ON DREAMS
by Aristotle
translated by J. I. Beare
CHAPTER 1
WE must, in the next place, investigate the
subject of the dream, and first inquire to
which of the faculties of the soul it presents
itself, i. e. whether the affection is one
which pertains to the faculty of intelligence
or to that of sense-perception; for these
are the only faculties within us by which
we acquire knowledge.
If, then, the exercise of the faculty of
sight is actual seeing, that of the auditory
faculty, hearing, and, in general that of
the faculty of sense-perception, perceiving;
and if there are some perceptions common
to the senses, such as figure, magnitude,
motion, &c., while there are others,
as colour, sound, taste, peculiar [each to
its own sense]; and further, if all creatures,
when the eyes are closed in sleep, are unable
to see, and the analogous statement is true
of the other senses, so that manifestly we
perceive nothing when asleep; we may conclude
that it is not by sense-perception we perceive
a dream.
But neither is it by opinion that we do so.
For [in dreams] we not only assert, e. g.
that some object approaching is a man or
a horse [which would be an exercise of opinion],
but that the object is white or beautiful,
points on which opinion without sense-perception
asserts nothing either truly or falsely.
It is, however, a fact that the soul makes
such assertions in sleep. We seem to see
equally well that the approaching figure
is a man, and that it is white. [In dreams],
too, we think something else, over and above
the dream presentation, just as we do in
waking moments when we perceive something;
for we often also reason about that which
we perceive. So, too, in sleep we sometimes
have thoughts other than the mere phantasms
immediately before our minds. This would
be manifest to any one who should attend
and try, immediately on arising from sleep,
to remember [his dreaming experiences]. There
are cases of persons who have seen such dreams,
those, for example, who believe themselves
to be mentally arranging a given list of
subjects according to the mnemonic rule.
They frequently find themselves engaged in
something else besides the dream, viz. in
setting a phantasm which they envisage into
its mnemonic position. Hence it is plain
that not every 'phantasm' in sleep is a mere
dream-image, and that the further thinking
which we perform then is due to an exercise
of the faculty of opinion.
So much at least is plain on all these points,
viz. that the faculty by which, in waking
hours, we are subject to illusion when affected
by disease, is identical with that which
produces illusory effects in sleep. So, even
when persons are in excellent health, and
know the facts of the case perfectly well,
the sun, nevertheless, appears to them to
be only a foot wide. Now, whether the presentative
faculty of the soul be identical with, or
different from, the faculty of sense-perception,
in either case the illusion does not occur
without our actually seeing or [otherwise]
perceiving something. Even to see wrongly
or to hear wrongly can happen only to one
who sees or hears something real, though
not exactly what he supposes. But we have
assumed that in sleep one neither sees, nor
hears, nor exercises any sense whatever.
Perhaps we may regard it as true that the
dreamer sees nothing, yet as false that his
faculty of sense-perception is unaffected,
the fact being that the sense of seeing and
the other senses may possibly be then in
a certain way affected, while each of these
affections, as duly as when he is awake,
gives its impulse in a certain manner to
his [primary] faculty of sense, though not
in precisely the same manner as when he is
awake. Sometimes, too, opinion says [to dreamers]
just as to those who are awake, that the
object seen is an illusion; at other times
it is inhibited, and becomes a mere follower
of the phantasm.
It is plain therefore that this affection,
which we name 'dreaming', is no mere exercise
of opinion or intelligence, but yet is not
an affection of the faculty of perception
in the simple sense. If it were the latter
it would be possible [when asleep] to hear
and see in the simple sense.
How then, and in what manner, it takes place,
is what we have to examine. Let us assume,
what is indeed clear enough, that the affection
[of dreaming] pertains to sense-perception
as surely as sleep itself does. For sleep
does not pertain to one organ in animals
and dreaming to another; both pertain to
the same organ.
But since we have, in our work On the Soul,
treated of presentation, and the faculty
of presentation is identical with that of
sense-perception, though the essential notion
of a faculty of presentation is different
from that of a faculty of sense-perception;
and since presentation is the movement set
up by a sensory faculty when actually discharging
its function, while a dream appears to be
a presentation (for a presentation which
occurs in sleep- whether simply or in some
particular way- is what we call a dream):
it manifestly follows that dreaming is an
activity of the faculty of sense-perception,
but belongs to this faculty qua presentative.
CHAPTER 2
We can best obtain a scientific view of the
nature of the dream and the manner in which
it originates by regarding it in the light
of the circumstances attending sleep. The
objects of sense-perception corresponding
to each sensory organ produce sense-perception
in us, and the affection due to their operation
is present in the organs of sense not only
when the perceptions are actualized, but
even when they have departed.
What happens in these cases may be compared
with what happens in the case of projectiles
moving in space. For in the case of these
the movement continues even when that which
set up the movement is no longer in contact
[with the things that are moved]. For that
which set them in motion moves a certain
portion of air, and this, in turn, being
moved excites motion in another portion;
and so, accordingly, it is in this way that
[the bodies], whether in air or in liquids,
continue moving, until they come to a standstill.
This we must likewise assume to happen in
the case of qualitative change; for that
part which [for example] has been heated
by something hot, heats [in turn] the part
next to it, and this propagates the affection
continuously onwards until the process has
come round to its
point of origination. This must also happen
in the organ wherein the exercise of sense-perception
takes place, since sense-perception, as realized
in actual perceiving, is a mode of qualitative
change. This explains why the affection continues
in the sensory organs, both in their deeper
and in their more superficial parts, not
merely while they are actually engaged in
perceiving, but even after they have ceased
to do so. That they do this, indeed, is obvious
in cases where we continue for some time
engaged in a particular form of perception,
for then, when we shift the scene of our
perceptive activity, the previous affection
remains; for instance, when we have turned
our gaze from sunlight into darkness. For
the result of this is that one sees nothing,
owing to the motion excited by the light
still subsisting in our eyes. Also, when
we have looked steadily for a long while
at one colour, e. g. at white or green, that
to which we next transfer our gaze appears
to be of the same colour. Again if, after
having looked at the sun or some other brilliant
object, we close the eyes, then, if we watch
carefully, it appears in a right line with
the direction of vision (whatever this may
be), at first in its own colour; then it
changes to crimson, next to purple, until
it becomes black and disappears. And also
when persons turn away from looking at objects
in motion, e. g. rivers, and especially those
which flow very rapidly, they find that the
visual stimulations still present themselves,
for the things really at rest are then seen
moving: persons become very deaf after hearing
loud noises, and after smelling very strong
odours their power of smelling is impaired;
and similarly in other cases. These phenomena
manifestly take place in the way above described.
That the sensory organs are acutely sensitive
to even a slight qualitative difference [in
their objects] is shown by what happens in
the case of mirrors; a subject to which,
even taking it independently, one might devote
close consideration and inquiry. At the same
time it becomes plain from them that as the
eye [in seeing] is affected [by the object
seen], so also it produces a certain effect
upon it. 'If a woman chances during her menstrual
period to look into a highly polished mirror,
the surface of it will grow cloudy with a
blood-coloured haze. It is very hard to remove
this stain from a new mirror, but easier
to remove from an older mirror. As we have
said before, the cause of this lies in the
fact that in the act of sight there occurs
not only a passion in the sense organ acted
on by the polished surface, but the organ,
as an agent, also produces an action, as
is proper to a brilliant object. For sight
is the property of an organ possessing brilliance
and colour. The eyes, therefore, have their
proper action as have other parts of the
body. Because it is natural to the eye to
be filled with blood-vessels, a woman's eyes,
during the period of menstrual flux and inflammation,
will undergo a change, although her husband
will not note this since his seed is of the
same nature as that of his wife. The surrounding
atmosphere, through which operates the action
of sight, and which surrounds the mirror
also, will undergo a change of the same sort
that occurred shortly before in the woman's
eyes, and hence the surface of the mirror
is likewise affected. And as in the case
of a garment, the cleaner it is the more
quickly it is soiled, so the same holds true
in the case of the mirror. For anything that
is clean will show quite clearly a stain
that it chances to receive, and the cleanest
object shows up even the slightest stain.
A bronze mirror, because of its shininess,
is especially sensitive to any sort of contact
(the movement of the surrounding air acts
upon it like a rubbing or pressing or wiping);
on that account, therefore, what is clean
will show up clearly the slightest touch
on its surface. It is hard to cleanse smudges
off new mirrors because the stain penetrates
deeply and is suffused to all parts; it penetrates
deeply because the mirror is not a dense
medium, and is suffused widely because of
the smoothness of the object. On the other
hand, in the case of old mirrors, stains
do not remain because they do not penetrate
deeply, but only smudge the surface.'
From this therefore it is plain that stimulatory
motion is set up even by slight differences,
and that sense-perception is quick to respond
to it; and further that the organ which perceives
colour is not only affected by its object,
but also reacts upon it. Further evidence
to the same point is afforded by what takes
place in wines, and in the manufacture of
unguents. For both oil, when prepared, and
wine become rapidly infected by the odours
of the things near them; they not only acquire
the odours of the things thrown into or mixed
with them, but also those of the things which
are placed, or which grow, near the vessels
containing them.
In order to answer our original question,
let us now, therefore, assume one proposition,
which is clear from what precedes, viz. that
even when the external object of perception
has departed, the impressions it has made
persist, and are themselves objects of perception;
and [let us assume], besides, that we are
easily deceived respecting the operations
of sense-perception when we are excited by
emotions, and different persons according
to their different emotions; for example,
the coward when excited by fear, the amorous
person by amorous desire; so that, with but
little resemblance to go upon, the former
thinks he sees his foes approaching, the
latter, that he sees the object of his desire;
and the more deeply one is under the influence
of the emotion, the less similarity is required
to give rise to these illusory impressions.
Thus too, both in fits of anger, and also
in all states of appetite, all men become
easily deceived, and more so the more their
emotions are excited. This is the reason
too why persons in the delirium of fever
sometimes think they see animals on their
chamber walls, an illusion arising from the
faint resemblance to animals of the markings
thereon when put together in patterns; and
this sometimes corresponds with the emotional
states of the sufferers, in such a way that,
if the latter be not very ill, they know
well enough that it is an illusion; but if
the illness is more severe they actually
move according to the appearances. The cause
of these occurrences is that the faculty
in virtue of which the controlling sense
judges is not identical with that in virtue
of which presentations come before the mind.
A proof of this is, that the sun presents
itself as only a foot in diameter, though
often something else gainsays the presentation.
Again, when the fingers are crossed, the
one object [placed between them] is felt
[by the touch] as two; but yet we deny that
it is two; for sight is more authoritative
than touch. Yet, if touch stood alone, we
should actually have pronounced the one object
to be two. The ground of such false judgements
is that any appearances whatever present
themselves, not only when its object stimulates
a sense, but also when the sense by itself
alone is stimulated, provided only it be
stimulated in the same manner as it is by
the object. For example, to persons sailing
past the land seems to move, when it is really
the eye that is being moved by something
else [the moving ship.]
CHAPTER 3
From this it is manifest that the stimulatory
movements based upon sensory impressions,
whether the latter are derived from external
objects or from causes within the body, present
themselves not only when persons are awake,
but also then, when this affection which
is called sleep has come upon them, with
even greater impressiveness. For by day,
while the senses and the intellect are working
together, they (i. e. such movements) are
extruded from consciousness or obscured,
just as a smaller is beside a larger fire,
or as small beside great pains or pleasures,
though, as soon as the latter have ceased,
even those which are trifling emerge into
notice. But by night [i. e. in sleep] owing
to the inaction of the particular senses,
and their powerlessness to realize themselves,
which arises from the reflux of the hot from
the exterior parts to the interior, they
[i. e. the above 'movements'] are borne in
to the head quarters of sense-perception,
and there display themselves as the disturbance
(of waking life) subsides. We must suppose
that, like the little eddies which are being
ever formed in rivers, so the sensory movements
are each a continuous process, often remaining
like what they were when first started, but
often, too, broken into other forms by collisions
with obstacles. This [last mentioned point],
moreover, gives the reason why no dreams
occur in sleep immediately after meals, or
to sleepers who are extremely young, e. g.
to infants. The internal movement in such
cases is excessive, owing to the heat generated
from the food. Hence, just as in a liquid,
if one vehemently disturbs it, sometimes
no reflected image appears, while at other
times one appears, indeed, but utterly distorted,
so as to seem quite unlike its original;
while, when once the motion has ceased, the
reflected images are clear and plain; in
the same manner during sleep the phantasms,
or residuary movements, which are based upon
the sensory impressions, become sometimes
quite obliterated by the above described
motion when too violent; while at other times
the sights are indeed seen, but confused
and weird, and the dreams [which then appear]
are unhealthy, like those of persons who
are atrabilious, or feverish, or intoxicated
with wine. For all such affections, being
spirituous, cause much commotion and disturbance.
In sanguineous animals, in proportion as
the blood becomes calm, and as its purer
are separated from its less pure elements,
the fact that the movement, based on impressions
derived from each of the organs of sense,
is preserved in its integrity, renders the
dreams healthy, causes a [clear] image to
present itself, and makes the dreamer think,
owing to the effects borne in from the organ
of sight, that he actually sees, and owing
to those which come from the organ of hearing,
that he really hears; and so on with those
also which proceed from the other sensory
organs. For it is owing to the fact that
the movement which reaches the primary organ
of sense comes from them, that one even when
awake believes himself to see, or hear, or
otherwise perceive; just as it is from a
belief that the organ of sight is being stimulated,
though in reality not so stimulated, that
we sometimes erroneously declare ourselves
to see, or that, from the fact that touch
announces two movements, we think that the
one object is two. For, as a rule, the governing
sense affirms the report of each particular
sense, unless another particular sense, more
authoritative, makes a contradictory report.
In every case an appearance presents itself,
but what appears does not in every case seem
real, unless when the deciding faculty is
inhibited, or does not move with its proper
motion. Moreover, as we said that different
men are subject to illusions, each according
to the different emotion present in him,
so it is that the sleeper, owing to sleep,
and to the movements then going on in his
sensory organs, as well as to the other facts
of the sensory process, [is liable to illusion],
so that the dream presentation, though but
little like it, appears as some actual given
thing. For when one is asleep, in proportion
as most of the blood sinks inwards to its
fountain [the heart], the internal [sensory]
movements, some potential, others actual
accompany it inwards. They are so related
[in general] that, if anything move the blood,
some one sensory movement will emerge from
it, while if this perishes another will take
its place; while to one another also they
are related in the same way as the artificial
frogs in water which severally rise [in fixed
succession] to the surface in the order in
which the salt [which keeps them down] becomes
dissolved. The residuary movements are like
these: they are within the soul potentially,
but actualize themselves only when the impediment
to their doing so has been relaxed; and according
as they are thus set free, they begin to
move in the blood which remains in the sensory
organs, and which is now but scanty, while
they possess verisimilitude after the manner
of cloud-shapes, which in their rapid metamorphoses
one compares now to human beings and a moment
afterwards to centaurs. Each of them is however,
as has been said, the remnant of a sensory
impression taken when sense was actualizing
itself; and when this, the true impression,
has departed, its remnant is still immanent,
and it is correct to say of it, that though
not actually Koriskos, it is like Koriskos.
For when the person was actually perceiving,
his controlling and judging sensory faculty
did not call it Koriskos, but, prompted by
this [impression], called the genuine person
yonder Koriskos. Accordingly, this sensory
impulse, which, when actually perceiving,
it [the controlling faculty] so describes
(unless completely inhibited by the blood),
it now [in dreams] when quasi-perceiving,
receives from the movements persisting in
the sense-organs, and mistakes it- an impulse
that is merely like the true [objective]
impression- for the true impression itself,
while the effect of sleep is so great that
it causes this mistake to pass unnoticed.
Accordingly, just as if a finger be inserted
beneath the eyeball without being observed,
one object will not only present two visual
images, but will create an opinion of its
being two objects; while if it [the finger]
be observed, the presentation will be the
same, but the same opinion will not be formed
of it; exactly so it is in states of sleep:
if the sleeper perceives that he is asleep,
and is conscious of the sleeping state during
which the perception comes before his mind,
it presents itself still, but something within
him speaks to this effect: 'the image of
Koriskos presents itself, but the real Koriskos
is not present'; for often, when one is asleep,
there is something in consciousness which
declares that what then presents itself is
but a dream. If, however, he is not aware
of being asleep, there is nothing which will
contradict the testimony of the bare presentation.
That what we here urge is true, i. e. that
there are such presentative movements in
the sensory organs, any one may convince
himself, if he attends to and tries to remember
the affections we experience when sinking
into slumber or when being awakened. He will
sometimes, in the moment of awakening, surprise
the images which present themselves to him
in sleep, and find that they are really but
movements lurking in the organs of sense.
And indeed some very young persons, if it
is dark, though looking with wide open eyes,
see multitudes of phantom figures moving
before them, so that they often cover up
their heads in terror.
From all this, then, the conclusion to be
drawn is, that the dream is a sort of presentation,
and, more particularly, one which occurs
in sleep; since the phantoms just mentioned
are not dreams, nor is any other a dream
which presents itself when the sense-perceptions
are in a state of freedom. Nor is every presentation
which occurs in sleep necessarily a dream.
For in the first place, some persons [when
asleep] actually, in a certain way, perceive
sounds, light, savour, and contact; feebly,
however, and, as it were, remotely. For there
have been cases in which persons while asleep,
but with the eyes partly open, saw faintly
in their sleep (as they supposed) the light
of a lamp, and afterwards, on being awakened,
straightway recognized it as the actual light
of a real lamp; while, in other cases, persons
who faintly heard the crowing of cocks or
the barking of dogs identified these clearly
with the real sounds as soon as they awoke.
Some persons, too, return answers to questions
put to them in sleep.
For it is quite possible that, of waking
or sleeping, while the one is present in
the ordinary sense, the other also should
be present in a certain way. But none of
these occurrences should be called a dream.
Nor should the true thoughts, as distinct
from the mere presentations, which occur
in sleep [be called dreams]. The dream proper
is a presentation based on the movement of
sense impressions, when such presentation
occurs during sleep, taking sleep in the
strict sense of the term.
There are cases of persons who in their whole
lives have never had a dream, while others
dream when considerably advanced in years,
having never dreamed before. The cause of
their not having dreams appears somewhat
like that which operates in the case of infants,
and [that which operates] immediately after
meals. It is intelligible enough that no
dream-presentation should occur to persons
whose natural constitution is such that in
them copious evaporation is borne upwards,
which, when borne back downwards, causes
a large quantity of motion. But it is not
surprising that, as age advances, a dream
should at length appear to them. Indeed,
it is inevitable that, as a change is wrought
in them in proportion to age or emotional
experience, this reversal [from non-dreaming
to dreaming] should occur also.
THE END
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