535 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
535 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
350 BC
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ON THE MOTION OF ANIMALS
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by Aristotle
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translated by A. S. L. Farquharson
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1
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ELSEWHERE we have investigated in detail the movement of animals
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after their various kinds, the differences between them, and the
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reasons for their particular characters (for some animals fly, some
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swim, some walk, others move in various other ways); there remains
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an investigation of the common ground of any sort of animal movement
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whatsoever.
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Now we have already determined (when we were discussing whether
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eternal motion exists or not, and its definition, if it does exist)
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that the origin of all other motions is that which moves itself, and
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that the origin of this is the immovable, and that the prime mover
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must of necessity be immovable. And we must grasp this not only
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generally in theory, but also by reference to individuals in the world
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of sense, for with these in view we seek general theories, and with
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these we believe that general theories ought to harmonize. Now in
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the world of sense too it is plainly impossible for movement to be
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initiated if there is nothing at rest, and before all else in our
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present subject- animal life. For if one of the parts of an animal
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be moved, another must be at rest, and this is the purpose of their
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joints; animals use joints like a centre, and the whole member, in
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which the joint is, becomes both one and two, both straight and
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bent, changing potentially and actually by reason of the joint. And
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when it is bending and being moved one of the points in the joint is
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moved and one is at rest, just as if the points A and D of a
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diameter were at rest, and B were moved, and DAC were generated.
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However, in the geometrical illustration, the centre is held to be
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altogether indivisible (for in mathematics motion is a fiction, as the
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phrase goes, no mathematical entity being really moved), whereas in
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the case of joints the centres become now one potentially and
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divided actually, and now one actually and divided potentially. But
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still the origin of movement, qua origin, always remains at rest
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when the lower part of a limb is moved; for example, the elbow
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joint, when the forearm is moved, and the shoulder, when the whole
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arm; the knee when the tibia is moved, and the hip when the whole leg.
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Accordingly it is plain that each animal as a whole must have within
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itself a point at rest, whence will be the origin of that which is
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moved, and supporting itself upon which it will be moved both as a
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complete whole and in its members.
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2
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But the point of rest in the animal is still quite ineffectual
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unless there be something without which is absolutely at rest and
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immovable. Now it is worth while to pause and consider what has been
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said, for it involves a speculation which extends beyond animals
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even to the motion and march of the universe. For just as there must
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be something immovable within the animal, if it is to be moved, so
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even more must there be without it something immovable, by
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supporting itself upon which that which is moved moves. For were
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that something always to give way (as it does for mice walking in
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grain or persons walking in sand) advance would be impossible, and
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neither would there be any walking unless the ground were to remain
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still, nor any flying or swimming were not the air and the sea to
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resist. And this which resists must needs be different from what is
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moved, the whole of it from the whole of that, and what is thus
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immovable must be no part of what is moved; otherwise there will be no
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movement. Evidence of this lies in the problem why it is that a man
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easily moves a boat from outside, if he push with a pole, putting it
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against the mast or some other part, but if he tried to do this when
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in the boat itself he would never move it, no not giant Tityus himself
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nor Boreas blowing from inside the ship, if he really were blowing
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in the way painters represent him; for they paint him sending the
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breath out from the boat. For whether one blew gently or so stoutly as
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to make a very great wind, and whether what were thrown or pushed were
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wind or something else, it is necessary in the first place to be
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supported upon one of one's own members which is at rest and so to
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push, and in the second place for this member, either itself, or
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that of which it is a part, to remain at rest, fixing itself against
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something external to itself. Now the man who is himself in the
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boat, if he pushes, fixing himself against the boat, very naturally
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does not move the boat, because what he pushes against should properly
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remain at rest. Now what he is trying to move, and what he is fixing
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himself against is in his case the same. If, however, he pushes or
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pulls from outside he does move it, for the ground is no part of the
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boat.
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3
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Here we may ask the difficult question whether if something moves
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the whole heavens this mover must be immovable, and moreover be no
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part of the heavens, nor in the heavens. For either it is moved itself
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and moves the heavens, in which case it must touch something immovable
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in order to create movement, and then this is no part of that which
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creates movement; or if the mover is from the first immovable it
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will equally be no part of that which is moved. In this point at least
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they argue correctly who say that as the Sphere is carried round in
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a circle no single part remains still, for then either the whole would
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necessarily stand still or its continuity be torn asunder; but they
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argue less well in supposing that the poles have a certain force,
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though conceived as having no magnitude, but as merely termini or
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points. For besides the fact that no such things have any
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substantial existence it is impossible for a single movement to be
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initiated by what is twofold; and yet they make the poles two. From
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a review of these difficulties we may conclude that there is something
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so related to the whole of Nature, as the earth is to animals and
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things moved by them.
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And the mythologists with their fable of Atlas setting his feet upon
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the earth appear to have based the fable upon intelligent grounds.
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They make Atlas a kind of diameter twirling the heavens about the
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poles. Now as the earth remains still this would be reasonable enough,
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but their theory involves them in the position that the earth is no
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part of the universe. And further the force of that which initiates
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movement must be made equal to the force of that which remains at
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rest. For there is a definite quantity of force or power by dint of
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which that which remains at rest does so, just as there is of force by
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dint of which that which initiates movement does so; and as there is a
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necessary proportion between opposite motions, so there is between
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absences of motion. Now equal forces are unaffected by one another,
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but are overcome by a superiority of force. And so in their theory
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Atlas, or whatever similar power initiates movement from within,
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must exert no more force than will exactly balance the stability of
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the earth- otherwise the earth will be moved out of her place in the
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centre of things. For as the pusher pushes so is the pushed pushed,
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and with equal force. But the prime mover moves that which is to begin
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with at rest, so that the power it exerts is greater, rather than
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equal and like to the power which produces absence of motion in that
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which is moved. And similarly also the power of what is moved and so
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moves must be greater than the power of that which is moved but does
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not initiate movement. Therefore the force of the earth in its
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immobility will have to be as great as the force of the whole heavens,
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and of that which moves the heavens. But if that is impossible, it
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follows that the heavens cannot possibly be moved by any force of this
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kind inside them.
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4
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There is a further difficulty about the motions of the parts of
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the heavens which, as akin to what has gone before, may be
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considered next. For if one could overcome by force of motion the
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immobility of the earth he would clearly move it away from the centre.
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And it is plain that the power from which this force would originate
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will not be infinite, for the earth is not infinite and therefore
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its weight is not. Now there are more senses than one of the word
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'impossible'. When we say it is impossible to see a sound, and when we
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say it is impossible to see the men in the moon, we use two senses
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of the word; the former is of necessity, the latter, though their
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nature is to be seen, cannot as a fact be seen by us. Now we suppose
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that the heavens are of necessity impossible to destroy and to
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dissolve, whereas the result of the present argument would be to do
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away with this necessity. For it is natural and possible for a
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motion to exist greater than the force by dint of which the earth is
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at rest, or than that by dint of which Fire and Aether are moved. If
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then there are superior motions, these will be dissolved in succession
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by one another: and if there actually are not, but might possibly be
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(for the earth cannot be infinite because no body can possibly be
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infinite), there is a possibility of the heavens being dissolved.
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For what is to prevent this coming to pass, unless it be impossible?
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And it is not impossible unless the opposite is necessary. This
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difficulty, however, we will discuss elsewhere.
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To resume, must there be something immovable and at rest outside
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of what is moved, and no part of it, or not? And must this necessarily
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be so also in the case of the universe? Perhaps it would be thought
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strange were the origin of movement inside. And to those who so
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conceive it the word of Homer would appear to have been well spoken:
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'Nay, ye would not pull Zeus, highest of all from heaven to the
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plain, no not even if ye toiled right hard; come, all ye gods and
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goddesses! Set hands to the chain'; for that which is entirely
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immovable cannot possibly be moved by anything. And herein lies the
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solution of the difficulty stated some time back, the possibility or
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impossibility of dissolving the system of the heavens, in that it
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depends from an original which is immovable.
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Now in the animal world there must be not only an immovable without,
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but also within those things which move in place, and initiate their
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own movement. For one part of an animal must be moved, and another
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be at rest, and against this the part which is moved will support
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itself and be moved; for example, if it move one of its parts; for one
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part, as it were, supports itself against another part at rest.
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But about things without life which are moved one might ask the
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question whether all contain in themselves both that which is at
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rest and that which initiates movement, and whether they also, for
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instance fire, earth, or any other inanimate thing, must support
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themselves against something outside which is at rest. Or is this
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impossible and must it not be looked for rather in those primary
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causes by which they are set in motion? For all things without life
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are moved by something other, and the origin of all things so moved
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are things which move themselves. And out of these we have spoken
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about animals (for they must all have in themselves that which is at
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rest, and without them that against which they are supported); but
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whether there is some higher and prime mover is not clear, and an
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origin of that kind involves a different discussion. Animals at any
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rate which move themselves are all moved supporting themselves on what
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is outside them, even when they inspire and expire; for there is no
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essential difference between casting a great and a small weight, and
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this is what men do when they spit and cough and when they breathe
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in and breathe out.
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5
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But is it only in that which moves itself in place that there must
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be a point at rest, or does this hold also of that which causes its
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own qualitative changes, and its own growth? Now the question of
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original generation and decay is different; for if there is, as we
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hold, a primary movement, this would be the cause of generation and
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decay, and probably of all the secondary movements too. And as in
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the universe, so in the animal world this is the primary movement,
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when the creature attains maturity; and therefore it is the cause of
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growth, when the creature becomes the cause of its own growth, and the
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cause too of alteration. But if this is not the primary movement
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then the point at rest is not necessary. However, the earliest
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growth and alteration in the living creature arise through another and
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by other channels, nor can anything possibly be the cause of its own
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generation and decay, for the mover must exist before the moved, the
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begetter before the begotten, and nothing is prior to itself.
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6
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Now whether the soul is moved or not, and how it is moved if it be
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moved, has been stated before in our treatise concerning it. And since
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all inorganic things are moved by some other thing- and the manner
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of the movement of the first and eternally moved, and how the first
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mover moves it, has been determined before in our Metaphysics, it
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remains to inquire how the soul moves the body, and what is the origin
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of movement in a living creature. For, if we except the movement of
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the universe, things with life are the causes of the movement of all
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else, that is of all that are not moved by one another by mutual
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impact. And so all their motions have a term or limit, inasmuch as the
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movements of things with life have such. For all living things both
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move and are moved with some object, so that this is the term of all
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their movement, the end, that is, in view. Now we see that the
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living creature is moved by intellect, imagination, purpose, wish, and
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appetite. And all these are reducible to mind and desire. For both
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imagination and sensation are on common ground with mind, since all
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three are faculties of judgement though differing according to
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distinctions stated elsewhere. Will, however, impulse, and appetite,
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are all three forms of desire, while purpose belongs both to intellect
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and to desire. Therefore the object of desire or of intellect first
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initiates movement, not, that is, every object of intellect, only
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the end in the domain of conduct. Accordingly among goods that which
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moves is a practical end, not the good in its whole extent. For it
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initiates movement only so far as something else is for its sake, or
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so far as it is the object of that which is for the sake of
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something else. And we must suppose that a seeming good may take the
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room of actual good, and so may the pleasant, which is itself a
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seeming good. From these considerations it is clear that in one regard
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that which is eternally moved by the eternal mover is moved in the
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same way as every living creature, in another regard differently,
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and so while it is moved eternally, the movement of living creatures
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has a term. Now the eternal beautiful, and the truly and primarily
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good (which is not at one time good, at another time not good), is too
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divine and precious to be relative to anything else. The prime mover
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then moves, itself being unmoved, whereas desire and its faculty are
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moved and so move. But it is not necessary for the last in the chain
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of things moved to move something else; wherefore it is plainly
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reasonable that motion in place should be the last of what happens
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in the region of things happening, since the living creature is
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moved and goes forward by reason of desire or purpose, when some
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alteration has been set going on the occasion of sensation or
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imagination.
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7
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But how is it that thought (viz. sense, imagination, and thought
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proper) is sometimes followed by action, sometimes not; sometimes by
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movement, sometimes not? What happens seems parallel to the case of
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thinking and inferring about the immovable objects of science. There
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the end is the truth seen (for, when one conceives the two
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premisses, one at once conceives and comprehends the conclusion),
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but here the two premisses result in a conclusion which is an
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action- for example, one conceives that every man ought to walk, one
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is a man oneself: straightway one walks; or that, in this case, no man
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should walk, one is a man: straightway one remains at rest. And one so
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acts in the two cases provided that there is nothing in the one case
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to compel or in the other to prevent. Again, I ought to create a good,
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a house is good: straightway I make a house. I need a covering, a coat
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is a covering: I need a coat. What I need I ought to make, I need a
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coat: I make a coat. And the conclusion I must make a coat is an
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action. And the action goes back to the beginning or first step. If
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there is to be a coat, one must first have B, and if B then A, so
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one gets A to begin with. Now that the action is the conclusion is
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clear. But the premisses of action are of two kinds, of the good and
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of the possible.
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And as in some cases of speculative inquiry we suppress one
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premise so here the mind does not stop to consider at all an obvious
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minor premise; for example if walking is good for man, one does not
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dwell upon the minor 'I am a man'. And so what we do without
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reflection, we do quickly. For when a man actualizes himself in
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relation to his object either by perceiving, or imagining or
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conceiving it, what he desires he does at once. For the actualizing of
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desire is a substitute for inquiry or reflection. I want to drink,
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says appetite; this is drink, says sense or imagination or mind:
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straightway I drink. In this way living creatures are impelled to move
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and to act, and desire is the last or immediate cause of movement, and
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desire arises after perception or after imagination and conception.
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And things that desire to act now create and now act under the
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influence of appetite or impulse or of desire or wish.
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The movements of animals may be compared with those of automatic
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puppets, which are set going on the occasion of a tiny movement; the
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levers are released, and strike the twisted strings against one
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another; or with the toy wagon. For the child mounts on it and moves
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it straight forward, and then again it is moved in a circle owing to
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its wheels being of unequal diameter (the smaller acts like a centre
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on the same principle as the cylinders). Animals have parts of a
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similar kind, their organs, the sinewy tendons to wit and the bones;
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the bones are like the wooden levers in the automaton, and the iron;
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the tendons are like the strings, for when these are tightened or
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leased movement begins. However, in the automata and the toy wagon
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there is no change of quality, though if the inner wheels became
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smaller and greater by turns there would be the same circular movement
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set up. In an animal the same part has the power of becoming now
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larger and now smaller, and changing its form, as the parts increase
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by warmth and again contract by cold and change their quality. This
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change of quality is caused by imaginations and sensations and by
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ideas. Sensations are obviously a form of change of quality, and
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imagination and conception have the same effect as the objects so
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imagined and conceived For in a measure the form conceived be it of
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hot or cold or pleasant or fearful is like what the actual objects
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would be, and so we shudder and are frightened at a mere idea. Now all
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these affections involve changes of quality, and with those changes
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some parts of the body enlarge, others grow smaller. And it is not
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hard to see that a small change occurring at the centre makes great
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and numerous changes at the circumference, just as by shifting the
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rudder a hair's breadth you get a wide deviation at the prow. And
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further, when by reason of heat or cold or some kindred affection a
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change is set up in the region of the heart, even in an
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imperceptibly small part of the heart, it produces a vast difference
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in the periphery of the body,- blushing, let us say, or turning white,
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goose-skin and shivers and their opposites.
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8
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But to return, the object we pursue or avoid in the field of
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action is, as has been explained, the original of movement, and upon
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the conception and imagination of this there necessarily follows a
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change in the temperature of the body. For what is painful we avoid,
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what is pleasing we pursue. We are, however, unconscious of what
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happens in the minute parts; still anything painful or pleasing is
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generally speaking accompanied by a definite change of temperature
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in the body. One may see this by considering the affections. Blind
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courage and panic fears, erotic motions, and the rest of the corporeal
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affections, pleasant and painful, are all accompanied by a change of
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temperature, some in a particular member, others in the body
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generally. So, memories and anticipations, using as it were the
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reflected images of these pleasures and pains, are now more and now
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less causes of the same changes of temperature. And so we see the
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reason of nature's handiwork in the inward parts, and in the centres
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of movement of the organic members; they change from solid to moist,
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and from moist to solid, from soft to hard and vice versa. And so when
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these are affected in this way, and when besides the passive and
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active have the constitution we have many times described, as often as
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it comes to pass that one is active and the other passive, and neither
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of them falls short of the elements of its essence, straightway one
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acts and the other responds. And on this account thinking that one
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ought to go and going are virtually simultaneous, unless there be
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something else to hinder action. The organic parts are suitably
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prepared by the affections, these again by desire, and desire by
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imagination. Imagination in its turn depends either upon conception or
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sense-perception. And the simultaneity and speed are due to the
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natural correspondence of the active and passive.
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However, that which first moves the animal organism must be
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situate in a definite original. Now we have said that a joint is the
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beginning of one part of a limb, the end of another. And so nature
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employs it sometimes as one, sometimes as two. When movement arises
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from a joint, one of the extreme points must remain at rest, and the
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other be moved (for as we explained above the mover must support
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itself against a point at rest); accordingly, in the case of the
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elbow-joint, the last point of the forearm is moved but does not
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move anything, while, in the flexion, one point of the elbow, which
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lies in the whole forearm that is being moved, is moved, but there
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must also be a point which is unmoved, and this is our meaning when we
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speak of a point which is in potency one, but which becomes two in
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actual exercise. Now if the arm were the living animal, somewhere in
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its elbow-joint would be situate the original seat of the moving soul.
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Since, however, it is possible for a lifeless thing to be so related
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to the hand as the forearm is to the upper (for example, when a man
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moves a stick in his hand), it is evident that the soul, the
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original of movement, could not lie in either of the two extreme
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points, neither, that is, in the last point of the stick which is
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moved, nor in the original point which causes movement. For the
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stick too has an end point and an originative point by reference to
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the hand. Accordingly, this example shows that the moving original
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which derives from the soul is not in the stick and if not, then not
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in the hand; for a precisely similar relation obtains between the hand
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and the wrist, as between the wrist and the elbow. In this matter it
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makes no difference whether the part is a continuous part of the
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body or not; the stick may be looked at as a detached part of the
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whole. It follows then of necessity that the original cannot lie in
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any individual origin which is the end of another member, even
|
|
though there may lie another part outside the one in question. For
|
|
example, relatively to the end point of the stick the hand is the
|
|
original, but the original of the hand's movement is in the wrist. And
|
|
so if the true original is not in the hand, be-there is still
|
|
something higher up, neither is the true original in the wrist, for
|
|
once more if the elbow is at rest the whole part below it can be moved
|
|
as a continuous whole.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
Now since the left and the right sides are symmetrical, and these
|
|
opposites are moved simultaneously, it cannot be that the left is
|
|
moved by the right remaining stationary, nor vice versa; the
|
|
original must always be in what lies above both. Therefore, the
|
|
original seat of the moving soul must be in that which lies in the
|
|
middle, for of both extremes the middle is the limiting point; and
|
|
this is similarly related to the movements from above [and below,]
|
|
those that is from the head, and to the bones which spring from the
|
|
spinal column, in creatures that have a spinal column.
|
|
|
|
And this is a reasonable arrangement. For the sensorium is in our
|
|
opinion in the centre too; and so, if the region of the original of
|
|
movement is altered in structure through sense-perception and thus
|
|
changes, it carries with it the parts that depend upon it and they too
|
|
are extended or contracted, and in this way the movement of the
|
|
creature necessarily follows. And the middle of the body must needs be
|
|
in potency one but in action more than one; for the limbs are moved
|
|
simultaneously from the original seat of movement, and when one is
|
|
at rest the other is moved. For example, in the line BAC, B is
|
|
moved, and A is the mover. There must, however, be a point at rest
|
|
if one is to move, the other to be moved. A (AE) then being one in
|
|
potency must be two in action, and so be a definite spatial
|
|
magnitude not a mathematical point. Again, C may be moved
|
|
simultaneously with B. Both the originals then in A must move and
|
|
be, and so there must be something other than them which moves but
|
|
is not moved. For otherwise, when the movement begins, the extremes,
|
|
i.e. the originals, in A would rest upon one another, like two men
|
|
putting themselves back to back and so moving their legs. There must
|
|
then be some one thing which moves both. This something is the soul,
|
|
distinct from the spatial magnitude just described and yet located
|
|
therein.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
Although from the point of view of the definition of movement- a
|
|
definition which gives the cause- desire is the middle term or
|
|
cause, and desire moves being moved, still in the material animated
|
|
body there must be some material which itself moves being moved. Now
|
|
that which is moved, but whose nature is not to initiate movement,
|
|
is capable of being passive to an external force, while that which
|
|
initiates movement must needs possess a kind of force and power. Now
|
|
experience shows us that animals do both possess connatural spirit and
|
|
derive power from this. (How this connatural spirit is maintained in
|
|
the body is explained in other passages of our works.) And this spirit
|
|
appears to stand to the soul-centre or original in a relation
|
|
analogous to that between the point in a joint which moves being moved
|
|
and the unmoved. Now since this centre is for some animals in the
|
|
heart, in the rest in a part analogous with the heart, we further
|
|
see the reason for the connatural spirit being situate where it
|
|
actually is found. The question whether the spirit remains always
|
|
the same or constantly changes and is renewed, like the cognate
|
|
question about the rest of the parts of the body, is better postponed.
|
|
At all events we see that it is well disposed to excite movement and
|
|
to exert power; and the functions of movement are thrusting and
|
|
pulling. Accordingly, the organ of movement must be capable of
|
|
expanding and contracting; and this is precisely the characteristic of
|
|
spirit. It contracts and expands naturally, and so is able to pull and
|
|
to thrust from one and the same cause, exhibiting gravity compared
|
|
with the fiery element, and levity by comparison with the opposites of
|
|
fire. Now that which is to initiate movement without change of
|
|
structure must be of the kind described, for the elementary bodies
|
|
prevail over one another in a compound body by dint of
|
|
disproportion; the light is overcome and kept down by the heavier, and
|
|
the heavy kept up by the lighter.
|
|
|
|
We have now explained what the part is which is moved when the
|
|
soul originates movement in the body, and what is the reason for this.
|
|
And the animal organism must be conceived after the similitude of a
|
|
well-governed commonwealth. When order is once established in it there
|
|
is no more need of a separate monarch to preside over each several
|
|
task. The individuals each play their assigned part as it is
|
|
ordered, and one thing follows another in its accustomed order. So
|
|
in animals there is the same orderliness- nature taking the place of
|
|
custom- and each part naturally doing his own work as nature has
|
|
composed them. There is no need then of a soul in each part, but she
|
|
resides in a kind of central governing place of the body, and the
|
|
remaining parts live by continuity of natural structure, and play
|
|
the parts Nature would have them play.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
So much then for the voluntary movements of animal bodies, and the
|
|
reasons for them. These bodies, however, display in certain members
|
|
involuntary movements too, but most often non-voluntary movements.
|
|
By involuntary I mean motions of the heart and of the privy member;
|
|
for often upon an image arising and without express mandate of the
|
|
reason these parts are moved. By non-voluntary I mean sleep and waking
|
|
and respiration, and other similar organic movements. For neither
|
|
imagination nor desire is properly mistress of any of these; but since
|
|
the animal body must undergo natural changes of quality, and when
|
|
the parts are so altered some must increase and other decrease, the
|
|
body must straightway be moved and change with the changes that nature
|
|
makes dependent upon one another. Now the causes of the movements
|
|
are natural changes of temperature, both those coming from outside the
|
|
body, and those taking place within it. So the involuntary movements
|
|
which occur in spite of reason in the aforesaid parts occur when a
|
|
change of quality supervenes. For conception and imagination, as we
|
|
said above, produce the conditions necessary to affections, since they
|
|
bring to bear the images or forms which tend to create these states.
|
|
And the two parts aforesaid display this motion more conspicuously
|
|
than the rest, because each is in a sense a separate vital organism,
|
|
the reason being that each contains vital moisture. In the case of the
|
|
heart the cause is plain, for the heart is the seat of the senses,
|
|
while an indication that the generative organ too is vital is that
|
|
there flows from it the seminal potency, itself a kind of organism.
|
|
Again, it is a reasonable arrangement that the movements arise in
|
|
the centre upon movements in the parts, and in the parts upon
|
|
movements in the centre, and so reach one another. Conceive A to be
|
|
the centre or starting point. The movements then arrive at the
|
|
centre from each letter in the diagram we have drawn, and flow back
|
|
again from the centre which is moved and changes, (for the centre is
|
|
potentially multiple) the movement of B goes to B, that of C to C, the
|
|
movement of both to both; but from B to C the movements flow by dint
|
|
of going from B to A as to a centre, and then from A to C as from a
|
|
centre.
|
|
|
|
Moreover a movement contrary to reason sometimes does and
|
|
sometimes does not arise in the organs on the occasion of the same
|
|
thoughts; the reason is that sometimes the matter which is passive
|
|
to the impressions is there in sufficient quantity and of the right
|
|
quality and sometimes not.
|
|
|
|
And so we have finished our account of the reasons for the parts
|
|
of each kind of animal, of the soul, and furthere of sense-perception,
|
|
of sleep, of memory, and of movement in general; it remains to speak
|
|
of animal generation.
|
|
|
|
-THE END-
|
|
.
|