457 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
457 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
350 BC
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ON SLEEP AND SLEEPLESSNESS
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by Aristotle
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translated by J. I. Beare
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1
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WITH regard to sleep and waking, we must consider what they are:
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whether they are peculiar to soul or to body, or common to both; and
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if common, to what part of soul or body they appertain: further,
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from what cause it arises that they are attributes of animals, and
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whether all animals share in them both, or some partake of the one
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only, others of the other only, or some partake of neither and some of
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both.
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Further, in addition to these questions, we must also inquire what
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the dream is, and from what cause sleepers sometimes dream, and
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sometimes do not; or whether the truth is that sleepers always dream
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but do not always remember (their dream); and if this occurs, what its
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explanation is.
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Again, [we must inquire] whether it is possible or not to foresee
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the future (in dreams), and if it be possible, in what manner;
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further, whether, supposing it possible, it extends only to things
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to be accomplished by the agency of Man, or to those also of which the
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cause lies in supra-human agency, and which result from the workings
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of Nature, or of Spontaneity.
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First, then, this much is clear, that waking and sleep appertain
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to the same part of an animal, inasmuch as they are opposites, and
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sleep is evidently a privation of waking. For contraries, in natural
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as well as in all other matters, are seen always to present themselves
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in the same subject, and to be affections of the same: examples
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are-health and sickness, beauty and ugliness, strength and weakness,
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sight and blindness, hearing and deafness. This is also clear from the
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following considerations. The criterion by which we know the waking
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person to be awake is identical with that by which we know the sleeper
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to be asleep; for we assume that one who is exercising
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sense-perception is awake, and that every one who is awake perceives
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either some external movement or else some movement in his own
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consciousness. If waking, then, consists in nothing else than the
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exercise of sense-perception, the inference is clear, that the
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organ, in virtue of which animals perceive, is that by which they
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wake, when they are awake, or sleep, when they are awake, or sleep,
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when they are asleep.
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But since the exercise of sense-perception does not belong to soul
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or body exclusively, then (since the subject of actuality is in
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every case identical with that of potentiality, and what is called
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sense-perception, as actuality, is a movement of the soul through
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the body) it is clear that its affection is not an affection of soul
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exclusively, and that a soulless body has not the potentiality of
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perception. [Thus sleep and waking are not attributes of pure
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intelligence, on the one hand, or of inanimate bodies, on the other.]
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Now, whereas we have already elsewhere distinguished what are called
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the parts of the soul, and whereas the nutrient is, in all living
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bodies, capable of existing without the other parts, while none of the
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others can exist without the nutrient; it is clear that sleep and
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waking are not affections of such living things as partake only of
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growth and decay, e.g. not of plants, because these have not the
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faculty of sense-perception, whether or not this be capable of
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separate existence; in its potentiality, indeed, and in its
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relationships, it is separable.
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Likewise it is clear that [of those which either sleep or wake]
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there is no animal which is always awake or always asleep, but that
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both these affections belong [alternately] to the same animals. For if
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there be an animal not endued with sense-perception, it is
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impossible that this should either sleep or wake; since both these are
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affections of the activity of the primary faculty of sense-perception.
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But it is equally impossible also that either of these two
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affections should perpetually attach itself to the same animal, e.g.
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that some species of animal should be always asleep or always awake,
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without intermission; for all organs which have a natural function
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must lose power when they work beyond the natural time-limit of
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their working period; for instance, the eyes [must lose power] from
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[too long continued] seeing, and must give it up; and so it is with
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the hand and every other member which has a function. Now, if
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sense-perception is the function of a special organ, this also, if
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it continues perceiving beyond the appointed time-limit of its
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continuous working period, will lose its power, and will do its work
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no longer. Accordingly, if the waking period is determined by this
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fact, that in it sense-perception is free; if in the case of some
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contraries one of the two must be present, while in the case of others
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this is not necessary; if waking is the contrary of sleeping, and
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one of these two must be present to every animal: it must follow
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that the state of sleeping is necessary. Finally, if such affection is
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Sleep, and this is a state of powerlessness arising from excess of
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waking, and excess of waking is in its origin sometimes morbid,
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sometimes not, so that the powerlessness or dissolution of activity
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will be so or not; it is inevitable that every creature which wakes
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must also be capable of sleeping, since it is impossible that it
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should continue actualizing its powers perpetually.
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So, also, it is impossible for any animal to continue always
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sleeping. For sleep is an affection of the organ of
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sense-perception--a sort of tie or inhibition of function imposed on
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it, so that every creature that sleeps must needs have the organ of
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sense-perception. Now, that alone which is capable of sense-perception
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in actuality has the faculty of sense-perception; but to realize
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this faculty, in the proper and unqualified sense, is impossible while
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one is asleep. All sleep, therefore, must be susceptible of awakening.
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Accordingly, almost all other animals are clearly observed to
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partake in sleep, whether they are aquatic, aerial, or terrestrial,
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since fishes of all kinds, and molluscs, as well as all others which
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have eyes, have been seen sleeping. 'Hard-eyed' creatures and
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insects manifestly assume the posture of sleep; but the sleep of all
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such creatures is of brief duration, so that often it might well
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baffle one's observation to decide whether they sleep or not. Of
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testaceous animals, on the contrary, no direct sensible evidence is as
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yet forthcoming to determine whether they sleep, but if the above
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reasoning be convincing to any one, he who follows it will admit
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this [viz. that they do so.]
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That, therefore, all animals sleep may be gathered from these
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considerations. For an animal is defined as such by its possessing
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sense-perception; and we assert that sleep is, in a certain way, an
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inhibition of function, or, as it were, a tie, imposed on
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sense-perception, while its loosening or remission constitutes the
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being awake. But no plant can partake in either of these affections,
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for without sense-perception there is neither sleeping nor waking. But
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creatures which have sense-perception have likewise the feeling of
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pain and pleasure, while those which have these have appetite as well;
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but plants have none of these affections. A mark of this is that the
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nutrient part does its own work better when (the animal) is asleep
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than when it is awake. Nutrition and growth are then especially
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promoted, a fact which implies that creatures do not need
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sense-perception to assist these processes.
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2
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We must now proceed to inquire into the cause why one sleeps and
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wakes, and into the particular nature of the sense-perception, or
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sense-perceptions, if there be several, on which these affections
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depend. Since, then, some animals possess all the modes of
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sense-perception, and some not all, not, for example, sight, while all
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possess touch and taste, except such animals as are imperfectly
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developed, a class of which we have already treated in our work on the
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soul; and since an animal when asleep is unable to exercise, in the
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simple sense any particular sensory faculty whatever, it follows
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that in the state called sleep the same affection must extend to all
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the special senses; because, if it attaches itself to one of them
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but not to another, then an animal while asleep may perceive with
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the latter; but this is impossible.
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Now, since every sense has something peculiar, and also something
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common; peculiar, as, e.g. seeing is to the sense of sight, hearing to
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the auditory sense, and so on with the other senses severally; while
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all are accompanied by a common power, in virtue whereof a person
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perceives that he sees or hears (for, assuredly, it is not by the
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special sense of sight that one sees that he sees; and it is not by
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mere taste, or sight, or both together that one discerns, and has
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the faculty of discerning, that sweet things are different from
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white things, but by a faculty connected in common with all the organs
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of sense; for there is one sensory function, and the controlling
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sensory faculty is one, though differing as a faculty of perception in
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relation to each genus of sensibles, e.g. sound or colour); and
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since this [common sensory activity] subsists in association chiefly
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with the faculty of touch (for this can exist apart from all the other
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organs of sense, but none of them can exist apart from it-a subject of
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which we have treated in our speculations concerning the Soul); it
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is therefore evident that waking and sleeping are an affection of this
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[common and controlling organ of sense-perception]. This explains
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why they belong to all animals, for touch [with which this common
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organ is chiefly connected], alone, [is common] to all [animals].
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For if sleeping were caused by the special senses having each and
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all undergone some affection, it would be strange that these senses,
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for which it is neither necessary nor in a manner possible to
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realize their powers simultaneously, should necessarily all go idle
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and become motionless simultaneously. For the contrary experience,
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viz. that they should not go to rest altogether, would have been
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more reasonably anticipated. But, according to the explanation just
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given, all is quite clear regarding those also. For, when the sense
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organ which controls all the others, and to which all the others are
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tributary, has been in some way affected, that these others should
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be all affected at the same time is inevitable, whereas, if one of the
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tributaries becomes powerless, that the controlling organ should
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also become powerless need in no wise follow.
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It is indeed evident from many considerations that sleep does not
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consist in the mere fact that the special senses do not function or
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that one does not employ them; and that it does not consist merely
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in an inability to exercise the sense-perceptions; for such is what
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happens in cases of swooning. A swoon means just such impotence of
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perception, and certain other cases of unconsciousness also are of
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this nature. Moreover, persons who have the bloodvessels in the neck
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compressed become insensible. But sleep supervenes when such
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incapacity of exercise has neither arisen in some casual organ of
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sense, nor from some chance cause, but when, as has been just
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stated, it has its seat in the primary organ with which one
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perceives objects in general. For when this has become powerless all
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the other sensory organs also must lack power to perceive; but when
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one of them has become powerless, it is not necessary for this also to
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lose its power.
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We must next state the cause to which it is due, and its quality
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as an affection. Now, since there are several types of cause (for we
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assign equally the 'final', the 'efficient', the 'material', and the
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'formal' as causes), in the first place, then, as we assert that
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Nature operates for the sake of an end, and that this end is a good;
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and that to every creature which is endowed by nature with the power
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to move, but cannot with pleasure to itself move always and
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continuously, rest is necessary and beneficial; and since, taught by
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experience, men apply to sleep this metaphorical term, calling it a
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'rest' [from the strain of movement implied in sense-perception]: we
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conclude that its end is the conservation of animals. But the waking
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state is for an animal its highest end, since the exercise of
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sense-perception or of thought is the highest end for all beings to
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which either of these appertains; inasmuch as these are best, and
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the highest end is what is best: whence it follows that sleep
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belongs of necessity to each animal. I use the term 'necessity' in its
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conditional sense, meaning that if an animal is to exist and have
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its own proper nature, it must have certain endowments; and, if
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these are to belong to it, certain others likewise must belong to it
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[as their condition.]
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The next question to be discussed is that of the kind of movement or
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action, taking place within their bodies, from which the affection
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of waking or sleeping arises in animals. Now, we must assume that
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the causes of this affection in all other animals are identical
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with, or analogous to, those which operate in sanguineous animals; and
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that the causes operating in sanguineous animals generally are
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identical with those operating in man. Hence we must consider the
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entire subject in the light of these instances [afforded by
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sanguineous animals, especially man]. Now, it has been definitely
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settled already in another work that sense-perception in animals
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originates ill the same part of the organism in which movement
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originates. This locus of origination is one of three determinate
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loci, viz. that which lies midway between the head and the abdomen.
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This is sanguineous animals is the region of the heart; for all
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sanguineous animals have a heart; and from this it is that both motion
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and the controlling sense-perception originate. Now, as regards
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movement, it is obvious that that of breathing and of the cooling
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process generally takes its rise there; and it is with a view to the
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conservation of the [due amount of] heat in this part that nature
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has formed as she has both the animals which respire, and those
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which cool themselves by moisture. Of this [cooling process] per se we
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shall treat hereafter. In bloodless animals, and insects, and such
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as do not respire, the 'connatural spirit' is seen alternately
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puffed up and subsiding in the part which is in them analogous [to the
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region of the heart in sanguineous animals]. This is clearly
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observable in the holoptera [insects with undivided wings] as wasps
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and bees; also in flies and such creatures. And since to move
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anything, or do anything, is impossible without strength, and
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holding the breath produces strength-in creatures which inhale, the
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holding of that breath which comes from without, but, in creatures
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which do not respire, of that which is connatural (which explains
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why winged insects of the class holoptera, when they move, are
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perceived to make a humming noise, due to the friction of the
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connatural spirit colliding with the diaphragm); and since movement
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is, in every animal, attended with some sense-perception, either
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internal or external, in the primary organ of sense, [we conclude]
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accordingly that if sleeping and waking are affections of this
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organ, the place in which, or the organ in which, sleep and waking
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originate, is self-evident [being that in which movement and
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sense-perception originate, viz. the heart].
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Some persons move in their sleep, and perform many acts like
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waking acts, but not without a phantasm or an exercise of
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sense-perception; for a dream is in a certain way a
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sense-impression. But of them we have to speak later on. Why it is
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that persons when aroused remember their dreams, but do not remember
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these acts which are like waking acts, has been already explained in
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the work 'Of Problems'.
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3
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The point for consideration next in order to the preceding
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is:-What are the processes in which the affection of waking and
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sleeping originates, and whence do they arise? Now, since it is when
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it has sense-perception that an animal must first take food and
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receive growth, and in all cases food in its ultimate form is, in
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sanguineous animals, the natural substance blood, or, in bloodless
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animals, that which is analogous to this; and since the veins are
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the place of the blood, while the origin of these is the heart-an
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assertion which is proved by anatomy-it is manifest that, when the
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external nutriment enters the parts fitted for its reception, the
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evaporation arising from it enters into the veins, and there,
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undergoing a change, is converted into blood, and makes its way to
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their source [the heart]. We have treated of all this when
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discussing the subject of nutrition, but must here recapitulate what
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was there said, in order that we may obtain a scientific view of the
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beginnings of the process, and come to know what exactly happens to
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the primary organ of sense-perception to account for the occurrence of
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waking and sleep. For sleep, as has been shown, is not any given
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impotence of the perceptive faculty; for unconsciousness, a certain
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form of asphyxia, and swooning, all produce such impotence. Moreover
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it is an established fact that some persons in a profound trance
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have still had the imaginative faculty in play. This last point,
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indeed, gives rise to a difficulty; for if it is conceivable that
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one who had swooned should in this state fall asleep, the phantasm
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also which then presented itself to his mind might be regarded as a
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dream. Persons, too, who have fallen into a deep trance, and have come
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to be regarded as dead, say many things while in this condition. The
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same view, however, is to be taken of all these cases, [i.e. that they
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are not cases of sleeping or dreaming].
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As we observed above, sleep is not co-extensive with any and every
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impotence of the perceptive faculty, but this affection is one which
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arises from the evaporation attendant upon the process of nutrition.
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The matter evaporated must be driven onwards to a certain point,
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then turn back, and change its current to and fro, like a tide-race in
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a narrow strait. Now, in every animal the hot naturally tends to
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move [and carry other things] upwards, but when it has reached the
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parts above [becoming cool], it turns back again, and moves
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downwards in a mass. This explains why fits of drowsiness are
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especially apt to come on after meals; for the matter, both the liquid
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and the corporeal, which is borne upwards in a mass, is then of
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considerable quantity. When, therefore, this comes to a stand it
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weighs a person down and causes him to nod, but when it has actually
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sunk downwards, and by its return has repulsed the hot, sleep comes
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on, and the animal so affected is presently asleep. A confirmation
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of this appears from considering the things which induce sleep; they
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all, whether potable or edible, for instance poppy, mandragora,
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wine, darnel, produce a heaviness in the head; and persons borne
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down [by sleepiness] and nodding [drowsily] all seem affected in
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this way, i.e. they are unable to lift up the head or the eye-lids.
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And it is after meals especially that sleep comes on like this, for
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the evaporation from the foods eaten is then copious. It also
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follows certain forms of fatigue; for fatigue operates as a solvent,
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and the dissolved matter acts, if not cold, like food prior to
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digestion. Moreover, some kinds of illness have this same effect;
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those arising from moist and hot secretions, as happens with
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fever-patients and in cases of lethargy. Extreme youth also has this
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effect; infants, for example, sleep a great deal, because of the
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food being all borne upwards-a mark whereof appears in the
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disproportionately large size of the upper parts compared with the
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lower during infancy, which is due to the fact that growth
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predominates in the direction of the former. Hence also they are
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subject to epileptic seizures; for sleep is like epilepsy, and, in a
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sense, actually is a seizure of this sort. Accordingly, the
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beginning of this malady takes place with many during sleep, and their
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subsequent habitual seizures occur in sleep, not in waking hours.
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For when the spirit [evaporation] moves upwards in a volume, on its
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return downwards it distends the veins, and forcibly compresses the
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passage through which respiration is effected. This explains why wines
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are not good for infants or for wet nurses (for it makes no
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difference, doubtless, whether the infants themselves, or their
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nurses, drink them), but such persons should drink them [if at all]
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diluted with water and in small quantity. For wine is spirituous,
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and of all wines the dark more so than any other. The upper parts,
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in infants, are so filled with nutriment that within five months
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[after birth] they do not even turn the neck [sc. to raise the
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head]; for in them, as in persons deeply intoxicated, there is ever
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a large quantity of moisture ascending. It is reasonable, too, to
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think that this affection is the cause of the embryo's remaining at
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rest in the womb at first. Also, as a general rule, persons whose
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veins are inconspicuous, as well as those who are dwarf-like, or
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have abnormally large heads, are addicted to sleep. For in the
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former the veins are narrow, so that it is not easy for the moisture
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to flow down through them; while in the case of dwarfs and those whose
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heads are abnormally large, the impetus of the evaporation upwards
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is excessive. Those [on the contrary] whose veins are large are,
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thanks to the easy flow through the veins, not addicted to sleep,
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unless, indeed, they labour under some other affection which
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counteracts [this easy flow]. Nor are the 'atrabilious' addicted to
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sleep, for in them the inward region is cooled so that the quantity of
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evaporation in their case is not great. For this reason they have
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large appetites, though spare and lean; for their bodily condition
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is as if they derived no benefit from what they eat. The dark bile,
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too, being itself naturally cold, cools also the nutrient tract, and
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the other parts wheresoever such secretion is potentially present
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[i.e. tends to be formed].
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Hence it is plain from what has been said that sleep is a sort of
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concentration, or natural recoil, of the hot matter inwards [towards
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its centre], due to the cause above mentioned. Hence restless movement
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is a marked feature in the case of a person when drowsy. But where
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it [the heat in the upper and outer parts] begins to fail, he grows
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cool, and owing to this cooling process his eye-lids droop.
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Accordingly [in sleep] the upper and outward parts are cool, but the
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inward and lower, i.e. the parts at the feet and in the interior of
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the body, are hot.
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Yet one might found a difficulty on the facts that sleep is most
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oppressive in its onset after meals, and that wine, and other such
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things, though they possess heating properties, are productive of
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sleep, for it is not probable that sleep should be a process of
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cooling while the things that cause sleeping are themselves hot. Is
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the explanation of this, then, to be found in the fact that, as the
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stomach when empty is hot, while replenishment cools it by the
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movement it occasions, so the passages and tracts in the head are
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cooled as the 'evaporation' ascends thither? Or, as those who have hot
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water poured on them feel a sudden shiver of cold, just so in the case
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before us, may it be that, when the hot substance ascends, the cold
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rallying to meet it cools [the aforesaid parts] deprives their
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native heat of all its power, and compels it to retire? Moreover, when
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much food is taken, which [i.e. the nutrient evaporation from which]
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the hot substance carries upwards, this latter, like a fire when fresh
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logs are laid upon it, is itself cooled, until the food has been
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digested.
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For, as has been observed elsewhere, sleep comes on when the
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corporeal element [in the 'evaporation'] conveyed upwards by the
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hot, along the veins, to the head. But when that which has been thus
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carried up can no longer ascend, but is too great in quantity [to do
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so], it forces the hot back again and flows downwards. Hence it is
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that men sink down [as they do in sleep] when the heat which tends
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to keep them erect (man alone, among animals, being naturally erect)
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is withdrawn; and this, when it befalls them, causes
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unconsciousness, and afterwards phantasy.
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|
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Or are the solutions thus proposed barely conceivable accounts of
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the refrigeration which takes place, while, as a matter of fact, the
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region of the brain is, as stated elsewhere, the main determinant of
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the matter? For the brain, or in creatures without a brain that
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|
which corresponds to it, is of all parts of the body the coolest.
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|
Therefore, as moisture turned into vapour by the sun's heat is, when
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|
it has ascended to the upper regions, cooled by the coldness of the
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|
latter, and becoming condensed, is carried downwards, and turned
|
|
into water once more; just so the excrementitious evaporation, when
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|
carried up by the heat to the region of the brain, is condensed into a
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|
'phlegm' (which explains why catarrhs are seen to proceed from the
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|
head); while that evaporation which is nutrient and not unwholesome,
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|
becoming condensed, descends and cools the hot. The tenuity or
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|
narrowness of the veins about the brain itself contributes to its
|
|
being kept cool, and to its not readily admitting the evaporation.
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|
This, then, is a sufficient explanation of the cooling which takes
|
|
place, despite the fact that the evaporation is exceedingly hot.
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|
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|
A person awakes from sleep when digestion is completed: when the
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|
heat, which had been previously forced together in large quantity
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|
within a small compass from out the surrounding part, has once more
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|
prevailed, and when a separation has been effected between the more
|
|
corporeal and the purer blood. The finest and purest blood is that
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|
contained in the head, while the thickest and most turbid is that in
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|
the lower parts. The source of all the blood is, as has been stated
|
|
both here and elsewhere, the heart. Now of the chambers in the heart
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|
the central communicates with each of the two others. Each of the
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|
latter again acts as receiver from each, respectively, of the two
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|
vessels, called the 'great' and the 'aorta'. It is in the central
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|
chamber that the [above-mentioned] separation takes place. To go
|
|
into these matters in detail would, however, be more properly the
|
|
business of a different treatise from the present. Owing to the fact
|
|
that the blood formed after the assimilation of food is especially
|
|
in need of separation, sleep [then especially] occurs [and lasts]
|
|
until the purest part of this blood has been separated off into the
|
|
upper parts of the body, and the most turbid into the lower parts.
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|
When this has taken place animals awake from sleep, being released
|
|
from the heaviness consequent on taking food. We have now stated the
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|
cause of sleeping, viz. that it consists in the recoil by the
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|
corporeal element, upborne by the connatural heat, in a mass upon
|
|
the primary sense-organ; we have also stated what sleep is, having
|
|
shown that it is a seizure of the primary sense-organ, rendering it
|
|
unable to actualize its powers; arising of necessity (for it is
|
|
impossible for an animal to exist if the conditions which render it an
|
|
animal be not fulfilled), i.e. for the sake of its conservation; since
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|
remission of movement tends to the conservation of animals.
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-THE END-
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.
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