to all things that exist, and of existing things suppose
some to be perceptible and others not perceptible, evidently
study both classes, which is all the more reason why one should
devote some time to seeing what is good in their views and what
bad from the standpoint of the inquiry we have now before us.
"The 'Pythagoreans' treat of principles and elements
stranger than those of the physical philosophers (the reason
is that they got the principles from non-sensible things, for
the objects of mathematics, except those of astronomy, are of
the class of things without movement); yet their discussions
and investigations are all about nature; for they generate the
heavens, and with regard to their parts and attributes and functions
they observe the phenomena, and use up the principles and the
causes in explaining these, which implies that they agree with
the others, the physical philosophers, that the real is just
all that which is perceptible and contained by the so-called
'heavens'. But the causes and the principles which they mention
are, as we said, sufficient to act as steps even up to the higher
realms of reality, and are more suited to these than to theories
about nature. They do not tell us at all, however, how there
can be movement if limit and unlimited and odd and even are the
only things assumed, or how without movement and change there
can be generation and destruction, or the bodies that move through
the heavens can do what they do.
"Further, if one either
granted them that spatial magnitude consists of these elements,
or this were proved, still how would some bodies be light and
others have weight? To judge from what they assume and maintain
they are speaking no more of mathematical bodies than of perceptible;
hence they have said nothing whatever about fire or earth or
the other bodies of this sort, I suppose because they have nothing
to say which applies peculiarly to perceptible things.
"Further,
how are we to combine the beliefs that the attributes of number,
and number itself, are causes of what exists and happens in the
heavens both from the beginning and now, and that there is no
other number than this number out of which the world is composed?
When in one particular region they place opinion and opportunity,
and, a little above or below, injustice and decision or mixture,
and allege, as proof, that each of these is a number, and that
there happens to be already in this place a plurality of the
extended bodies composed of numbers, because these attributes
of number attach to the various places,-this being so, is this
number, which we must suppose each of these abstractions to be,
the same number which is exhibited in the material universe,
or is it another than this? Plato says it is different; yet even
he thinks that both these bodies and their causes are numbers,
but that the intelligible numbers are causes, while the others
are sensible.
Part 9
"Let us leave the Pythagoreans for the present; for it
is enough to have touched on them as much as we have done. But
as for those who posit the Ideas as causes, firstly, in seeking
to grasp the causes of the things around us, they introduced
others equal in number to these, as if a man who wanted to count
things thought he would not be able to do it while they were
few, but tried to count them when he had added to their number.
For the Forms are practically equal to-or not fewer than-the
things, in trying to explain which these thinkers proceeded from
them to the Forms. For to each thing there answers an entity
which has the same name and exists apart from the substances,
and so also in the case of all other groups there is a one over
many, whether the many are in this world or are eternal.
"Further,
of the ways in which we prove that the Forms exist, none is convincing;
for from some no inference necessarily follows, and from some
arise Forms even of things of which we think there are no Forms.
For according to the arguments from the existence of the sciences
there will be Forms of all things of which there are sciences
and according to the 'one over many' argument there will be Forms
even of negations, and according to the argument that there is
an object for thought even when the thing has perished, there
will be Forms of perishable things; for we have an image of these.
Further, of the more accurate arguments, some lead to Ideas of
relations, of which we say there is no independent class, and
others introduce the 'third man'.
"And in general the
arguments for the Forms destroy the things for whose existence
we are more zealous than for the existence of the Ideas; for
it follows that not the dyad but number is first, i.e. that the
relative is prior to the absolute,-besides all the other points
on which certain people by following out the opinions held about
the Ideas have come into conflict with the principles of the
theory.
"Further, according to the assumption on which
our belief in the Ideas rests, there will be Forms not only of
substances but also of many other things (for the concept is
single not only in the case of substances but also in the other
cases, and there are sciences not only of substance but also
of other things, and a thousand other such difficulties confront
them). But according to the necessities of the case and the opinions
held about the Forms, if Forms can be shared in there must be
Ideas of substances only. For they are not shared in incidentally,
but a thing must share in its Form as in something not predicated
of a subject (by 'being shared in incidentally' I mean that e.g.
if a thing shares in 'double itself', it shares also in 'eternal',
but incidentally; for 'eternal' happens to be predicable of the
'double'). Therefore the Forms will be substance; but the same
terms indicate substance in this and in the ideal world (or what
will be the meaning of saying that there is something apart from
the particulars-the one over many?). And if the Ideas and the
particulars that share in them have the same form, there will
be something common to these; for why should '2' be one and the
same in the perishable 2's or in those which are many but eternal,
and not the same in the '2' itself' as in the particular 2? But
if they have not the same form, they must have only the name
in common, and it is as if one were to call both Callias and
a wooden image a 'man', without observing any community between
them.
"Above all one might discuss the question what
on earth the Forms contribute to sensible things, either to those
that are eternal or to those that come into being and cease to
be. For they cause neither movement nor any change in them. But
again they help in no wise either towards the knowledge of the
other things (for they are not even the substance of these, else
they would have been in them), or towards their being, if they
are not in the particulars which share in them; though if they
were, they might be thought to be causes, as white causes whiteness
in a white object by entering into its composition. But this
argument, which first Anaxagoras and later Eudoxus and certain
others used, is very easily upset; for it is not difficult to
collect many insuperable objections to such a view.
"But,
further, all other things cannot come from the Forms in any of
the usual senses of 'from'. And to say that they are patterns
and the other things share in them is to use empty words and
poetical metaphors. For what is it that works, looking to the
Ideas? And anything can either be, or become, like another without
being copied from it, so that whether Socrates or not a man Socrates
like might come to be; and evidently this might be so even if
Socrates were eternal. And there will be several patterns of
the same thing, and therefore several Forms; e.g. 'animal' and
'two-footed' and also 'man himself' will be Forms of man. Again,
the Forms are patterns not only sensible things, but of Forms
themselves also; i.e. the genus, as genus of various species,
will be so; therefore the same thing will be pattern and copy.
"Again, it would seem impossible that the substance and
that of which it is the substance should exist apart; how, therefore,
could the Ideas, being the substances of things, exist apart?
In the Phaedo' the case is stated in this way-that the Forms
are causes both of being and of becoming; yet when the Forms
exist, still the things that share in them do not come into being,
unless there is something to originate movement; and many other
things come into being (e.g. a house or a ring) of which we say
there are no Forms. Clearly, therefore, even the other things
can both be and come into being owing to such causes as produce
the things just mentioned.
"Again, if the Forms are numbers,
how can they be causes? Is it because existing things are other
numbers, e.g. one number is man, another is Socrates, another
Callias? Why then are the one set of numbers causes of the other
set? It will not make any difference even if the former are eternal
and the latter are not. But if it is because things in this sensible
world (e.g. harmony) are ratios of numbers, evidently the things
between which they are ratios are some one class of things. If,
then, this--the matter--is some definite thing, evidently the
numbers themselves too will be ratios of something to something
else. E.g. if Callias is a numerical ratio between fire and earth
and water and air, his Idea also will be a number of certain
other underlying things; and man himself, whether it is a number
in a sense or not, will still be a numerical ratio of certain
things and not a number proper, nor will it be a of number merely
because it is a numerical ratio.
"Again, from many numbers
one number is produced, but how can one Form come from many Forms?
And if the number comes not from the many numbers themselves
but from the units in them, e.g. in 10,000, how is it with the
units? If they are specifically alike, numerous absurdities will
follow, and also if they are not alike (neither the units in
one number being themselves like one another nor those in other
numbers being all like to all); for in what will they differ,
as they are without quality? This is not a plausible view, nor
is it consistent with our thought on the matter.
"Further,
they must set up a second kind of number (with which arithmetic
deals), and all the objects which are called 'intermediate' by
some thinkers; and how do these exist or from what principles
do they proceed? Or why must they be intermediate between the
things in this sensible world and the things-themselves?
"Further,
the units in must each come from a prior but this is impossible.
"Further, why is a number, when taken all together, one?
"Again, besides what has been said, if the units are
diverse the Platonists should have spoken like those who say
there are four, or two, elements; for each of these thinkers
gives the name of element not to that which is common, e.g. to
body, but to fire and earth, whether there is something common
to them, viz. body, or not. But in fact the Platonists speak
as if the One were homogeneous like fire or water; and if this
is so, the numbers will not be substances. Evidently, if there
is a One itself and this is a first principle, 'one' is being
used in more than one sense; for otherwise the theory is impossible.
"When we wish to reduce substances to their principles,
we state that lines come from the short and long (i.e. from a
kind of small and great), and the plane from the broad and narrow,
and body from the deep and shallow. Yet how then can either the
plane contain a line, or the solid a line or a plane? For the
broad and narrow is a different class from the deep and shallow.
Therefore, just as number is not present in these, because the
many and few are different from these, evidently no other of
the higher classes will be present in the lower. But again the
broad is not a genus which includes the deep, for then the solid
would have been a species of plane. Further, from what principle
will the presence of the points in the line be derived? Plato
even used to object to this class of things as being a geometrical
fiction. He gave the name of principle of the line-and this he
often posited-to the indivisible lines. Yet these must have a
limit; therefore the argument from which the existence of the
line follows proves also the existence of the point.
"In
general, though philosophy seeks the cause of perceptible things,
we have given this up (for we say nothing of the cause from which
change takes its start), but while we fancy we are stating the
substance of perceptible things, we assert the existence of a
second class of substances, while our account of the way in which
they are the substances of perceptible things is empty talk;
for 'sharing', as we said before, means nothing.
"Nor
have the Forms any connexion with what we see to be the cause
in the case of the arts, that for whose sake both all mind and
the whole of nature are operative,-with this cause which we assert
to be one of the first principles; but mathematics has come to
be identical with philosophy for modern thinkers, though they
say that it should be studied for the sake of other things. Further,
one might suppose that the substance which according to them
underlies as matter is too mathematical, and is a predicate and
differentia of the substance, ie. of the matter, rather than
matter itself; i.e. the great and the small are like the rare
and the dense which the physical philosophers speak of, calling
these the primary differentiae of the substratum; for these are
a kind of excess and defect. And regarding movement, if the great
and the small are to he movement, evidently the Forms will be
moved; but if they are not to be movement, whence did movement
come? The whole study of nature has been annihilated.
"And
what is thought to be easy-to show that all things are one-is
not done; for what is proved by the method of setting out instances
is not that all things are one but that there is a One itself,-if
we grant all the assumptions. And not even this follows, if we
do not grant that the universal is a genus; and this in some
cases it cannot be.
"Nor can it be explained either how
the lines and planes and solids that come after the numbers exist
or can exist, or what significance they have; for these can neither
be Forms (for they are not numbers), nor the intermediates (for
those are the objects of mathematics), nor the perishable things.
This is evidently a distinct fourth class.
"In general,
if we search for the elements of existing things without distinguishing
the many senses in which things are said to exist, we cannot
find them, especially if the search for the elements of which
things are made is conducted in this manner. For it is surely
impossible to discover what 'acting' or 'being acted on', or
'the straight', is made of, but if elements can be discovered
at all, it is only the elements of substances; therefore either
to seek the elements of all existing things or to think one has
them is incorrect.
"And how could we learn the elements
of all things? Evidently we cannot start by knowing anything
before. For as he who is learning geometry, though he may know
other things before, knows none of the things with which the
science deals and about which he is to learn, so is it in all
other cases. Therefore if there is a science of all things, such
as some assert to exist, he who is learning this will know nothing
before. Yet all learning is by means of premisses which are (either
all or some of them) known before,-whether the learning be by
demonstration or by definitions; for the elements of the definition
must be known before and be familiar; and learning by induction
proceeds similarly. But again, if the science were actually innate,
it were strange that we are unaware of our possession of the
greatest of sciences.
"Again, how is one to come to know
what all things are made of, and how is this to be made evident?
This also affords a difficulty; for there might be a conflict
of opinion, as there is about certain syllables; some say za
is made out of s and d and a, while others say it is a distinct
sound and none of those that are familiar.
"Further,
how could we know the objects of sense without having the sense
in question? Yet we ought to, if the elements of which all things
consist, as complex sounds consist of the clements proper to
sound, are the same.
Part 10
"It is evident, then, even from what we have said before,
that all men seem to seek the causes named in the Physics, and
that we cannot name any beyond these; but they seek these vaguely;
and though in a sense they have all been described before, in
a sense they have not been described at all. For the earliest
philosophy is, on all subjects, like one who lisps, since it
is young and in its beginnings. For even Empedocles says bone
exists by virtue of the ratio in it. Now this is the essence
and the substance of the thing. But it is similarly necessary
that flesh and each of the other tissues should be the ratio
of its elements, or that not one of them should; for it is on
account of this that both flesh and bone and everything else
will exist, and not on account of the matter, which he names,-fire
and earth and water and air. But while he would necessarily have
agreed if another had said this, he has not said it clearly.
"On these questions our views have been expressed before;
but let us return to enumerate the difficulties that might be
raised on these same points; for perhaps we may get from them
some help towards our later difficulties.
END
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