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      everything else (for there will be no flesh in the remaining water);

      if on the other hand it does not, and further extraction is always

      possible, there will be an infinite multitude of finite equal

      particles in a finite quantity-which is impossible. Another proof

      may be added: Since every body must diminish in size when something is

      taken from it, and flesh is quantitatively definite in respect both of

      greatness and smallness, it is clear that from the minimum quantity of

      flesh no body can be separated out; for the flesh left would be less

      than the minimum of flesh.

      Lastly (4) in each of his infinite bodies there would be already

      present infinite flesh and blood and brain- having a distinct

      existence, however, from one another, and no less real than the

      infinite bodies, and each infinite: which is contrary to reason.

      The statement that complete separation never will take place is

      correct enough, though Anaxagoras is not fully aware of what it means.

      For affections are indeed inseparable. If then colours and states

      had entered into the mixture, and if separation took place, there

      would be a 'white' or a 'healthy' which was nothing but white or

      healthy, i.e. was not the predicate of a subject. So his 'Mind' is

      an absurd person aiming at the impossible, if he is supposed to wish

      to separate them, and it is impossible to do so, both in respect of

      quantity and of quality- of quantity, because there is no minimum

      magnitude, and of quality, because affections are inseparable.

      Nor is Anaxagoras right about the coming to be of homogeneous

      bodies. It is true there is a sense in which clay is divided into

      pieces of clay, but there is another in which it is not. Water and air

      are, and are generated 'from' each other, but not in the way in

      which bricks come 'from' a house and again a house 'from' bricks;

      and it is better to assume a smaller and finite number of

      principles, as Empedocles does.

      5

      All thinkers then agree in making the contraries principles, both

      those who describe the All as one and unmoved (for even Parmenides

      treats hot and cold as principles under the names of fire and earth)

      and those too who use the rare and the dense. The same is true of

      Democritus also, with his plenum and void, both of which exist, be

      says, the one as being, the other as not-being. Again he speaks of

      differences in position, shape, and order, and these are genera of

      which the species are contraries, namely, of position, above and

      below, before and behind; of shape, angular and angle-less, straight

      and round.

      It is plain then that they all in one way or another identify the

      contraries with the principles. And with good reason. For first

      principles must not be derived from one another nor from anything

      else, while everything has to be derived from them. But these

      conditions are fulfilled by the primary contraries, which are not

      derived from anything else because they are primary, nor from each

      other because they are contraries.

      But we must see how this can be arrived at as a reasoned result,

      as well as in the way just indicated.

      Our first presupposition must be that in nature nothing acts on,

      or is acted on by, any other thing at random, nor may anything come

      from anything else, unless we mean that it does so in virtue of a

      concomitant attribute. For how could 'white' come from 'musical',

      unless 'musical' happened to be an attribute of the not-white or of

      the black? No, 'white' comes from 'not-white'-and not from any

      'not-white', but from black or some intermediate colour. Similarly,

      'musical' comes to be from 'not-musical', but not from any thing other

      than musical, but from 'unmusical' or any intermediate state there may

      be.

      Nor again do things pass into the first chance thing; 'white' does

      not pass into 'musical' (except, it may be, in virtue of a concomitant

      attribute), but into 'not-white'-and not into any chance thing which

      is not white, but into black or an intermediate colour; 'musical'

      passes into 'not-musical'-and not into any chance thing other than

      musical, but into 'unmusical' or any intermediate state there may be.

      The same holds of other things also: even things which are not

      simple but complex follow the same principle, but the opposite state

      has not received a name, so we fail to notice the fact. What is in

      tune must come from what is not in tune, and vice versa; the tuned

      passes into untunedness-and not into any untunedness, but into the

      corresponding opposite. It does not matter whether we take attunement,

      order, or composition for our illustration; the principle is obviously

      the same in all, and in fact applies equally to the production of a

      house, a statue, or any other complex. A house comes from certain

      things in a certain state of separation instead of conjunction, a

      statue (or any other thing that has been shaped) from

      shapelessness-each of these objects being partly order and partly

      composition.

      If then this is true, everything that comes to be or passes away

      from, or passes into, its contrary or an intermediate state. But the

      intermediates are derived from the contraries-colours, for instance,

      from black and white. Everything, therefore, that comes to be by a

      natural process is either a contrary or a product of contraries.

      Up to this point we have practically had most of the other writers

      on the subject with us, as I have said already: for all of them

      identify their elements, and what they call their principles, with the

      contraries, giving no reason indeed for the theory, but contrained

      as it were by the truth itself. They differ, however, from one another

      in that some assume contraries which are more primary, others

      contraries which are less so: some those more knowable in the order of

      explanation, others those more familiar to sense. For some make hot

      and cold, or again moist and dry, the conditions of becoming; while

      others make odd and even, or again Love and Strife; and these differ

      from each other in the way mentioned.

      Hence their principles are in one sense the same, in another

      different; different certainly, as indeed most people think, but the

      same inasmuch as they are analogous; for all are taken from the same

      table of columns, some of the pairs being wider, others narrower in

      extent. In this way then their theories are both the same and

      different, some better, some worse; some, as I have said, take as

      their contraries what is more knowable in the order of explanation,

      others what is more familiar to sense. (The universal is more knowable

      in the order of explanation, the particular in the order of sense: for

      explanation has to do with the universal, sense with the

      particular.) 'The great and the small', for example, belong to the

      former class, 'the dense and the rare' to the latter.

      It is clear then that our principles must be contraries.

      6

      The next question is whether the principles are two or three or more

      in number.

      One they can
    not be, for there cannot be one contrary. Nor can they

      be innumerable, because, if so, Being will not be knowable: and in any

      one genus there is only one contrariety, and substance is one genus:

      also a finite number is sufficient, and a finite number, such as the

      principles of Empedocles, is better than an infinite multitude; for

      Empedocles professes to obtain from his principles all that Anaxagoras

      obtains from his innumerable principles. Lastly, some contraries are

      more primary than others, and some arise from others-for example sweet

      and bitter, white and black-whereas the principles must always

      remain principles.

      This will suffice to show that the principles are neither one nor

      innumerable.

      Granted, then, that they are a limited number, it is plausible to

      suppose them more than two. For it is difficult to see how either

      density should be of such a nature as to act in any way on rarity or

      rarity on density. The same is true of any other pair of contraries;

      for Love does not gather Strife together and make things out of it,

      nor does Strife make anything out of Love, but both act on a third

      thing different from both. Some indeed assume more than one such thing

      from which they construct the world of nature.

      Other objections to the view that it is not necessary to assume a

      third principle as a substratum may be added. (1) We do not find

      that the contraries constitute the substance of any thing. But what is

      a first principle ought not to be the predicate of any subject. If

      it were, there would be a principle of the supposed principle: for the

      subject is a principle, and prior presumably to what is predicated

      of it. Again (2) we hold that a substance is not contrary to another

      substance. How then can substance be derived from what are not

      substances? Or how can non-substances be prior to substance?

      If then we accept both the former argument and this one, we must, to

      preserve both, assume a third somewhat as the substratum of the

      contraries, such as is spoken of by those who describe the All as

      one nature-water or fire or what is intermediate between them. What is

      intermediate seems preferable; for fire, earth, air, and water are

      already involved with pairs of contraries. There is, therefore, much

      to be said for those who make the underlying substance different

      from these four; of the rest, the next best choice is air, as

      presenting sensible differences in a less degree than the others;

      and after air, water. All, however, agree in this, that they

      differentiate their One by means of the contraries, such as density

      and rarity and more and less, which may of course be generalized, as

      has already been said into excess and defect. Indeed this doctrine too

      (that the One and excess and defect are the principles of things)

      would appear to be of old standing, though in different forms; for the

      early thinkers made the two the active and the one the passive

      principle, whereas some of the more recent maintain the reverse.

      To suppose then that the elements are three in number would seem,

      from these and similar considerations, a plausible view, as I said

      before. On the other hand, the view that they are more than three in

      number would seem to be untenable.

      For the one substratum is sufficient to be acted on; but if we

      have four contraries, there will be two contrarieties, and we shall

      have to suppose an intermediate nature for each pair separately. If,

      on the other hand, the contrarieties, being two, can generate from

      each other, the second contrariety will be superfluous. Moreover, it

      is impossible that there should be more than one primary

      contrariety. For substance is a single genus of being, so that the

      principles can differ only as prior and posterior, not in genus; in

      a single genus there is always a single contrariety, all the other

      contrarieties in it being held to be reducible to one.

      It is clear then that the number of elements is neither one nor more

      than two or three; but whether two or three is, as I said, a

      question of considerable difficulty.

      7

      We will now give our own account, approaching the question first

      with reference to becoming in its widest sense: for we shall be

      following the natural order of inquiry if we speak first of common

      characteristics, and then investigate the characteristics of special

      cases.

      We say that one thing comes to be from another thing, and one sort

      of thing from another sort of thing, both in the case of simple and of

      complex things. I mean the following. We can say (1) 'man becomes

      musical', (2) what is 'not-musical becomes musical', or (3), the

      'not-musical man becomes a musical man'. Now what becomes in (1) and

      (2)-'man' and 'not musical'-I call simple, and what each

      becomes-'musical'-simple also. But when (3) we say the 'not-musical

      man becomes a musical man', both what becomes and what it becomes

      are complex.

      As regards one of these simple 'things that become' we say not

      only 'this becomes so-and-so', but also 'from being this, comes to

      be so-and-so', as 'from being not-musical comes to be musical'; as

      regards the other we do not say this in all cases, as we do not say

      (1) 'from being a man he came to be musical' but only 'the man

      became musical'.

      When a 'simple' thing is said to become something, in one case (1)

      it survives through the process, in the other (2) it does not. For man

      remains a man and is such even when he becomes musical, whereas what

      is not musical or is unmusical does not continue to exist, either

      simply or combined with the subject.

      These distinctions drawn, one can gather from surveying the

      various cases of becoming in the way we are describing that, as we

      say, there must always be an underlying something, namely that which

      becomes, and that this, though always one numerically, in form at

      least is not one. (By that I mean that it can be described in

      different ways.) For 'to be man' is not the same as 'to be unmusical'.

      One part survives, the other does not: what is not an opposite

      survives (for 'man' survives), but 'not-musical' or 'unmusical' does

      not survive, nor does the compound of the two, namely 'unmusical man'.

      We speak of 'becoming that from this' instead of 'this becoming

      that' more in the case of what does not survive the change-'becoming

      musical from unmusical', not 'from man'-but there are exceptions, as

      we sometimes use the latter form of expression even of what

      survives; we speak of 'a statue coming to be from bronze', not of

      the 'bronze becoming a statue'. The change, however, from an

      opposite which does not survive is described indifferently in both

      ways, 'becoming that from this' or 'this becoming that'. We say both

      that 'the unmusical becomes musical', and that 'from unmusical he

      becomes musical'. And so both forms are used of the complex, 'becoming

      a musical man from an unmusical man', and unmusical man becoming a

      musical man'.

      But there are different senses of 'coming to be'. In some cases we

     
    ; do not use the expression 'come to be', but 'come to be so-and-so'.

      Only substances are said to 'come to be' in the unqualified sense.

      Now in all cases other than substance it is plain that there must be

      some subject, namely, that which becomes. For we know that when a

      thing comes to be of such a quantity or quality or in such a relation,

      time, or place, a subject is always presupposed, since substance alone

      is not predicated of another subject, but everything else of

      substance.

      But that substances too, and anything else that can be said 'to

      be' without qualification, come to be from some substratum, will

      appear on examination. For we find in every case something that

      underlies from which proceeds that which comes to be; for instance,

      animals and plants from seed.

      Generally things which come to be, come to be in different ways: (1)

      by change of shape, as a statue; (2) by addition, as things which

      grow; (3) by taking away, as the Hermes from the stone; (4) by putting

      together, as a house; (5) by alteration, as things which 'turn' in

      respect of their material substance.

      It is plain that these are all cases of coming to be from a

      substratum.

      Thus, clearly, from what has been said, whatever comes to be is

      always complex. There is, on the one hand, (a) something which comes

      into existence, and again (b) something which becomes that-the

      latter (b) in two senses, either the subject or the opposite. By the

      'opposite' I mean the 'unmusical', by the 'subject' 'man', and

      similarly I call the absence of shape or form or order the 'opposite',

      and the bronze or stone or gold the 'subject'.

      Plainly then, if there are conditions and principles which

      constitute natural objects and from which they primarily are or have

      come to be-have come to be, I mean, what each is said to be in its

      essential nature, not what each is in respect of a concomitant

     


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