Metaphysics
By Aristotle
Part 1
"The subject of our inquiry is substance; for the principles
and the causes we are seeking are those of substances. For if
the universe is of the nature of a whole, substance is its first
part; and if it coheres merely by virtue of serial succession,
on this view also substance is first, and is succeeded by quality,
and then by quantity. At the same time these latter are not even
being in the full sense, but are qualities and movements of it,-or
else even the not-white and the not-straight would be being;
at least we say even these are, e.g. 'there is a not-white'.
Further, none of the categories other than substance can exist
apart. And the early philosophers also in practice testify to
the primacy of substance; for it was of substance that they sought
the principles and elements and causes. The thinkers of the present
day tend to rank universals as substances (for genera are universals,
and these they tend to describe as principles and substances,
owing to the abstract nature of their inquiry); but the thinkers
of old ranked particular things as substances, e.g. fire and
earth, not what is common to both, body.
"There are three
kinds of substance-one that is sensible (of which one subdivision
is eternal and another is perishable; the latter is recognized
by all men, and includes e.g. plants and animals), of which we
must grasp the elements, whether one or many; and another that
is immovable, and this certain thinkers assert to be capable
of existing apart, some dividing it into two, others identifying
the Forms and the objects of mathematics, and others positing,
of these two, only the objects of mathematics. The former two
kinds of substance are the subject of physics (for they imply
movement); but the third kind belongs to another science, if
there is no principle common to it and to the other kinds.
Part 2
"Sensible substance is changeable. Now if change proceeds
from opposites or from intermediates, and not from all opposites
(for the voice is not-white, (but it does not therefore change
to white)), but from the contrary, there must be something underlying
which changes into the contrary state; for the contraries do
not change. Further, something persists, but the contrary does
not persist; there is, then, some third thing besides the contraries,
viz. the matter. Now since changes are of four kinds-either in
respect of the 'what' or of the quality or of the quantity or
of the place, and change in respect of 'thisness' is simple generation
and destruction, and change in quantity is increase and diminution,
and change in respect of an affection is alteration, and change
of place is motion, changes will be from given states into those
contrary to them in these several respects. The matter, then,
which changes must be capable of both states. And since that
which 'is' has two senses, we must say that everything changes
from that which is potentially to that which is actually, e.g.
from potentially white to actually white, and similarly in the
case of increase and diminution. Therefore not only can a thing
come to be, incidentally, out of that which is not, but also
all things come to be out of that which is, but is potentially,
and is not actually. And this is the 'One' of Anaxagoras; for
instead of 'all things were together'-and the 'Mixture' of Empedocles
and Anaximander and the account given by Democritus-it is better
to say 'all things were together potentially but not actually'.
Therefore these thinkers seem to have had some notion of matter.
Now all things that change have matter, but different matter;
and of eternal things those which are not generable but are movable
in space have matter-not matter for generation, however, but
for motion from one place to another.
"One might raise
the question from what sort of non-being generation proceeds;
for 'non-being' has three senses. If, then, one form of non-being
exists potentially, still it is not by virtue of a potentiality
for any and every thing, but different things come from different
things; nor is it satisfactory to say that 'all things were together';
for they differ in their matter, since otherwise why did an infinity
of things come to be, and not one thing? For 'reason' is one,
so that if matter also were one, that must have come to be in
actuality which the matter was in potency. The causes and the
principles, then, are three, two being the pair of contraries
of which one is definition and form and the other is privation,
and the third being the matter.
Part 3
"Note, next, that neither the matter nor the form comes
to be-and I mean the last matter and form. For everything that
changes is something and is changed by something and into something.
That by which it is changed is the immediate mover; that which
is changed, the matter; that into which it is changed, the form.
The process, then, will go on to infinity, if not only the bronze
comes to be round but also the round or the bronze comes to be;
therefore there must be a stop.
"Note, next, that each
substance comes into being out of something that shares its name.
(Natural objects and other things both rank as substances.) For
things come into being either by art or by nature or by luck
or by spontaneity. Now art is a principle of movement in something
other than the thing moved, nature is a principle in the thing
itself (for man begets man), and the other causes are privations
of these two.
"There are three kinds of substance-the
matter, which is a 'this' in appearance (for all things that
are characterized by contact and not, by organic unity are matter
and substratum, e.g. fire, flesh, head; for these are all matter,
and the last matter is the matter of that which is in the full
sense substance); the nature, which is a 'this' or positive state
towards which movement takes place; and again, thirdly, the particular
substance which is composed of these two, e.g. Socrates or Callias.
Now in some cases the 'this' does not exist apart from the composite
substance, e.g. the form of house does not so exist, unless the
art of building exists apart (nor is there generation and destruction
of these forms, but it is in another way that the house apart
from its matter, and health, and all ideals of art, exist and
do not exist); but if the 'this' exists apart from the concrete
thing, it is only in the case of natural objects. And so Plato
was not far wrong when he said that there are as many Forms as
there are kinds of natural object (if there are Forms distinct
from the things of this earth). The moving causes exist as things
preceding the effects, but causes in the sense of definitions
are simultaneous with their effects. For when a man is healthy,
then health also exists; and the shape of a bronze sphere exists
at the same time as the bronze sphere. (But we must examine whether
any form also survives afterwards. For in some cases there is
nothing to prevent this; e.g. the soul may be of this sort-not
all soul but the reason; for presumably it is impossible that
all soul should survive.) Evidently then there is no necessity,
on this ground at least, for the existence of the Ideas. For
man is begotten by man, a given man by an individual father;
and similarly in the arts; for the medical art is the formal
cause of health.
Part 4
"The causes and the principles of different things are
in a sense different, but in a sense, if one speaks universally
and analogically, they are the same for all. For one might raise
the question whether the principles and elements are different
or the same for substances and for relative terms, and similarly
in the case of each of the categories. But it would be paradoxical
if they were the same for all. For then from the same elements
will proceed relative terms and substances. What then will this
common element be? For (1) (a) there is nothing common to and
distinct from substance and the other categories, viz. those
which are predicated; but an element is prior to the things of
which it is an element. But again (b) substance is not an element
in relative terms, nor is any of these an element in substance.
Further, (2) how can all things have the same elements? For none
of the elements can be the same as that which is composed of
elements, e.g. b or a cannot be the same as ba. (None, therefore,
of the intelligibles, e.g. being or unity, is an element; for
these are predicable of each of the compounds as well.) None
of the elements, then, will be either a substance or a relative
term; but it must be one or other. All things, then, have not
the same elements.
"Or, as we are wont to put it, in
a sense they have and in a sense they have not; e.g. perhaps
the elements of perceptible bodies are, as form, the hot, and
in another sense the cold, which is the privation; and, as matter,
that which directly and of itself potentially has these attributes;
and substances comprise both these and the things composed of
these, of which these are the principles, or any unity which
is produced out of the hot and the cold, e.g. flesh or bone;
for the product must be different from the elements. These things
then have the same elements and principles (though specifically
different things have specifically different elements); but all
things have not the same elements in this sense, but only analogically;
i.e. one might say that there are three principles-the form,
the privation, and the matter. But each of these is different
for each class; e.g. in colour they are white, black, and surface,
and in day and night they are light, darkness, and air.
"Since
not only the elements present in a thing are causes, but also
something external, i.e. the moving cause, clearly while 'principle'
and 'element' are different both are causes, and 'principle'
is divided into these two kinds; and that which acts as producing
movement or rest is a principle and a substance. Therefore analogically
there are three elements, and four causes and principles; but
the elements are different in different things, and the proximate
moving cause is different for different things. Health, disease,
body; the moving cause is the medical art. Form, disorder of
a particular kind, bricks; the moving cause is the building art.
And since the moving cause in the case of natural things is-for
man, for instance, man, and in the products of thought the form
or its contrary, there will be in a sense three causes, while
in a sense there are four. For the medical art is in some sense
health, and the building art is the form of the house, and man
begets man; further, besides these there is that which as first
of all things moves all things.
Part 5
"Some things can exist apart and some cannot, and it
is the former that are substances. And therefore all things have
the same causes, because, without substances, modifications and
movements do not exist. Further, these causes will probably be
soul and body, or reason and desire and body.
"And in
yet another way, analogically identical things are principles,
i.e. actuality and potency; but these also are not only different
for different things but also apply in different ways to them.
For in some cases the same thing exists at one time actually
and at another potentially, e.g. wine or flesh or man does so.
(And these too fall under the above-named causes. For the form
exists actually, if it can exist apart, and so does the complex
of form and matter, and the privation, e.g. darkness or disease;
but the matter exists potentially; for this is that which can
become qualified either by the form or by the privation.) But
the distinction of actuality and potentiality applies in another
way to cases where the matter of cause and of effect is not the
same, in some of which cases the form is not the same but different;
e.g. the cause of man is (1) the elements in man (viz. fire and
earth as matter, and the peculiar form), and further (2) something
else outside, i.e. the father, and (3) besides these the sun
and its oblique course, which are neither matter nor form nor
privation of man nor of the same species with him, but moving
causes.
"Further, one must observe that some causes can
be expressed in universal terms, and some cannot. The proximate
principles of all things are the 'this' which is proximate in
actuality, and another which is proximate in potentiality. The
universal causes, then, of which we spoke do not exist. For it
is the individual that is the originative principle of the individuals.
For while man is the originative principle of man universally,
there is no universal man, but Peleus is the originative principle
of Achilles, and your father of you, and this particular b of
this particular ba, though b in general is the originative principle
of ba taken without qualification.
"Further, if the causes
of substances are the causes of all things, yet different things
have different causes and elements, as was said; the causes of
things that are not in the same class, e.g. of colours and sounds,
of substances and quantities, are different except in an analogical
sense; and those of things in the same species are different,
not in species, but in the sense that the causes of different
individuals are different, your matter and form and moving cause
being different from mine, while in their universal definition
they are the same. And if we inquire what are the principles
or elements of substances and relations and qualities-whether
they are the same or different-clearly when the names of the
causes are used in several senses the causes of each are the
same, but when the senses are distinguished the causes are not
the same but different, except that in the following senses the
causes of all are the same. They are (1) the same or analogous
in this sense, that matter, form, privation, and the moving cause
are common to all things; and (2) the causes of substances may
be treated as causes of all things in this sense, that when substances
are removed all things are removed; further, (3) that which is
first in respect of complete reality is the cause of all things.
But in another sense there are different first causes, viz. all
the contraries which are neither generic nor ambiguous terms;
and, further, the matters of different things are different.
We have stated, then, what are the principles of sensible things
and how many they are, and in what sense they are the same and
in what sense different.
Part 6
"Since there were three kinds of substance, two of them
physical and one unmovable, regarding the latter we must assert
that it is necessary that there should be an eternal unmovable
substance. For substances are the first of existing things, and
if they are all destructible, all things are destructible. But
it is impossible that movement should either have come into being
or cease to be (for it must always have existed), or that time
should. For there could not be a before and an after if time
did not exist. Movement also is continuous, then, in the sense
in which time is; for time is either the same thing as movement
or an attribute of movement. And there is no continuous movement
except movement in place, and of this only that which is circular
is continuous.
"But if there is something which is capable
of moving things or acting on them, but is not actually doing
so, there will not necessarily be movement; for that which has
a potency need not exercise it. Nothing, then, is gained even
if we suppose eternal substances, as the believers in the Forms
do, unless there is to be in them some principle which can cause
change; nay, even this is not enough, nor is another substance
besides the Forms enough; for if it is not to act, there will
be no movement. Further even if it acts, this will not be enough,
if its essence is potency; for there will not be eternal movement,
since that which is potentially may possibly not be. There must,
then, be such a principle, whose very essence is actuality. Further,
then, these substances must be without matter; for they must
be eternal, if anything is eternal. Therefore they must be actuality.
"Yet there is a difficulty; for it is thought that everything
that acts is able to act, but that not everything that is able
to act acts, so that the potency is prior. But if this is so,
nothing that is need be; for it is possible for all things to
be capable of existing but not yet to exist.
"Yet if
we follow the theologians who generate the world from night,
or the natural philosophers who say that 'all things were together',
the same impossible result ensues. For how will there be movement,
if there is no actually existing cause? Wood will surely not
move itself-the carpenter's art must act on it; nor will the
menstrual blood nor the earth set themselves in motion, but the
seeds must act on the earth and the semen on the menstrual blood.
"This is why some suppose eternal actuality-e.g. Leucippus
and Plato; for they say there is always movement. But why and
what this movement is they do say, nor, if the world moves in
this way or that, do they tell us the cause of its doing so.
Now nothing is moved at random, but there must always be something
present to move it; e.g. as a matter of fact a thing moves in
one way by nature, and in another by force or through the influence
of reason or something else. (Further, what sort of movement
is primary? This makes a vast difference.) But again for Plato,
at least, it is not permissible to name here that which he sometimes
supposes to be the source of movement-that which moves itself;
for the soul is later, and coeval with the heavens, according
to his account. To suppose potency prior to actuality, then,
is in a sense right, and in a sense not; and we have specified
these senses. That actuality is prior is testified by Anaxagoras
(for his 'reason' is actuality) and by Empedocles in his doctrine
of love and strife, and by those who say that there is always
movement, e.g. Leucippus. Therefore chaos or night did not exist
for an infinite time, but the same things have always existed
(either passing through a cycle of changes or obeying some other
law), since actuality is prior to potency. If, then, there is
a constant cycle, something must always remain, acting in the
same way. And if there is to be generation and destruction, there
must be something else which is always acting in different ways.
This must, then, act in one way in virtue of itself, and in another
in virtue of something else-either of a third agent, therefore,
or of the first. Now it must be in virtue of the first. For otherwise
this again causes the motion both of the second agent and of
the third. Therefore it is better to say 'the first'. For it
was the cause of eternal uniformity; and something else is the
cause of variety, and evidently both together are the cause of
eternal variety. This, accordingly, is the character which the
motions actually exhibit. What need then is there to seek for
other principles?
Part 7
"Since (1) this is a possible account of the matter,
and (2) if it were not true, the world would have proceeded out
of night and 'all things together' and out of non-being, these
difficulties may be taken as solved. There is, then, something
which is always moved with an unceasing motion, which is motion
in a circle; and this is plain not in theory only but in fact.
Therefore the first heaven must be eternal. There is therefore
also something which moves it. And since that which moves and
is moved is intermediate, there is something which moves without
being moved, being eternal, substance, and actuality. And the
object of desire and the object of thought move in this way;
they move without being moved. The primary objects of desire
and of thought are the same. For the apparent good is the object
of appetite, and the real good is the primary object of rational
wish. But desire is consequent on opinion rather than opinion
on desire; for the thinking is the starting-point. And thought
is moved by the object of thought, and one of the two columns
of opposites is in itself the object of thought; and in this,
substance is first, and in substance, that which is simple and
exists actually. (The one and the simple are not the same; for
'one' means a measure, but 'simple' means that the thing itself
has a certain nature.) But the beautiful, also, and that which
is in itself desirable are in the same column; and the first
in any class is always best, or analogous to the best.
"That
a final cause may exist among unchangeable entities is shown
by the distinction of its meanings. For the final cause is (a)
some being for whose good an action is done, and (b) something
at which the action aims; and of these the latter exists among
unchangeable entities though the former does not. The final cause,
then, produces motion as being loved, but all other things move
by being moved. Now if something is moved it is capable of being
otherwise than as it is. Therefore if its actuality is the primary
form of spatial motion, then in so far as it is subject to change,
in this respect it is capable of being otherwise,-in place, even
if not in substance. But since there is something which moves
while itself unmoved, existing actually, this can in no way be
otherwise than as it is. For motion in space is the first of
the kinds of change, and motion in a circle the first kind of
spatial motion; and this the first mover produces. The first
mover, then, exists of necessity; and in so far as it exists
by necessity, its mode of being is good, and it is in this sense
a first principle. For the necessary has all these senses-that
which is necessary perforce because it is contrary to the natural
impulse, that without which the good is impossible, and that
which cannot be otherwise but can exist only in a single way.
"On such a principle, then, depend the heavens and the
world of nature. And it is a life such as the best which we enjoy,
and enjoy for but a short time (for it is ever in this state,
which we cannot be), since its actuality is also pleasure. (And
for this reason are waking, perception, and thinking most pleasant,
and hopes and memories are so on account of these.) And thinking
in itself deals with that which is best in itself, and that which
is thinking in the fullest sense with that which is best in the
fullest sense. And thought thinks on itself because it shares
the nature of the object of thought; for it becomes an object
of thought in coming into contact with and thinking its objects,
so that thought and object of thought are the same. For that
which is capable of receiving the object of thought, i.e. the
essence, is thought. But it is active when it possesses this
object. Therefore the possession rather than the receptivity
is the divine element which thought seems to contain, and the
act of contemplation is what is most pleasant and best. If, then,
God is always in that good state in which we sometimes are, this
compels our wonder; and if in a better this compels it yet more.
And God is in a better state. And life also belongs to God; for
the actuality of thought is life, and God is that actuality;
and God's self-dependent actuality is life most good and eternal.
We say therefore that God is a living being, eternal, most good,
so that life and duration continuous and eternal belong to God;
for this is God.
"Those who suppose, as the Pythagoreans
and Speusippus do, that supreme beauty and goodness are not present
in the beginning, because the beginnings both of plants and of
animals are causes, but beauty and completeness are in the effects
of these, are wrong in their opinion. For the seed comes from
other individuals which are prior and complete, and the first
thing is not seed but the complete being; e.g. we must say that
before the seed there is a man,-not the man produced from the
seed, but another from whom the seed comes.
"It is clear
then from what has been said that there is a substance which
is eternal and unmovable and separate from sensible things. It
has been shown also that this substance cannot have any magnitude,
but is without parts and indivisible (for it produces movement
through infinite time, but nothing finite has infinite power;
and, while every magnitude is either infinite or finite, it cannot,
for the above reason, have finite magnitude, and it cannot have
infinite magnitude because there is no infinite magnitude at
all). But it has also been shown that it is impassive and unalterable;
for all the other changes are posterior to change of place.
Part 8
"It is clear, then, why these things are as they are.
But we must not ignore the question whether we have to suppose
one such substance or more than one, and if the latter, how many;
we must also mention, regarding the opinions expressed by others,
that they have said nothing about the number of the substances
that can even be clearly stated. For the theory of Ideas has
no special discussion of the subject; for those who speak of
Ideas say the Ideas are numbers, and they speak of numbers now
as unlimited, now as limited by the number 10; but as for the
reason why there should be just so many numbers, nothing is said
with any demonstrative exactness. We however must discuss the
subject, starting from the presuppositions and distinctions we
have mentioned. The first principle or primary being is not movable
either in itself or accidentally, but produces the primary eternal
and single movement. But since that which is moved must be moved
by something, and the first mover must be in itself unmovable,
and eternal movement must be produced by something eternal and
a single movement by a single thing, and since we see that besides
the simple spatial movement of the universe, which we say the
first and unmovable substance produces, there are other spatial
movements-those of the planets-which are eternal (for a body
which moves in a circle is eternal and unresting; we have proved
these points in the physical treatises), each of these movements
also must be caused by a substance both unmovable in itself and
eternal. For the nature of the stars is eternal just because
it is a certain kind of substance, and the mover is eternal and
prior to the moved, and that which is prior to a substance must
be a substance. Evidently, then, there must be substances which
are of the same number as the movements of the stars, and in
their nature eternal, and in themselves unmovable, and without
magnitude, for the reason before mentioned. That the movers are
substances, then, and that one of these is first and another
second according to the same order as the movements of the stars,
is evident. But in the number of the movements we reach a problem
which must be treated from the standpoint of that one of the
mathematical sciences which is most akin to philosophy-viz. of
astronomy; for this science speculates about substance which
is perceptible but eternal, but the other mathematical sciences,
i.e. arithmetic and geometry, treat of no substance. That the
movements are more numerous than the bodies that are moved is
evident to those who have given even moderate attention to the
matter; for each of the planets has more than one movement. But
as to the actual number of these movements, we now-to give some
notion of the subject-quote what some of the mathematicians say,
that our thought may have some definite number to grasp; but,
for the rest, we must partly investigate for ourselves, Partly
learn from other investigators, and if those who study this subject
form an opinion contrary to what we have now stated, we must
esteem both parties indeed, but follow the more accurate.
"Eudoxus
supposed that the motion of the sun or of the moon involves,
in either case, three spheres, of which the first is the sphere
of the fixed stars, and the second moves in the circle which
runs along the middle of the zodiac, and the third in the circle
which is inclined across the breadth of the zodiac; but the circle
in which the moon moves is inclined at a greater angle than that
in which the sun moves. And the motion of the planets involves,
in each case, four spheres, and of these also the first and second
are the same as the first two mentioned above (for the sphere
of the fixed stars is that which moves all the other spheres,
and that which is placed beneath this and has its movement in
the circle which bisects the zodiac is common to all), but the
poles of the third sphere of each planet are in the circle which
bisects the zodiac, and the motion of the fourth sphere is in
the circle which is inclined at an angle to the equator of the
third sphere; and the poles of the third sphere are different
for each of the other planets, but those of Venus and Mercury
are the same.
"Callippus made the position of the spheres
the same as Eudoxus did, but while he assigned the same number
as Eudoxus did to Jupiter and to Saturn, he thought two more
spheres should be added to the sun and two to the moon, if one
is to explain the observed facts; and one more to each of the
other planets.
"But it is necessary, if all the spheres
combined are to explain the observed facts, that for each of
the planets there should be other spheres (one fewer than those
hitherto assigned) which counteract those already mentioned and
bring back to the same position the outermost sphere of the star
which in each case is situated below the star in question; for
only thus can all the forces at work produce the observed motion
of the planets. Since, then, the spheres involved in the movement
of the planets themselves are--eight for Saturn and Jupiter and
twenty-five for the others, and of these only those involved
in the movement of the lowest-situated planet need not be counteracted
the spheres which counteract those of the outermost two planets
will be six in number, and the spheres which counteract those
of the next four planets will be sixteen; therefore the number
of all the spheres--both those which move the planets and those
which counteract these--will be fifty-five. And if one were not
to add to the moon and to the sun the movements we mentioned,
the whole set of spheres will be forty-seven in number.
"Let
this, then, be taken as the number of the spheres, so that the
unmovable substances and principles also may probably be taken
as just so many; the assertion of necessity must be left to more
powerful thinkers. But if there can be no spatial movement which
does not conduce to the moving of a star, and if further every
being and every substance which is immune from change and in
virtue of itself has attained to the best must be considered
an end, there can be no other being apart from these we have
named, but this must be the number of the substances. For if
there are others, they will cause change as being a final cause
of movement; but there cannot he other movements besides those
mentioned. And it is reasonable to infer this from a consideration
of the bodies that are moved; for if everything that moves is
for the sake of that which is moved, and every movement belongs
to something that is moved, no movement can be for the sake of
itself or of another movement, but all the movements must be
for the sake of the stars. For if there is to be a movement for
the sake of a movement, this latter also will have to be for
the sake of something else; so that since there cannot be an
infinite regress, the end of every movement will be one of the
divine bodies which move through the heaven.
"(Evidently
there is but one heaven. For if there are many heavens as there
are many men, the moving principles, of which each heaven will
have one, will be one in form but in number many. But all things
that are many in number have matter; for one and the same definition,
e.g. that of man, applies to many things, while Socrates is one.
But the primary essence has not matter; for it is complete reality.
So the unmovable first mover is one both in definition and in
number; so too, therefore, is that which is moved always and
continuously; therefore there is one heaven alone.) Our forefathers
in the most remote ages have handed down to their posterity a
tradition, in the form of a myth, that these bodies are gods,
and that the divine encloses the whole of nature. The rest of
the tradition has been added later in mythical form with a view
to the persuasion of the multitude and to its legal and utilitarian
expediency; they say these gods are in the form of men or like
some of the other animals, and they say other things consequent
on and similar to these which we have mentioned. But if one were
to separate the first point from these additions and take it
alone-that they thought the first substances to be gods, one
must regard this as an inspired utterance, and reflect that,
while probably each art and each science has often been developed
as far as possible and has again perished, these opinions, with
others, have been preserved until the present like relics of
the ancient treasure. Only thus far, then, is the opinion of
our ancestors and of our earliest predecessors clear to us.
Part 9
"The nature of the divine thought involves certain problems;
for while thought is held to be the most divine of things observed
by us, the question how it must be situated in order to have
that character involves difficulties. For if it thinks of nothing,
what is there here of dignity? It is just like one who sleeps.
And if it thinks, but this depends on something else, then (since
that which is its substance is not the act of thinking, but a
potency) it cannot be the best substance; for it is through thinking
that its value belongs to it. Further, whether its substance
is the faculty of thought or the act of thinking, what does it
think of? Either of itself or of something else; and if of something
else, either of the same thing always or of something different.
Does it matter, then, or not, whether it thinks of the good or
of any chance thing? Are there not some things about which it
is incredible that it should think? Evidently, then, it thinks
of that which is most divine and precious, and it does not change;
for change would be change for the worse, and this would be already
a movement. First, then, if 'thought' is not the act of thinking
but a potency, it would be reasonable to suppose that the continuity
of its thinking is wearisome to it. Secondly, there would evidently
be something else more precious than thought, viz. that which
is thought of. For both thinking and the act of thought will
belong even to one who thinks of the worst thing in the world,
so that if this ought to be avoided (and it ought, for there
are even some things which it is better not to see than to see),
the act of thinking cannot be the best of things. Therefore it
must be of itself that the divine thought thinks (since it is
the most excellent of things), and its thinking is a thinking
on thinking.
"But evidently knowledge and perception
and opinion and understanding have always something else as their
object, and themselves only by the way. Further, if thinking
and being thought of are different, in respect of which does
goodness belong to thought? For to he an act of thinking and
to he an object of thought are not the same thing. We answer
that in some cases the knowledge is the object. In the productive
sciences it is the substance or essence of the object, matter
omitted, and in the theoretical sciences the definition or the
act of thinking is the object. Since, then, thought and the object
of thought are not different in the case of things that have
not matter, the divine thought and its object will be the same,
i.e. the thinking will be one with the object of its thought.
"A further question is left-whether the object of the
divine thought is composite; for if it were, thought would change
in passing from part to part of the whole. We answer that everything
which has not matter is indivisible-as human thought, or rather
the thought of composite beings, is in a certain period of time
(for it does not possess the good at this moment or at that,
but its best, being something different from it, is attained
only in a whole period of time), so throughout eternity is the
thought which has itself for its object.
Part 10
"We must consider also in which of two ways the nature
of the universe contains the good, and the highest good, whether
as something separate and by itself, or as the order of the parts.
Probably in both ways, as an army does; for its good is found
both in its order and in its leader, and more in the latter;
for he does not depend on the order but it depends on him. And
all things are ordered together somehow, but not all alike,-both
fishes and fowls and plants; and the world is not such that one
thing has nothing to do with another, but they are connected.
For all are ordered together to one end, but it is as in a house,
where the freemen are least at liberty to act at random, but
all things or most things are already ordained for them, while
the slaves and the animals do little for the common good, and
for the most part live at random; for this is the sort of principle
that constitutes the nature of each. I mean, for instance, that
all must at least come to be dissolved into their elements, and
there are other functions similarly in which all share for the
good of the whole.
"We must not fail to observe how many
impossible or paradoxical results confront those who hold different
views from our own, and what are the views of the subtler thinkers,
and which views are attended by fewest difficulties. All make
all things out of contraries. But neither 'all things' nor 'out
of contraries' is right; nor do these thinkers tell us how all
the things in which the contraries are present can be made out
of the contraries; for contraries are not affected by one another.
Now for us this difficulty is solved naturally by the fact that
there is a third element. These thinkers however make one of
the two contraries matter; this is done for instance by those
who make the unequal matter for the equal, or the many matter
for the one. But this also is refuted in the same way; for the
one matter which underlies any pair of contraries is contrary
to nothing. Further, all things, except the one, will, on the
view we are criticizing, partake of evil; for the bad itself
is one of the two elements. But the other school does not treat
the good and the bad even as principles; yet in all things the
good is in the highest degree a principle. The school we first
mentioned is right in saying that it is a principle, but how
the good is a principle they do not say-whether as end or as
mover or as form.
"Empedocles also has a paradoxical
view; for he identifies the good with love, but this is a principle
both as mover (for it brings things together) and as matter (for
it is part of the mixture). Now even if it happens that the same
thing is a principle both as matter and as mover, still the being,
at least, of the two is not the same. In which respect then is
love a principle? It is paradoxical also that strife should be
imperishable; the nature of his 'evil' is just strife.
"Anaxagoras
makes the good a motive principle; for his 'reason' moves things.
But it moves them for an end, which must be something other than
it, except according to our way of stating the case; for, on
our view, the medical art is in a sense health. It is paradoxical
also not to suppose a contrary to the good, i.e. to reason. But
all who speak of the contraries make no use of the contraries,
unless we bring their views into shape. And why some things are
perishable and others imperishable, no one tells us; for they
make all existing things out of the same principles. Further,
some make existing things out of the nonexistent; and others
to avoid the necessity of this make all things one.
"Further,
why should there always be becoming, and what is the cause of
becoming?-this no one tells us. And those who suppose two principles
must suppose another, a superior principle, and so must those
who believe in the Forms; for why did things come to participate,
or why do they participate, in the Forms? And all other thinkers
are confronted by the necessary consequence that there is something
contrary to Wisdom, i.e. to the highest knowledge; but we are
not. For there is nothing contrary to that which is primary;
for all contraries have matter, and things that have matter exist
only potentially; and the ignorance which is contrary to any
knowledge leads to an object contrary to the object of the knowledge;
but what is primary has no contrary.
"Again, if besides
sensible things no others exist, there will be no first principle,
no order, no becoming, no heavenly bodies, but each principle
will have a principle before it, as in the accounts of the theologians
and all the natural philosophers. But if the Forms or the numbers
are to exist, they will be causes of nothing; or if not that,
at least not of movement. Further, how is extension, i.e. a continuum,
to be produced out of unextended parts? For number will not,
either as mover or as form, produce a continuum. But again there
cannot be any contrary that is also essentially a productive
or moving principle; for it would be possible for it not to be.
Or at least its action would be posterior to its potency. The
world, then, would not be eternal. But it is; one of these premisses,
then, must be denied. And we have said how this must be done.
Further, in virtue of what the numbers, or the soul and the body,
or in general the form and the thing, are one-of this no one
tells us anything; nor can any one tell, unless he says, as we
do, that the mover makes them one. And those who say mathematical
number is first and go on to generate one kind of substance after
another and give different principles for each, make the substance
of the universe a mere series of episodes (for one substance
has no influence on another by its existence or nonexistence),
and they give us many governing principles; but the world refuses
to be governed badly. "
"'The rule of many is not good; one ruler let there be.'
END
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