De Anima (On the soul)
by Aristotle (ca. 350 BC)
Book III
Chapter 1
That there is no sixth sense in addition to the five enumerated
-- sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch -- may be established by
the following considerations: If we have actually sensation of everything
of which touch can give us sensation (for all the qualities of the
tangible qua tangible are perceived by us through touch); and if
absence of a sense necessarily involves absence of a sense-organ;
and if (1) all objects that we perceive by immediate contact with
them are perceptible by touch, which sense we actually possess,
and (2) all objects that we perceive through media, i.e. without
immediate contact, are perceptible by or through the simple elements,
e.g. air and water (and this is so arranged that (a) if more than
one kind of sensible object is perceivable through a single medium,
the possessor of a sense-organ homogeneous with that medium has
the power of perceiving both kinds of objects; for example, if the
sense-organ is made of air, and air is a medium both for sound and
for colour; and that (b) if more than one medium can transmit the
same kind of sensible objects, as e.g. water as well as air can
transmit colour, both [425a] being transparent, then the possessor
of either alone will be able to perceive the kind of objects transmissible
through both); and if of the simple elements two only, air and water,
go to form sense-organs (for the pupil is made of water, the organ
of hearing is made of air, and the organ of smell of one or other
of these two, while fire is found either in none or in all -- warmth
being an essential condition of all sensibility -- and earth either
in none or, if anywhere, specially mingled with the components of
the organ of touch; wherefore it would remain that there can be
no sense-organ formed of anything except water and air); and if
these sense-organs are actually found in certain animals; -- then
all the possible senses are possessed by those animals that are
not imperfect or mutilated (for even the mole is observed to have
eyes beneath its skin); so that, if there is no fifth element and
no property other than those which belong to the four elements of
our world, no sense can be wanting to such animals.
Further, there cannot be a special sense-organ for the common sensibles
either, i.e. the objects which we perceive incidentally through
this or that special sense, e.g. movement, rest, figure, magnitude,
number, unity; for all these we perceive by movement, e.g. magnitude
by movement, and therefore also figure (for figure is a species
of magnitude), what is at rest by the absence of movement: number
is perceived by the negation of continuity, and by the special sensibles;
for each sense perceives one class of sensible objects. So that
it is clearly impossible that there should be a special sense for
any one of the common sensibles, e.g. movement; for, if that were
so, our perception of it would be exactly parallel to our present
perception of what is sweet by vision. That is so because we have
a sense for each of the two qualities, in virtue of which when they
happen to meet in one sensible object we are aware of both contemporaneously.
If it were not like this our perception of the common qualities
would always be incidental, i.e. as is the perception of Cleon's
son, where we perceive him not as Cleon's son but as white, and
the white thing which we really perceive happens to be Cleon's son.
But in the case of the common sensibles there is already in us
a general sensibility which enables us to perceive them directly;
there is therefore no special sense required for their perception:
if there were, our perception of them would have been exactly like
what has been above described.
The senses perceive each other's special objects incidentally;
not because the percipient sense is this or that special sense,
but because all form a unity: this incidental perception takes place
whenever sense is directed at one [425b] and the same moment to
two disparate qualities in one and the same object, e.g. to the
bitterness and the yellowness of bile, the assertion of the identity
of both cannot be the act of either of the senses; hence the illusion
of sense, e.g. the belief that if a thing is yellow it is bile.
It might be asked why we have more senses than one. Is it to prevent
a failure to apprehend the common sensibles, e.g. movement, magnitude,
and number, which go along with the special sensibles? Had we no
sense but sight, and that sense no object but white, they would
have tended to escape our notice and everything would have merged
for us into an indistinguishable identity because of the concomitance
of colour and magnitude. As it is, the fact that the common sensibles
are given in the objects of more than one sense reveals their distinction
from each and all of the special sensibles.
Chapter 2
Since it is through sense that we are aware that we are seeing
or hearing, it must be either by sight that we are aware of seeing,
or by some sense other than sight. But the sense that gives us this
new sensation must perceive both sight and its object, viz. colour:
so that either (1) there will be two senses both percipient of the
same sensible object, or (2) the sense must be percipient of itself.
Further, even if the sense which perceives sight were different
from sight, we must either fall into an infinite regress, or we
must somewhere assume a sense which is aware of itself. If so, we
ought to do this in the first case.
This presents a difficulty: if to perceive by sight is just to
see, and what is seen is colour (or the coloured), then if we are
to see that which sees, that which sees originally must be coloured.
It is clear therefore that 'to perceive by sight' has more than
one meaning; for even when we are not seeing, it is by sight that
we discriminate darkness from light, though not in the same way
as we distinguish one colour from another. Further, in a sense even
that which sees is coloured; for in each case the sense-organ is
capable of receiving the sensible object without its matter. That
is why even when the sensible objects are gone the sensings and
imaginings continue to exist in the sense-organs.
The activity of the sensible object and that of the percipient
sense is one and the same activity, and yet the distinction between
their being remains. Take as illustration actual sound and actual
hearing: a man may have hearing and yet not be hearing, and that
which has a sound is not always sounding. But when that which can
hear is actively hearing and which can sound is sounding, then the
actual hearing and the actual sound are merged in one (these one
might call respectively hearkening and [426a] sounding).
If it is true that the movement, both the acting and the being
acted upon, is to be found in that which is acted upon, both the
sound and the hearing so far as it is actual must be found in that
which has the faculty of hearing; for it is in the passive factor
that the actuality of the active or motive factor is realized; that
is why that which causes movement may be at rest. Now the actuality
of that which can sound is just sound or sounding, and the actuality
of that which can hear is hearing or hearkening; 'sound' and 'hearing'
are both ambiguous. The same account applies to the other senses
and their objects. For as the-acting-and-being-acted-upon is to
be found in the passive, not in the active factor, so also the actuality
of the sensible object and that of the sensitive subject are both
realized in the latter. But while in some cases each aspect of the
total actuality has a distinct name, e.g. sounding and hearkening,
in some one or other is nameless, e.g. the actuality of sight is
called seeing, but the actuality of colour has no name: the actuality
of the faculty of taste is called tasting, but the actuality of
flavour has no name. Since the actualities of the sensible object
and of the sensitive faculty are one actuality in spite of the difference
between their modes of being, actual hearing and actual sounding
appear and disappear from existence at one and the same moment,
and so actual savour and actual tasting, &c., while as potentialities
one of them may exist without the other. The earlier students of
nature were mistaken in their view that without sight there was
no white or black, without taste no savour. This statement of theirs
is partly true, partly false: 'sense' and 'the sensible object'
are ambiguous terms, i.e. may denote either potentialities or actualities:
the statement is true of the latter, false of the former. This ambiguity
they wholly failed to notice.
If voice always implies a concord, and if the voice and the hearing
of it are in one sense one and the same, and if concord always implies
a ratio, hearing as well as what is heard must be a ratio. That
is why the excess of either the sharp or the flat destroys the hearing.
(So also in the case of [426b] savours excess destroys the sense
of taste, and in the case of colours excessive brightness or darkness
destroys the sight, and in the case of smell excess of strength
whether in the direction of sweetness or bitterness is destructive.)
This shows that the sense is a ratio.
That is also why the objects of sense are (1) pleasant when the
sensible extremes such as acid or sweet or salt being pure and unmixed
are brought into the proper ratio; then they are pleasant: and in
general what is blended is more pleasant than the sharp or the flat
alone; or, to touch, that which is capable of being either warmed
or chilled: the sense and the ratio are identical: while (2) in
excess the sensible extremes are painful or destructive.
Each sense then is relative to its particular group of sensible
qualities: it is found in a sense-organ as such and discriminates
the differences which exist within that group; e.g. sight discriminates
white and black, taste sweet and bitter, and so in all cases. Since
we also discriminate white from sweet, and indeed each sensible
quality from every other, with what do we perceive that they are
different? It must be by sense; for what is before us is sensible
objects. (Hence it is also obvious that the flesh cannot be the
ultimate sense-organ: if it were, the discriminating power could
not do its work without immediate contact with the object.)
Therefore (1) discrimination between white and sweet cannot be
effected by two agencies which remain separate; both the qualities
discriminated must be present to something that is one and single.
On any other supposition even if I perceived sweet and you perceived
white, the difference between them would be apparent. What says
that two things are different must be one; for sweet is different
from white. Therefore what asserts this difference must be self-identical,
and as what asserts, so also what thinks or perceives. That it is
not possible by means of two agencies which remain separate to discriminate
two objects which are separate, is therefore obvious; and that (it
is not possible to do this in separate movements of time may be
seen' if we look at it as follows. For as what asserts the difference
between the good and the bad is one and the same, so also the time
at which it asserts the one to be different and the other to be
different is not accidental to the assertion (as it is for instance
when I now assert a difference but do not assert that there is now
a difference); it asserts thus -- both now and that the objects
are different now; the objects therefore must be present at one
and the same moment. Both the discriminating power and the time
of its exercise must be one and undivided.
But, it may be objected, it is impossible that what is self-identical
should be moved at me and the same time with contrary movements
in so far as it is undivided, and in an undivided moment of time.
For if what is sweet be the quality perceived, it moves the sense
or thought in this [427a] determinate way, while what is bitter
moves it in a contrary way, and what is white in a different way.
Is it the case then that what discriminates, though both numerically
one and indivisible, is at the same time divided in its being? In
one sense, it is what is divided that perceives two separate objects
at once, but in another sense it does so qua undivided; for it is
divisible in its being but spatially and numerically undivided.
But is not this impossible? For while it is true that what is self-identical
and undivided may be both contraries at once potentially, it cannot
be self-identical in its being -- it must lose its unity by being
put into activity. It is not possible to be at once white and black,
and therefore it must also be impossible for a thing to be affected
at one and the same moment by the forms of both, assuming it to
be the case that sensation and thinking are properly so described.
The answer is that just as what is called a 'point' is, as being
at once one and two, properly said to be divisible, so here, that
which discriminates is qua undivided one, and active in a single
moment of time, while so far forth as it is divisible it twice over
uses the same dot at one and the same time. So far forth then as
it takes the limit as two' it discriminates two separate objects
with what in a sense is divided: while so far as it takes it as
one, it does so with what is one and occupies in its activity a
single moment of time.
About the principle in virtue of which we say that animals are
percipient, let this discussion suffice.
Chapter 3
There are two distinctive peculiarities by reference to which we
characterize the soul (1) local movement and (2) thinking, discriminating,
and perceiving. Thinking both speculative and practical is regarded
as akin to a form of perceiving; for in the one as well as the other
the soul discriminates and is cognizant of something which is. Indeed
the ancients go so far as to identify thinking and perceiving; e.g.
Empedocles says 'For 'tis in respect of what is present that man's
wit is increased', and again 'Whence it befalls them from time to
time to think diverse thoughts', and Homer's phrase 'For suchlike
is man's mind' means the same. They all look upon thinking as a
bodily process like perceiving, and hold that like is known as well
as perceived by like, as I explained at the beginning of our discussion.
Yet they ought at the same time to have accounted for error also;
for it is more intimately [427b] connected with animal existence
and the soul continues longer in the state of error than in that
of truth. They cannot escape the dilemma: either (1) whatever seems
is true (and there are some who accept this) or (2) error is contact
with the unlike; for that is the opposite of the knowing of like
by like.
But it is a received principle that error as well as knowledge
in respect to contraries is one and the same.
That perceiving and practical thinking are not identical is therefore
obvious; for the former is universal in the animal world, the latter
is found in only a small division of it. Further, speculative thinking
is also distinct from perceiving -- I mean that in which we find
rightness and wrongness -- rightness in prudence, knowledge, true
opinion, wrongness in their opposites; for perception of the special
objects of sense is always free from error, and is found in all
animals, while it is possible to think falsely as well as truly,
and thought is found only where there is discourse of reason as
well as sensibility. For imagination is different from either perceiving
or discursive thinking, though it is not found without sensation,
or judgement without it. That this activity is not the same kind
of thinking as judgement is obvious. For imagining lies within our
own power whenever we wish (e.g. we can call up a picture, as in
the practice of mnemonics by the use of mental images), but in forming
opinions we are not free: we cannot escape the alternative of falsehood
or truth. Further, when we think something to be fearful or threatening,
emotion is immediately produced, and so too with what is encouraging;
but when we merely imagine we remain as unaffected as persons who
are looking at a painting of some dreadful or encouraging scene.
Again within the field of judgement itself we find varieties, knowledge,
opinion, prudence, and their opposites; of the differences between
these I must speak elsewhere.
Thinking is different from perceiving and is held to be in part
imagination, in part judgement: we must therefore first mark off
the sphere of imagination and then speak of [428a] judgement. If
then imagination is that in virtue of which an image arises for
us, excluding metaphorical uses of the term, is it a single faculty
or disposition relative to images, in virtue of which we discriminate
and are either in error or not? The faculties in virtue of which
we do this are sense, opinion, science, intelligence.
That imagination is not sense is clear from the following considerations:
Sense is either a faculty or an activity, e.g. sight or seeing:
imagination takes place in the absence of both, as e.g. in dreams.
(Again, sense is always present, imagination not. If actual imagination
and actual sensation were the same, imagination would be found in
all the brutes: this is held not to be the case; e.g. it is not
found in ants or bees or grubs. (Again, sensations are always true,
imaginations are for the most part false. (Once more, even in ordinary
speech, we do not, when sense functions precisely with regard to
its object, say that we imagine it to be a man, but rather when
there is some failure of accuracy in its exercise. And as we were
saying before, visions appear to us even when our eyes are shut.
Neither is imagination any of the things that are never in error:
e.g. knowledge or intelligence; for imagination may be false.
It remains therefore to see if it is opinion, for opinion may be
either true or false.
But opinion involves belief (for without belief in what we opine
we cannot have an opinion), and in the brutes though we often find
imagination we never find belief. Further, every opinion is accompanied
by belief, belief by conviction, and conviction by discourse of
reason: while there are some of the brutes in which we find imagination,
without discourse of reason. It is clear then that imagination cannot,
again, be (1) opinion plus sensation, or (2) opinion mediated by
sensation, or (3) a blend of opinion and sensation; this is impossible
both for these reasons and because the content of the supposed opinion
cannot be different from that of the sensation (I mean that imagination
must be the blending of the perception of white with the opinion
that it is white: it could scarcely be a blend of the opinion that
it is good with the perception that it is white): to imagine is
therefore (on this view) identical [428b] with the thinking of exactly
the same as what one in the strictest sense perceives. But what
we imagine is sometimes false though our contemporaneous judgement
about it is true; e.g. we imagine the sun to be a foot in diameter
though we are convinced that it is larger than the inhabited part
of the earth, and the following dilemma presents itself. Either
(a while the fact has not changed and the (observer has neither
forgotten nor lost belief in the true opinion which he had, that
opinion has disappeared, or (b) if he retains it then his opinion
is at once true and false. A true opinion, however, becomes false
only when the fact alters without being noticed.
Imagination is therefore neither any one of the states enumerated,
nor compounded out of them.
But since when one thing has been set in motion another thing may
be moved by it, and imagination is held to be a movement and to
be impossible without sensation, i.e. to occur in beings that are
percipient and to have for its content what can be perceived, and
since movement may be produced by actual sensation and that movement
is necessarily similar in character to the sensation itself, this
movement must be (1) necessarily (a) incapable of existing apart
from sensation, (b) incapable of existing except when we perceive,
(such that in virtue of its possession that in which it is found
may present various phenomena both active and passive, and (such
that it may be either true or false.
The reason of the last characteristic is as follows. Perception
(1) of the special objects of sense is never in error or admits
the least possible amount of falsehood. (2) That of the concomitance
of the objects concomitant with the sensible qualities comes next:
in this case certainly we may be deceived; for while the perception
that there is white before us cannot be false, the perception that
what is white is this or that may be false. (3) Third comes the
perception of the universal attributes which accompany the concomitant
objects to which the special sensibles attach (I mean e.g. of movement
and magnitude); it is in respect of these that the greatest amount
of sense-illusion is possible.
The motion which is due to the activity of sense in these three
modes of its exercise will differ from the activity of sense; (1)
the first kind of derived motion is free from error while the sensation
is present; (2) and (3) the others may be erroneous whether it is
present or absent, especially when the object of perception is far
off. If then imagination presents no other features than those enumerated
and is what we have described, then imagination must be a movement
resulting from an actual exercise of a power of [429a] sense.
As sight is the most highly developed sense, the name Phantasia
(imagination) has been formed from Phaos (light) because it is not
possible to see without light. And because imaginations remain in
the organs of sense and resemble sensations, animals in their actions
are largely guided by them, some (i.e. the brutes) because of the
non-existence in them of mind, others (i.e. men) because of the
temporary eclipse in them of mind by feeling or disease or sleep.
About imagination, what it is and why it exists, let so much suffice.
Chapter 4
Turning now to the part of the soul with which the soul knows and
thinks (whether this is separable from the others in definition
only, or spatially as well) we have to inquire (1) what differentiates
this part, and (2) how thinking can take place.
If thinking is like perceiving, it must be either a process in
which the soul is acted upon by what is capable of being thought,
or a process different from but analogous to that. The thinking
part of the soul must therefore be, while impassible, capable of
receiving the form of an object; that is, must be potentially identical
in character with its object without being the object. Mind must
be related to what is thinkable, as sense is to what is sensible.
Therefore, since everything is a possible object of thought, mind
in order, as Anaxagoras says, to dominate, that is, to know, must
be pure from all admixture; for the co-presence of what is alien
to its nature is a hindrance and a block: it follows that it too,
like the sensitive part, can have no nature of its own, other than
that of having a certain capacity. Thus that in the soul which is
called mind (by mind I mean that whereby the soul thinks and judges)
is, before it thinks, not actually any real thing. For this reason
it cannot reasonably be regarded as blended with the body: if so,
it would acquire some quality, e.g. warmth or cold, or even have
an organ like the sensitive faculty: as it is, it has none. It was
a good idea to call the soul 'the place of forms', though (1) this
description holds only of the intellective soul, and (2) even this
is the forms only potentially, not actually.
Observation of the sense-organs and their employment reveals a
distinction between the impassibility of the sensitive and that
of the intellective faculty. After strong [429b] stimulation of
a sense we are less able to exercise it than before, as e.g. in
the case of a loud sound we cannot hear easily immediately after,
or in the case of a bright colour or a powerful odour we cannot
see or smell, but in the case of mind thought about an object that
is highly intelligible renders it more and not less able afterwards
to think objects that are less intelligible: the reason is that
while the faculty of sensation is dependent upon the body, mind
is separable from it.
Once the mind has become each set of its possible objects, as a
man of science has, when this phrase is used of one who is actually
a man of science (this happens when he is now able to exercise the
power on his own initiative), its condition is still one of potentiality,
but in a different sense from the potentiality which preceded the
acquisition of knowledge by learning or discovery: the mind too
is then able to think itself.
Since we can distinguish between a spatial magnitude and what it
is to be such, and between water and what it is to be water, and
so in many other cases (though not in all; for in certain cases
the thing and its form are identical), flesh and what it is to be
flesh are discriminated either by different faculties, or by the
same faculty in two different states: for flesh necessarily involves
matter and is like what is snub-nosed, a this in a this. Now it
is by means of the sensitive faculty that we discriminate the hot
and the cold, i.e. the factors which combined in a certain ratio
constitute flesh: the essential character of flesh is apprehended
by something different either wholly separate from the sensitive
faculty or related to it as a bent line to the same line when it
has been straightened out.
Again in the case of abstract objects what is straight is analogous
to what is snub-nosed; for it necessarily implies a continuum as
its matter: its constitutive essence is different, if we may distinguish
between straightness and what is straight: let us take it to be
two-ness. It must be apprehended, therefore, by a different power
or by the same power in a different state. To sum up, in so far
as the realities it knows are capable of being separated from their
matter, so it is also with the powers of mind.
The problem might be suggested: if thinking is a passive affection,
then if mind is simple and impassible and has nothing in common
with anything else, as Anaxagoras says, how can it come to think
at all? For interaction between two factors is held to require a
precedent community of nature between the factors. Again it might
be asked, is mind a possible object of thought to itself? For if
mind is thinkable per se and what is thinkable is in kind one and
the same, then either (a) mind will belong to everything, or (b)
mind will contain some element common to it with all other realities
which makes them all thinkable.
(1) Have not we already disposed of the difficulty about interaction
involving a common element, when we said that mind is in a sense
potentially whatever is thinkable, though actually it is nothing
until it has thought? What it thinks must be in it just as characters
may be said to be on a [430a] writing tablet on which as yet nothing
actually stands written: this is exactly what happens with mind.
(2) Mind is itself thinkable in exactly the same way as its objects
are. For (a) in the case of objects which involve no matter, what
thinks and what is thought are identical; for speculative knowledge
and its object are identical. (Why mind is not always thinking we
must consider later.) (b) In the case of those which contain matter
each of the objects of thought is only potentially present. It follows
that while they will not have mind in them (for mind is a potentiality
of them only in so far as they are capable of being disengaged from
matter) mind may yet be thinkable.
Chapter 5
Since in every class of things, as in nature as a whole, we find
two factors involved, (1) a matter which is potentially all the
particulars included in the class, (2) a cause which is productive
in the sense that it makes them all (the latter standing to the
former, as e.g. an art to its material), these distinct elements
must likewise be found within the soul.
And in fact mind as we have described it is what it is what it
is by virtue of becoming all things, while there is another which
is what it is by virtue of making all things: this is a sort of
positive state like light; for in a sense light makes potential
colours into actual colours. Mind in this sense of it is separable,
impassible, unmixed, since it is in its essential nature activity
(for always the active is superior to the passive factor, the originating
force to the matter which it forms).
Actual knowledge is identical with its object: in the individual,
potential knowledge is in time prior to actual knowledge, but in
the universe as a whole it is not prior even in time. Mind is not
at one time knowing and at another not. When mind is set free from
its present conditions it appears as just what it is and nothing
more: this alone is immortal and eternal (we do not, however, remember
its former activity because, while mind in this sense is impassible,
mind as passive is destructible), and without it nothing thinks.
Chapter 6
The thinking then of the simple objects of thought is found in
those cases where falsehood is impossible: where the alternative
of true or false applies, there we always find a putting together
of objects of thought in a quasi-unity. As Empedocles said that
'where heads of many a creature sprouted without necks' they afterwards
by Love's power were combined, so here too objects of thought which
were given separate are combined, e.g. 'incommensurate' and 'diagonal':
if the combination be of objects past or future the combination
of thought includes in its content the date. For falsehood always
involves a synthesis; [430b] for even if you assert that what is
white is not white you have included not white in a synthesis. It
is possible also to call all these cases division as well as combination.
However that may be, there is not only the true or false assertion
that Cleon is white but also the true or false assertion that he
was or will he white. In each and every case that which unifies
is mind.
Since the word 'simple' has two senses, i.e. may mean either (a)
'not capable of being divided' or (b) 'not actually divided', there
is nothing to prevent mind from knowing what is undivided, e.g.
when it apprehends a length (which is actually undivided) and that
in an undivided time; for the time is divided or undivided in the
same manner as the line. It is not possible, then, to tell what
part of the line it was apprehending in each half of the time: the
object has no actual parts until it has been divided: if in thought
you think each half separately, then by the same act you divide
the time also, the half-lines becoming as it were new wholes of
length. But if you think it as a whole consisting of these two possible
parts, then also you think it in a time which corresponds to both
parts together. (But what is not quantitatively but qualitatively
simple is thought in a simple time and by a simple act of the soul.)
But that which mind thinks and the time in which it thinks are
in this case divisible only incidentally and not as such. For in
them too there is something indivisible (though, it may be, not
isolable) which gives unity to the time and the whole of length;
and this is found equally in every continuum whether temporal or
spatial.
Points and similar instances of things that divide, themselves
being indivisible, are realized in consciousness in the same manner
as privations.
A similar account may be given of all other cases, e.g. how evil
or black is cognized; they are cognized, in a sense, by means of
their contraries. That which cognizes must have an element of potentiality
in its being, and one of the contraries must be in it. But if there
is anything that has no contrary, then it knows itself and is actually
and possesses independent existence.
Assertion is the saying of something concerning something, e.g.
affirmation, and is in every case either true or false: this is
not always the case with mind: the thinking of the definition in
the sense of the constitutive essence is never in error nor is it
the assertion of something concerning something, but, just as while
the seeing of the special object of sight can never be in error,
the belief that the white object seen is a man may be mistaken,
so too in the case of objects which are without matter.
Chapter 7
Actual knowledge is identical with its object: potential [431a]
knowledge in the individual is in time prior to actual knowledge
but in the universe it has no priority even in time; for all things
that come into being arise from what actually is. In the case of
sense clearly the sensitive faculty already was potentially what
the object makes it to be actually; the faculty is not affected
or altered. This must therefore be a different kind from movement;
for movement is, as we saw, an activity of what is imperfect, activity
in the unqualified sense, i.e. that of what has been perfected,
is different from movement.
To perceive then is like bare asserting or knowing; but when the
object is pleasant or painful, the soul makes a quasi-affirmation
or negation, and pursues or avoids the object. To feel pleasure
or pain is to act with the sensitive mean towards what is good or
bad as such. Both avoidance and appetite when actual are identical
with this: the faculty of appetite and avoidance are not different,
either from one another or from the faculty of sense-perception;
but their being is different.
To the thinking soul images serve as if they were contents of perception
(and when it asserts or denies them to be good or bad it avoids
or pursues them). That is why the soul never thinks without an image.
The process is like that in which the air modifies the pupil in
this or that way and the pupil transmits the modification to some
third thing (and similarly in hearing), while the ultimate point
of arrival is one, a single mean, with different manners of being.
With what part of itself the soul discriminates sweet from hot
I have explained before and must now describe again as follows:
That with which it does so is a sort of unity, but in the way just
mentioned, i.e. as a connecting term. And the two faculties it connects,
being one by analogy and numerically, are each to each as the qualities
discerned are to one another (for what difference does it make whether
we raise the problem of discrimination between disparates or between
contraries, e.g. white and black?). Let then C be to D as A is to
B: it follows alternando that C:A::D:B. If then C and D belong to
one subject, the case will be the same with them as with and [431b]
A and B form a single identity with different modes of being; so
too will the former pair. The same reasoning holds if be sweet and
B white.
The faculty of thinking then thinks the forms in the images, and
as in the former case what is to be pursued or avoided is marked
out for it, so where there is no sensation and it is engaged upon
the images it is moved to pursuit or avoidance. E.g.. perceiving
by sense that the beacon is fire, it recognizes in virtue of the
general faculty of sense that it signifies an enemy, because it
sees it moving; but sometimes by means of the images or thoughts
which are within the soul, just as if it were seeing, it calculates
and deliberates what is to come by reference to what is present;
and when it makes a pronouncement, as in the case of sensation it
pronounces the object to be pleasant or painful, in this case it
avoids or persues and so generally in cases of action.
That too which involves no action, i.e. that which is true or false,
is in the same province with what is good or bad: yet they differ
in this, that the one set imply and the other do not a reference
to a particular person.
The so-called abstract objects the mind thinks just as, if one
had thought of the snubnosed not as snub-nosed but as hollow, one
would have thought of an actuality without the flesh in which it
is embodied: it is thus that the mind when it is thinking the objects
of Mathematics thinks as separate elements which do not exist separate.
In every case the mind which is actively thinking is the objects
which it thinks. Whether it is possible for it while not existing
separate from spatial conditions to think anything that is separate,
or not, we must consider later.
Chapter 8
Let us now summarize our results about soul, and repeat that the
soul is in a way all existing things; for existing things are either
sensible or thinkable, and knowledge is in a way what is knowable,
and sensation is in a way what is sensible: in what way we must
inquire. Knowledge and sensation are divided to correspond with
the realities, potential knowledge and sensation answering to potentialities,
actual knowledge and sensation to actualities. Within the soul the
faculties of knowledge and sensation are potentially these objects,
the one what is knowable, the other what is sensible. They must
be either the things themselves or their forms. The former alternative
is of course impossible: it is not the stone which is present in
the soul but its form.
It follows that the soul is analogous to the hand; for as the hand
is a tool of tools, so the mind is the form of [432a] forms and
sense the form of sensible things.
Since according to common agreement there is nothing outside and
separate in existence from sensible spatial magnitudes, the objects
of thought are in the sensible forms, viz. both the abstract objects
and all the states and affections of sensible things. Hence (1)
no one can learn or understand anything in the absence of sense,
and (when the mind is actively aware of anything it is necessarily
aware of it along with an image; for images are like sensuous contents
except in that they contain no matter.
Imagination is different from assertion and denial; for what is
true or false involves a synthesis of concepts. In what will the
primary concepts differ from images? Must we not say that neither
these nor even our other concepts are images, though they necessarily
involve them?
Chapter 9
The soul of animals is characterized by two faculties, (a) the
faculty of discrimination which is the work of thought and sense,
and (b) the faculty of originating local movement. Sense and mind
we have now sufficiently examined. Let us next consider what it
is in the soul which originates movement. Is it a single part of
the soul separate either spatially or in definition? Or is it the
soul as a whole? If it is a part, is that part different from those
usually distinguished or already mentioned by us, or is it one of
them? The problem at once presents itself, in what sense we are
to speak of parts of the soul, or how many we should distinguish.
For in a sense there is an infinity of parts: it is not enough to
distinguish, with some thinkers, the calculative, the passionate,
and the desiderative, or with others the rational and the irrational;
for if we take the dividing lines followed by these thinkers we
shall find parts far more distinctly separated from one another
than these, namely those we have just mentioned: (1) the nutritive,
which belongs both to plants and to all animals, and (2) the sensitive,
which cannot easily be classed as either irrational or rational;
further (3) the imaginative, which is, [432b] in its being, different
from all, while it is very hard to say with which of the others
it is the same or not the same, supposing we determine to posit
separate parts in the soul; and lastly (4) the appetitive, which
would seem to be distinct both in definition and in power from all
hitherto enumerated.
It is absurd to break up the last-mentioned faculty: as these thinkers
do, for wish is found in the calculative part and desire and passion
in the irrational; and if the soul is tripartite appetite will be
found in all three parts. Turning our attention to the present object
of discussion, let us ask what that is which originates local movement
of the animal.
The movement of growth and decay, being found in all living things,
must be attributed to the faculty of reproduction and nutrition,
which is common to all: inspiration and expiration, sleep and waking,
we must consider later: these too present much difficulty: at present
we must consider local movement, asking what it is that originates
forward movement in the animal.
That it is not the nutritive faculty is obvious; for this kind
of movement is always for an end and is accompanied either by imagination
or by appetite; for no animal moves except by compulsion unless
it has an impulse towards or away from an object. Further, if it
were the nutritive faculty, even plants would have been capable
of originating such movement and would have possessed the organs
necessary to carry it out. Similarly it cannot be the sensitive
faculty either; for there are many animals which have sensibility
but remain fast and immovable throughout their lives.
If then Nature never makes anything without a purpose and never
leaves out what is necessary (except in the case of mutilated or
imperfect growths; and that here we have neither mutilation nor
imperfection may be argued from the facts that such animals (a)
can reproduce their species and (b) rise to completeness of nature
and decay to an end), it follows that, had they been capable of
originating forward movement, they would have possessed the organs
necessary for that purpose. Further, neither can the calculative
faculty or what is called 'mind' be the cause of such movement;
for mind as speculative never thinks what is practicable, it never
says anything about an object to be avoided or pursued, while this
movement is always in something which is avoiding or pursuing an
object. No, not even when it is aware of such an object does it
at once enjoin pursuit or avoidance of it; e.g. the mind often thinks
of something terrifying or pleasant without enjoining the emotion
of fear. It is the heart that is moved (or in the case of a pleasant
object some other part). Further, even when [433a] the mind does
command and thought bids us pursue or avoid something, sometimes
no movement is produced; we act in accordance with desire, as in
the case of moral weakness. And, generally, we observe that the
possessor of medical knowledge is not necessarily healing, which
shows that something else is required to produce action in accordance
with knowledge; the knowledge alone is not the cause. Lastly, appetite
too is incompetent to account fully for movement; for those who
successfully resist temptation have appetite and desire and yet
follow mind and refuse to enact that for which they have appetite.
Chapter 10
These two at all events appear to be sources of movement: appetite
and mind (if one may venture to regard imagination as a kind of
thinking; for many men follow their imaginations contrary to knowledge,
and in all animals other than man there is no thinking or calculation
but only imagination).
Both of these then are capable of originating local movement, mind
and appetite: (1) mind, that is, which calculates means to an end,
i.e. mind practical (it differs from mind speculative in the character
of its end); while (2) appetite is in every form of it relative
to an end: for that which is the object of appetite is the stimulant
of mind practical; and that which is last in the process of thinking
is the beginning of the action. It follows that there is a justification
for regarding these two as the sources of movement, i.e. appetite
and practical thought; for the object of appetite starts a movement
and as a result of that thought gives rise to movement, the object
of appetite being it a source of stimulation. So too when imagination
originates movement, it necessarily involves appetite.
That which moves therefore is a single faculty and the faculty
of appetite; for if there had been two sources of movement -- mind
and appetite -- they would have produced movement in virtue of some
common character. As it is, mind is never found producing movement
without appetite (for wish is a form of appetite; and when movement
is produced according to calculation it is also according to wish),
but appetite can originate movement contrary to calculation, for
desire is a form of appetite. Now mind is always right, but appetite
and imagination may be either right or wrong. That is why, though
in any case it is the object of appetite which originates movement,
this object may be either the real or the apparent good. To produce
movement the object must be more than this: it must be good that
can be brought into being by action; and only what can be otherwise
than as it is can thus be brought into being. That then such a power
in the soul as has been described, i.e. that called appetite, originates
movement [433b] is clear. Those who distinguish parts in the soul,
if they distinguish and divide in accordance with differences of
power, find themselves with a very large number of parts, a nutritive,
a sensitive, an intellective, a deliberative, and now an appetitive
part; for these are more different from one another than the faculties
of desire and passion.
Since appetites run counter to one another, which happens when
a principle of reason and a desire are contrary and is possible
only in beings with a sense of time (for while mind bids us hold
back because of what is future, desire is influenced by what is
just at hand: a pleasant object which is just at hand presents itself
as both pleasant and good, without condition in either case, because
of want of foresight into what is farther away in time), it follows
that while that which originates movement must be specifically one,
viz. the faculty of appetite as such (or rather farthest back of
all the object of that faculty; for it is it that itself remaining
unmoved originates the movement by being apprehended in thought
or imagination), the things that originate movement are numerically
many.
All movement involves three factors, (1) that which originates
the movement, (2) that by means of which it originates it, and (3)
that which is moved. The expression 'that which originates the movement'
is ambiguous: it may mean either (a) something which itself is unmoved
or (b) that which at once moves and is moved. Here that which moves
without itself being moved is the realizable good, that which at
once moves and is moved is the faculty of appetite (for that which
is influenced by appetite so far as it is actually so influenced
is set in movement, and appetite in the sense of actual appetite
is a kind of movement), while that which is in motion is the animal.
The instrument which appetite employs to produce movement is no
longer psychical but bodily: hence the examination of it falls within
the province of the functions common to body and soul. To state
the matter summarily at present, that which is the instrument in
the production of movement is to be found where a beginning and
an end coincide as e.g. in a ball and socket joint; for there the
convex and the concave sides are respectively an end and a beginning
(that is why while the one remains at rest, the other is moved):
they are separate in definition but not separable spatially. For
everything is moved by pushing and pulling. Hence just as in the
case of a wheel, so here there must be a point which remains at
rest, and from that point the movement must originate.
To sum up, then, and repeat what I have said, inasmuch as an animal
is capable of appetite it is capable of self-movement; it is not
capable of appetite without possessing imagination; and all imagination
is either (1) calculative or (2) sensitive. In the latter all animals,
and not only man, partake.
Chapter 11
We must consider also in the case of imperfect animals, sc. those
which have no sense but touch, what it is that in them originates
movement. Can they have [434a] imagination or not? or desire? Clearly
they have feelings of pleasure and pain, and if they have these
they must have desire. But how can they have imagination? Must not
we say that, as their movements are indefinite, they have imagination
and desire, but indefinitely?
Sensitive imagination, as we have said, is found in all animals,
deliberative imagination only in those that are calculative: for
whether this or that shall be enacted is already a task requiring
calculation; and there must be a single standard to measure by,
for that is pursued which is greater. It follows that what acts
in this way must be able to make a unity out of several images.
This is the reason why imagination is held not to involve opinion,
in that it does not involve opinion based on inference, though opinion
involves imagination. Hence appetite contains no deliberative element.
Sometimes it overpowers wish and sets it in movement: at times wish
acts thus upon appetite, like one sphere imparting its movement
to another, or appetite acts thus upon appetite, i.e. in the condition
of moral weakness (though by nature the higher faculty is always
more authoritative and gives rise to movement). Thus three modes
of movement are possible.
The faculty of knowing is never moved but remains at rest. Since
the one premiss or judgement is universal and the other deals with
the particular (for the first tells us that such and such a kind
of man should do such and such a kind of act, and the second that
this is an act of the kind meant, and I a person of the type intended),
it is the latter opinion that really originates movement, not the
universal; or rather it is both, but the one does so while it remains
in a state more like rest, while the other partakes in movement.
Chapter 12
The nutritive soul then must be possessed by everything that is
alive, and every such thing is endowed with soul from its birth
to its death. For what has been born must grow, reach maturity,
and decay -- all of which are impossible without nutrition. Therefore
the nutritive faculty must be found in everything that grows and
decays.
But sensation need not be found in all things that live. For it
is impossible for touch to belong either (1) to those whose body
is uncompounded or (2) to those which are incapable of taking in
the forms without their matter.
But animals must be endowed with sensation, since Nature does nothing
in vain. For all things that exist by Nature are means to an end,
or will be concomitants of means to an end. Every body capable of
forward movement [434b] would, if unendowed with sensation, perish
and fail to reach its end, which is the aim of Nature; for how could
it obtain nutriment? Stationary living things, it is true, have
as their nutriment that from which they have arisen; but it is not
possible that a body which is not stationary but produced by generation
should have a soul and a discerning mind without also having sensation.
(Nor yet even if it were not produced by generation. Why should
it not have sensation? Because it were better so either for the
body or for the soul? But clearly it would not be better for either:
the absence of sensation will not enable the one to think better
or the other to exist better.) Therefore no body which is not stationary
has soul without sensation.
But if a body has sensation, it must be either simple or compound.
And simple it cannot be; for then it could not have touch, which
is indispensable. This is clear from what follows. An animal is
a body with soul in it: every body is tangible, i.e. perceptible
by touch; hence necessarily, if an animal is to survive, its body
must have tactual sensation. All the other senses, e.g. smell, sight,
hearing, apprehend through media; but where there is immediate contact
the animal, if it has no sensation, will be unable to avoid some
things and take others, and so will find it impossible to survive.
That is why taste also is a sort of touch; it is relative to nutriment,
which is just tangible body; whereas sound, colour, and odour are
innutritious, and further neither grow nor decay. Hence it is that
taste also must be a sort of touch, because it is the sense for
what is tangible and nutritious.
Both these senses, then, are indispensable to the animal, and it
is clear that without touch it is impossible for an animal to be.
All the other senses subserve well-being and for that very reason
belong not to any and every kind of animal, but only to some, e.g.
those capable of forward movement must have them; for, if they are
to survive, they must perceive not only by immediate contact but
also at a distance from the object. This will be possible if they
can perceive through a medium, the medium being affected and moved
by the perceptible object, and the animal by the medium. just as
that which produces local movement causes a change extending to
a certain point, and that which gave an impulse causes another to
produce a new impulse so that the movement traverses a medium the
first mover impelling without being impelled, the last moved being
impelled without impelling, while the medium (or media, for there
are many) is both -- so is it also in the case of alteration, except
that the agent produces it [435a] without the patient's changing
its place. Thus if an object is dipped into wax, the movement goes
on until submersion has taken place, and in stone it goes no distance
at all, while in water the disturbance goes far beyond the object
dipped: in air the disturbance is propagated farthest of all, the
air acting and being acted upon, so long as it maintains an unbroken
unity. That is why in the case of reflection it is better, instead
of saying that the sight issues from the eye and is reflected, to
say that the air, so long as it remains one, is affected by the
shape and colour. On a smooth surface the air possesses unity; hence
it is that it in turn sets the sight in motion, just as if the impression
on the wax were transmitted as far as the wax extends.
Chapter 13
It is clear that the body of an animal cannot be simple, i.e. consist
of one element such as fire or air. For without touch it is impossible
to have any other sense; for every body that has soul in it must,
as we have said, be capable of touch. All the other elements with
the exception of earth can constitute organs of sense, but all of
them bring about perception only through something else, viz. through
the media. Touch takes place by direct contact with its objects,
whence also its name. All the other organs of sense, no doubt, perceive
by contact, only the contact is mediate: touch alone perceives by
immediate contact. Consequently no animal body can consist of these
other elements.
Nor can it consist solely of earth. For touch is as it were a mean
between all tangible qualities, and its organ is capable of receiving
not only all the specific qualities which characterize earth, but
also the hot and the cold and all other tangible qualities whatsoever.
That is why we have no [435b] sensation by means of bones, hair,
&c., because they consist of earth. So too plants, because they
consist of earth, have no sensation. Without touch there can be
no other sense, and the organ of touch cannot consist of earth or
of any other single element.
It is evident, therefore, that the loss of this one sense alone
must bring about the death of an animal. For as on the one hand
nothing which is not an animal can have this sense, so on the other
it is the only one which is indispensably necessary to what is an
animal. This explains, further, the following difference between
the other senses and touch. In the case of all the others excess
of intensity in the qualities which they apprehend, i.e. excess
of intensity in colour, sound, and smell, destroys not the but only
the organs of the sense (except incidentally, as when the sound
is accompanied by an impact or shock, or where through the objects
of sight or of smell certain other things are set in motion, which
destroy by contact); flavour also destroys only in so far as it
is at the same time tangible. But excess of intensity in tangible
qualities, e.g. heat, cold, or hardness, destroys the animal itself.
As in the case of every sensible quality excess destroys the organ,
so here what is tangible destroys touch, which is the essential
mark of life; for it has been shown that without touch it is impossible
for an animal to be. That is why excess in intensity of tangible
qualities destroys not merely the organ, but the animal itself,
because this is the only sense which it must have.
All the other senses are necessary to animals, as we have said,
not for their being, but for their well-being. Such, e.g. is sight,
which, since it lives in air or water, or generally in what is pellucid,
it must have in order to see, and taste because of what is pleasant
or painful to it, in order that it may perceive these qualities
in its nutriment and so may desire to be set in motion, and hearing
that it may have communication made to it, and a tongue that it
may communicate with its fellows.
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