De Anima (On the soul)
by Aristotle (ca. 350 BC)
Book I
Chapter 1
Holding as we do that, while knowledge of any kind is a thing to
be honoured and prized, one kind of it may, [402a] either by reason
of its greater exactness or of a higher dignity and greater wonderfulness
in its objects, be more honourable and precious than another, on
both accounts we should naturally be led to place in the front rank
the study of the soul. The knowledge of the soul admittedly contributes
greatly to the advance of truth in general, and, above all, to our
understanding of Nature, for the soul is in some sense the principle
of animal life. Our aim is to grasp and understand, first its essential
nature, and secondly its properties; of these some are taught to
be affections proper to the soul itself, while others are considered
to attach to the animal owing to the presence within it of soul.
To attain any assured knowledge about the soul is one of the most
difficult things in the world. As the form of question which here
presents itself, viz. the question 'What is it?', recurs in other
fields, it might be supposed that there was some single method of
inquiry applicable to all objects whose essential nature (as we
are endeavouring to ascertain there is for derived properties the
single method of demonstration); in that case what we should have
to seek for would be this unique method. But if there is no such
single and general method for solving the question of essence, our
task becomes still more difficult; in the case of each different
subject we shall have to determine the appropriate process of investigation.
If to this there be a clear answer, e.g. that the process is demonstration
or division, or some known method, difficulties and hesitations
still beset us -- with what facts shall we begin the inquiry? For
the facts which form the starting-points in different subjects must
be different, as e.g. in the case of numbers and surfaces.
First, no doubt, it is necessary to determine in which of the summa
genera soul lies, what it is; is it 'a this-somewhat,' a substance,
or is it a quale or a quantum, or some other of the remaining kinds
of predicates which we have distinguished? Further, does soul belong
to the class of potential existents, or is it not rather an actuality?
Our answer to this question is of the greatest importance.
[402b] We must consider also whether soul is divisible or is without
parts, and whether it is everywhere homogeneous or not; and if not
homogeneous, whether its various forms are different specifically
or generically: up to the present time those who have discussed
and investigated soul seem to have confined themselves to the human
soul. We must be careful not to ignore the question whether soul
can be defined in a single unambiguous formula, as is the case with
animal, or whether we must not give a separate formula for each
of it, as we do for horse, dog, man, god (in the latter case the
'universal' animal -- and so too every other 'common predicate'
-- being treated either as nothing at all or as a later product).
Further, if what exists is not a plurality of souls, but a plurality
of parts of one soul, which ought we to investigate first, the whole
soul or its parts? (It is also a difficult problem to decide which
of these parts are in nature distinct from one another.) Again,
which ought we to investigate first, these parts or their functions,
mind or thinking, the faculty or the act of sensation, and so on?
If the investigation of the functions precedes that of the parts,
the further question suggests itself: ought we not before either
to consider the correlative objects, e.g. of sense or thought? It
seems not only useful for the discovery of the causes of the derived
properties of substances to be acquainted with the essential nature
of those substances (as in mathematics it is useful for the understanding
of the property of the equality of the interior angles of a triangle
to two right angles to know the essential nature of the straight
and the curved or of the line and the plane) but also conversely,
for the knowledge of the essential nature of a substance is largely
promoted by an acquaintance with its properties: for, when we are
able to give an account conformable to experience of all or most
of the properties of a substance, we shall be in the most favourable
position to say something worth saying about the essential nature
of that subject; in all demonstration a definition of the essence
is required as a starting-point, so that definitions which do not
enable us to [403a] discover the derived properties, or which fail
to facilitate even a conjecture about them, must obviously, one
and all, be dialectical and futile.
A further problem presented by the affections of soul is this:
are they all affections of the complex of body and soul, or is there
any one among them peculiar to the soul by itself? To determine
this is indispensable but difficult. If we consider the majority
of them, there seems to be no case in which the soul can act or
be acted upon without involving the body; e.g. anger, courage, appetite,
and sensation generally. Thinking seems the most probable exception;
but if this too proves to be a form of imagination or to be impossible
without imagination, it too requires a body as a condition of its
existence. If there is any way of acting or being acted upon proper
to soul, soul will be capable of separate existence; if there is
none, its separate existence is impossible. In the latter case,
it will be like what is straight, which has many properties arising
from the straightness in it, e.g. that of touching a bronze sphere
at a point, though straightness divorced from the other constituents
of the straight thing cannot touch it in this way; it cannot be
so divorced at all, since it is always found in a body. It therefore
seems that all the affections of soul involve a body-passion, gentleness,
fear, pity, courage, joy, loving, and hating; in all these there
is a concurrent affection of the body. In support of this we may
point to the fact that, while sometimes on the occasion of violent
and striking occurrences there is no excitement or fear felt, on
others faint and feeble stimulations produce these emotions, viz.
when the body is already in a state of tension resembling its condition
when we are angry. Here is a still clearer case: in the absence
of any external cause of terror we find ourselves experiencing the
feelings of a man in terror. From all this it is obvious that the
affections of soul are enmattered formulable essences.
Consequently their definitions ought to correspond, e.g. anger
should be defined as a certain mode of movement of such and such
a body (or part or faculty of a body) by this or that cause and
for this or that end. That is precisely why the study of the soul
must fall within the science of Nature, at least so far as in its
affections it manifests this double character. Hence a physicist
would define an affection of soul differently from a dialectician;
the latter would define e.g. anger as the appetite for returning
pain for pain, or something like that, while the former would define
it as a boiling of the blood or warm substance [403b] surrounding
the heart. The latter assigns the material conditions, the former
the form or formulable essence; for what he states is the formulable
essence of the fact, though for its actual existence there must
be embodiment of it in a material such as is described by the other.
Thus the essence of a house is assigned in such a formula as 'a
shelter against destruction by wind, rain, and heat'; the physicist
would describe it as 'stones, bricks, and timbers'; but there is
a third possible description which would say that it was that form
in that material with that purpose or end. Which, then, among these
is entitled to be regarded as the genuine physicist? The one who
confines himself to the material, or the one who restricts himself
to the formulable essence alone? Is it not rather the one who combines
both in a single formula? If this is so, how are we to characterize
the other two? Must we not say that there is no type of thinker
who concerns himself with those qualities or attributes of the material
which are in fact inseparable from the material, and without attempting
even in thought to separate them? The physicist is he who concerns
himself with all the properties active and passive of bodies or
materials thus or thus defined; attributes not considered as being
of this character he leaves to others, in certain cases it may be
to a specialist, e.g. a carpenter or a physician, in others (a)
where they are inseparable in fact, but are separable from any particular
kind of body by an effort of abstraction, to the mathematician,
(b) where they are separate both in fact and in thought from body
altogether, to the First Philosopher or metaphysician. But we must
return from this digression, and repeat that the affections of soul
are inseparable from the material substratum of animal life, to
which we have seen that such affections, e.g. passion and fear,
attach, and have not the same mode of being as a line or a plane.
Chapter 2
For our study of soul it is necessary, while formulating the problems
of which in our further advance we are to find the solutions, to
call into council the views of those of our predecessors who have
declared any opinion on this subject, in order that we may profit
by whatever is sound in their suggestions and avoid their errors.
The starting-point of our inquiry is an exposition of those characteristics
which have chiefly been held to belong to soul in its very nature.
Two characteristic marks have above all others been recognized as
distinguishing that which has soul in it from that which has not
movement and sensation. It may be said that these two are what our
predecessors have fixed upon as characteristic of soul.
Some say that what originates movement is both pre-eminently and
primarily soul; believing that what is not itself moved cannot originate
movement in another, they arrived at the view that soul belongs
to the class of things in [404a] movement. This is what led Democritus
to say that soul is a sort of fire or hot substance; his 'forms'
or atoms are infinite in number; those which are spherical he calls
fire and soul, and compares them to the motes in the air which we
see in shafts of light coming through windows; the mixture of seeds
of all sorts he calls the elements of the whole of Nature (Leucippus
gives a similar account); the spherical atoms are identified with
soul because atoms of that shape are most adapted to permeate everywhere,
and to set all the others moving by being themselves in movement.
This implies the view that soul is identical with what produces
movement in animals. That is why, further, they regard respiration
as the characteristic mark of life; as the environment compresses
the bodies of animals, and tends to extrude those atoms which impart
movement to them, because they themselves are never at rest, there
must be a reinforcement of these by similar atoms coming in from
without in the act of respiration; for they prevent the extrusion
of those which are already within by counteracting the compressing
and consolidating force of the environment; and animals continue
to live only so long as they are able to maintain this resistance.
The doctrine of the Pythagoreans seems to rest upon the same ideas;
some of them declared the motes in air, others what moved them,
to be soul. These motes were referred to because they are seen always
in movement, even in a complete calm.
The same tendency is shown by those who define soul as that which
moves itself; all seem to hold the view that movement is what is
closest to the nature of soul, and that while all else is moved
by soul, it alone moves itself. This belief arises from their never
seeing anything originating movement which is not first itself moved.
Similarly also Anaxagoras (and whoever agrees with him in saying
that mind set the whole in movement) declares the moving cause of
things to be soul. His position must, however, be distinguished
from that of Democritus. Democritus roundly identifies soul and
mind, for he identifies what appears with what is true -- that is
why he commends Homer for the phrase 'Hector lay with thought distraught';
he does not employ mind as a special faculty dealing with truth,
but identifies soul and mind. What Anaxagoras says about them is
more obscure; in many [404b] places he tells us that the cause of
beauty and order is mind, elsewhere that it is soul; it is found,
he says, in all animals, great and small, high and low, but mind
(in the sense of intelligence) appears not to belong alike to all
animals, and indeed not even to all human beings.
All those, then, who had special regard to the fact that what has
soul in it is moved, adopted the view that soul is to be identified
with what is eminently originative of movement. All, on the other
hand, who looked to the fact that what has soul in it knows or perceives
what is, identify soul with the principle or principles of Nature,
according as they admit several such principles or one only. Thus
Empedocles declares that it is formed out of all his elements, each
of them also being soul; his words are:
For 'tis by Earth we see Earth, by Water Water,
By Ether Ether divine, by Fire destructive Fire,
By Love Love, and Hate by cruel Hate.
In the same way Plato in the Timaeus fashions soul out of his elements;
for like, he holds, is known by like, and things are formed out
of the principles or elements, so that soul must be so too. Similarly
also in his lectures 'On Philosophy' it was set forth that the Animal
itself is compounded of the Idea itself of the One together with
the primary length, breadth, and depth, everything else, the objects
of its perception, being similarly constituted. Again he puts his
view in yet other terms: Mind is the monad, science or knowledge
the dyad (because it goes undeviatingly from one point to another),
opinion the number of the plane, sensation the number of the solid;
the numbers are by him expressly identified with the Forms themselves
or principles, and are formed out of the elements; now things are
apprehended either by mind or science or opinion or sensation, and
these same numbers are the Forms of things.
Some thinkers, accepting both premisses, viz. that the soul is
both originative of movement and cognitive, have compounded it of
both and declared the soul to be a self-moving number.
As to the nature and number of the first principles opinions differ.
The difference is greatest between those who regard them [405a]
as corporeal and those who regard them as incorporeal, and from
both dissent those who make a blend and draw their principles from
both sources. The number of principles is also in dispute; some
admit one only, others assert several. There is a consequent diversity
in their several accounts of soul; they assume, naturally enough,
that what is in its own nature originative of movement must be among
what is primordial. That has led some to regard it as fire, for
fire is the subtlest of the elements and nearest to incorporeality;
further, in the most primary sense, fire both is moved and originates
movement in all the others.
Democritus has expressed himself more ingeniously than the rest
on the grounds for ascribing each of these two characters to soul;
soul and mind are, he says, one and the same thing, and this thing
must be one of the primary and indivisible bodies, and its power
of originating movement must be due to its fineness of grain and
the shape of its atoms; he says that of all the shapes the spherical
is the most mobile, and that this is the shape of the particles
of fire and mind.
Anaxagoras, as we said above, seems to distinguish between soul
and mind, but in practice he treats them as a single substance,
except that it is mind that he specially posits as the principle
of all things; at any rate what he says is that mind alone of all
that is simple, unmixed, and pure. He assigns both characteristics,
knowing and origination of movement, to the same principle, when
he says that it was mind that set the whole in movement.
Thales, too, to judge from what is recorded about him, seems to
have held soul to be a motive force, since he said that the magnet
has a soul in it because it moves the iron.
Diogenes (and others) held the soul to be air because he believed
air to be finest in grain and a first principle; therein lay the
grounds of the soul's powers of knowing and originating movement.
As the primordial principle from which all other things are derived,
it is cognitive; as finest in grain, it has the power to originate
movement.
Heraclitus too says that the first principle -- the 'warm exhalation'
of which, according to him, everything else is composed -- is soul;
further, that this exhalation is most incorporeal and in ceaseless
flux; that what is in movement requires that what knows it should
be in movement; and that all that is has its being essentially in
movement (herein agreeing with the majority).
Alcmaeon also seems to have held a similar view about soul; he
says that it is immortal because it resembles 'the immortals,' and
that this immortality belongs to it in virtue of its ceaseless movement;
for all the 'things divine,' moon, sun, the planets, and the whole
heavens, are in perpetual movement.
Of more superficial writers, some, e.g. Hippo, have pronounced
it to be water; they seem to have [405b] argued from the fact that
the seed of all animals is fluid, for Hippo tries to refute those
who say that the soul is blood, on the ground that the seed, which
is the primordial soul, is not blood.
Another group (Critias, for example) did hold it to be blood; they
take perception to be the most characteristic attribute of soul,
and hold that perceptiveness is due to the nature of blood.
Each of the elements has thus found its partisan, except earth
-- earth has found no supporter unless we count as such those who
have declared soul to be, or to be compounded of, all the elements.
All, then, it may be said, characterize the soul by three marks,
Movement, Sensation, Incorporeality, and each of these is traced
back to the first principles. That is why (with one exception) all
those who define the soul by its power of knowing make it either
an element or constructed out of the elements. The language they
all use is similar; like, they say, is known by like; as the soul
knows everything, they construct it out of all the principles. Hence
all those who admit but one cause or element, make the soul also
one (e.g. fire or air), while those who admit a multiplicity of
principles make the soul also multiple. The exception is Anaxagoras;
he alone says that mind is impassible and has nothing in common
with anything else. But, if this is so, how or in virtue of what
cause can it know? That Anaxagoras has not explained, nor can any
answer be inferred from his words. All who acknowledge pairs of
opposites among their principles, construct the soul also out of
these contraries, while those who admit as principles only one contrary
of each pair, e.g. either hot or cold, likewise make the soul some
one of these. That is why, also, they allow themselves to be guided
by the names; those who identify soul with the hot argue that sen
(to live) is derived from sein (to boil), while those who identify
it with the cold say that soul (psuche) is so called from the process
of respiration and (katapsuxis).
Such are the traditional opinions concerning soul, together with
the grounds on which they are maintained.
Chapter 3
We must begin our examination with movement; for doubtless, not
only is it false that the essence of soul is correctly described
by those who say that it is what moves [406a] (or is capable of
moving) itself, but it is an impossibility that movement should
be even an attribute of it. We have already pointed out that there
is no necessity that what originates movement should itself be moved.
There are two senses in which anything may be moved -- either (a)
indirectly, owing to something other than itself, or (b) directly,
owing to itself. Things are 'indirectly moved' which are moved as
being contained in something which is moved, e.g. sailors in a ship,
for they are moved in a different sense from that in which the ship
is moved; the ship is 'directly moved', they are 'indirectly moved',
because they are in a moving vessel. This is clear if we consider
their limbs; the movement proper to the legs (and so to man) is
walking, and in this case the sailors tare not walking. Recognizing
the double sense of 'being moved', what we have to consider now
is whether the soul is 'directly moved' and participates in such
direct movement.
There are four species of movement-locomotion, alteration, diminution,
growth; consequently if the soul is moved, it must be moved with
one or several or all of these species of movement. Now if its movement
is not incidental, there must be a movement natural to it, and,
if so, as all the species enumerated involve place, place must be
natural to it. But if the essence of soul be to move itself, its
being moved cannot be incidental to -- as it is to what is white
or three cubits long; they too can be moved, but only incidentally
-- what is moved is that of which 'white' and 'three cubits long'
are the attributes, the body in which they inhere; hence they have
no place: but if the soul naturally partakes in movement, it follows
that it must have a place.
Further, if there be a movement natural to the soul, there must
be a counter-movement unnatural to it, and conversely. The same
applies to rest as well as to movement; for the terminus ad quem
of a thing's natural movement is the place of its natural rest,
and similarly the terminus ad quem of its enforced movement is the
place of its enforced rest. But what meaning can be attached to
enforced movements or rests of the soul, it is difficult even to
imagine. Further, if the natural movement of the soul be upward,
the soul must be fire; if downward, it must be earth; for upward
and downward movements are the definitory characteristics of these
bodies. The same reasoning applies to the intermediate movements,
termini, and bodies. Further, since the soul is observed to originate
movement in the body, it is reasonable to suppose that it transmits
to the body the movements by which it itself is moved, and so, reversing
the order, we may infer from the movements of the body back to similar
movements of the soul. Now the [406b] body is moved from place to
place with movements of locomotion. Hence it would follow that the
soul too must in accordance with the body change either its place
as a whole or the relative places of its parts. This carries with
it the possibility that the soul might even quit its body and re-enter
it, and with this would be involved the possibility of a resurrection
of animals from the dead. But, it may be contended, the soul can
be moved indirectly by something else; for an animal can be pushed
out of its course. Yes, but that to whose essence belongs the power
of being moved by itself, cannot be moved by something else except
incidentally, just as what is good by or in itself cannot owe its
goodness to something external to it or to some end to which it
is a means.
If the soul is moved, the most probable view is that what moves
it is sensible things.
We must note also that, if the soul moves itself, it must be the
mover itself that is moved, so that it follows that if movement
is in every case a displacement of that which is in movement, in
that respect in which it is said to be moved, the movement of the
soul must be a departure from its essential nature, at least if
its self-movement is essential to it, not incidental.
Some go so far as to hold that the movements which the soul imparts
to the body in which it is are the same in kind as those with which
it itself is moved. An example of this is Democritus, who uses language
like that of the comic dramatist Philippus, who accounts for the
movements that Daedalus imparted to his wooden Aphrodite by saying
that he poured quicksilver into it; similarly Democritus says that
the spherical atoms which according to him constitute soul, owing
to their own ceaseless movements draw the whole body after them
and so produce its movements. We must urge the question whether
it is these very same atoms which produce rest also -- how they
could do so, it is difficult and even impossible to say. And, in
general, we may object that it is not in this way that the soul
appears to originate movement in animals -- it is through intention
or process of thinking.
It is in the same fashion that the Timaeus also tries to give a
physical account of how the soul moves its body; the soul, it is
there said, is in movement, and so owing to their mutual implication
moves the body also. After compounding the soul-substance out of
the elements and dividing it in accordance with the harmonic numbers,
in order that it may possess a connate sensibility for 'harmony'
and that the whole may move in movements well attuned, the Demiurge
bent the straight line into a [407a] circle; this single circle
he divided into two circles united at two common points; one of
these he subdivided into seven circles. All this implies that the
movements of the soul are identified with the local movements of
the heavens.
Now, in the first place, it is a mistake to say that the soul is
a spatial magnitude. It is evident that Plato means the soul of
the whole to be like the sort of soul which is called mind not like
the sensitive or the desiderative soul, for the movements of neither
of these are circular. Now mind is one and continuous in the sense
in which the process of thinking is so, and thinking is identical
with the thoughts which are its parts; these have a serial unity
like that of number, not a unity like that of a spatial magnitude.
Hence mind cannot have that kind of unity either; mind is either
without parts or is continuous in some other way than that which
characterizes a spatial magnitude. How, indeed, if it were a spatial
magnitude, could mind possibly think? Will it think with any one
indifferently of its parts? In this case, the 'part' must be understood
either in the sense of a spatial magnitude or in the sense of a
point (if a point can be called a part of a spatial magnitude).
If we accept the latter alternative, the points being infinite in
number, obviously the mind can never exhaustively traverse them;
if the former, the mind must think the same thing over and over
again, indeed an infinite number of times (whereas it is manifestly
possible to think a thing once only). If contact of any part whatsoever
of itself with the object is all that is required, why need mind
move in a circle, or indeed possess magnitude at all? On the other
hand, if contact with the whole circle is necessary, what meaning
can be given to the contact of the parts? Further, how could what
has no parts think what has parts, or what has parts think what
has none? We must identify the circle referred to with mind; for
it is mind whose movement is thinking, and it is the circle whose
movement is revolution, so that if thinking is a movement of revolution,
the circle which has this characteristic movement must be mind.
If the circular movement is eternal, there must be something which
mind is always thinking -- what can this be? For all practical processes
of thinking have limits -- they all go on for the sake of something
outside the process, and all theoretical processes come to a close
in the same way as the phrases in speech which express processes
and results of thinking. Every such linguistic phrase is either
definitory or demonstrative. Demonstration has both a starting-point
and may be said to end in a conclusion or inferred result; even
if the process never reaches final completion, at any rate it never
returns upon itself again to its starting-point, it goes on assuming
a fresh middle term or a fresh extreme, and moves straight forward,
but circular movement returns to its starting-point. Definitions,
too, are closed groups of terms.
Further, if the same revolution is repeated, mind must repeatedly
think the same object.
Further, thinking has more resemblance to a coming to rest or arrest
than to a movement; the same may be said of inferring.
It might also be urged that what is difficult and enforced is incompatible
with blessedness; if the movement of the soul is not of its essence,
movement of the soul must be [407b] contrary to its nature. It must
also be painful for the soul to be inextricably bound up with the
body; nay more, if, as is frequently said and widely accepted, it
is better for mind not to be embodied, the union must be for it
undesirable. Further, the cause of the revolution of the heavens
is left obscure. It is not the essence of soul which is the cause
of this circular movement -- that movement is only incidental to
soul -- nor is, a fortiori, the body its cause. Again, it is not
even asserted that it is better that soul should be so moved; and
yet the reason for which God caused the soul to move in a circle
can only have been that movement was better for it than rest, and
movement of this kind better than any other. But since this sort
of consideration is more appropriate to another field of speculation,
let us dismiss it for the present.
The view we have just been examining, in company with most theories
about the soul, involves the following absurdity: they all join
the soul to a body, or place it in a body, without adding any specification
of the reason of their union, or of the bodily conditions required
for it. Yet such explanation can scarcely be omitted; for some community
of nature is presupposed by the fact that the one acts and the other
is acted upon, the one moves and the other is moved; interaction
always implies a special nature in the two interagents. All, however,
that these thinkers do is to describe the specific characteristics
of the soul; they do not try to determine anything about the body
which is to contain it, as if it were possible, as in the Pythagorean
myths, that any soul could be clothed upon with any body -- an absurd
view, for each body seems to have a form and shape of its own. It
is as absurd as to say that the art of carpentry could embody itself
in flutes; each art must use its tools, each soul its body.
Chapter 4
There is yet another theory about soul, which has commended itself
to many as no less probable than any of those we have hitherto mentioned,
and has rendered public account of itself in the court of popular
discussion. Its supporters say that the soul is a kind of harmony,
for (a) harmony is a blend or composition of contraries, and (b)
the body is compounded out of contraries. Harmony, however, is a
certain proportion or composition of the constituents blended, and
soul can be neither the one nor the other of these. Further, the
power of originating movement cannot belong to a harmony, while
almost all concur in regarding this as a principal attribute of
soul. It is more appropriate to call health (or [408a] generally
one of the good states of the body) a harmony than to predicate
it of the soul. The absurdity becomes most apparent when we try
to attribute the active and passive affections of the soul to a
harmony; the necessary readjustment of their conceptions is difficult.
Further, in using the word 'harmony' we have one or other of two
cases in our mind; the most proper sense is in relation to spatial
magnitudes which have motion and position, where harmony means the
disposition and cohesion of their parts in such a manner as to prevent
the introduction into the whole of anything homogeneous with it,
and the secondary sense, derived from the former, is that in which
it means the ratio between the constituents so blended; in neither
of these senses is it plausible to predicate it of soul. That soul
is a harmony in the sense of the mode of composition of the parts
of the body is a view easily refutable; for there are many composite
parts and those variously compounded; of what bodily part is mind
or the sensitive or the appetitive faculty the mode of composition?
And what is the mode of composition which constitutes each of them?
It is equally absurd to identify the soul with the ratio of the
mixture; for the mixture which makes flesh has a different ratio
between the elements from that which makes bone. The consequence
of this view will therefore be that distributed throughout the whole
body there will be many souls, since every one of the bodily parts
is a different mixture of the elements, and the ratio of mixture
is in each case a harmony, i.e. a soul.
From Empedocles at any rate we might demand an answer to the following
question for he says that each of the parts of the body is what
it is in virtue of a ratio between the elements: is the soul identical
with this ratio, or is it not rather something over and above this
which is formed in the parts? Is love the cause of any and every
mixture, or only of those that are in the right ratio? Is love this
ratio itself, or is love something over and above this? Such are
the problems raised by this account. But, on the other hand, if
the soul is different from the mixture, why does it disappear at
one and the same moment with that relation between the elements
which constitutes flesh or the other parts of the animal body? Further,
if the soul is not identical with the ratio of mixture, and it is
consequently not the case that each of the parts has a soul, what
is that which perishes when the soul quits the body?
That the soul cannot either be a harmony, or be moved in a circle,
is clear from what we have said. Yet that it can be moved incidentally
is, as we said above, possible, and even that in a sense it can
move itself, i.e. in the sense that the vehicle in which it is can
be moved, and moved by it; in no other sense can the soul be moved
in space. More legitimate doubts might remain as to its movement
in view [408b] of the following facts. We speak of the soul as being
pained or pleased, being bold or fearful, being angry, perceiving,
thinking. All these are regarded as modes of movement, and hence
it might be inferred that the soul is moved. This, however, does
not necessarily follow. We may admit to the full that being pained
or pleased, or thinking, are movements (each of them a 'being moved'),
and that the movement is originated by the soul. For example we
may regard anger or fear as such and such movements of the heart,
and thinking as such and such another movement of that organ, or
of some other; these modifications may arise either from changes
of place in certain parts or from qualitative alterations (the special
nature of the parts and the special modes of their changes being
for our present purpose irrelevant). Yet to say that it is the soul
which is angry is as inexact as it would be to say that it is the
soul that weaves webs or builds houses. It is doubtless better to
avoid saying that the soul pities or learns or thinks and rather
to say that it is the man who does this with his soul. What we mean
is not that the movement is in the soul, but that sometimes it terminates
in the soul and sometimes starts from it, sensation e.g. coming
from without inwards, and reminiscence starting from the soul and
terminating with the movements, actual or residual, in the sense
organs.
The case of mind is different; it seems to be an independent substance
implanted within the soul and to be incapable of being destroyed.
If it could be destroyed at all, it would be under the blunting
influence of old age. What really happens in respect of mind in
old age is, however, exactly parallel to what happens in the case
of the sense organs; if the old man could recover the proper kind
of eye, he would see just as well as the young man. The incapacity
of old age is due to an affection not of the soul but of its vehicle,
as occurs in drunkenness or disease. Thus it is that in old age
the activity of mind or intellectual apprehension declines only
through the decay of some other inward part; mind itself is impassible.
Thinking, loving, and hating are affections not of mind, but of
that which has mind, so far as it has it. That is why, when this
vehicle decays, memory and love cease; they were activities not
of mind, but of the composite which has perished; mind is, no doubt,
something more divine and impassible. That the soul cannot be moved
is therefore clear from what we have said, and if it cannot be moved
at all, manifestly it cannot be moved by itself.
Of all the opinions we have enumerated, by far the most unreasonable
is that which declares the soul to be a self-moving number; it involves
in the first place all the impossibilities which follow from regarding
the soul as moved, and in the second special absurdities which follow
from [409a] calling it a number. How we to imagine a unit being
moved? By what agency? What sort of movement can be attributed to
what is without parts or internal differences? If the unit is both
originative of movement and itself capable of being moved, it must
contain difference.
Further, since they say a moving line generates a surface and a
moving point a line, the movements of the psychic units must be
lines (for a point is a unit having position, and the number of
the soul is, of course, somewhere and has position).
Again, if from a number a number or a unit is subtracted, the remainder
is another number; but plants and many animals when divided continue
to live, and each segment is thought to retain the same kind of
soul.
It must be all the same whether we speak of units or corpuscles;
for if the spherical atoms of Democritus became points, nothing
being retained but their being a quantum, there must remain in each
a moving and a moved part, just as there is in what is continuous;
what happens has nothing to do with the size of the atoms, it depends
solely upon their being a quantum. That is why there must be something
to originate movement in the units. If in the animal what originates
movement is the soul, so also must it be in the case of the number,
so that not the mover and the moved together, but the mover only,
will be the soul. But how is it possible for one of the units to
fulfil this function of originating movement? There must be some
difference between such a unit and all the other units, and what
difference can there be between one placed unit and another except
a difference of position? If then, on the other hand, these psychic
units within the body are different from the points of the body,
there will be two sets of units both occupying the same place; for
each unit will occupy a point. And yet, if there can be two, why
cannot there be an infinite number? For if things can occupy an
indivisible lace, they must themselves be indivisible. If, on the
other hand, the points of the body are identical with the units
whose number is the soul, or if the number of the points in the
body is the soul, why have not all bodies souls? For all bodies
contain points or an infinity of points.
Further, how is it possible for these points to be isolated or
separated from their bodies, seeing that lines cannot be resolved
into points?
Chapter 5
The result is, as we have said, that this view, while on the one
side identical with that of those who maintain that soul is a subtle
kind of body, is on the other entangled in the absurdity peculiar
to Democritus' way of describing [409b] the manner in which movement
is originated by soul. For if the soul is present throughout the
whole percipient body, there must, if the soul be a kind of body,
be two bodies in the same place; and for those who call it a number,
there must be many points at one point, or every body must have
a soul, unless the soul be a different sort of number -- other,
that is, than the sum of the points existing in a body. Another
consequence that follows is that the animal must be moved by its
number precisely in the way that Democritus explained its being
moved by his spherical psychic atoms. What difference does it make
whether we speak of small spheres or of large units, or, quite simply,
of units in movement? One way or another, the movements of the animal
must be due to their movements. Hence those who combine movement
and number in the same subject lay themselves open to these and
many other similar absurdities. It is impossible not only that these
characters should give the definition of soul -- it is impossible
that they should even be attributes of it. The point is clear if
the attempt be made to start from this as the account of soul and
explain from it the affections and actions of the soul, e.g. reasoning,
sensation, pleasure, pain, &c. For, to repeat what we have said
earlier, movement and number do not facilitate even conjecture about
the derivative properties of soul.
Such are the three ways in which soul has traditionally been defined;
one group of thinkers declared it to be that which is most originative
of movement because it moves itself, another group to be the subtlest
and most nearly incorporeal of all kinds of body. We have now sufficiently
set forth the difficulties and inconsistencies to which these theories
are exposed. It remains now to examine the doctrine that soul is
composed of the elements.
The reason assigned for this doctrine is that thus the soul may
perceive or come to know everything that is, but the theory necessarily
involves itself in many impossibilities. Its upholders assume that
like is known only by like, and imagine that by declaring the soul
to be composed of the elements they succeed in identifying the soul
with all the things it is capable of apprehending. But the elements
are not the only things it knows; there are many others, or, more
exactly, an infinite number of others, formed out of the elements.
Let us admit that the soul knows or perceives the elements out of
which each of these composites is made up; but by what means will
it know or perceive the composite whole, e.g. what God, man, flesh,
bone (or any other compound) is? For each is, not [410a] merely
the elements of which it is composed, but those elements combined
in a determinate mode or ratio, as Empedocles himself says of bone,
The kindly Earth in its broad-bosomed moulds
Won of clear Water two parts out of eight,
And four of Fire; and so white bones were formed.
Nothing, therefore, will be gained by the presence of the elements
in the soul, unless there be also present there the various formulae
of proportion and the various compositions in accordance with them.
Each element will indeed know its fellow outside, but there will
be no knowledge of bone or man, unless they too are present in the
constitution of the soul. The impossibility of this needs no pointing
out; for who would suggest that stone or man could enter into the
constitution of the soul? The same applies to 'the good' and 'the
not-good', and so on.
Further, the word 'is' has many meanings: it may be used of a 'this'
or substance, or of a quantum, or of a quale, or of any other of
the kinds of predicates we have distinguished. Does the soul consist
of all of these or not? It does not appear that all have common
elements. Is the soul formed out of those elements alone which enter
into substances? so how will it be able to know each of the other
kinds of thing? Will it be said that each kind of thing has elements
or principles of its own, and that the soul is formed out of the
whole of these? In that case, the soul must be a quantum and a quale
and a substance. But all that can be made out of the elements of
a quantum is a quantum, not a substance. These (and others like
them) are the consequences of the view that the soul is composed
of all the elements.
It is absurd, also, to say both (a) that like is not capable of
being affected by like, and (b) that like is perceived or known
by like, for perceiving, and also both thinking and knowing, are,
on their own assumption, ways of being affected or moved.
There are many puzzles and difficulties raised by saying, as Empedocles
does, that each set of things is known by means of its corporeal
elements and by reference to something in soul which is like them,
and additional testimony is furnished by this new consideration;
for all the parts of the animal body which consist wholly of earth
such as bones, sinews, and hair seem to be wholly insensitive and
consequently not perceptive even of objects earthy like [410b] themselves,
as they ought to have been.
Further, each of the principles will have far more ignorance than
knowledge, for though each of them will know one thing, there will
be many of which it will be ignorant. Empedocles at any rate must
conclude that his God is the least intelligent of all beings, for
of him alone is it true that there is one thing, Strife, which he
does not know, while there is nothing which mortal beings do not
know, for ere is nothing which does not enter into their composition.
In general, we may ask, Why has not everything a soul, since everything
either is an element, or is formed out of one or several or all
of the elements? Each must certainly know one or several or all.
The problem might also be raised, What is that which unifies the
elements into a soul? The elements correspond, it would appear,
to the matter; what unites them, whatever it is, is the supremely
important factor. But it is impossible that there should be something
superior to, and dominant over, the soul (and a fortiori over the
mind); it is reasonable to hold that mind is by nature most primordial
and dominant, while their statement that it is the elements which
are first of all that is.
All, both those who assert that the soul, because of its knowledge
or perception of what is compounded out of the elements, and is
those who assert that it is of all things the most originative of
movement, fail to take into consideration all kinds of soul. In
fact (1) not all beings that perceive can originate movement; there
appear to be certain animals which stationary, and yet local movement
is the only one, so it seems, which the soul originates in animals.
And (2) the same objection holds against all those who construct
mind and the perceptive faculty out of the elements; for it appears
that plants live, and yet are not endowed with locomotion or perception,
while a large number of animals are without discourse of reason.
Even if these points were waived and mind admitted to be a part
of the soul (and so too the perceptive faculty), still, even so,
there would be kinds and parts of soul of which they had failed
to give any account.
The same objection lies against the view expressed in the 'Orphic'
poems: there it is said that the soul comes in from the whole when
breathing takes place, being borne in upon the winds. Now this cannot
take place in the case of plants, [411a] nor indeed in the case
of certain classes of animal, for not all classes of animal breathe.
This fact has escaped the notice of the holders of this view.
If we must construct the soul out of the elements, there is no
necessity to suppose that all the elements enter into its construction;
one element in each pair of contraries will suffice to enable it
to know both that element itself and its contrary. By means of the
straight line we know both itself and the curved -- the carpenter's
rule enables us to test both -- but what is curved does not enable
us to distinguish either itself or the straight.
Certain thinkers say that soul is intermingled in the whole universe,
and it is perhaps for that reason that Thales came to the opinion
that all things are full of gods. This presents some difficulties:
Why does the soul when it resides in air or fire not form an animal,
while it does so when it resides in mixtures of the elements, and
that although it is held to be of higher quality when contained
in the former? (One might add the question, why the soul in air
is maintained to be higher and more immortal than that in animals.)
Both possible ways of replying to the former question lead to absurdity
or paradox; for it is beyond paradox to say that fire or air is
an animal, and it is absurd to refuse the name of animal to what
has soul in it. The opinion that the elements have soul in them
seems to have arisen from the doctrine that a whole must be homogeneous
with its parts. If it is true that animals become animate by drawing
into themselves a portion of what surrounds them, the partisans
of this view are bound to say that the soul of the Whole too is
homogeneous with all its parts. If the air sucked in is homogeneous,
but soul heterogeneous, clearly while some part of soul will exist
in the inbreathed air, some other part will not. The soul must either
be homogeneous, or such that there are some parts of the Whole in
which it is not to be found.
From what has been said it is now clear that knowing as an attribute
of soul cannot be explained by soul's being composed of the elements,
and that it is neither sound nor true to speak of soul as moved.
But since (a) knowing, perceiving, opining, and further (b) desiring,
wishing, and generally all other modes of appetition, belong to
soul, and (c) the local movements of animals, and (d) growth, maturity,
and decay are produced by the soul, we must ask whether each of
these is an attribute of the soul as a whole, [411b] i.e. whether
it is with the whole soul we think, perceive, move ourselves, act
or are acted upon, or whether each of them requires a different
part of the soul? So too with regard to life. Does it depend on
one of the parts of soul? Or is it dependent on more than one? Or
on all? Or has it some quite other cause?
Some hold that the soul is divisible, and that one part thinks,
another desires. If, then, its nature admits of its being divided,
what can it be that holds the parts together? Surely not the body;
on the contrary it seems rather to be the soul that holds the body
together; at any rate when the soul departs the body disintegrates
and decays. If, then, there is something else which makes the soul
one, this unifying agency would have the best right to the name
of soul, and we shall have to repeat for it the question: Is it
one or multipartite? If it is one, why not at once admit that 'the
soul' is one? If it has parts, once more the question must be put:
What holds its parts together, and so ad infinitum?
The question might also be raised about the parts of the soul:
What is the separate role of each in relation to the body? For,
if the whole soul holds together the whole body, we should expect
each part of the soul to hold together a part of the body. But this
seems an impossibility; it is difficult even to imagine what sort
of bodily part mind will hold together, or how it will do this.
It is a fact of observation that plants and certain insects go
on living when divided into segments; this means that each of the
segments has a soul in it identical in species, though not numerically
identical in the different segments, for both of the segments for
a time possess the power of sensation and local movement. That this
does not last is not surprising, for they no longer possess the
organs necessary for self-maintenance. But, all the same, in each
of the bodily parts there are present all the parts of soul, and
the souls so present are homogeneous with one another and with the
whole; this means that the several parts of the soul are indisseverable
from one another, although the whole soul is divisible. It seems
also that the principle found in plants is also a kind of soul;
for this is the only principle which is common to both animals and
plants; and this exists in isolation from the principle of sensation,
though there nothing which has the latter without the former.
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