1464 lines
81 KiB
Plaintext
1464 lines
81 KiB
Plaintext
350 BC
|
|
|
|
CATEGORIES
|
|
|
|
by Aristotle
|
|
|
|
translated by E. M. Edghill
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
Things are said to be named 'equivocally' when, though they have a
|
|
common name, the definition corresponding with the name differs for
|
|
each. Thus, a real man and a figure in a picture can both lay claim to
|
|
the name 'animal'; yet these are equivocally so named, for, though
|
|
they have a common name, the definition corresponding with the name
|
|
differs for each. For should any one define in what sense each is an
|
|
animal, his definition in the one case will be appropriate to that
|
|
case only.
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, things are said to be named 'univocally' which
|
|
have both the name and the definition answering to the name in common.
|
|
A man and an ox are both 'animal', and these are univocally so
|
|
named, inasmuch as not only the name, but also the definition, is
|
|
the same in both cases: for if a man should state in what sense each
|
|
is an animal, the statement in the one case would be identical with
|
|
that in the other.
|
|
|
|
Things are said to be named 'derivatively', which derive their
|
|
name from some other name, but differ from it in termination. Thus the
|
|
grammarian derives his name from the word 'grammar', and the
|
|
courageous man from the word 'courage'.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
Forms of speech are either simple or composite. Examples of the
|
|
latter are such expressions as 'the man runs', 'the man wins'; of the
|
|
former 'man', 'ox', 'runs', 'wins'.
|
|
|
|
Of things themselves some are predicable of a subject, and are never
|
|
present in a subject. Thus 'man' is predicable of the individual
|
|
man, and is never present in a subject.
|
|
|
|
By being 'present in a subject' I do not mean present as parts are
|
|
present in a whole, but being incapable of existence apart from the
|
|
said subject.
|
|
|
|
Some things, again, are present in a subject, but are never
|
|
predicable of a subject. For instance, a certain point of
|
|
grammatical knowledge is present in the mind, but is not predicable of
|
|
any subject; or again, a certain whiteness may be present in the
|
|
body (for colour requires a material basis), yet it is never
|
|
predicable of anything.
|
|
|
|
Other things, again, are both predicable of a subject and present in
|
|
a subject. Thus while knowledge is present in the human mind, it is
|
|
predicable of grammar.
|
|
|
|
There is, lastly, a class of things which are neither present in a
|
|
subject nor predicable of a subject, such as the individual man or the
|
|
individual horse. But, to speak more generally, that which is
|
|
individual and has the character of a unit is never predicable of a
|
|
subject. Yet in some cases there is nothing to prevent such being
|
|
present in a subject. Thus a certain point of grammatical knowledge is
|
|
present in a subject.
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
When one thing is predicated of another, all that which is
|
|
predicable of the predicate will be predicable also of the subject.
|
|
Thus, 'man' is predicated of the individual man; but 'animal' is
|
|
predicated of 'man'; it will, therefore, be predicable of the
|
|
individual man also: for the individual man is both 'man' and
|
|
'animal'.
|
|
|
|
If genera are different and co-ordinate, their differentiae are
|
|
themselves different in kind. Take as an instance the genus 'animal'
|
|
and the genus 'knowledge'. 'With feet', 'two-footed', 'winged',
|
|
'aquatic', are differentiae of 'animal'; the species of knowledge
|
|
are not distinguished by the same differentiae. One species of
|
|
knowledge does not differ from another in being 'two-footed'.
|
|
|
|
But where one genus is subordinate to another, there is nothing to
|
|
prevent their having the same differentiae: for the greater class is
|
|
predicated of the lesser, so that all the differentiae of the
|
|
predicate will be differentiae also of the subject.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
Expressions which are in no way composite signify substance,
|
|
quantity, quality, relation, place, time, position, state, action,
|
|
or affection. To sketch my meaning roughly, examples of substance
|
|
are 'man' or 'the horse', of quantity, such terms as 'two cubits long'
|
|
or 'three cubits long', of quality, such attributes as 'white',
|
|
'grammatical'. 'Double', 'half', 'greater', fall under the category of
|
|
relation; 'in a the market place', 'in the Lyceum', under that of
|
|
place; 'yesterday', 'last year', under that of time. 'Lying',
|
|
'sitting', are terms indicating position, 'shod', 'armed', state;
|
|
'to lance', 'to cauterize', action; 'to be lanced', 'to be
|
|
cauterized', affection.
|
|
|
|
No one of these terms, in and by itself, involves an affirmation; it
|
|
is by the combination of such terms that positive or negative
|
|
statements arise. For every assertion must, as is admitted, be
|
|
either true or false, whereas expressions which are not in any way
|
|
composite such as 'man', 'white', 'runs', 'wins', cannot be either
|
|
true or false.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
Substance, in the truest and primary and most definite sense of
|
|
the word, is that which is neither predicable of a subject nor present
|
|
in a subject; for instance, the individual man or horse. But in a
|
|
secondary sense those things are called substances within which, as
|
|
species, the primary substances are included; also those which, as
|
|
genera, include the species. For instance, the individual man is
|
|
included in the species 'man', and the genus to which the species
|
|
belongs is 'animal'; these, therefore-that is to say, the species
|
|
'man' and the genus 'animal,-are termed secondary substances.
|
|
|
|
It is plain from what has been said that both the name and the
|
|
definition of the predicate must be predicable of the subject. For
|
|
instance, 'man' is predicted of the individual man. Now in this case
|
|
the name of the species man' is applied to the individual, for we
|
|
use the term 'man' in describing the individual; and the definition of
|
|
'man' will also be predicated of the individual man, for the
|
|
individual man is both man and animal. Thus, both the name and the
|
|
definition of the species are predicable of the individual.
|
|
|
|
With regard, on the other hand, to those things which are present in
|
|
a subject, it is generally the case that neither their name nor
|
|
their definition is predicable of that in which they are present.
|
|
Though, however, the definition is never predicable, there is
|
|
nothing in certain cases to prevent the name being used. For instance,
|
|
'white' being present in a body is predicated of that in which it is
|
|
present, for a body is called white: the definition, however, of the
|
|
colour white' is never predicable of the body.
|
|
|
|
Everything except primary substances is either predicable of a
|
|
primary substance or present in a primary substance. This becomes
|
|
evident by reference to particular instances which occur. 'Animal'
|
|
is predicated of the species 'man', therefore of the individual man,
|
|
for if there were no individual man of whom it could be predicated, it
|
|
could not be predicated of the species 'man' at all. Again, colour
|
|
is present in body, therefore in individual bodies, for if there
|
|
were no individual body in which it was present, it could not be
|
|
present in body at all. Thus everything except primary substances is
|
|
either predicated of primary substances, or is present in them, and if
|
|
these last did not exist, it would be impossible for anything else
|
|
to exist.
|
|
|
|
Of secondary substances, the species is more truly substance than
|
|
the genus, being more nearly related to primary substance. For if
|
|
any one should render an account of what a primary substance is, he
|
|
would render a more instructive account, and one more proper to the
|
|
subject, by stating the species than by stating the genus. Thus, he
|
|
would give a more instructive account of an individual man by
|
|
stating that he was man than by stating that he was animal, for the
|
|
former description is peculiar to the individual in a greater
|
|
degree, while the latter is too general. Again, the man who gives an
|
|
account of the nature of an individual tree will give a more
|
|
instructive account by mentioning the species 'tree' than by
|
|
mentioning the genus 'plant'.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, primary substances are most properly called substances
|
|
in virtue of the fact that they are the entities which underlie every.
|
|
else, and that everything else is either predicated of them or present
|
|
in them. Now the same relation which subsists between primary
|
|
substance and everything else subsists also between the species and
|
|
the genus: for the species is to the genus as subject is to predicate,
|
|
since the genus is predicated of the species, whereas the species
|
|
cannot be predicated of the genus. Thus we have a second ground for
|
|
asserting that the species is more truly substance than the genus.
|
|
|
|
Of species themselves, except in the case of such as are genera,
|
|
no one is more truly substance than another. We should not give a more
|
|
appropriate account of the individual man by stating the species to
|
|
which he belonged, than we should of an individual horse by adopting
|
|
the same method of definition. In the same way, of primary substances,
|
|
no one is more truly substance than another; an individual man is
|
|
not more truly substance than an individual ox.
|
|
|
|
It is, then, with good reason that of all that remains, when we
|
|
exclude primary substances, we concede to species and genera alone the
|
|
name 'secondary substance', for these alone of all the predicates
|
|
convey a knowledge of primary substance. For it is by stating the
|
|
species or the genus that we appropriately define any individual
|
|
man; and we shall make our definition more exact by stating the former
|
|
than by stating the latter. All other things that we state, such as
|
|
that he is white, that he runs, and so on, are irrelevant to the
|
|
definition. Thus it is just that these alone, apart from primary
|
|
substances, should be called substances.
|
|
|
|
Further, primary substances are most properly so called, because
|
|
they underlie and are the subjects of everything else. Now the same
|
|
relation that subsists between primary substance and everything else
|
|
subsists also between the species and the genus to which the primary
|
|
substance belongs, on the one hand, and every attribute which is not
|
|
included within these, on the other. For these are the subjects of all
|
|
such. If we call an individual man 'skilled in grammar', the predicate
|
|
is applicable also to the species and to the genus to which he
|
|
belongs. This law holds good in all cases.
|
|
|
|
It is a common characteristic of all sub. stance that it is never
|
|
present in a subject. For primary substance is neither present in a
|
|
subject nor predicated of a subject; while, with regard to secondary
|
|
substances, it is clear from the following arguments (apart from
|
|
others) that they are not present in a subject. For 'man' is
|
|
predicated of the individual man, but is not present in any subject:
|
|
for manhood is not present in the individual man. In the same way,
|
|
'animal' is also predicated of the individual man, but is not
|
|
present in him. Again, when a thing is present in a subject, though
|
|
the name may quite well be applied to that in which it is present, the
|
|
definition cannot be applied. Yet of secondary substances, not only
|
|
the name, but also the definition, applies to the subject: we should
|
|
use both the definition of the species and that of the genus with
|
|
reference to the individual man. Thus substance cannot be present in a
|
|
subject.
|
|
|
|
Yet this is not peculiar to substance, for it is also the case
|
|
that differentiae cannot be present in subjects. The characteristics
|
|
'terrestrial' and 'two-footed' are predicated of the species 'man',
|
|
but not present in it. For they are not in man. Moreover, the
|
|
definition of the differentia may be predicated of that of which the
|
|
differentia itself is predicated. For instance, if the
|
|
characteristic 'terrestrial' is predicated of the species 'man', the
|
|
definition also of that characteristic may be used to form the
|
|
predicate of the species 'man': for 'man' is terrestrial.
|
|
|
|
The fact that the parts of substances appear to be present in the
|
|
whole, as in a subject, should not make us apprehensive lest we should
|
|
have to admit that such parts are not substances: for in explaining
|
|
the phrase 'being present in a subject', we stated' that we meant
|
|
'otherwise than as parts in a whole'.
|
|
|
|
It is the mark of substances and of differentiae that, in all
|
|
propositions of which they form the predicate, they are predicated
|
|
univocally. For all such propositions have for their subject either
|
|
the individual or the species. It is true that, inasmuch as primary
|
|
substance is not predicable of anything, it can never form the
|
|
predicate of any proposition. But of secondary substances, the species
|
|
is predicated of the individual, the genus both of the species and
|
|
of the individual. Similarly the differentiae are predicated of the
|
|
species and of the individuals. Moreover, the definition of the
|
|
species and that of the genus are applicable to the primary substance,
|
|
and that of the genus to the species. For all that is predicated of
|
|
the predicate will be predicated also of the subject. Similarly, the
|
|
definition of the differentiae will be applicable to the species and
|
|
to the individuals. But it was stated above that the word 'univocal'
|
|
was applied to those things which had both name and definition in
|
|
common. It is, therefore, established that in every proposition, of
|
|
which either substance or a differentia forms the predicate, these are
|
|
predicated univocally.
|
|
|
|
All substance appears to signify that which is individual. In the
|
|
case of primary substance this is indisputably true, for the thing
|
|
is a unit. In the case of secondary substances, when we speak, for
|
|
instance, of 'man' or 'animal', our form of speech gives the
|
|
impression that we are here also indicating that which is
|
|
individual, but the impression is not strictly true; for a secondary
|
|
substance is not an individual, but a class with a certain
|
|
qualification; for it is not one and single as a primary substance is;
|
|
the words 'man', 'animal', are predicable of more than one subject.
|
|
|
|
Yet species and genus do not merely indicate quality, like the
|
|
term 'white'; 'white' indicates quality and nothing further, but
|
|
species and genus determine the quality with reference to a substance:
|
|
they signify substance qualitatively differentiated. The determinate
|
|
qualification covers a larger field in the case of the genus that in
|
|
that of the species: he who uses the word 'animal' is herein using a
|
|
word of wider extension than he who uses the word 'man'.
|
|
|
|
Another mark of substance is that it has no contrary. What could
|
|
be the contrary of any primary substance, such as the individual man
|
|
or animal? It has none. Nor can the species or the genus have a
|
|
contrary. Yet this characteristic is not peculiar to substance, but is
|
|
true of many other things, such as quantity. There is nothing that
|
|
forms the contrary of 'two cubits long' or of 'three cubits long',
|
|
or of 'ten', or of any such term. A man may contend that 'much' is the
|
|
contrary of 'little', or 'great' of 'small', but of definite
|
|
quantitative terms no contrary exists.
|
|
|
|
Substance, again, does not appear to admit of variation of degree. I
|
|
do not mean by this that one substance cannot be more or less truly
|
|
substance than another, for it has already been stated' that this is
|
|
the case; but that no single substance admits of varying degrees
|
|
within itself. For instance, one particular substance, 'man', cannot
|
|
be more or less man either than himself at some other time or than
|
|
some other man. One man cannot be more man than another, as that which
|
|
is white may be more or less white than some other white object, or as
|
|
that which is beautiful may be more or less beautiful than some
|
|
other beautiful object. The same quality, moreover, is said to subsist
|
|
in a thing in varying degrees at different times. A body, being white,
|
|
is said to be whiter at one time than it was before, or, being warm,
|
|
is said to be warmer or less warm than at some other time. But
|
|
substance is not said to be more or less that which it is: a man is
|
|
not more truly a man at one time than he was before, nor is
|
|
anything, if it is substance, more or less what it is. Substance,
|
|
then, does not admit of variation of degree.
|
|
|
|
The most distinctive mark of substance appears to be that, while
|
|
remaining numerically one and the same, it is capable of admitting
|
|
contrary qualities. From among things other than substance, we
|
|
should find ourselves unable to bring forward any which possessed this
|
|
mark. Thus, one and the same colour cannot be white and black. Nor can
|
|
the same one action be good and bad: this law holds good with
|
|
everything that is not substance. But one and the selfsame
|
|
substance, while retaining its identity, is yet capable of admitting
|
|
contrary qualities. The same individual person is at one time white,
|
|
at another black, at one time warm, at another cold, at one time good,
|
|
at another bad. This capacity is found nowhere else, though it might
|
|
be maintained that a statement or opinion was an exception to the
|
|
rule. The same statement, it is agreed, can be both true and false.
|
|
For if the statement 'he is sitting' is true, yet, when the person
|
|
in question has risen, the same statement will be false. The same
|
|
applies to opinions. For if any one thinks truly that a person is
|
|
sitting, yet, when that person has risen, this same opinion, if
|
|
still held, will be false. Yet although this exception may be allowed,
|
|
there is, nevertheless, a difference in the manner in which the
|
|
thing takes place. It is by themselves changing that substances
|
|
admit contrary qualities. It is thus that that which was hot becomes
|
|
cold, for it has entered into a different state. Similarly that
|
|
which was white becomes black, and that which was bad good, by a
|
|
process of change; and in the same way in all other cases it is by
|
|
changing that substances are capable of admitting contrary
|
|
qualities. But statements and opinions themselves remain unaltered
|
|
in all respects: it is by the alteration in the facts of the case that
|
|
the contrary quality comes to be theirs. The statement 'he is sitting'
|
|
remains unaltered, but it is at one time true, at another false,
|
|
according to circumstances. What has been said of statements applies
|
|
also to opinions. Thus, in respect of the manner in which the thing
|
|
takes place, it is the peculiar mark of substance that it should be
|
|
capable of admitting contrary qualities; for it is by itself
|
|
changing that it does so.
|
|
|
|
If, then, a man should make this exception and contend that
|
|
statements and opinions are capable of admitting contrary qualities,
|
|
his contention is unsound. For statements and opinions are said to
|
|
have this capacity, not because they themselves undergo
|
|
modification, but because this modification occurs in the case of
|
|
something else. The truth or falsity of a statement depends on
|
|
facts, and not on any power on the part of the statement itself of
|
|
admitting contrary qualities. In short, there is nothing which can
|
|
alter the nature of statements and opinions. As, then, no change takes
|
|
place in themselves, these cannot be said to be capable of admitting
|
|
contrary qualities.
|
|
|
|
But it is by reason of the modification which takes place within the
|
|
substance itself that a substance is said to be capable of admitting
|
|
contrary qualities; for a substance admits within itself either
|
|
disease or health, whiteness or blackness. It is in this sense that it
|
|
is said to be capable of admitting contrary qualities.
|
|
|
|
To sum up, it is a distinctive mark of substance, that, while
|
|
remaining numerically one and the same, it is capable of admitting
|
|
contrary qualities, the modification taking place through a change
|
|
in the substance itself.
|
|
|
|
Let these remarks suffice on the subject of substance.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
Quantity is either discrete or continuous. Moreover, some quantities
|
|
are such that each part of the whole has a relative position to the
|
|
other parts: others have within them no such relation of part to part.
|
|
|
|
Instances of discrete quantities are number and speech; of
|
|
continuous, lines, surfaces, solids, and, besides these, time and
|
|
place.
|
|
|
|
In the case of the parts of a number, there is no common boundary at
|
|
which they join. For example: two fives make ten, but the two fives
|
|
have no common boundary, but are separate; the parts three and seven
|
|
also do not join at any boundary. Nor, to generalize, would it ever be
|
|
possible in the case of number that there should be a common
|
|
boundary among the parts; they are always separate. Number, therefore,
|
|
is a discrete quantity.
|
|
|
|
The same is true of speech. That speech is a quantity is evident:
|
|
for it is measured in long and short syllables. I mean here that
|
|
speech which is vocal. Moreover, it is a discrete quantity for its
|
|
parts have no common boundary. There is no common boundary at which
|
|
the syllables join, but each is separate and distinct from the rest.
|
|
|
|
A line, on the other hand, is a continuous quantity, for it is
|
|
possible to find a common boundary at which its parts join. In the
|
|
case of the line, this common boundary is the point; in the case of
|
|
the plane, it is the line: for the parts of the plane have also a
|
|
common boundary. Similarly you can find a common boundary in the
|
|
case of the parts of a solid, namely either a line or a plane.
|
|
|
|
Space and time also belong to this class of quantities. Time,
|
|
past, present, and future, forms a continuous whole. Space,
|
|
likewise, is a continuous quantity; for the parts of a solid occupy
|
|
a certain space, and these have a common boundary; it follows that the
|
|
parts of space also, which are occupied by the parts of the solid,
|
|
have the same common boundary as the parts of the solid. Thus, not
|
|
only time, but space also, is a continuous quantity, for its parts
|
|
have a common boundary.
|
|
|
|
Quantities consist either of parts which bear a relative position
|
|
each to each, or of parts which do not. The parts of a line bear a
|
|
relative position to each other, for each lies somewhere, and it would
|
|
be possible to distinguish each, and to state the position of each
|
|
on the plane and to explain to what sort of part among the rest each
|
|
was contiguous. Similarly the parts of a plane have position, for it
|
|
could similarly be stated what was the position of each and what
|
|
sort of parts were contiguous. The same is true with regard to the
|
|
solid and to space. But it would be impossible to show that the arts
|
|
of a number had a relative position each to each, or a particular
|
|
position, or to state what parts were contiguous. Nor could this be
|
|
done in the case of time, for none of the parts of time has an abiding
|
|
existence, and that which does not abide can hardly have position.
|
|
It would be better to say that such parts had a relative order, in
|
|
virtue of one being prior to another. Similarly with number: in
|
|
counting, 'one' is prior to 'two', and 'two' to 'three', and thus
|
|
the parts of number may be said to possess a relative order, though it
|
|
would be impossible to discover any distinct position for each. This
|
|
holds good also in the case of speech. None of its parts has an
|
|
abiding existence: when once a syllable is pronounced, it is not
|
|
possible to retain it, so that, naturally, as the parts do not
|
|
abide, they cannot have position. Thus, some quantities consist of
|
|
parts which have position, and some of those which have not.
|
|
|
|
Strictly speaking, only the things which I have mentioned belong
|
|
to the category of quantity: everything else that is called
|
|
quantitative is a quantity in a secondary sense. It is because we have
|
|
in mind some one of these quantities, properly so called, that we
|
|
apply quantitative terms to other things. We speak of what is white as
|
|
large, because the surface over which the white extends is large; we
|
|
speak of an action or a process as lengthy, because the time covered
|
|
is long; these things cannot in their own right claim the quantitative
|
|
epithet. For instance, should any one explain how long an action
|
|
was, his statement would be made in terms of the time taken, to the
|
|
effect that it lasted a year, or something of that sort. In the same
|
|
way, he would explain the size of a white object in terms of
|
|
surface, for he would state the area which it covered. Thus the things
|
|
already mentioned, and these alone, are in their intrinsic nature
|
|
quantities; nothing else can claim the name in its own right, but,
|
|
if at all, only in a secondary sense.
|
|
|
|
Quantities have no contraries. In the case of definite quantities
|
|
this is obvious; thus, there is nothing that is the contrary of 'two
|
|
cubits long' or of 'three cubits long', or of a surface, or of any
|
|
such quantities. A man might, indeed, argue that 'much' was the
|
|
contrary of 'little', and 'great' of 'small'. But these are not
|
|
quantitative, but relative; things are not great or small
|
|
absolutely, they are so called rather as the result of an act of
|
|
comparison. For instance, a mountain is called small, a grain large,
|
|
in virtue of the fact that the latter is greater than others of its
|
|
kind, the former less. Thus there is a reference here to an external
|
|
standard, for if the terms 'great' and 'small' were used absolutely, a
|
|
mountain would never be called small or a grain large. Again, we say
|
|
that there are many people in a village, and few in Athens, although
|
|
those in the city are many times as numerous as those in the
|
|
village: or we say that a house has many in it, and a theatre few,
|
|
though those in the theatre far outnumber those in the house. The
|
|
terms 'two cubits long, "three cubits long,' and so on indicate
|
|
quantity, the terms 'great' and 'small' indicate relation, for they
|
|
have reference to an external standard. It is, therefore, plain that
|
|
these are to be classed as relative.
|
|
|
|
Again, whether we define them as quantitative or not, they have no
|
|
contraries: for how can there be a contrary of an attribute which is
|
|
not to be apprehended in or by itself, but only by reference to
|
|
something external? Again, if 'great' and 'small' are contraries, it
|
|
will come about that the same subject can admit contrary qualities
|
|
at one and the same time, and that things will themselves be
|
|
contrary to themselves. For it happens at times that the same thing is
|
|
both small and great. For the same thing may be small in comparison
|
|
with one thing, and great in comparison with another, so that the same
|
|
thing comes to be both small and great at one and the same time, and
|
|
is of such a nature as to admit contrary qualities at one and the same
|
|
moment. Yet it was agreed, when substance was being discussed, that
|
|
nothing admits contrary qualities at one and the same moment. For
|
|
though substance is capable of admitting contrary qualities, yet no
|
|
one is at the same time both sick and healthy, nothing is at the
|
|
same time both white and black. Nor is there anything which is
|
|
qualified in contrary ways at one and the same time.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, if these were contraries, they would themselves be
|
|
contrary to themselves. For if 'great' is the contrary of 'small', and
|
|
the same thing is both great and small at the same time, then
|
|
'small' or 'great' is the contrary of itself. But this is
|
|
impossible. The term 'great', therefore, is not the contrary of the
|
|
term 'small', nor 'much' of 'little'. And even though a man should
|
|
call these terms not relative but quantitative, they would not have
|
|
contraries.
|
|
|
|
It is in the case of space that quantity most plausibly appears to
|
|
admit of a contrary. For men define the term 'above' as the contrary
|
|
of 'below', when it is the region at the centre they mean by
|
|
'below'; and this is so, because nothing is farther from the
|
|
extremities of the universe than the region at the centre. Indeed,
|
|
it seems that in defining contraries of every kind men have recourse
|
|
to a spatial metaphor, for they say that those things are contraries
|
|
which, within the same class, are separated by the greatest possible
|
|
distance.
|
|
|
|
Quantity does not, it appears, admit of variation of degree. One
|
|
thing cannot be two cubits long in a greater degree than another.
|
|
Similarly with regard to number: what is 'three' is not more truly
|
|
three than what is 'five' is five; nor is one set of three more
|
|
truly three than another set. Again, one period of time is not said to
|
|
be more truly time than another. Nor is there any other kind of
|
|
quantity, of all that have been mentioned, with regard to which
|
|
variation of degree can be predicated. The category of quantity,
|
|
therefore, does not admit of variation of degree.
|
|
|
|
The most distinctive mark of quantity is that equality and
|
|
inequality are predicated of it. Each of the aforesaid quantities is
|
|
said to be equal or unequal. For instance, one solid is said to be
|
|
equal or unequal to another; number, too, and time can have these
|
|
terms applied to them, indeed can all those kinds of quantity that
|
|
have been mentioned.
|
|
|
|
That which is not a quantity can by no means, it would seem, be
|
|
termed equal or unequal to anything else. One particular disposition
|
|
or one particular quality, such as whiteness, is by no means
|
|
compared with another in terms of equality and inequality but rather
|
|
in terms of similarity. Thus it is the distinctive mark of quantity
|
|
that it can be called equal and unequal.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
Those things are called relative, which, being either said to be
|
|
of something else or related to something else, are explained by
|
|
reference to that other thing. For instance, the word 'superior' is
|
|
explained by reference to something else, for it is superiority over
|
|
something else that is meant. Similarly, the expression 'double' has
|
|
this external reference, for it is the double of something else that
|
|
is meant. So it is with everything else of this kind. There are,
|
|
moreover, other relatives, e.g. habit, disposition, perception,
|
|
knowledge, and attitude. The significance of all these is explained by
|
|
a reference to something else and in no other way. Thus, a habit is
|
|
a habit of something, knowledge is knowledge of something, attitude is
|
|
the attitude of something. So it is with all other relatives that have
|
|
been mentioned. Those terms, then, are called relative, the nature
|
|
of which is explained by reference to something else, the
|
|
preposition 'of' or some other preposition being used to indicate
|
|
the relation. Thus, one mountain is called great in comparison with
|
|
son with another; for the mountain claims this attribute by comparison
|
|
with something. Again, that which is called similar must be similar to
|
|
something else, and all other such attributes have this external
|
|
reference. It is to be noted that lying and standing and sitting are
|
|
particular attitudes, but attitude is itself a relative term. To
|
|
lie, to stand, to be seated, are not themselves attitudes, but take
|
|
their name from the aforesaid attitudes.
|
|
|
|
It is possible for relatives to have contraries. Thus virtue has a
|
|
contrary, vice, these both being relatives; knowledge, too, has a
|
|
contrary, ignorance. But this is not the mark of all relatives;
|
|
'double' and 'triple' have no contrary, nor indeed has any such term.
|
|
|
|
It also appears that relatives can admit of variation of degree. For
|
|
'like' and 'unlike', 'equal' and 'unequal', have the modifications
|
|
'more' and 'less' applied to them, and each of these is relative in
|
|
character: for the terms 'like' and 'unequal' bear 'unequal' bear a
|
|
reference to something external. Yet, again, it is not every
|
|
relative term that admits of variation of degree. No term such as
|
|
'double' admits of this modification. All relatives have correlatives:
|
|
by the term 'slave' we mean the slave of a master, by the term
|
|
'master', the master of a slave; by 'double', the double of its
|
|
hall; by 'half', the half of its double; by 'greater', greater than
|
|
that which is less; by 'less,' less than that which is greater.
|
|
|
|
So it is with every other relative term; but the case we use to
|
|
express the correlation differs in some instances. Thus, by
|
|
knowledge we mean knowledge the knowable; by the knowable, that
|
|
which is to be apprehended by knowledge; by perception, perception
|
|
of the perceptible; by the perceptible, that which is apprehended by
|
|
perception.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes, however, reciprocity of correlation does not appear to
|
|
exist. This comes about when a blunder is made, and that to which
|
|
the relative is related is not accurately stated. If a man states that
|
|
a wing is necessarily relative to a bird, the connexion between
|
|
these two will not be reciprocal, for it will not be possible to say
|
|
that a bird is a bird by reason of its wings. The reason is that the
|
|
original statement was inaccurate, for the wing is not said to be
|
|
relative to the bird qua bird, since many creatures besides birds have
|
|
wings, but qua winged creature. If, then, the statement is made
|
|
accurate, the connexion will be reciprocal, for we can speak of a
|
|
wing, having reference necessarily to a winged creature, and of a
|
|
winged creature as being such because of its wings.
|
|
|
|
Occasionally, perhaps, it is necessary to coin words, if no word
|
|
exists by which a correlation can adequately be explained. If we
|
|
define a rudder as necessarily having reference to a boat, our
|
|
definition will not be appropriate, for the rudder does not have
|
|
this reference to a boat qua boat, as there are boats which have no
|
|
rudders. Thus we cannot use the terms reciprocally, for the word
|
|
'boat' cannot be said to find its explanation in the word 'rudder'. As
|
|
there is no existing word, our definition would perhaps be more
|
|
accurate if we coined some word like 'ruddered' as the correlative
|
|
of 'rudder'. If we express ourselves thus accurately, at any rate
|
|
the terms are reciprocally connected, for the 'ruddered' thing is
|
|
'ruddered' in virtue of its rudder. So it is in all other cases. A
|
|
head will be more accurately defined as the correlative of that
|
|
which is 'headed', than as that of an animal, for the animal does
|
|
not have a head qua animal, since many animals have no head.
|
|
|
|
Thus we may perhaps most easily comprehend that to which a thing
|
|
is related, when a name does not exist, if, from that which has a
|
|
name, we derive a new name, and apply it to that with which the
|
|
first is reciprocally connected, as in the aforesaid instances, when
|
|
we derived the word 'winged' from 'wing' and from 'rudder'.
|
|
|
|
All relatives, then, if properly defined, have a correlative. I
|
|
add this condition because, if that to which they are related is
|
|
stated as haphazard and not accurately, the two are not found to be
|
|
interdependent. Let me state what I mean more clearly. Even in the
|
|
case of acknowledged correlatives, and where names exist for each,
|
|
there will be no interdependence if one of the two is denoted, not
|
|
by that name which expresses the correlative notion, but by one of
|
|
irrelevant significance. The term 'slave,' if defined as related,
|
|
not to a master, but to a man, or a biped, or anything of that sort,
|
|
is not reciprocally connected with that in relation to which it is
|
|
defined, for the statement is not exact. Further, if one thing is said
|
|
to be correlative with another, and the terminology used is correct,
|
|
then, though all irrelevant attributes should be removed, and only
|
|
that one attribute left in virtue of which it was correctly stated
|
|
to be correlative with that other, the stated correlation will still
|
|
exist. If the correlative of 'the slave' is said to be 'the master',
|
|
then, though all irrelevant attributes of the said 'master', such as
|
|
'biped', 'receptive of knowledge', 'human', should be removed, and the
|
|
attribute 'master' alone left, the stated correlation existing between
|
|
him and the slave will remain the same, for it is of a master that a
|
|
slave is said to be the slave. On the other hand, if, of two
|
|
correlatives, one is not correctly termed, then, when all other
|
|
attributes are removed and that alone is left in virtue of which it
|
|
was stated to be correlative, the stated correlation will be found
|
|
to have disappeared.
|
|
|
|
For suppose the correlative of 'the slave' should be said to be 'the
|
|
man', or the correlative of 'the wing"the bird'; if the attribute
|
|
'master' be withdrawn from' the man', the correlation between 'the
|
|
man' and 'the slave' will cease to exist, for if the man is not a
|
|
master, the slave is not a slave. Similarly, if the attribute 'winged'
|
|
be withdrawn from 'the bird', 'the wing' will no longer be relative;
|
|
for if the so-called correlative is not winged, it follows that 'the
|
|
wing' has no correlative.
|
|
|
|
Thus it is essential that the correlated terms should be exactly
|
|
designated; if there is a name existing, the statement will be easy;
|
|
if not, it is doubtless our duty to construct names. When the
|
|
terminology is thus correct, it is evident that all correlatives are
|
|
interdependent.
|
|
|
|
Correlatives are thought to come into existence simultaneously. This
|
|
is for the most part true, as in the case of the double and the
|
|
half. The existence of the half necessitates the existence of that
|
|
of which it is a half. Similarly the existence of a master
|
|
necessitates the existence of a slave, and that of a slave implies
|
|
that of a master; these are merely instances of a general rule.
|
|
Moreover, they cancel one another; for if there is no double it
|
|
follows that there is no half, and vice versa; this rule also
|
|
applies to all such correlatives. Yet it does not appear to be true in
|
|
all cases that correlatives come into existence simultaneously. The
|
|
object of knowledge would appear to exist before knowledge itself, for
|
|
it is usually the case that we acquire knowledge of objects already
|
|
existing; it would be difficult, if not impossible, to find a branch
|
|
of knowledge the beginning of the existence of which was
|
|
contemporaneous with that of its object.
|
|
|
|
Again, while the object of knowledge, if it ceases to exist, cancels
|
|
at the same time the knowledge which was its correlative, the converse
|
|
of this is not true. It is true that if the object of knowledge does
|
|
not exist there can be no knowledge: for there will no longer be
|
|
anything to know. Yet it is equally true that, if knowledge of a
|
|
certain object does not exist, the object may nevertheless quite
|
|
well exist. Thus, in the case of the squaring of the circle, if indeed
|
|
that process is an object of knowledge, though it itself exists as
|
|
an object of knowledge, yet the knowledge of it has not yet come
|
|
into existence. Again, if all animals ceased to exist, there would
|
|
be no knowledge, but there might yet be many objects of knowledge.
|
|
|
|
This is likewise the case with regard to perception: for the
|
|
object of perception is, it appears, prior to the act of perception.
|
|
If the perceptible is annihilated, perception also will cease to
|
|
exist; but the annihilation of perception does not cancel the
|
|
existence of the perceptible. For perception implies a body
|
|
perceived and a body in which perception takes place. Now if that
|
|
which is perceptible is annihilated, it follows that the body is
|
|
annihilated, for the body is a perceptible thing; and if the body does
|
|
not exist, it follows that perception also ceases to exist. Thus the
|
|
annihilation of the perceptible involves that of perception.
|
|
|
|
But the annihilation of perception does not involve that of the
|
|
perceptible. For if the animal is annihilated, it follows that
|
|
perception also is annihilated, but perceptibles such as body, heat,
|
|
sweetness, bitterness, and so on, will remain.
|
|
|
|
Again, perception is generated at the same time as the perceiving
|
|
subject, for it comes into existence at the same time as the animal.
|
|
But the perceptible surely exists before perception; for fire and
|
|
water and such elements, out of which the animal is itself composed,
|
|
exist before the animal is an animal at all, and before perception.
|
|
Thus it would seem that the perceptible exists before perception.
|
|
|
|
It may be questioned whether it is true that no substance is
|
|
relative, as seems to be the case, or whether exception is to be
|
|
made in the case of certain secondary substances. With regard to
|
|
primary substances, it is quite true that there is no such
|
|
possibility, for neither wholes nor parts of primary substances are
|
|
relative. The individual man or ox is not defined with reference to
|
|
something external. Similarly with the parts: a particular hand or
|
|
head is not defined as a particular hand or head of a particular
|
|
person, but as the hand or head of a particular person. It is true
|
|
also, for the most part at least, in the case of secondary substances;
|
|
the species 'man' and the species 'ox' are not defined with
|
|
reference to anything outside themselves. Wood, again, is only
|
|
relative in so far as it is some one's property, not in so far as it
|
|
is wood. It is plain, then, that in the cases mentioned substance is
|
|
not relative. But with regard to some secondary substances there is
|
|
a difference of opinion; thus, such terms as 'head' and 'hand' are
|
|
defined with reference to that of which the things indicated are a
|
|
part, and so it comes about that these appear to have a relative
|
|
character. Indeed, if our definition of that which is relative was
|
|
complete, it is very difficult, if not impossible, to prove that no
|
|
substance is relative. If, however, our definition was not complete,
|
|
if those things only are properly called relative in the case of which
|
|
relation to an external object is a necessary condition of
|
|
existence, perhaps some explanation of the dilemma may be found.
|
|
|
|
The former definition does indeed apply to all relatives, but the
|
|
fact that a thing is explained with reference to something else does
|
|
not make it essentially relative.
|
|
|
|
From this it is plain that, if a man definitely apprehends a
|
|
relative thing, he will also definitely apprehend that to which it
|
|
is relative. Indeed this is self-evident: for if a man knows that some
|
|
particular thing is relative, assuming that we call that a relative in
|
|
the case of which relation to something is a necessary condition of
|
|
existence, he knows that also to which it is related. For if he does
|
|
not know at all that to which it is related, he will not know
|
|
whether or not it is relative. This is clear, moreover, in
|
|
particular instances. If a man knows definitely that such and such a
|
|
thing is 'double', he will also forthwith know definitely that of
|
|
which it is the double. For if there is nothing definite of which he
|
|
knows it to be the double, he does not know at all that it is
|
|
double. Again, if he knows that a thing is more beautiful, it
|
|
follows necessarily that he will forthwith definitely know that also
|
|
than which it is more beautiful. He will not merely know
|
|
indefinitely that it is more beautiful than something which is less
|
|
beautiful, for this would be supposition, not knowledge. For if he
|
|
does not know definitely that than which it is more beautiful, he
|
|
can no longer claim to know definitely that it is more beautiful
|
|
than something else which is less beautiful: for it might be that
|
|
nothing was less beautiful. It is, therefore, evident that if a man
|
|
apprehends some relative thing definitely, he necessarily knows that
|
|
also definitely to which it is related.
|
|
|
|
Now the head, the hand, and such things are substances, and it is
|
|
possible to know their essential character definitely, but it does not
|
|
necessarily follow that we should know that to which they are related.
|
|
It is not possible to know forthwith whose head or hand is meant. Thus
|
|
these are not relatives, and, this being the case, it would be true to
|
|
say that no substance is relative in character. It is perhaps a
|
|
difficult matter, in such cases, to make a positive statement
|
|
without more exhaustive examination, but to have raised questions with
|
|
regard to details is not without advantage.
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
|
By 'quality' I mean that in virtue of which people are said to be
|
|
such and such.
|
|
|
|
Quality is a term that is used in many senses. One sort of quality
|
|
let us call 'habit' or 'disposition'. Habit differs from disposition
|
|
in being more lasting and more firmly established. The various kinds
|
|
of knowledge and of virtue are habits, for knowledge, even when
|
|
acquired only in a moderate degree, is, it is agreed, abiding in its
|
|
character and difficult to displace, unless some great mental upheaval
|
|
takes place, through disease or any such cause. The virtues, also,
|
|
such as justice, self-restraint, and so on, are not easily dislodged
|
|
or dismissed, so as to give place to vice.
|
|
|
|
By a disposition, on the other hand, we mean a condition that is
|
|
easily changed and quickly gives place to its opposite. Thus, heat,
|
|
cold, disease, health, and so on are dispositions. For a man is
|
|
disposed in one way or another with reference to these, but quickly
|
|
changes, becoming cold instead of warm, ill instead of well. So it
|
|
is with all other dispositions also, unless through lapse of time a
|
|
disposition has itself become inveterate and almost impossible to
|
|
dislodge: in which case we should perhaps go so far as to call it a
|
|
habit.
|
|
|
|
It is evident that men incline to call those conditions habits which
|
|
are of a more or less permanent type and difficult to displace; for
|
|
those who are not retentive of knowledge, but volatile, are not said
|
|
to have such and such a 'habit' as regards knowledge, yet they are
|
|
disposed, we may say, either better or worse, towards knowledge.
|
|
Thus habit differs from disposition in this, that while the latter
|
|
in ephemeral, the former is permanent and difficult to alter.
|
|
|
|
Habits are at the same time dispositions, but dispositions are not
|
|
necessarily habits. For those who have some specific habit may be said
|
|
also, in virtue of that habit, to be thus or thus disposed; but
|
|
those who are disposed in some specific way have not in all cases
|
|
the corresponding habit.
|
|
|
|
Another sort of quality is that in virtue of which, for example,
|
|
we call men good boxers or runners, or healthy or sickly: in fact it
|
|
includes all those terms which refer to inborn capacity or incapacity.
|
|
Such things are not predicated of a person in virtue of his
|
|
disposition, but in virtue of his inborn capacity or incapacity to
|
|
do something with ease or to avoid defeat of any kind. Persons are
|
|
called good boxers or good runners, not in virtue of such and such a
|
|
disposition, but in virtue of an inborn capacity to accomplish
|
|
something with ease. Men are called healthy in virtue of the inborn
|
|
capacity of easy resistance to those unhealthy influences that may
|
|
ordinarily arise; unhealthy, in virtue of the lack of this capacity.
|
|
Similarly with regard to softness and hardness. Hardness is predicated
|
|
of a thing because it has that capacity of resistance which enables it
|
|
to withstand disintegration; softness, again, is predicated of a thing
|
|
by reason of the lack of that capacity.
|
|
|
|
A third class within this category is that of affective qualities
|
|
and affections. Sweetness, bitterness, sourness, are examples of
|
|
this sort of quality, together with all that is akin to these; heat,
|
|
moreover, and cold, whiteness, and blackness are affective
|
|
qualities. It is evident that these are qualities, for those things
|
|
that possess them are themselves said to be such and such by reason of
|
|
their presence. Honey is called sweet because it contains sweetness;
|
|
the body is called white because it contains whiteness; and so in
|
|
all other cases.
|
|
|
|
The term 'affective quality' is not used as indicating that those
|
|
things which admit these qualities are affected in any way. Honey is
|
|
not called sweet because it is affected in a specific way, nor is this
|
|
what is meant in any other instance. Similarly heat and cold are
|
|
called affective qualities, not because those things which admit
|
|
them are affected. What is meant is that these said qualities are
|
|
capable of producing an 'affection' in the way of perception. For
|
|
sweetness has the power of affecting the sense of taste; heat, that of
|
|
touch; and so it is with the rest of these qualities.
|
|
|
|
Whiteness and blackness, however, and the other colours, are not
|
|
said to be affective qualities in this sense, but -because they
|
|
themselves are the results of an affection. It is plain that many
|
|
changes of colour take place because of affections. When a man is
|
|
ashamed, he blushes; when he is afraid, he becomes pale, and so on. So
|
|
true is this, that when a man is by nature liable to such
|
|
affections, arising from some concomitance of elements in his
|
|
constitution, it is a probable inference that he has the corresponding
|
|
complexion of skin. For the same disposition of bodily elements, which
|
|
in the former instance was momentarily present in the case of an
|
|
access of shame, might be a result of a man's natural temperament,
|
|
so as to produce the corresponding colouring also as a natural
|
|
characteristic. All conditions, therefore, of this kind, if caused
|
|
by certain permanent and lasting affections, are called affective
|
|
qualities. For pallor and duskiness of complexion are called
|
|
qualities, inasmuch as we are said to be such and such in virtue of
|
|
them, not only if they originate in natural constitution, but also
|
|
if they come about through long disease or sunburn, and are
|
|
difficult to remove, or indeed remain throughout life. For in the same
|
|
way we are said to be such and such because of these.
|
|
|
|
Those conditions, however, which arise from causes which may
|
|
easily be rendered ineffective or speedily removed, are called, not
|
|
qualities, but affections: for we are not said to be such virtue of
|
|
them. The man who blushes through shame is not said to be a
|
|
constitutional blusher, nor is the man who becomes pale through fear
|
|
said to be constitutionally pale. He is said rather to have been
|
|
affected.
|
|
|
|
Thus such conditions are called affections, not qualities.
|
|
|
|
In like manner there are affective qualities and affections of the
|
|
soul. That temper with which a man is born and which has its origin in
|
|
certain deep-seated affections is called a quality. I mean such
|
|
conditions as insanity, irascibility, and so on: for people are said
|
|
to be mad or irascible in virtue of these. Similarly those abnormal
|
|
psychic states which are not inborn, but arise from the concomitance
|
|
of certain other elements, and are difficult to remove, or
|
|
altogether permanent, are called qualities, for in virtue of them
|
|
men are said to be such and such.
|
|
|
|
Those, however, which arise from causes easily rendered
|
|
ineffective are called affections, not qualities. Suppose that a man
|
|
is irritable when vexed: he is not even spoken of as a bad-tempered
|
|
man, when in such circumstances he loses his temper somewhat, but
|
|
rather is said to be affected. Such conditions are therefore termed,
|
|
not qualities, but affections.
|
|
|
|
The fourth sort of quality is figure and the shape that belongs to a
|
|
thing; and besides this, straightness and curvedness and any other
|
|
qualities of this type; each of these defines a thing as being such
|
|
and such. Because it is triangular or quadrangular a thing is said
|
|
to have a specific character, or again because it is straight or
|
|
curved; in fact a thing's shape in every case gives rise to a
|
|
qualification of it.
|
|
|
|
Rarity and density, roughness and smoothness, seem to be terms
|
|
indicating quality: yet these, it would appear, really belong to a
|
|
class different from that of quality. For it is rather a certain
|
|
relative position of the parts composing the thing thus qualified
|
|
which, it appears, is indicated by each of these terms. A thing is
|
|
dense, owing to the fact that its parts are closely combined with
|
|
one another; rare, because there are interstices between the parts;
|
|
smooth, because its parts lie, so to speak, evenly; rough, because
|
|
some parts project beyond others.
|
|
|
|
There may be other sorts of quality, but those that are most
|
|
properly so called have, we may safely say, been enumerated.
|
|
|
|
These, then, are qualities, and the things that take their name from
|
|
them as derivatives, or are in some other way dependent on them, are
|
|
said to be qualified in some specific way. In most, indeed in almost
|
|
all cases, the name of that which is qualified is derived from that of
|
|
the quality. Thus the terms 'whiteness', 'grammar', 'justice', give us
|
|
the adjectives 'white', 'grammatical', 'just', and so on.
|
|
|
|
There are some cases, however, in which, as the quality under
|
|
consideration has no name, it is impossible that those possessed of it
|
|
should have a name that is derivative. For instance, the name given to
|
|
the runner or boxer, who is so called in virtue of an inborn capacity,
|
|
is not derived from that of any quality; for lob those capacities have
|
|
no name assigned to them. In this, the inborn capacity is distinct
|
|
from the science, with reference to which men are called, e.g.
|
|
boxers or wrestlers. Such a science is classed as a disposition; it
|
|
has a name, and is called 'boxing' or 'wrestling' as the case may
|
|
be, and the name given to those disposed in this way is derived from
|
|
that of the science. Sometimes, even though a name exists for the
|
|
quality, that which takes its character from the quality has a name
|
|
that is not a derivative. For instance, the upright man takes his
|
|
character from the possession of the quality of integrity, but the
|
|
name given him is not derived from the word 'integrity'. Yet this does
|
|
not occur often.
|
|
|
|
We may therefore state that those things are said to be possessed of
|
|
some specific quality which have a name derived from that of the
|
|
aforesaid quality, or which are in some other way dependent on it.
|
|
|
|
One quality may be the contrary of another; thus justice is the
|
|
contrary of injustice, whiteness of blackness, and so on. The
|
|
things, also, which are said to be such and such in virtue of these
|
|
qualities, may be contrary the one to the other; for that which is
|
|
unjust is contrary to that which is just, that which is white to
|
|
that which is black. This, however, is not always the case. Red,
|
|
yellow, and such colours, though qualities, have no contraries.
|
|
|
|
If one of two contraries is a quality, the other will also be a
|
|
quality. This will be evident from particular instances, if we apply
|
|
the names
|
|
used to denote the other categories; for instance, granted that
|
|
justice is the contrary of injustice and justice is a quality,
|
|
injustice will also be a quality: neither quantity, nor relation,
|
|
nor place, nor indeed any other category but that of quality, will
|
|
be applicable properly to injustice. So it is with all other
|
|
contraries falling under the category of quality.
|
|
|
|
Qualities admit of variation of degree. Whiteness is predicated of
|
|
one thing in a greater or less degree than of another. This is also
|
|
the case with reference to justice. Moreover, one and the same thing
|
|
may exhibit a quality in a greater degree than it did before: if a
|
|
thing is white, it may become whiter.
|
|
|
|
Though this is generally the case, there are exceptions. For if we
|
|
should say that justice admitted of variation of degree,
|
|
difficulties might ensue, and this is true with regard to all those
|
|
qualities which are dispositions. There are some, indeed, who
|
|
dispute the possibility of variation here. They maintain that
|
|
justice and health cannot very well admit of variation of degree
|
|
themselves, but that people vary in the degree in which they possess
|
|
these qualities, and that this is the case with grammatical learning
|
|
and all those qualities which are classed as dispositions. However
|
|
that may be, it is an incontrovertible fact that the things which in
|
|
virtue of these qualities are said to be what they are vary in the
|
|
degree in which they possess them; for one man is said to be better
|
|
versed in grammar, or more healthy or just, than another, and so on.
|
|
|
|
The qualities expressed by the terms 'triangular' and 'quadrangular'
|
|
do not appear to admit of variation of degree, nor indeed do any
|
|
that have to do with figure. For those things to which the
|
|
definition of the triangle or circle is applicable are all equally
|
|
triangular or circular. Those, on the other hand, to which the same
|
|
definition is not applicable, cannot be said to differ from one
|
|
another in degree; the square is no more a circle than the
|
|
rectangle, for to neither is the definition of the circle appropriate.
|
|
In short, if the definition of the term proposed is not applicable
|
|
to both objects, they cannot be compared. Thus it is not all qualities
|
|
which admit of variation of degree.
|
|
|
|
Whereas none of the characteristics I have mentioned are peculiar to
|
|
quality, the fact that likeness and unlikeness can be predicated
|
|
with reference to quality only, gives to that category its distinctive
|
|
feature. One thing is like another only with reference to that in
|
|
virtue of which it is such and such; thus this forms the peculiar mark
|
|
of quality.
|
|
|
|
We must not be disturbed because it may be argued that, though
|
|
proposing to discuss the category of quality, we have included in it
|
|
many relative terms. We did say that habits and dispositions were
|
|
relative. In practically all such cases the genus is relative, the
|
|
individual not. Thus knowledge, as a genus, is explained by
|
|
reference to something else, for we mean a knowledge of something. But
|
|
particular branches of knowledge are not thus explained. The knowledge
|
|
of grammar is not relative to anything external, nor is the
|
|
knowledge of music, but these, if relative at all, are relative only
|
|
in virtue of their genera; thus grammar is said be the knowledge of
|
|
something, not the grammar of something; similarly music is the
|
|
knowledge of something, not the music of something.
|
|
|
|
Thus individual branches of knowledge are not relative. And it is
|
|
because we possess these individual branches of knowledge that we
|
|
are said to be such and such. It is these that we actually possess: we
|
|
are called experts because we possess knowledge in some particular
|
|
branch. Those particular branches, therefore, of knowledge, in
|
|
virtue of which we are sometimes said to be such and such, are
|
|
themselves qualities, and are not relative. Further, if anything
|
|
should happen to fall within both the category of quality and that
|
|
of relation, there would be nothing extraordinary in classing it under
|
|
both these heads.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
Action and affection both admit of contraries and also of
|
|
variation of degree. Heating is the contrary of cooling, being
|
|
heated of being cooled, being glad of being vexed. Thus they admit
|
|
of contraries. They also admit of variation of degree: for it is
|
|
possible to heat in a greater or less degree; also to be heated in a
|
|
greater or less degree. Thus action and affection also admit of
|
|
variation of degree. So much, then, is stated with regard to these
|
|
categories.
|
|
|
|
We spoke, moreover, of the category of position when we were dealing
|
|
with that of relation, and stated that such terms derived their
|
|
names from those of the corresponding attitudes.
|
|
|
|
As for the rest, time, place, state, since they are easily
|
|
intelligible, I say no more about them than was said at the beginning,
|
|
that in the category of state are included such states as 'shod',
|
|
'armed', in that of place 'in the Lyceum' and so on, as was
|
|
explained before.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
The proposed categories have, then, been adequately dealt with.
|
|
|
|
We must next explain the various senses in which the term 'opposite'
|
|
is used. Things are said to be opposed in four senses: (i) as
|
|
correlatives to one another, (ii) as contraries to one another,
|
|
(iii) as privatives to positives, (iv) as affirmatives to negatives.
|
|
|
|
Let me sketch my meaning in outline. An instance of the use of the
|
|
word 'opposite' with reference to correlatives is afforded by the
|
|
expressions 'double' and 'half'; with reference to contraries by 'bad'
|
|
and 'good'. Opposites in the sense of 'privatives' and 'positives'
|
|
are' blindness' and 'sight'; in the sense of affirmatives and
|
|
negatives, the propositions 'he sits', 'he does not sit'.
|
|
|
|
(i) Pairs of opposites which fall under the category of relation are
|
|
explained by a reference of the one to the other, the reference
|
|
being indicated by the preposition 'of' or by some other
|
|
preposition. Thus, double is a relative term, for that which is double
|
|
is explained as the double of something. Knowledge, again, is the
|
|
opposite of the thing known, in the same sense; and the thing known
|
|
also is explained by its relation to its opposite, knowledge. For
|
|
the thing known is explained as that which is known by something, that
|
|
is, by knowledge. Such things, then, as are opposite the one to the
|
|
other in the sense of being correlatives are explained by a
|
|
reference of the one to the other.
|
|
|
|
(ii) Pairs of opposites which are contraries are not in any way
|
|
interdependent, but are contrary the one to the other. The good is not
|
|
spoken of as the good of the had, but as the contrary of the bad,
|
|
nor is white spoken of as the white of the black, but as the
|
|
contrary of the black. These two types of opposition are therefore
|
|
distinct. Those contraries which are such that the subjects in which
|
|
they are naturally present, or of which they are predicated, must
|
|
necessarily contain either the one or the other of them, have no
|
|
intermediate, but those in the case of which no such necessity
|
|
obtains, always have an intermediate. Thus disease and health are
|
|
naturally present in the body of an animal, and it is necessary that
|
|
either the one or the other should be present in the body of an
|
|
animal. Odd and even, again, are predicated of number, and it is
|
|
necessary that the one or the other should be present in numbers.
|
|
Now there is no intermediate between the terms of either of these
|
|
two pairs. On the other hand, in those contraries with regard to which
|
|
no such necessity obtains, we find an intermediate. Blackness and
|
|
whiteness are naturally present in the body, but it is not necessary
|
|
that either the one or the other should be present in the body,
|
|
inasmuch as it is not true to say that everybody must be white or
|
|
black. Badness and goodness, again, are predicated of man, and of many
|
|
other things, but it is not necessary that either the one quality or
|
|
the other should be present in that of which they are predicated: it
|
|
is not true to say that everything that may be good or bad must be
|
|
either good or bad. These pairs of contraries have intermediates:
|
|
the intermediates between white and black are grey, sallow, and all
|
|
the other colours that come between; the intermediate between good and
|
|
bad is that which is neither the one nor the other.
|
|
|
|
Some intermediate qualities have names, such as grey and sallow
|
|
and all the other colours that come between white and black; in
|
|
other cases, however, it is not easy to name the intermediate, but
|
|
we must define it as that which is not either extreme, as in the
|
|
case of that which is neither good nor bad, neither just nor unjust.
|
|
|
|
(iii) 'privatives' and 'Positives' have reference to the same
|
|
subject. Thus, sight and blindness have reference to the eye. It is
|
|
a universal rule that each of a pair of opposites of this type has
|
|
reference to that to which the particular 'positive' is natural. We
|
|
say that that is capable of some particular faculty or possession
|
|
has suffered privation when the faculty or possession in question is
|
|
in no way present in that in which, and at the time at which, it
|
|
should naturally be present. We do not call that toothless which has
|
|
not teeth, or that blind which has not sight, but rather that which
|
|
has not teeth or sight at the time when by nature it should. For there
|
|
are some creatures which from birth are without sight, or without
|
|
teeth, but these are not called toothless or blind.
|
|
|
|
To be without some faculty or to possess it is not the same as the
|
|
corresponding 'privative' or 'positive'. 'Sight' is a 'positive',
|
|
'blindness' a 'privative', but 'to possess sight' is not equivalent to
|
|
'sight', 'to be blind' is not equivalent to 'blindness'. Blindness
|
|
is a 'privative', to be blind is to be in a state of privation, but is
|
|
not a 'privative'. Moreover, if 'blindness' were equivalent to
|
|
'being blind', both would be predicated of the same subject; but
|
|
though a man is said to be blind, he is by no means said to be
|
|
blindness.
|
|
|
|
To be in a state of 'possession' is, it appears, the opposite of
|
|
being in a state of 'privation', just as 'positives' and
|
|
'privatives' themselves are opposite. There is the same type of
|
|
antithesis in both cases; for just as blindness is opposed to sight,
|
|
so is being blind opposed to having sight.
|
|
|
|
That which is affirmed or denied is not itself affirmation or
|
|
denial. By 'affirmation' we mean an affirmative proposition, by
|
|
'denial' a negative. Now, those facts which form the matter of the
|
|
affirmation or denial are not propositions; yet these two are said
|
|
to be opposed in the same sense as the affirmation and denial, for
|
|
in this case also the type of antithesis is the same. For as the
|
|
affirmation is opposed to the denial, as in the two propositions 'he
|
|
sits', 'he does not sit', so also the fact which constitutes the
|
|
matter of the proposition in one case is opposed to that in the other,
|
|
his sitting, that is to say, to his not sitting.
|
|
|
|
It is evident that 'positives' and 'privatives' are not opposed each
|
|
to each in the same sense as relatives. The one is not explained by
|
|
reference to the other; sight is not sight of blindness, nor is any
|
|
other preposition used to indicate the relation. Similarly blindness
|
|
is not said to be blindness of sight, but rather, privation of
|
|
sight. Relatives, moreover, reciprocate; if blindness, therefore, were
|
|
a relative, there would be a reciprocity of relation between it and
|
|
that with which it was correlative. But this is not the case. Sight is
|
|
not called the sight of blindness.
|
|
|
|
That those terms which fall under the heads of 'positives' and
|
|
'privatives' are not opposed each to each as contraries, either, is
|
|
plain from the following facts: Of a pair of contraries such that they
|
|
have no intermediate, one or the other must needs be present in the
|
|
subject in which they naturally subsist, or of which they are
|
|
predicated; for it is those, as we proved,' in the case of which
|
|
this necessity obtains, that have no intermediate. Moreover, we
|
|
cited health and disease, odd and even, as instances. But those
|
|
contraries which have an intermediate are not subject to any such
|
|
necessity. It is not necessary that every substance, receptive of such
|
|
qualities, should be either black or white, cold or hot, for something
|
|
intermediate between these contraries may very well be present in
|
|
the subject. We proved, moreover, that those contraries have an
|
|
intermediate in the case of which the said necessity does not
|
|
obtain. Yet when one of the two contraries is a constitutive
|
|
property of the subject, as it is a constitutive property of fire to
|
|
be hot, of snow to be white, it is necessary determinately that one of
|
|
the two contraries, not one or the other, should be present in the
|
|
subject; for fire cannot be cold, or snow black. Thus, it is not the
|
|
case here that one of the two must needs be present in every subject
|
|
receptive of these qualities, but only in that subject of which the
|
|
one forms a constitutive property. Moreover, in such cases it is one
|
|
member of the pair determinately, and not either the one or the other,
|
|
which must be present.
|
|
|
|
In the case of 'positives' and 'privatives', on the other hand,
|
|
neither of the aforesaid statements holds good. For it is not
|
|
necessary that a subject receptive of the qualities should always have
|
|
either the one or the other; that which has not yet advanced to the
|
|
state when sight is natural is not said either to be blind or to
|
|
see. Thus 'positives' and 'privatives' do not belong to that class
|
|
of contraries which consists of those which have no intermediate. On
|
|
the other hand, they do not belong either to that class which consists
|
|
of contraries which have an intermediate. For under certain conditions
|
|
it is necessary that either the one or the other should form part of
|
|
the constitution of every appropriate subject. For when a thing has
|
|
reached the stage when it is by nature capable of sight, it will be
|
|
said either to see or to be blind, and that in an indeterminate sense,
|
|
signifying that the capacity may be either present or absent; for it
|
|
is not necessary either that it should see or that it should be blind,
|
|
but that it should be either in the one state or in the other. Yet
|
|
in the case of those contraries which have an intermediate we found
|
|
that it was never necessary that either the one or the other should be
|
|
present in every appropriate subject, but only that in certain
|
|
subjects one of the pair should be present, and that in a
|
|
determinate sense. It is, therefore, plain that 'positives' and
|
|
'privatives' are not opposed each to each in either of the senses in
|
|
which contraries are opposed.
|
|
|
|
Again, in the case of contraries, it is possible that there should
|
|
be changes from either into the other, while the subject retains its
|
|
identity, unless indeed one of the contraries is a constitutive
|
|
property of that subject, as heat is of fire. For it is possible
|
|
that that that which is healthy should become diseased, that which
|
|
is white, black, that which is cold, hot, that which is good, bad,
|
|
that which is bad, good. The bad man, if he is being brought into a
|
|
better way of life and thought, may make some advance, however slight,
|
|
and if he should once improve, even ever so little, it is plain that
|
|
he might change completely, or at any rate make very great progress;
|
|
for a man becomes more and more easily moved to virtue, however
|
|
small the improvement was at first. It is, therefore, natural to
|
|
suppose that he will make yet greater progress than he has made in the
|
|
past; and as this process goes on, it will change him completely and
|
|
establish him in the contrary state, provided he is not hindered by
|
|
lack of time. In the case of 'positives' and 'privatives', however,
|
|
change in both directions is impossible. There may be a change from
|
|
possession to privation, but not from privation to possession. The man
|
|
who has become blind does not regain his sight; the man who has become
|
|
bald does not regain his hair; the man who has lost his teeth does not
|
|
grow his grow a new set. (iv) Statements opposed as affirmation and
|
|
negation belong manifestly to a class which is distinct, for in this
|
|
case, and in this case only, it is necessary for the one opposite to
|
|
be true and the other false.
|
|
|
|
Neither in the case of contraries, nor in the case of
|
|
correlatives, nor in the case of 'positives' and 'privatives', is it
|
|
necessary for one to be true and the other false. Health and disease
|
|
are contraries: neither of them is true or false. 'Double' and
|
|
'half' are opposed to each other as correlatives: neither of them is
|
|
true or false. The case is the same, of course, with regard to
|
|
'positives' and 'privatives' such as 'sight' and 'blindness'. In
|
|
short, where there is no sort of combination of words, truth and
|
|
falsity have no place, and all the opposites we have mentioned so
|
|
far consist of simple words.
|
|
|
|
At the same time, when the words which enter into opposed statements
|
|
are contraries, these, more than any other set of opposites, would
|
|
seem to claim this characteristic. 'Socrates is ill' is the contrary
|
|
of 'Socrates is well', but not even of such composite expressions is
|
|
it true to say that one of the pair must always be true and the
|
|
other false. For if Socrates exists, one will be true and the other
|
|
false, but if he does not exist, both will be false; for neither
|
|
'Socrates is ill' nor 'Socrates is well' is true, if Socrates does not
|
|
exist at all.
|
|
|
|
In the case of 'positives' and 'privatives', if the subject does not
|
|
exist at all, neither proposition is true, but even if the subject
|
|
exists, it is not always the fact that one is true and the other
|
|
false. For 'Socrates has sight' is the opposite of 'Socrates is blind'
|
|
in the sense of the word 'opposite' which applies to possession and
|
|
privation. Now if Socrates exists, it is not necessary that one should
|
|
be true and the other false, for when he is not yet able to acquire
|
|
the power of vision, both are false, as also if Socrates is altogether
|
|
non-existent.
|
|
|
|
But in the case of affirmation and negation, whether the subject
|
|
exists or not, one is always false and the other true. For manifestly,
|
|
if Socrates exists, one of the two propositions 'Socrates is ill',
|
|
'Socrates is not ill', is true, and the other false. This is
|
|
likewise the case if he does not exist; for if he does not exist, to
|
|
say that he is ill is false, to say that he is not ill is true. Thus
|
|
it is in the case of those opposites only, which are opposite in the
|
|
sense in which the term is used with reference to affirmation and
|
|
negation, that the rule holds good, that one of the pair must be
|
|
true and the other false.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
That the contrary of a good is an evil is shown by induction: the
|
|
contrary of health is disease, of courage, cowardice, and so on. But
|
|
the contrary of an evil is sometimes a good, sometimes an evil. For
|
|
defect, which is an evil, has excess for its contrary, this also being
|
|
an evil, and the mean. which is a good, is equally the contrary of the
|
|
one and of the other. It is only in a few cases, however, that we
|
|
see instances of this: in most, the contrary of an evil is a good.
|
|
|
|
In the case of contraries, it is not always necessary that if one
|
|
exists the other should also exist: for if all become healthy there
|
|
will be health and no disease, and again, if everything turns white,
|
|
there will be white, but no black. Again, since the fact that Socrates
|
|
is ill is the contrary of the fact that Socrates is well, and two
|
|
contrary conditions cannot both obtain in one and the same
|
|
individual at the same time, both these contraries could not exist
|
|
at once: for if that Socrates was well was a fact, then that
|
|
Socrates was ill could not possibly be one.
|
|
|
|
It is plain that contrary attributes must needs be present in
|
|
subjects which belong to the same species or genus. Disease and health
|
|
require as their subject the body of an animal; white and black
|
|
require a body, without further qualification; justice and injustice
|
|
require as their subject the human soul.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, it is necessary that pairs of contraries should in all
|
|
cases either belong to the same genus or belong to contrary genera
|
|
or be themselves genera. White and black belong to the same genus,
|
|
colour; justice and injustice, to contrary genera, virtue and vice;
|
|
while good and evil do not belong to genera, but are themselves actual
|
|
genera, with terms under them.
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
There are four senses in which one thing can be said to be 'prior'
|
|
to another. Primarily and most properly the term has reference to
|
|
time: in this sense the word is used to indicate that one thing is
|
|
older or more ancient than another, for the expressions 'older' and
|
|
'more ancient' imply greater length of time.
|
|
|
|
Secondly, one thing is said to be 'prior' to another when the
|
|
sequence of their being cannot be reversed. In this sense 'one' is
|
|
'prior' to 'two'. For if 'two' exists, it follows directly that
|
|
'one' must exist, but if 'one' exists, it does not follow
|
|
necessarily that 'two' exists: thus the sequence subsisting cannot
|
|
be reversed. It is agreed, then, that when the sequence of two
|
|
things cannot be reversed, then that one on which the other depends is
|
|
called 'prior' to that other.
|
|
|
|
In the third place, the term 'prior' is used with reference to any
|
|
order, as in the case of science and of oratory. For in sciences which
|
|
use demonstration there is that which is prior and that which is
|
|
posterior in order; in geometry, the elements are prior to the
|
|
propositions; in reading and writing, the letters of the alphabet
|
|
are prior to the syllables. Similarly, in the case of speeches, the
|
|
exordium is prior in order to the narrative.
|
|
|
|
Besides these senses of the word, there is a fourth. That which is
|
|
better and more honourable is said to have a natural priority. In
|
|
common parlance men speak of those whom they honour and love as
|
|
'coming first' with them. This sense of the word is perhaps the most
|
|
far-fetched.
|
|
|
|
Such, then, are the different senses in which the term 'prior' is
|
|
used.
|
|
|
|
Yet it would seem that besides those mentioned there is yet another.
|
|
For in those things, the being of each of which implies that of the
|
|
other, that which is in any way the cause may reasonably be said to be
|
|
by nature 'prior' to the effect. It is plain that there are
|
|
instances of this. The fact of the being of a man carries with it
|
|
the truth of the proposition that he is, and the implication is
|
|
reciprocal: for if a man is, the proposition wherein we allege that he
|
|
is true, and conversely, if the proposition wherein we allege that
|
|
he is true, then he is. The true proposition, however, is in no way
|
|
the cause of the being of the man, but the fact of the man's being
|
|
does seem somehow to be the cause of the truth of the proposition, for
|
|
the truth or falsity of the proposition depends on the fact of the
|
|
man's being or not being.
|
|
|
|
Thus the word 'prior' may be used in five senses.
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
|
The term 'simultaneous' is primarily and most appropriately
|
|
applied to those things the genesis of the one of which is
|
|
simultaneous with that of the other; for in such cases neither is
|
|
prior or posterior to the other. Such things are said to be
|
|
simultaneous in point of time. Those things, again, are 'simultaneous'
|
|
in point of nature, the being of each of which involves that of the
|
|
other, while at the same time neither is the cause of the other's
|
|
being. This is the case with regard to the double and the half, for
|
|
these are reciprocally dependent, since, if there is a double, there
|
|
is also a half, and if there is a half, there is also a double,
|
|
while at the same time neither is the cause of the being of the other.
|
|
|
|
Again, those species which are distinguished one from another and
|
|
opposed one to another within the same genus are said to be
|
|
'simultaneous' in nature. I mean those species which are
|
|
distinguished each from each by one and the same method of division.
|
|
Thus the 'winged' species is simultaneous with the 'terrestrial' and
|
|
the 'water' species. These are distinguished within the same genus,
|
|
and are opposed each to each, for the genus 'animal' has the 'winged',
|
|
the 'terrestrial', and the 'water' species, and no one of these is
|
|
prior or posterior to another; on the contrary, all such things appear
|
|
to be 'simultaneous' in nature. Each of these also, the terrestrial,
|
|
the winged, and the water species, can be divided again into
|
|
subspecies. Those species, then, also will be 'simultaneous' point
|
|
of nature, which, belonging to the same genus, are distinguished
|
|
each from each by one and the same method of differentiation.
|
|
|
|
But genera are prior to species, for the sequence of their being
|
|
cannot be reversed. If there is the species 'water-animal', there will
|
|
be the genus 'animal', but granted the being of the genus 'animal', it
|
|
does not follow necessarily that there will be the species
|
|
'water-animal'.
|
|
|
|
Those things, therefore, are said to be 'simultaneous' in nature,
|
|
the being of each of which involves that of the other, while at the
|
|
same time neither is in any way the cause of the other's being;
|
|
those species, also, which are distinguished each from each and
|
|
opposed within the same genus. Those things, moreover, are
|
|
'simultaneous' in the unqualified sense of the word which come into
|
|
being at the same time.
|
|
|
|
14
|
|
|
|
There are six sorts of movement: generation, destruction,
|
|
increase, diminution, alteration, and change of place.
|
|
|
|
It is evident in all but one case that all these sorts of movement
|
|
are distinct each from each. Generation is distinct from
|
|
destruction, increase and change of place from diminution, and so
|
|
on. But in the case of alteration it may be argued that the process
|
|
necessarily implies one or other of the other five sorts of motion.
|
|
This is not true, for we may say that all affections, or nearly all,
|
|
produce in us an alteration which is distinct from all other sorts
|
|
of motion, for that which is affected need not suffer either
|
|
increase or diminution or any of the other sorts of motion. Thus
|
|
alteration is a distinct sort of motion; for, if it were not, the
|
|
thing altered would not only be altered, but would forthwith
|
|
necessarily suffer increase or diminution or some one of the other
|
|
sorts of motion in addition; which as a matter of fact is not the
|
|
case. Similarly that which was undergoing the process of increase or
|
|
was subject to some other sort of motion would, if alteration were not
|
|
a distinct form of motion, necessarily be subject to alteration
|
|
also. But there are some things which undergo increase but yet not
|
|
alteration. The square, for instance, if a gnomon is applied to it,
|
|
undergoes increase but not alteration, and so it is with all other
|
|
figures of this sort. Alteration and increase, therefore, are
|
|
distinct.
|
|
|
|
Speaking generally, rest is the contrary of motion. But the
|
|
different forms of motion have their own contraries in other forms;
|
|
thus destruction is the contrary of generation, diminution of
|
|
increase, rest in a place, of change of place. As for this last,
|
|
change in the reverse direction would seem to be most truly its
|
|
contrary; thus motion upwards is the contrary of motion downwards
|
|
and vice versa.
|
|
|
|
In the case of that sort of motion which yet remains, of those
|
|
that have been enumerated, it is not easy to state what is its
|
|
contrary. It appears to have no contrary, unless one should define the
|
|
contrary here also either as 'rest in its quality' or as 'change in
|
|
the direction of the contrary quality', just as we defined the
|
|
contrary of change of place either as rest in a place or as change
|
|
in the reverse direction. For a thing is altered when change of
|
|
quality takes place; therefore either rest in its quality or change in
|
|
the direction of the contrary may be called the contrary of this
|
|
qualitative form of motion. In this way becoming white is the contrary
|
|
of becoming black; there is alteration in the contrary direction,
|
|
since a change of a qualitative nature takes place.
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
The term 'to have' is used in various senses. In the first place
|
|
it is used with reference to habit or disposition or any other
|
|
quality, for we are said to 'have' a piece of knowledge or a virtue.
|
|
Then, again, it has reference to quantity, as, for instance, in the
|
|
case of a man's height; for he is said to 'have' a height of three
|
|
or four cubits. It is used, moreover, with regard to apparel, a man
|
|
being said to 'have' a coat or tunic; or in respect of something which
|
|
we have on a part of ourselves, as a ring on the hand: or in respect
|
|
of something which is a part of us, as hand or foot. The term refers
|
|
also to content, as in the case of a vessel and wheat, or of a jar and
|
|
wine; a jar is said to 'have' wine, and a corn-measure wheat. The
|
|
expression in such cases has reference to content. Or it refers to
|
|
that which has been acquired; we are said to 'have' a house or a
|
|
field. A man is also said to 'have' a wife, and a wife a husband,
|
|
and this appears to be the most remote meaning of the term, for by the
|
|
use of it we mean simply that the husband lives with the wife.
|
|
|
|
Other senses of the word might perhaps be found, but the most
|
|
ordinary ones have all been enumerated.
|
|
|
|
-THE END-
|
|
.
|