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On The Soul
by Aristotle
Part 1
Part
2 Part 3
II.1.
LET the foregoing suffice as our account of the views concerning the soul which
have been handed on by our predecessors; let us now dismiss them and make as it
were a completely fresh start, endeavouring to give a precise answer to the
question, What is soul? i.e. to formulate the most general possible definition
of it.
We
are in the habit of recognizing, as one determinate kind of what is, substance,
and that in several senses, (a) in the sense of matter or that which in itself
is not 'a this', and (b) in the sense of form or essence, which is that
precisely in virtue of which a thing is called 'a this', and thirdly (c) in the
sense of that which is compounded of both (a) and (b). Now matter is
potentiality, form actuality; of the latter there are two grades related to one
another as e.g. knowledge to the exercise of knowledge.
Among
substances are by general consent reckoned bodies and especially natural bodies;
for they are the principles of all other bodies. Of natural bodies some have
life in them, others not; by life we mean self-nutrition and growth (with its
correlative decay). It follows that every natural body which has life in it is a
substance in the sense of a composite.
But
since it is also a body of such and such a kind, viz. having life, the body
cannot be soul; the body is the subject or matter, not what is attributed to it.
Hence the soul must be a substance in the sense of the form of a natural body
having life potentially within it. But substance is actuality, and thus soul is
the actuality of a body as above characterized. Now the word actuality has two
senses corresponding respectively to the possession of knowledge and the actual
exercise of knowledge. It is obvious that the soul is actuality in the first
sense, viz. that of knowledge as possessed, for both sleeping and waking
presuppose the existence of soul, and of these waking corresponds to actual
knowing, sleeping to knowledge possessed but not employed, and, in the history
of the individual, knowledge comes before its employment or exercise.
That
is why the soul is the first grade of actuality of a natural body having life
potentially in it. The body so described is a body which is organized. The parts
of plants in spite of their extreme simplicity are 'organs'; e.g. the leaf
serves to shelter the pericarp, the pericarp to shelter the fruit, while the
roots of plants are analogous to the mouth of animals, both serving for the
absorption of food. If, then, we have to give a general formula applicable to
all kinds of soul, we must describe it as the first grade of actuality of a
natural organized body. That is why we can wholly dismiss as unnecessary the
question whether the soul and the body are one: it is as meaningless as to ask
whether the wax and the shape given to it by the stamp are one, or generally the
matter of a thing and that of which it is the matter. Unity has many senses (as
many as 'is' has), but the most proper and fundamental sense of both is the
relation of an actuality to that of which it is the actuality. We have now given
an answer to the question, What is soul?-an answer which applies to it in its
full extent. It is substance in the sense which corresponds to the definitive
formula of a thing's essence. That means that it is 'the essential whatness' of
a body of the character just assigned. Suppose that what is literally an
'organ', like an axe, were a natural body, its 'essential whatness', would have
been its essence, and so its soul; if this disappeared from it, it would have
ceased to be an axe, except in name. As it is, it is just an axe; it wants the
character which is required to make its whatness or formulable essence a soul;
for that, it would have had to be a natural body of a particular kind, viz. one
having in itself the power of setting itself in movement and arresting itself.
Next, apply this doctrine in the case of the 'parts' of the living body. Suppose
that the eye were an animal-sight would have been its soul, for sight is the
substance or essence of the eye which corresponds to the formula, the eye being
merely the matter of seeing; when seeing is removed the eye is no longer an eye,
except in name-it is no more a real eye than the eye of a statue or of a painted
figure. We must now extend our consideration from the 'parts' to the whole
living body; for what the departmental sense is to the bodily part which is its
organ, that the whole faculty of sense is to the whole sensitive body as such.
We
must not understand by that which is 'potentially capable of living' what has
lost the soul it had, but only what still retains it; but seeds and fruits are
bodies which possess the qualification. Consequently, while waking is actuality
in a sense corresponding to the cutting and the seeing, the soul is actuality in
the sense corresponding to the power of sight and the power in the tool; the
body corresponds to what exists in potentiality; as the pupil plus the power of
sight constitutes the eye, so the soul plus the body constitutes the animal.
From
this it indubitably follows that the soul is inseparable from its body, or at
any rate that certain parts of it are (if it has parts) for the actuality of
some of them is nothing but the actualities of their bodily parts. Yet some may
be separable because they are not the actualities of any body at all. Further,
we have no light on the problem whether the soul may not be the actuality of its
body in the sense in which the sailor is the actuality of the ship.
This
must suffice as our sketch or outline determination of the nature of soul.
II.2.
Since what is clear or logically more evident emerges from what in itself is
confused but more observable by us, we must reconsider our results from this
point of view. For it is not enough for a definitive formula to express as most
now do the mere fact; it must include and exhibit the ground also. At present
definitions are given in a form analogous to the conclusion of a syllogism; e.g.
What is squaring? The construction of an equilateral rectangle equal to a given
oblong rectangle. Such a definition is in form equivalent to a conclusion. One
that tells us that squaring is the discovery of a line which is a mean
proportional between the two unequal sides of the given rectangle discloses the
ground of what is defined.
We
resume our inquiry from a fresh starting-point by calling attention to the fact
that what has soul in it differs from what has not, in that the former displays
life. Now this word has more than one sense, and provided any one alone of these
is found in a thing we say that thing is living. Living, that is, may mean
thinking or perception or local movement and rest, or movement in the sense of
nutrition, decay and growth. Hence we think of plants also as living, for they
are observed to possess in themselves an originative power through which they
increase or decrease in all spatial directions; they grow up and down, and
everything that grows increases its bulk alike in both directions or indeed in
all, and continues to live so long as it can absorb nutriment.
This
power of self-nutrition can be isolated from the other powers mentioned, but not
they from it-in mortal beings at least. The fact is obvious in plants; for it is
the only psychic power they possess.
This
is the originative power the possession of which leads us to speak of things as
living at all, but it is the possession of sensation that leads us for the first
time to speak of living things as animals; for even those beings which possess
no power of local movement but do possess the power of sensation we call animals
and not merely living things.
The
primary form of sense is touch, which belongs to all animals. just as the power
of self-nutrition can be isolated from touch and sensation generally, so touch
can be isolated from all other forms of sense. (By the power of self-nutrition
we mean that departmental power of the soul which is common to plants and
animals: all animals whatsoever are observed to have the sense of touch.) What
the explanation of these two facts is, we must discuss later. At present we must
confine ourselves to saying that soul is the source of these phenomena and is
characterized by them, viz. by the powers of self-nutrition, sensation,
thinking, and motivity.
Is
each of these a soul or a part of a soul? And if a part, a part in what sense? A
part merely distinguishable by definition or a part distinct in local situation
as well? In the case of certain of these powers, the answers to these questions
are easy, in the case of others we are puzzled what to say. just as in the case
of plants which when divided are observed to continue to live though removed to
a distance from one another (thus showing that in their case the soul of each
individual plant before division was actually one, potentially many), so we
notice a similar result in other varieties of soul, i.e. in insects which have
been cut in two; each of the segments possesses both sensation and local
movement; and if sensation, necessarily also imagination and appetition; for,
where there is sensation, there is also pleasure and pain, and, where these,
necessarily also desire.
We
have no evidence as yet about mind or the power to think; it seems to be a
widely different kind of soul, differing as what is eternal from what is
perishable; it alone is capable of existence in isolation from all other psychic
powers. All the other parts of soul, it is evident from what we have said, are,
in spite of certain statements to the contrary, incapable of separate existence
though, of course, distinguishable by definition. If opining is distinct from
perceiving, to be capable of opining and to be capable of perceiving must be
distinct, and so with all the other forms of living above enumerated. Further,
some animals possess all these parts of soul, some certain of them only, others
one only (this is what enables us to classify animals); the cause must be
considered later.' A similar arrangement is found also within the field of the
senses; some classes of animals have all the senses, some only certain of them,
others only one, the most indispensable, touch.
Since
the expression 'that whereby we live and perceive' has two meanings, just like
the expression 'that whereby we know'-that may mean either (a) knowledge or (b)
the soul, for we can speak of knowing by or with either, and similarly that
whereby we are in health may be either (a) health or (b) the body or some part
of the body; and since of the two terms thus contrasted knowledge or health is
the name of a form, essence, or ratio, or if we so express it an actuality of a
recipient matter-knowledge of what is capable of knowing, health of what is
capable of being made healthy (for the operation of that which is capable of
originating change terminates and has its seat in what is changed or altered);
further, since it is the soul by or with which primarily we live, perceive, and
think:-it follows that the soul must be a ratio or formulable essence, not a
matter or subject. For, as we said, word substance has three meanings form,
matter, and the complex of both and of these three what is called matter is
potentiality, what is called form actuality. Since then the complex here is the
living thing, the body cannot be the actuality of the soul; it is the soul which
is the actuality of a certain kind of body. Hence the rightness of the view that
the soul cannot be without a body, while it csnnot he a body; it is not a body
but something relative to a body. That is why it is in a body, and a body of a
definite kind. It was a mistake, therefore, to do as former thinkers did, merely
to fit it into a body without adding a definite specification of the kind or
character of that body. Reflection confirms the observed fact; the actuality of
any given thing can only be realized in what is already potentially that thing,
i.e. in a matter of its own appropriate to it. From all this it follows that
soul is an actuality or formulable essence of something that possesses a
potentiality of being besouled.
II.3.
Of the psychic powers above enumerated some kinds of living things, as we have
said, possess all, some less than all, others one only. Those we have mentioned
are the nutritive, the appetitive, the sensory, the locomotive, and the power of
thinking. Plants have none but the first, the nutritive, while another order of
living things has this plus the sensory. If any order of living things has the
sensory, it must also have the appetitive; for appetite is the genus of which
desire, passion, and wish are the species; now all animals have one sense at
least, viz. touch, and whatever has a sense has the capacity for pleasure and
pain and therefore has pleasant and painful objects present to it, and wherever
these are present, there is desire, for desire is just appetition of what is
pleasant. Further, all animals have the sense for food (for touch is the sense
for food); the food of all living things consists of what is dry, moist, hot,
cold, and these are the qualities apprehended by touch; all other sensible
qualities are apprehended by touch only indirectly. Sounds, colours, and odours
contribute nothing to nutriment; flavours fall within the field of tangible
qualities. Hunger and thirst are forms of desire, hunger a desire for what is
dry and hot, thirst a desire for what is cold and moist; flavour is a sort of
seasoning added to both. We must later clear up these points, but at present it
may be enough to say that all animals that possess the sense of touch have also
appetition. The case of imagination is obscure; we must examine it later.
Certain kinds of animals possess in addition the power of locomotion, and still
another order of animate beings, i.e. man and possibly another order like man or
superior to him, the power of thinking, i.e. mind. It is now evident that a
single definition can be given of soul only in the same sense as one can be
given of figure. For, as in that case there is no figure distinguishable and
apart from triangle, etc., so here there is no soul apart from the forms of soul
just enumerated. It is true that a highly general definition can be given for
figure which will fit all figures without expressing the peculiar nature of any
figure. So here in the case of soul and its specific forms. Hence it is absurd
in this and similar cases to demand an absolutely general definition which will
fail to express the peculiar nature of anything that is, or again, omitting
this, to look for separate definitions corresponding to each infima species. The
cases of figure and soul are exactly parallel; for the particulars subsumed
under the common name in both cases-figures and living beings-constitute a
series, each successive term of which potentially contains its predecessor, e.g.
the square the triangle, the sensory power the self-nutritive. Hence we must ask
in the case of each order of living things, What is its soul, i.e. What is the
soul of plant, animal, man? Why the terms are related in this serial way must
form the subject of later examination. But the facts are that the power of
perception is never found apart from the power of self-nutrition, while-in
plants-the latter is found isolated from the former. Again, no sense is found
apart from that of touch, while touch is found by itself; many animals have
neither sight, hearing, nor smell. Again, among living things that possess sense
some have the power of locomotion, some not. Lastly, certain living beings-a
small minority-possess calculation and thought, for (among mortal beings) those
which possess calculation have all the other powers above mentioned, while the
converse does not hold-indeed some live by imagination alone, while others have
not even imagination. The mind that knows with immediate intuition presents a
different problem.
It
is evident that the way to give the most adequate definition of soul is to seek
in the case of each of its forms for the most appropriate definition.
II.4.
It is necessary for the student of these forms of soul first to find a
definition of each, expressive of what it is, and then to investigate its
derivative properties, etc. But if we are to express what each is, viz. what the
thinking power is, or the perceptive, or the nutritive, we must go farther back
and first give an account of thinking or perceiving, for in the order of
investigation the question of what an agent does precedes the question, what
enables it to do what it does. If this is correct, we must on the same ground go
yet another step farther back and have some clear view of the objects of each;
thus we must start with these objects, e.g. with food, with what is perceptible,
or with what is intelligible.
It
follows that first of all we must treat of nutrition and reproduction, for the
nutritive soul is found along with all the others and is the most primitive and
widely distributed power of soul, being indeed that one in virtue of which all
are said to have life. The acts in which it manifests itself are reproduction
and the use of food-reproduction, I say, because for any living thing that has
reached its normal development and which is unmutilated, and whose mode of
generation is not spontaneous, the most natural act is the production of another
like itself, an animal producing an animal, a plant a plant, in order that, as
far as its nature allows, it may partake in the eternal and divine. That is the
goal towards which all things strive, that for the sake of which they do
whatsoever their nature renders possible. The phrase 'for the sake of which' is
ambiguous; it may mean either (a) the end to achieve which, or (b) the being in
whose interest, the act is done. Since then no living thing is able to partake
in what is eternal and divine by uninterrupted continuance (for nothing
perishable can for ever remain one and the same), it tries to achieve that end
in the only way possible to it, and success is possible in varying degrees; so
it remains not indeed as the self-same individual but continues its existence in
something like itself-not numerically but specifically one.
The
soul is the cause or source of the living body. The terms cause and source have
many senses. But the soul is the cause of its body alike in all three senses
which we explicitly recognize. It is (a) the source or origin of movement, it is
(b) the end, it is (c) the essence of the whole living body.
That
it is the last, is clear; for in everything the essence is identical with the
ground of its being, and here, in the case of living things, their being is to
live, and of their being and their living the soul in them is the cause or
source. Further, the actuality of whatever is potential is identical with its
formulable essence.
It
is manifest that the soul is also the final cause of its body. For Nature, like
mind, always does whatever it does for the sake of something, which something is
its end. To that something corresponds in the case of animals the soul and in
this it follows the order of nature; all natural bodies are organs of the soul.
This is true of those that enter into the constitution of plants as well as of
those which enter into that of animals. This shows that that the sake of which
they are is soul. We must here recall the two senses of 'that for the sake of
which', viz. (a) the end to achieve which, and (b) the being in whose interest,
anything is or is done.
We
must maintain, further, that the soul is also the cause of the living body as
the original source of local movement. The power of locomotion is not found,
however, in all living things. But change of quality and change of quantity are
also due to the soul. Sensation is held to be a qualitative alteration, and
nothing except what has soul in it is capable of sensation. The same holds of
the quantitative changes which constitute growth and decay; nothing grows or
decays naturally except what feeds itself, and nothing feeds itself except what
has a share of soul in it.
Empedocles
is wrong in adding that growth in plants is to be explained, the downward
rooting by the natural tendency of earth to travel downwards, and the upward
branching by the similar natural tendency of fire to travel upwards. For he
misinterprets up and down; up and down are not for all things what they are for
the whole Cosmos: if we are to distinguish and identify organs according to
their functions, the roots of plants are analogous to the head in animals.
Further, we must ask what is the force that holds together the earth and the
fire which tend to travel in contrary directions; if there is no counteracting
force, they will be torn asunder; if there is, this must be the soul and the
cause of nutrition and growth. By some the element of fire is held to be the
cause of nutrition and growth, for it alone of the primary bodies or elements is
observed to feed and increase itself. Hence the suggestion that in both plants
and animals it is it which is the operative force. A concurrent cause in a sense
it certainly is, but not the principal cause, that is rather the soul; for while
the growth of fire goes on without limit so long as there is a supply of fuel,
in the case of all complex wholes formed in the course of nature there is a
limit or ratio which determines their size and increase, and limit and ratio are
marks of soul but not of fire, and belong to the side of formulable essence
rather than that of matter.
Nutrition
and reproduction are due to one and the same psychic power. It is necessary
first to give precision to our account of food, for it is by this function of
absorbing food that this psychic power is distinguished from all the others. The
current view is that what serves as food to a living thing is what is contrary
to it-not that in every pair of contraries each is food to the other: to be food
a contrary must not only be transformable into the other and vice versa, it must
also in so doing increase the bulk of the other. Many a contrary is transformed
into its other and vice versa, where neither is even a quantum and so cannot
increase in bulk, e.g. an invalid into a healthy subject. It is clear that not
even those contraries which satisfy both the conditions mentioned above are food
to one another in precisely the same sense; water may be said to feed fire, but
not fire water. Where the members of the pair are elementary bodies only one of
the contraries, it would appear, can be said to feed the other. But there is a
difficulty here. One set of thinkers assert that like fed, as well as increased
in amount, by like. Another set, as we have said, maintain the very reverse,
viz. that what feeds and what is fed are contrary to one another; like, they
argue, is incapable of being affected by like; but food is changed in the
process of digestion, and change is always to what is opposite or to what is
intermediate. Further, food is acted upon by what is nourished by it, not the
other way round, as timber is worked by a carpenter and not conversely; there is
a change in the carpenter but it is merely a change from not-working to working.
In answering this problem it makes all the difference whether we mean by 'the
food' the 'finished' or the 'raw' product. If we use the word food of both, viz.
of the completely undigested and the completely digested matter, we can justify
both the rival accounts of it; taking food in the sense of undigested matter, it
is the contrary of what is fed by it, taking it as digested it is like what is
fed by it. Consequently it is clear that in a certain sense we may say that both
parties are right, both wrong.
Since
nothing except what is alive can be fed, what is fed is the besouled body and
just because it has soul in it. Hence food is essentially related to what has
soul in it. Food has a power which is other than the power to increase the bulk
of what is fed by it; so far forth as what has soul in it is a quantum, food may
increase its quantity, but it is only so far as what has soul in it is a
'this-somewhat' or substance that food acts as food; in that case it maintains
the being of what is fed, and that continues to be what it is so long as the
process of nutrition continues. Further, it is the agent in generation, i.e. not
the generation of the individual fed but the reproduction of another like it;
the substance of the individual fed is already in existence; the existence of no
substance is a self-generation but only a self-maintenance.
Hence
the psychic power which we are now studying may be described as that which tends
to maintain whatever has this power in it of continuing such as it was, and food
helps it to do its work. That is why, if deprived of food, it must cease to be.
The
process of nutrition involves three factors, (a) what is fed, (b) that wherewith
it is fed, (c) what does the feeding; of these (c) is the first soul, (a) the
body which has that soul in it, (b) the food. But since it is right to call
things after the ends they realize, and the end of this soul is to generate
another being like that in which it is, the first soul ought to be named the
reproductive soul. The expression (b) 'wherewith it is fed' is ambiguous just as
is the expression 'wherewith the ship is steered'; that may mean either (i) the
hand or (ii) the rudder, i.e. either (i) what is moved and sets in movement, or
(ii) what is merely moved. We can apply this analogy here if we recall that all
food must be capable of being digested, and that what produces digestion is
warmth; that is why everything that has soul in it possesses warmth.
We
have now given an outline account of the nature of food; further details must be
given in the appropriate place.
II.5.
Having made these distinctions let us now speak of sensation in the widest
sense. Sensation depends, as we have said, on a process of movement or affection
from without, for it is held to be some sort of change of quality. Now some
thinkers assert that like is affected only by like; in what sense this is
possible and in what sense impossible, we have explained in our general
discussion of acting and being acted upon.
Here
arises a problem: why do we not perceive the senses themselves as well as the
external objects of sense, or why without the stimulation of external objects do
they not produce sensation, seeing that they contain in themselves fire, earth,
and all the other elements, which are the direct or indirect objects is so of
sense? It is clear that what is sensitive is only potentially, not actually. The
power of sense is parallel to what is combustible, for that never ignites itself
spontaneously, but requires an agent which has the power of starting ignition;
otherwise it could have set itself on fire, and would not have needed actual
fire to set it ablaze.
In
reply we must recall that we use the word 'perceive' in two ways, for we say (a)
that what has the power to hear or see, 'sees' or 'hears', even though it is at
the moment asleep, and also (b) that what is actually seeing or hearing, 'sees'
or 'hears'. Hence 'sense' too must have two meanings, sense potential, and sense
actual. Similarly 'to be a sentient' means either (a) to have a certain power or
(b) to manifest a certain activity. To begin with, for a time, let us speak as
if there were no difference between (i) being moved or affected, and (ii) being
active, for movement is a kind of activity-an imperfect kind, as has elsewhere
been explained. Everything that is acted upon or moved is acted upon by an agent
which is actually at work. Hence it is that in one sense, as has already been
stated, what acts and what is acted upon are like, in another unlike, i.e. prior
to and during the change the two factors are unlike, after it like.
But
we must now distinguish not only between what is potential and what is actual
but also different senses in which things can be said to be potential or actual;
up to now we have been speaking as if each of these phrases had only one sense.
We can speak of something as 'a knower' either (a) as when we say that man is a
knower, meaning that man falls within the class of beings that know or have
knowledge, or (b) as when we are speaking of a man who possesses a knowledge of
grammar; each of these is so called as having in him a certain potentiality, but
there is a difference between their respective potentialities, the one (a) being
a potential knower, because his kind or matter is such and such, the other (b),
because he can in the absence of any external counteracting cause realize his
knowledge in actual knowing at will. This implies a third meaning of 'a knower'
(c), one who is already realizing his knowledge-he is a knower in actuality and
in the most proper sense is knowing, e.g. this A. Both the former are potential
knowers, who realize their respective potentialities, the one (a) by change of
quality, i.e. repeated transitions from one state to its opposite under
instruction, the other (b) by the transition from the inactive possession of
sense or grammar to their active exercise. The two kinds of transition are
distinct.
Also
the expression 'to be acted upon' has more than one meaning; it may mean either
(a) the extinction of one of two contraries by the other, or (b) the maintenance
of what is potential by the agency of what is actual and already like what is
acted upon, with such likeness as is compatible with one's being actual and the
other potential. For what possesses knowledge becomes an actual knower by a
transition which is either not an alteration of it at all (being in reality a
development into its true self or actuality) or at least an alteration in a
quite different sense from the usual meaning.
Hence
it is wrong to speak of a wise man as being 'altered' when he uses his wisdom,
just as it would be absurd to speak of a builder as being altered when he is
using his skill in building a house.
What
in the case of knowing or understanding leads from potentiality to actuality
ought not to be called teaching but something else. That which starting with the
power to know learns or acquires knowledge through the agency of one who
actually knows and has the power of teaching either (a) ought not to be said 'to
be acted upon' at all or (b) we must recognize two senses of alteration, viz. (i)
the substitution of one quality for another, the first being the contrary of the
second, or (ii) the development of an existent quality from potentiality in the
direction of fixity or nature.
In
the case of what is to possess sense, the first transition is due to the action
of the male parent and takes place before birth so that at birth the living
thing is, in respect of sensation, at the stage which corresponds to the
possession of knowledge. Actual sensation corresponds to the stage of the
exercise of knowledge. But between the two cases compared there is a difference;
the objects that excite the sensory powers to activity, the seen, the heard,
etc., are outside. The ground of this difference is that what actual sensation
apprehends is individuals, while what knowledge apprehends is universals, and
these are in a sense within the soul. That is why a man can exercise his
knowledge when he wishes, but his sensation does not depend upon himself a
sensible object must be there. A similar statement must be made about our
knowledge of what is sensible-on the same ground, viz. that the sensible objects
are individual and external.
A
later more appropriate occasion may be found thoroughly to clear up all this. At
present it must be enough to recognize the distinctions already drawn; a thing
may be said to be potential in either of two senses, (a) in the sense in which
we might say of a boy that he may become a general or (b) in the sense in which
we might say the same of an adult, and there are two corresponding senses of the
term 'a potential sentient'. There are no separate names for the two stages of
potentiality; we have pointed out that they are different and how they are
different. We cannot help using the incorrect terms 'being acted upon or
altered' of the two transitions involved. As we have said, has the power of
sensation is potentially like what the perceived object is actually; that is,
while at the beginning of the process of its being acted upon the two
interacting factors are dissimilar, at the end the one acted upon is assimilated
to the other and is identical in quality with it.
II.6.
In dealing with each of the senses we shall have first to speak of the objects
which are perceptible by each. The term 'object of sense' covers three kinds of
objects, two kinds of which are, in our language, directly perceptible, while
the remaining one is only incidentally perceptible. Of the first two kinds one
(a) consists of what is perceptible by a single sense, the other (b) of what is
perceptible by any and all of the senses. I call by the name of special object
of this or that sense that which cannot be perceived by any other sense than
that one and in respect of which no error is possible; in this sense colour is
the special object of sight, sound of hearing, flavour of taste. Touch, indeed,
discriminates more than one set of different qualities. Each sense has one kind
of object which it discerns, and never errs in reporting that what is before it
is colour or sound (though it may err as to what it is that is coloured or where
that is, or what it is that is sounding or where that is.) Such objects are what
we propose to call the special objects of this or that sense.
'Common
sensibles' are movement, rest, number, figure, magnitude; these are not peculiar
to any one sense, but are common to all. There are at any rate certain kinds of
movement which are perceptible both by touch and by sight.
We
speak of an incidental object of sense where e.g. the white object which we see
is the son of Diares; here because 'being the son of Diares' is incidental to
the directly visible white patch we speak of the son of Diares as being
(incidentally) perceived or seen by us. Because this is only incidentally an
object of sense, it in no way as such affects the senses. Of the two former
kinds, both of which are in their own nature perceptible by sense, the first
kind-that of special objects of the several senses-constitute the objects of
sense in the strictest sense of the term and it is to them that in the nature of
things the structure of each several sense is adapted.
II.7.
The object of sight is the visible, and what is visible is (a) colour and (b) a
certain kind of object which can be described in words but which has no single
name; what we mean by (b) will be abundantly clear as we proceed. Whatever is
visible is colour and colour is what lies upon what is in its own nature
visible; 'in its own nature' here means not that visibility is involved in the
definition of what thus underlies colour, but that that substratum contains in
itself the cause of visibility. Every colour has in it the power to set in
movement what is actually transparent; that power constitutes its very nature.
That is why it is not visible except with the help of light; it is only in light
that the colour of a thing is seen. Hence our first task is to explain what
light is.
Now
there clearly is something which is transparent, and by 'transparent' I mean
what is visible, and yet not visible in itself, but rather owing its visibility
to the colour of something else; of this character are air, water, and many
solid bodies. Neither air nor water is transparent because it is air or water;
they are transparent because each of them has contained in it a certain
substance which is the same in both and is also found in the eternal body which
constitutes the uppermost shell of the physical Cosmos. Of this substance light
is the activity-the activity of what is transparent so far forth as it has in it
the determinate power of becoming transparent; where this power is present,
there is also the potentiality of the contrary, viz. darkness. Light is as it
were the proper colour of what is transparent, and exists whenever the
potentially transparent is excited to actuality by the influence of fire or
something resembling 'the uppermost body'; for fire too contains something which
is one and the same with the substance in question.
We
have now explained what the transparent is and what light is; light is neither
fire nor any kind whatsoever of body nor an efflux from any kind of body (if it
were, it would again itself be a kind of body)-it is the presence of fire or
something resembling fire in what is transparent. It is certainly not a body,
for two bodies cannot be present in the same place. The opposite of light is
darkness; darkness is the absence from what is transparent of the corresponding
positive state above characterized; clearly therefore, light is just the
presence of that.
Empedocles
(and with him all others who used the same forms of expression) was wrong in
speaking of light as 'travelling' or being at a given moment between the earth
and its envelope, its movement being unobservable by us; that view is contrary
both to the clear evidence of argument and to the observed facts; if the
distance traversed were short, the movement might have been unobservable, but
where the distance is from extreme East to extreme West, the draught upon our
powers of belief is too great.
What
is capable of taking on colour is what in itself is colourless, as what can take
on sound is what is soundless; what is colourless includes (a) what is
transparent and (b) what is invisible or scarcely visible, i.e. what is 'dark'.
The latter (b) is the same as what is transparent, when it is potentially, not
of course when it is actually transparent; it is the same substance which is now
darkness, now light.
Not
everything that is visible depends upon light for its visibility. This is only
true of the 'proper' colour of things. Some objects of sight which in light are
invisible, in darkness stimulate the sense; that is, things that appear fiery or
shining. This class of objects has no simple common name, but instances of it
are fungi, flesh, heads, scales, and eyes of fish. In none of these is what is
seen their own proper' colour. Why we see these at all is another question. At
present what is obvious is that what is seen in light is always colour. That is
why without the help of light colour remains invisible. Its being colour at all
means precisely its having in it the power to set in movement what is already
actually transparent, and, as we have seen, the actuality of what is transparent
is just light.
The
following experiment makes the necessity of a medium clear. If what has colour
is placed in immediate contact with the eye, it cannot be seen. Colour sets in
movement not the sense organ but what is transparent, e.g. the air, and that,
extending continuously from the object to the organ, sets the latter in
movement. Democritus misrepresents the facts when he expresses the opinion that
if the interspace were empty one could distinctly see an ant on the vault of the
sky; that is an impossibility. Seeing is due to an affection or change of what
has the perceptive faculty, and it cannot be affected by the seen colour itself;
it remains that it must be affected by what comes between. Hence it is
indispensable that there be something in between-if there were nothing, so far
from seeing with greater distinctness, we should see nothing at all.
We
have now explained the cause why colour cannot be seen otherwise than in light.
Fire on the other hand is seen both in darkness and in light; this double
possibility follows necessarily from our theory, for it is just fire that makes
what is potentially transparent actually transparent.
The
same account holds also of sound and smell; if the object of either of these
senses is in immediate contact with the organ no sensation is produced. In both
cases the object sets in movement only what lies between, and this in turn sets
the organ in movement: if what sounds or smells is brought into immediate
contact with the organ, no sensation will be produced. The same, in spite of all
appearances, applies also to touch and taste; why there is this apparent
difference will be clear later. What comes between in the case of sounds is air;
the corresponding medium in the case of smell has no name. But, corresponding to
what is transparent in the case of colour, there is a quality found both in air
and water, which serves as a medium for what has smell-I say 'in water' because
animals that live in water as well as those that live on land seem to possess
the sense of smell, and 'in air' because man and all other land animals that
breathe, perceive smells only when they breathe air in. The explanation of this
too will be given later.
II.8.
Now let us, to begin with, make certain distinctions about sound and hearing.
Sound
may mean either of two things (a) actual, and (b) potential, sound. There are
certain things which, as we say, 'have no sound', e.g. sponges or wool, others
which have, e.g. bronze and in general all things which are smooth and solid-the
latter are said to have a sound because they can make a sound, i.e. can generate
actual sound between themselves and the organ of hearing.
Actual
sound requires for its occurrence (i, ii) two such bodies and (iii) a space
between them; for it is generated by an impact. Hence it is impossible for one
body only to generate a sound-there must be a body impinging and a body impinged
upon; what sounds does so by striking against something else, and this is
impossible without a movement from place to place.
As
we have said, not all bodies can by impact on one another produce sound; impact
on wool makes no sound, while the impact on bronze or any body which is smooth
and hollow does. Bronze gives out a sound when struck because it is smooth;
bodies which are hollow owing to reflection repeat the original impact over and
over again, the body originally set in movement being unable to escape from the
concavity.
Further,
we must remark that sound is heard both in air and in water, though less
distinctly in the latter. Yet neither air nor water is the principal cause of
sound. What is required for the production of sound is an impact of two solids
against one another and against the air. The latter condition is satisfied when
the air impinged upon does not retreat before the blow, i.e. is not dissipated
by it.
That
is why it must be struck with a sudden sharp blow, if it is to sound-the
movement of the whip must outrun the dispersion of the air, just as one might
get in a stroke at a heap or whirl of sand as it was traveling rapidly past.
An
echo occurs, when, a mass of air having been unified, bounded, and prevented
from dissipation by the containing walls of a vessel, the air originally struck
by the impinging body and set in movement by it rebounds from this mass of air
like a ball from a wall. It is probable that in all generation of sound echo
takes place, though it is frequently only indistinctly heard. What happens here
must be analogous to what happens in the case of light; light is always
reflected-otherwise it would not be diffused and outside what was directly
illuminated by the sun there would be blank darkness; but this reflected light
is not always strong enough, as it is when it is reflected from water, bronze,
and other smooth bodies, to cast a shadow, which is the distinguishing mark by
which we recognize light.
It
is rightly said that an empty space plays the chief part in the production of
hearing, for what people mean by 'the vacuum' is the air, which is what causes
hearing, when that air is set in movement as one continuous mass; but owing to
its friability it emits no sound, being dissipated by impinging upon any surface
which is not smooth. When the surface on which it impinges is quite smooth, what
is produced by the original impact is a united mass, a result due to the
smoothness of the surface with which the air is in contact at the other end.
What
has the power of producing sound is what has the power of setting in movement a
single mass of air which is continuous from the impinging body up to the organ
of hearing. The organ of hearing is physically united with air, and because it
is in air, the air inside is moved concurrently with the air outside. Hence
animals do not hear with all parts of their bodies, nor do all parts admit of
the entrance of air; for even the part which can be moved and can sound has not
air everywhere in it. Air in itself is, owing to its friability, quite
soundless; only when its dissipation is prevented is its movement sound. The air
in the ear is built into a chamber just to prevent this dissipating movement, in
order that the animal may accurately apprehend all varieties of the movements of
the air outside. That is why we hear also in water, viz. because the water
cannot get into the air chamber or even, owing to the spirals, into the outer
ear. If this does happen, hearing ceases, as it also does if the tympanic
membrane is damaged, just as sight ceases if the membrane covering the pupil is
damaged. It is also a test of deafness whether the ear does or does not
reverberate like a horn; the air inside the ear has always a movement of its
own, but the sound we hear is always the sounding of something else, not of the
organ itself. That is why we say that we hear with what is empty and echoes,
viz. because what we hear with is a chamber which contains a bounded mass of
air.
Which
is it that 'sounds', the striking body or the struck? Is not the answer 'it is
both, but each in a different way'? Sound is a movement of what can rebound from
a smooth surface when struck against it. As we have explained' not everything
sounds when it strikes or is struck, e.g. if one needle is struck against
another, neither emits any sound. In order, therefore, that sound may be
generated, what is struck must be smooth, to enable the air to rebound and be
shaken off from it in one piece.
The
distinctions between different sounding bodies show themselves only in actual
sound; as without the help of light colours remain invisible, so without the
help of actual sound the distinctions between acute and grave sounds remain
inaudible. Acute and grave are here metaphors, transferred from their proper
sphere, viz. that of touch, where they mean respectively (a) what moves the
sense much in a short time, (b) what moves the sense little in a long time. Not
that what is sharp really moves fast, and what is grave, slowly, but that the
difference in the qualities of the one and the other movement is due to their
respective speeds. There seems to be a sort of parallelism between what is acute
or grave to hearing and what is sharp or blunt to touch; what is sharp as it
were stabs, while what is blunt pushes, the one producing its effect in a short,
the other in a long time, so that the one is quick, the other slow.
Let
the foregoing suffice as an analysis of sound. Voice is a kind of sound
characteristic of what has soul in it; nothing that is without soul utters
voice, it being only by a metaphor that we speak of the voice of the flute or
the lyre or generally of what (being without soul) possesses the power of
producing a succession of notes which differ in length and pitch and timbre. The
metaphor is based on the fact that all these differences are found also in
voice. Many animals are voiceless, e.g. all non-sanuineous animals and among
sanguineous animals fish. This is just what we should expect, since voice is a
certain movement of air. The fish, like those in the Achelous, which are said to
have voice, really make the sounds with their gills or some similar organ. Voice
is the sound made by an animal, and that with a special organ. As we saw,
everything that makes a sound does so by the impact of something (a) against
something else, (b) across a space, (c) filled with air; hence it is only to be
expected that no animals utter voice except those which take in air. Once air is
inbreathed, Nature uses it for two different purposes, as the tongue is used
both for tasting and for articulating; in that case of the two functions tasting
is necessary for the animal's existence (hence it is found more widely
distributed), while articulate speech is a luxury subserving its possessor's
well-being; similarly in the former case Nature employs the breath both as an
indispensable means to the regulation of the inner temperature of the living
body and also as the matter of articulate voice, in the interests of its
possessor's well-being. Why its former use is indispensable must be discussed
elsewhere.
The
organ of respiration is the windpipe, and the organ to which this is related as
means to end is the lungs. The latter is the part of the body by which the
temperature of land animals is raised above that of all others. But what
primarily requires the air drawn in by respiration is not only this but the
region surrounding the heart. That is why when animals breathe the air must
penetrate inwards.
Voice
then is the impact of the inbreathed air against the 'windpipe', and the agent
that produces the impact is the soul resident in these parts of the body. Not
every sound, as we said, made by an animal is voice (even with the tongue we may
merely make a sound which is not voice, or without the tongue as in coughing);
what produces the impact must have soul in it and must be accompanied by an act
of imagination, for voice is a sound with a meaning, and is not merely the
result of any impact of the breath as in coughing; in voice the breath in the
windpipe is used as an instrument to knock with against the walls of the
windpipe. This is confirmed by our inability to speak when we are breathing
either out or in-we can only do so by holding our breath; we make the movements
with the breath so checked. It is clear also why fish are voiceless; they have
no windpipe. And they have no windpipe because they do not breathe or take in
air. Why they do not is a question belonging to another inquiry.
II.9.
Smell and its object are much less easy to determine than what we have hitherto
discussed; the distinguishing characteristic of the object of smell is less
obvious than those of sound or colour. The ground of this is that our power of
smell is less discriminating and in general inferior to that of many species of
animals; men have a poor sense of smell and our apprehension of its proper
objects is inseparably bound up with and so confused by pleasure and pain, which
shows that in us the organ is inaccurate. It is probable that there is a
parallel failure in the perception of colour by animals that have hard eyes:
probably they discriminate differences of colour only by the presence or absence
of what excites fear, and that it is thus that human beings distinguish smells.
It seems that there is an analogy between smell and taste, and that the species
of tastes run parallel to those of smells-the only difference being that our
sense of taste is more discriminating than our sense of smell, because the
former is a modification of touch, which reaches in man the maximum of
discriminative accuracy. While in respect of all the other senses we fall below
many species of animals, in respect of touch we far excel all other species in
exactness of discrimination. That is why man is the most intelligent of all
animals. This is confirmed by the fact that it is to differences in the organ of
touch and to nothing else that the differences between man and man in respect of
natural endowment are due; men whose flesh is hard are ill-endowed by nature,
men whose flesh is soft, wellendowed.
As
flavours may be divided into (a) sweet, (b) bitter, so with smells. In some
things the flavour and the smell have the same quality, i.e. both are sweet or
both bitter, in others they diverge. Similarly a smell, like a flavour, may be
pungent, astringent, acid, or succulent. But, as we said, because smells are
much less easy to discriminate than flavours, the names of these varieties are
applied to smells only metaphorically; for example 'sweet' is extended from the
taste to the smell of saffron or honey, 'pungent' to that of thyme, and so on.
In
the same sense in which hearing has for its object both the audible and the
inaudible, sight both the visible and the invisible, smell has for its object
both the odorous and the inodorous. 'Inodorous' may be either (a) what has no
smell at all, or (b) what has a small or feeble smell. The same ambiguity lurks
in the word 'tasteless'.
Smelling,
like the operation of the senses previously examined, takes place through a
medium, i.e. through air or water-I add water, because water-animals too (both
sanguineous and non-sanguineous) seem to smell just as much as land-animals; at
any rate some of them make directly for their food from a distance if it has any
scent. That is why the following facts constitute a problem for us. All animals
smell in the same way, but man smells only when he inhales; if he exhales or
holds his breath, he ceases to smell, no difference being made whether the
odorous object is distant or near, or even placed inside the nose and actually
on the wall of the nostril; it is a disability common to all the senses not to
perceive what is in immediate contact with the organ of sense, but our failure
to apprehend what is odorous without the help of inhalation is peculiar (the
fact is obvious on making the experiment). Now since bloodless animals do not
breathe, they must, it might be argued, have some novel sense not reckoned among
the usual five. Our reply must be that this is impossible, since it is scent
that is perceived; a sense that apprehends what is odorous and what has a good
or bad odour cannot be anything but smell. Further, they are observed to be
deleteriously effected by the same strong odours as man is, e.g. bitumen,
sulphur, and the like. These animals must be able to smell without being able to
breathe. The probable explanation is that in man the organ of smell has a
certain superiority over that in all other animals just as his eyes have over
those of hard-eyed animals. Man's eyes have in the eyelids a kind of shelter or
envelope, which must be shifted or drawn back in order that we may see, while
hardeyed animals have nothing of the kind, but at once see whatever presents
itself in the transparent medium. Similarly in certain species of animals the
organ of smell is like the eye of hard-eyed animals, uncurtained, while in
others which take in air it probably has a curtain over it, which is drawn back
in inhalation, owing to the dilating of the veins or pores. That explains also
why such animals cannot smell under water; to smell they must first inhale, and
that they cannot do under water.
Smells
come from what is dry as flavours from what is moist. Consequently the organ of
smell is potentially dry.
II.10.
What can be tasted is always something that can be touched, and just for that
reason it cannot be perceived through an interposed foreign body, for touch
means the absence of any intervening body. Further, the flavoured and tasteable
body is suspended in a liquid matter, and this is tangible. Hence, if we lived
in water, we should perceive a sweet object introduced into the water, but the
water would not be the medium through which we perceived; our perception would
be due to the solution of the sweet substance in what we imbibed, just as if it
were mixed with some drink. There is no parallel here to the perception of
colour, which is due neither to any blending of anything with anything, nor to
any efflux of anything from anything. In the case of taste, there is nothing
corresponding to the medium in the case of the senses previously discussed; but
as the object of sight is colour, so the object of taste is flavour. But nothing
excites a perception of flavour without the help of liquid; what acts upon the
sense of taste must be either actually or potentially liquid like what is
saline; it must be both (a) itself easily dissolved, and (b) capable of
dissolving along with itself the tongue. Taste apprehends both (a) what has
taste and (b) what has no taste, if we mean by (b) what has only a slight or
feeble flavour or what tends to destroy the sense of taste. In this it is
exactly parallel to sight, which apprehends both what is visible and what is
invisible (for darkness is invisible and yet is discriminated by sight; so is,
in a different way, what is over brilliant), and to hearing, which apprehends
both sound and silence, of which the one is audible and the other inaudible, and
also over-loud sound. This corresponds in the case of hearing to over-bright
light in the case of sight. As a faint sound is 'inaudible', so in a sense is a
loud or violent sound. The word 'invisible' and similar privative terms cover
not only (a) what is simply without some power, but also (b) what is adapted by
nature to have it but has not it or has it only in a very low degree, as when we
say that a species of swallow is 'footless' or that a variety of fruit is 'stoneless'.
So too taste has as its object both what can be tasted and the tasteless-the
latter in the sense of what has little flavour or a bad flavour or one
destructive of taste. The difference between what is tasteless and what is not
seems to rest ultimately on that between what is drinkable and what is
undrinkable both are tasteable, but the latter is bad and tends to destroy
taste, while the former is the normal stimulus of taste. What is drinkable is
the common object of both touch and taste.
Since
what can be tasted is liquid, the organ for its perception cannot be either (a)
actually liquid or (b) incapable of becoming liquid. Tasting means a being
affected by what can be tasted as such; hence the organ of taste must be
liquefied, and so to start with must be non-liquid but capable of liquefaction
without loss of its distinctive nature. This is confirmed by the fact that the
tongue cannot taste either when it is too dry or when it is too moist; in the
latter case what occurs is due to a contact with the pre-existent moisture in
the tongue itself, when after a foretaste of some strong flavour we try to taste
another flavour; it is in this way that sick persons find everything they taste
bitter, viz. because, when they taste, their tongues are overflowing with bitter
moisture.
The
species of flavour are, as in the case of colour, (a) simple, i.e. the two
contraries, the sweet and the bitter, (b) secondary, viz. (i) on the side of the
sweet, the succulent, (ii) on the side of the bitter, the saline, (iii) between
these come the pungent, the harsh, the astringent, and the acid; these pretty
well exhaust the varieties of flavour. It follows that what has the power of
tasting is what is potentially of that kind, and that what is tasteable is what
has the power of making it actually what it itself already is.
II.11.
Whatever can be said of what is tangible, can be said of touch, and vice versa;
if touch is not a single sense but a group of senses, there must be several
kinds of what is tangible. It is a problem whether touch is a single sense or a
group of senses. It is also a problem, what is the organ of touch; is it or is
it not the flesh (including what in certain animals is homologous with flesh)?
On the second view, flesh is 'the medium' of touch, the real organ being
situated farther inward. The problem arises because the field of each sense is
according to the accepted view determined as the range between a single pair of
contraries, white and black for sight, acute and grave for hearing, bitter and
sweet for taste; but in the field of what is tangible we find several such
pairs, hot cold, dry moist, hard soft, etc. This problem finds a partial
solution, when it is recalled that in the case of the other senses more than one
pair of contraries are to be met with, e.g. in sound not only acute and grave
but loud and soft, smooth and rough, etc.; there are similar contrasts in the
field of colour. Nevertheless we are unable clearly to detect in the case of
touch what the single subject is which underlies the contrasted qualities and
corresponds to sound in the case of hearing.
To
the question whether the organ of touch lies inward or not (i.e. whether we need
look any farther than the flesh), no indication in favour of the second answer
can be drawn from the fact that if the object comes into contact with the flesh
it is at once perceived. For even under present conditions if the experiment is
made of making a web and stretching it tight over the flesh, as soon as this web
is touched the sensation is reported in the same manner as before, yet it is
clear that the or is gan is not in this membrane. If the membrane could be grown
on to the flesh, the report would travel still quicker. The flesh plays in touch
very much the same part as would be played in the other senses by an
air-envelope growing round our body; had we such an envelope attached to us we
should have supposed that it was by a single organ that we perceived sounds,
colours, and smells, and we should have taken sight, hearing, and smell to be a
single sense. But as it is, because that through which the different movements
are transmitted is not naturally attached to our bodies, the difference of the
various sense-organs is too plain to miss. But in the case of touch the
obscurity remains.
There
must be such a naturally attached 'medium' as flesh, for no living body could be
constructed of air or water; it must be something solid. Consequently it must be
composed of earth along with these, which is just what flesh and its analogue in
animals which have no true flesh tend to be. Hence of necessity the medium
through which are transmitted the manifoldly contrasted tactual qualities must
be a body naturally attached to the organism. That they are manifold is clear
when we consider touching with the tongue; we apprehend at the tongue all
tangible qualities as well as flavour. Suppose all the rest of our flesh was,
like the tongue, sensitive to flavour, we should have identified the sense of
taste and the sense of touch; what saves us from this identification is the fact
that touch and taste are not always found together in the same part of the body.
The following problem might be raised. Let us assume that every body has depth,
i.e. has three dimensions, and that if two bodies have a third body between them
they cannot be in contact with one another; let us remember that what is liquid
is a body and must be or contain water, and that if two bodies touch one another
under water, their touching surfaces cannot be dry, but must have water between,
viz. the water which wets their bounding surfaces; from all this it follows that
in water two bodies cannot be in contact with one another. The same holds of two
bodies in air-air being to bodies in air precisely what water is to bodies in
water-but the facts are not so evident to our observation, because we live in
air, just as animals that live in water would not notice that the things which
touch one another in water have wet surfaces. The problem, then, is: does the
perception of all objects of sense take place in the same way, or does it not,
e.g. taste and touch requiring contact (as they are commonly thought to do),
while all other senses perceive over a distance? The distinction is unsound; we
perceive what is hard or soft, as well as the objects of hearing, sight, and
smell, through a 'medium', only that the latter are perceived over a greater
distance than the former; that is why the facts escape our notice. For we do
perceive everything through a medium; but in these cases the fact escapes us.
Yet, to repeat what we said before, if the medium for touch were a membrane
separating us from the object without our observing its existence, we should be
relatively to it in the same condition as we are now to air or water in which we
are immersed; in their case we fancy we can touch objects, nothing coming in
between us and them. But there remains this difference between what can be
touched and what can be seen or can sound; in the latter two cases we perceive
because the medium produces a certain effect upon us, whereas in the perception
of objects of touch we are affected not by but along with the medium; it is as
if a man were struck through his shield, where the shock is not first given to
the shield and passed on to the man, but the concussion of both is simultaneous.
In
general, flesh and the tongue are related to the real organs of touch and taste,
as air and water are to those of sight, hearing, and smell. Hence in neither the
one case nor the other can there be any perception of an object if it is placed
immediately upon the organ, e.g. if a white object is placed on the surface of
the eye. This again shows that what has the power of perceiving the tangible is
seated inside. Only so would there be a complete analogy with all the other
senses. In their case if you place the object on the organ it is not perceived,
here if you place it on the flesh it is perceived; therefore flesh is not the
organ but the medium of touch.
What
can be touched are distinctive qualities of body as body; by such differences I
mean those which characterize the elements, viz, hot cold, dry moist, of which
we have spoken earlier in our treatise on the elements. The organ for the
perception of these is that of touch-that part of the body in which primarily
the sense of touch resides. This is that part which is potentially such as its
object is actually: for all sense-perception is a process of being so affected;
so that that which makes something such as it itself actually is makes the other
such because the other is already potentially such. That is why when an object
of touch is equally hot and cold or hard and soft we cannot perceive; what we
perceive must have a degree of the sensible quality lying beyond the neutral
point. This implies that the sense itself is a 'mean' between any two opposite
qualities which determine the field of that sense. It is to this that it owes
its power of discerning the objects in that field. What is 'in the middle' is
fitted to discern; relatively to either extreme it can put itself in the place
of the other. As what is to perceive both white and black must, to begin with,
be actually neither but potentially either (and so with all the other
sense-organs), so the organ of touch must be neither hot nor cold.
Further,
as in a sense sight had for its object both what was visible and what was
invisible (and there was a parallel truth about all the other senses discussed),
so touch has for its object both what is tangible and what is intangible. Here
by 'intangible' is meant (a) what like air possesses some quality of tangible
things in a very slight degree and (b) what possesses it in an excessive degree,
as destructive things do.
We
have now given an outline account of each of the several senses.
II.12.
The following results applying to any and every sense may now be formulated.
(A)
By a 'sense' is meant what has the power of receiving into itself the sensible
forms of things without the matter. This must be conceived of as taking place in
the way in which a piece of wax takes on the impress of a signet-ring without
the iron or gold; we say that what produces the impression is a signet of bronze
or gold, but its particular metallic constitution makes no difference: in a
similar way the sense is affected by what is coloured or flavoured or sounding,
but it is indifferent what in each case the substance is; what alone matters is
what quality it has, i.e. in what ratio its constituents are combined.
(B)
By 'an organ of sense' is meant that in which ultimately such a power is seated.
The
sense and its organ are the same in fact, but their essence is not the same.
What perceives is, of course, a spatial magnitude, but we must not admit that
either the having the power to perceive or the sense itself is a magnitude; what
they are is a certain ratio or power in a magnitude. This enables us to explain
why objects of sense which possess one of two opposite sensible qualities in a
degree largely in excess of the other opposite destroy the organs of sense; if
the movement set up by an object is too strong for the organ, the equipoise of
contrary qualities in the organ, which just is its sensory power, is disturbed;
it is precisely as concord and tone are destroyed by too violently twanging the
strings of a lyre. This explains also why plants cannot perceive. in spite of
their having a portion of soul in them and obviously being affected by tangible
objects themselves; for undoubtedly their temperature can be lowered or raised.
The explanation is that they have no mean of contrary qualities, and so no
principle in them capable of taking on the forms of sensible objects without
their matter; in the case of plants the affection is an affection by
form-and-matter together. The problem might be raised: Can what cannot smell be
said to be affected by smells or what cannot see by colours, and so on? It might
be said that a smell is just what can be smelt, and if it produces any effect it
can only be so as to make something smell it, and it might be argued that what
cannot smell cannot be affected by smells and further that what can smell can be
affected by it only in so far as it has in it the power to smell (similarly with
the proper objects of all the other senses). Indeed that this is so is made
quite evident as follows. Light or darkness, sounds and smells leave bodies
quite unaffected; what does affect bodies is not these but the bodies which are
their vehicles, e.g. what splits the trunk of a tree is not the sound of the
thunder but the air which accompanies thunder. Yes, but, it may be objected,
bodies are affected by what is tangible and by flavours. If not, by what are
things that are without soul affected, i.e. altered in quality? Must we not,
then, admit that the objects of the other senses also may affect them? Is not
the true account this, that all bodies are capable of being affected by smells
and sounds, but that some on being acted upon, having no boundaries of their
own, disintegrate, as in the instance of air, which does become odorous, showing
that some effect is produced on it by what is odorous? But smelling is more than
such an affection by what is odorous-what more? Is not the answer that, while
the air owing to the momentary duration of the action upon it of what is odorous
does itself become perceptible to the sense of smell, smelling is an observing
of the result produced?
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Part 3
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Now
to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in
the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our
Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and
authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen. Jude
1:24-25

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