BOOK ONE
ON THE GENERATION OF ANIMALS
by Aristotle
Translated by Arthur Platt
CHAPTER 1 -
1 WE have now discussed the other parts of
animals, both generally and with reference
to the peculiarities of each kind, explaining
how each part exists on account of such a
cause, and I mean by this the final cause.
There are four causes underlying everything:
first, the final cause, that for the sake
of which a thing exists; secondly, the formal
cause, the definition of its essence (and
these two we may regard pretty much as one
and the same); thirdly, the material; and
fourthly, the moving principle or efficient
cause.
We have then already discussed the other
three causes, for the definition and the
final cause are the same, and the material
of animals is their parts of the whole animal
the non-homogeneous parts, of these again
the homogeneous, and of these last the so-called
elements of all matter. It remains to speak
of those parts which contribute to the generation
of animals and of which nothing definite
has yet been said, and to explain what is
the moving or efficient cause. To inquire
into this last and to inquire into the generation
of each animal is in a way the same thing;
and, therefore, my plan has united them together,
arranging the discussion of these parts last,
and the beginning of the question of generation
next to them.
Now some animals come into being from the
union of male and female, i. e. all those
kinds of animal which possess the two sexes.
This is not the case with all of them; though
in the sanguinea with few exceptions the
creature, when its growth is complete, is
either male or female, and though some bloodless
animals have sexes so that they generate
offspring of the same kind, yet other bloodless
animals generate indeed, but not offspring
of the same kind; such are all that come
into being not from a union of the sexes,
but from decaying earth and excrements. To
speak generally, if we take all animals which
change their locality, some by swimming,
others by flying, others by walking, we find
in these the two sexes, not only in the sanguinea
but also in some of the bloodless animals;
and this applies in the case of the latter
sometimes to the whole class, as the cephalopoda
and crustacea, but in the class of insects
only to the majority. Of these, all which
are produced by union of animals of the same
kind generate also after their kind, but
all which are not produced by animals, but
from decaying matter, generate indeed, but
produce another kind, and the offspring is
neither male nor female; such are some of
the insects. This is what might have been
expected, for if those animals which are
not produced by parents had themselves united
and produced others, then their offspring
must have been either like or unlike to themselves.
If like, then their parents ought to have
come into being in the same way; this is
only a reasonable postulate to make, for
it is plainly the case with other animals.
If unlike, and yet able to copulate, then
there would have come into being again from
them another kind of creature and again another
from these, and this would have gone on to
infinity. But Nature flies from the infinite,
for the infinite is unending or imperfect,
and Nature ever seeks an end.
But all those creatures which do not move,
as the testacea and animals that live by
clinging to something else, inasmuch as their
nature resembles that of plants, have no
sex any more than plants have, but as applied
to them the word is only used in virtue of
a similarity and analogy. For there is a
slight distinction of this sort, since even
in plants we find in the same kind some trees
which bear fruit and others which, while
bearing none themselves, yet contribute to
the ripening of the fruits of those which
do, as in the case of the fig-tree and caprifig.
The same holds good also in plants, some
coming into being from seed and others, as
it were, by the spontaneous action of Nature,
arising either from decomposition of the
earth or of some parts in other plants, for
some are not formed by themselves separately
but are produced upon other trees, as the
mistletoe. Plants, however, must be investigated
separately.
2 Of the generation of animals we must speak
as various questions arise in order in the
case of each, and we must connect our account
with what has been said. For, as we said
above, the male and female principles may
be put down first and foremost as origins
of generation, the former as containing the
efficient cause of generation, the latter
the material of it. The most conclusive proof
of this is drawn from considering how and
whence comes the semen; for there is no doubt
that it is out of this that those creatures
are formed which are produced in the ordinary
course of Nature; but we must observe carefully
the way in which this semen actually comes
into being from the male and female. For
it is just because the semen is secreted
from the two sexes, the secretion taking
place in them and from them, that they are
first principles of generation. For by a
male animal we mean that which generates
in another, and by a female that which generates
in itself; wherefore men apply these terms
to the macrocosm also, naming Earth mother
as being female, but addressing Heaven and
the Sun and other like entities as fathers,
as causing generation.
Male and female differ in their essence by
each having a separate ability or faculty,
and anatomically by certain parts; essentially
the male is that which is able to generate
in another, as said above; the female is
that which is able to generate in itself
and out of which comes into being the offspring
previously existing in the parent. And since
they are differentiated by an ability or
faculty and by their function, and since
instruments or organs are needed for all
functioning, and since the bodily parts are
the instruments or organs to serve the faculties,
it follows that certain parts must exist
for union of parents and production of offspring.
And these must differ from each other, so
that consequently the male will differ from
the female. (For even though we speak of
the animal as a whole as male or female,
yet really it is not male or female in virtue
of the whole of itself, but only in virtue
of a certain faculty and a certain part—just
as with the part used for sight or locomotion—which
part is also plain to sense-perception.)
Now as a matter of fact such parts are in
the female the so-called uterus, in the male
the testes and the penis, in all the sanguinea;
for some of them have testes and others the
corresponding passages. There are corresponding
differences of male and female in all the
bloodless animals also which have this division
into opposite sexes. But if in the sanguinea
it is the parts concerned in copulation that
differ primarily in their forms, we must
observe that a small change in a first principle
is often attended by changes in other things
depending on it. This is plain in the case
of castrated animals, for, though only the
generative part is disabled, yet pretty well
the whole form of the animal changes in consequence
so much that it seems to be female or not
far short of it, and thus it is clear than
an animal is not male or female in virtue
of an isolated part or an isolated faculty.
Clearly, then, the distinction of sex is
a first principle; at any rate, when that
which distinguishes male and female suffers
change, many other changes accompany it,
as would be the case if a first principle
is changed.
3 The sanguinea are not all alike as regards
testes and uterus. Taking the former first,
we find that some of them have not testes
at all, as the classes of fish and of serpents,
but only two spermatic ducts. Others have
testes indeed, but internally by the loin
in the region of the kidneys, and from each
of these a duct, as in the case of those
animals which have no testes at all, these
ducts unite also as with those animals; this
applies (among animals breathing air and
having a lung) to all birds and oviparous
quadrupeds. For all these have their testes
internal near the loin, and two ducts from
these in the same way as serpents; I mean
the lizards and tortoises and all the scaly
reptiles. But all the vivipara have their
testes in front; some of them inside at the
end of the abdomen, as the dolphin, not with
ducts but with a penis projecting externally
from them; others outside, either pendent
as in man or towards the fundament as in
swine. They have been discriminated more
accurately in the Enquiries about Animals.
The uterus is always double, just as the
testes are always two in the male. It is
situated either near the pudendum (as in
women, and all those animals which bring
forth alive not only externally but also
internally, and all fish that lay eggs externally)
or up towards the hypozoma (as in all birds
and in viviparous fishes). The uterus is
also double in the crustacea and the cephalopoda,
for the membranes which include their so-called
eggs are of the nature of a uterus. It is
particularly hard to distinguish in the case
of the poulps, so that it seems to be single,
but the reason of this is that the bulk of
the body is everywhere similar.
It is double also in the larger insects;
in the smaller the question is uncertain
owing to the small size of the body.
Such is the description of the aforesaid
parts of animals.
4 With regard to the difference of the spermatic
organs in males, if we are to investigate
the causes of their existence, we must first
grasp the final cause of the testes. Now
if Nature makes everything either because
it is necessary or because it is better so,
this part also must be for one of these two
reasons. But that it is not necessary for
generation is plain; else had it been possessed
by all creatures that generate, but as it
is neither serpents have testes nor have
fish; for they have been seen uniting and
with their ducts full of milt. It remains
then that it must be because it is somehow
better so. Now it is true that the business
of most animals is, you may say, nothing
else than to produce young, as the business
of a plant is to produce seed and fruit.
But still as, in the case of nutriment, animals
with straight intestines are more violent
in their desire for food, so those which
have not testes but only ducts, or which
have them indeed but internally, are all
quicker in accomplishing copulation. But
those which are to be more temperate in the
one case have not straight intestines, and
in the other have their ducts twisted to
prevent their desire being too violent and
hasty. It is for this that the testes are
contrived; for they make the movement of
the spermatic secretion steadier, preserving
the folding back of the passages in the vivipara,
as horses and the like, and in man. (For
details see the Enquiries about Animals.)
For the testes are no part of the ducts but
are only attached to them, as women fasten
stones to the loom when weaving; if they
are removed the ducts are drawn up internally,
so that castrated animals are unable to generate;
if they were not drawn up they would be able,
and before now a bull mounting immediately
after castration has caused conception in
the cow because the ducts had not yet been
drawn up. In birds and oviparous quadrupeds
the testes receive the spermatic secretion,
so that its expulsion is slower than in fishes.
This is clear in the case of birds, for their
testes are much enlarged at the time of copulation,
and all those which pair at one season of
the year have them so small when this is
past that they are almost indiscernible,
but during the season they are very large.
When the testes are internal the act of copulation
is quicker than when they are external, for
even in the latter case the semen is not
emitted before the testes are drawn up.
5 Besides, quadrupeds have the organ of copulation,
since it is possible for them to have it,
but for birds and the footless animals it
is not possible, because the former have
their legs under the middle of the abdomen
and the latter have no legs at all; now the
penis depends from that region and is situated
there. (Wherefore also the legs are strained
in intercourse, both the penis and the legs
being sinewy.) So that, since it is not possible
for them to have this organ, they must necessarily
either have no testes also, or at any rate
not have them there, as those animals that
have both penis and testes have them in the
same situation.
Further, with those animals at any rate that
have external testes, the semen is collected
together before emission, and emission is
due to the penis being heated by its movement;
it is not ready for emission at immediate
contact as in fishes.
All the vivipira have their testes in front,
internally or externally, except the hedgehog;
he alone has them near the loin. This is
for the same reason as with birds, because
their union must be quick, for the hedgehog
does not, like the other quadrupeds, mount
upon the back of the female, but they conjugate
standing upright because of their spines.
So much for the reasons why those animals
have testes which have them, and why they
are sometimes external and sometimes internal.
6 All those animals which have no testes
are deficient in this part, as has been said,
not because it is better to be so but simply
because of necessity, and secondly because
it is necessary that their copulation should
be speedy. Such is the nature of fish and
serpents. Fish copulate throwing themselves
alongside of the females and separating again
quickly. For as men and all such creatures
must hold their breath before emitting the
semen, so fish at such times must cease taking
in the sea-water, and then they perish easily.
Therefore they must not mature the semen
during copulation, as viviparous land-animals
do, but they have it all matured together
before the time, so as not to be maturing
it while in contact but to emit it ready
matured. So they have no testes, and the
ducts are straight and simple. There is a
small part similar to this connected with
the testes in the system of quadrupeds, for
part of the reflected duct is sanguineous
and part is not; the fluid is already semen
when it is received by and passes through
this latter part, so that once it has arrived
there it is soon emitted in these quadrupeds
also. Now in fishes the whole passage resembles
the last section of the reflected part of
the duct in man and similar animals.
7 Serpents copulate twining round one another,
and, as said above, have neither testes nor
penis, the latter because they have no legs,
the former because of their length, but they
have ducts like for on account of their extreme
length the seminal fluid would take too long
in its passage and be cooled if it were further
delayed by testes. (This happens also if
the penis is large; such men are less fertile
than when it is smaller because the semen,
if cold, is not generative, and that which
is carried too far is cooled.) So much for
the reason why some animals have testes and
others not. Serpents intertwine because of
their inaptitude to cast themselves alongside
of one another. For they are too long to
unite closely with so small a part and have
no organs of attachment, so they make use
of the suppleness of their bodies, intertwining.
Wherefore also they seem to be slower in
copulation than fish, not only on account
of the length of the ducts but also of this
elaborate arrangement in uniting.
8 It is not easy to state the facts about
the uterus in female animals, for there are
many points of difference. The vivipara are
not alike in this part; women and all the
vivipara with feet have the uterus low down
by the pudendum, but the cartilaginous viviparous
fish have it higher up near the hypozoma.
In the ovipara, again, it is low in fish
(as in women and the viviparous quadrupeds),
high in birds and all oviparous quadrupeds.
Yet even these differences are on a principle.
To begin with the ovipara, they differ in
the manner of laying their eggs, for some
produce them imperfect, as fishes whose eggs
increase and are finally developed outside
of them. The reason is that they produce
many young, and this is their function as
it is with plants. If then they perfected
the egg in themselves they must needs be
few in number, but as it is, they have so
many that each uterus seems to be an egg,
at any rate in the small fishes. For these
are the most productive, just as with the
other animals and plants whose nature is
analogous to theirs, for the increase of
size turns with them to seed.
But the eggs of birds and the quadrupedal
ovipara are perfect when produced. In order
that these may be preserved they must have
a hard covering (for their envelope is soft
so long as they are increasing in size),
and the shell is made by heat squeezing out
the moisture for the earthy material; consequently
the place must be hot in which this is to
happen. But the part about the hypozoma is
hot, as is shown by that being the part which
concocts the food. If then the eggs must
be within the uterus, then the uterus must
be near the hypozoma in those creatures which
produce their eggs in a perfect form. Similarly
it must be low down in those which produce
them imperfect, for it is profitable that
it should be so. And it is more natural for
the uterus to be low down than high up, when
Nature has no other business in hand to hinder
it; for its end is low down, and where is
the end, there is the function, and the uterus
itself is naturally where the function is.
9 We find differences in the vivipara also
as compared with one another. Some produce
their young alive, not only externally, but
also internally, as men, horses, dogs, and
all those which have hair, and among aquatic
animals, dolphins, whales, and such cetacea.
10 But the cartilaginous fish and the vipers
produce their young alive externally, but
first produce eggs internally. The egg is
perfect, for so only can an animal be generated
from an egg, and nothing comes from an imperfect
one. It is because they are of a cold nature,
not hot as some assert, that they do not
lay their eggs externally.
11 At least they certainly produce their
eggs in a soft envelope, the reason being
that they have but little heat and so their
nature does not complete the process of drying
the egg-shell. Because, then, they are cold
they produce soft-shelled eggs, and because
the eggs are soft they do not produce them
externally; for that would have caused their
destruction.
The process is for the most part the same
as in birds, for the egg descends and the
young is hatched from it near the vagina,
where the young is produced in those animals
which are viviparous from the beginning.
Therefore in such animals the uterus is dissimilar
to that of both the vivipara and ovipara,
because they participate in both classes;
for it is at once near the hypozoma and also
stretching along downwards in all the cartilaginous
fishes. But the facts about this and the
other kinds of uterus must be gathered from
inspection of the drawings of dissections
and from the Enquiries. Thus, because they
are oviparous, laying perfect eggs, they
have the uterus placed high, but, as being
viviparous, low, participating in both classes.
Animals that are viviparous from the beginning
all have it low, Nature here having no other
business to interfere with her, and their
production having no double character. Besides
this, it is impossible for animals to be
produced alive near the hypozoma, for the
foetus must needs be heavy and move, and
that region in the mother is vital and would
not be able to bear the weight and the movement.
Thirdly, parturition would be difficult because
of the length of the passage to be traversed;
even as it is there is difficulty with women
if they draw up the uterus in parturition
by yawning or anything of the kind, and even
when empty it causes a feeling of suffocation
if moved upwards. For if a uterus is to hold
a living animal it must be stronger than
in ovipara, and therefore in all the vivipara
it is fleshy, whereas when the uterus is
near the hypozoma it is membranous. And this
is clear also in the case of the animals
which produce young by the mixed method,
for their eggs are high up and sideways,
but the living young are produced in the
lower part of the uterus.
So much for the reason why differences are
found in the uterus of various animals, and
generally why it is low in some and high
in others near the hypozoma.
12 Why is the uterus always internal, but
the testes sometimes internal, sometimes
external? The reason for the uterus always
being internal is that in this is contained
the egg or foetus, which needs guarding,
shelter, and maturation by concoction, while
the outer surface of the body is easily injured
and cold. The testes vary in position because
they also need shelter and a covering to
preserve them and to mature the semen; for
it would be impossible for them, if chilled
and stiffened, to be drawn up and discharge
it. Therefore, whenever the testes are visible,
they have a cuticular covering known as the
scrotum. If the nature of the skin is opposed
to this, being too hard to be adapted for
enclosing them or for being soft like a true
‘skin’, as with the scaly integument of fish
and reptiles, then the testes must needs
be internal. Therefore they are so in dolphins
and all the cetacea which have them, and
in the oviparous quadrupeds among the scaly
animals. The skin of birds also is hard so
that it will not conform to the size of anything
and enclose it neatly. (This is another reason
with all these animals for their testes being
internal besides those previously mentioned
as arising necessarily from the details of
copulation.) For the same reason they are
internal in the elephant and hedgehog, for
the skin of these, too, is not well suited
to keep the protective part separate.
[The position of the uterus differs in animals
viviparous within themselves and those externally
oviparous, and in the latter class again
it differs in those which have the uterus
low and those which have it near the hypozoma,
as in fishes compared with birds and oviparous
quadrupeds. And it is different again in
those which produce young in both ways, being
oviparous internally and viviparous externally.
For those which are viviparous both internally
and externally have the uterus placed on
the abdomen, as men, cattle, dogs, and the
like, since it is expedient for the safety
and growth of the foetus that no weight should
be upon the uterus.]
13 The passages also are different through
which the solid and liquid excreta pass out
in all the vivipara. Wherefore both males
and females in this class all have a part
whereby the urine is voided, and this serves
also for the issue of the semen in males,
of the offspring in females. This passage
is situated above and in front of the passage
of the solid excreta. The passage is the
same as that of the solid nutriment in all
those animals that have no penis, in all
the ovipara, even those of them that have
a bladder, as the tortoises. For it is for
the sake of generation, not for the evacuation
of the urine, that the passages are double;
but because the semen is naturally liquid,
the liquid excretion also shares the same
passage. This is clear from the fact that
all animals produce semen, but all do not
void liquid excrement. Now the spermatic
passages of the male must be fixed and must
not wander, and the same applies to the uterus
of the female, and this fixing must take
place at either the front or the back of
the body. To take the uterus first, it is
in the front of the body in vivipara because
of the foetus, but at the loin and the back
in ovipara. All animals which are internally
oviparous and externally viviparous are in
an intermediate condition because they participate
in both classes, being at once oviparous
and viviparous. For the upper part of the
uterus, where the eggs are produced, is under
the hypozoma by the loin and the back, but
as it advances is low at the abdomen; for
it is in that part that the animal is viviparous.
In these also the passage for solid excrement
and for copulation is the same, for none
of these, as has been said already, has a
separate pudendum.
The same applies to the passages in the male,
whether they have testes or no, as to the
uterus of the ovipara. For in all of them,
not only in the ovipara, the ducts adhere
to the back and the region of the spine.
For they must not wander but be settled,
and that is the character of the region of
the back, which gives continuity and stability.
Now in those which have internal testes,
the ducts are fixed from the first, and they
are fixed in like manner if the testes are
external; then they meet together towards
the region of the penis.
The like applies to the ducts in the dolphins,
but they have their testes hidden under the
abdominal cavity.
We have now discussed the situation of the
parts contributing to generation, and the
causes thereof.
14 The bloodless animals do not agree either
with the sanguinea or with each other in
the fashion of the parts contributing to
generation. There are four classes still
left to deal with, first the crustacea, secondly
the cephalopoda, thirdly the insects, and
fourthly the testacea. We cannot be certain
about all of them, but that most of them
copulate is plain; in what manner they unite
must be stated later.
The crustacea copulate like the retromingent
quadrupeds, fitting their tails to one another,
the one supine and the other prone. For the
flaps attached to the sides of the tail being
long prevent them from uniting with the belly
against the back. The males have fine spermatic
ducts, the females a membranous uterus alongside
the intestine, cloven on each side, in which
the egg is produced.
15 The cephalopoda entwine together at the
mouth, pushing against one another and enfolding
their arms. This attitude is necessary, because
Nature has bent backwards the end of the
intestine and brought it round near the mouth,
as has been said before in the treatise on
the parts of animals. The female has a part
corresponding to the uterus, plainly to be
seen in each of these animals, for it contains
an egg which is at first indivisible to the
eye but afterwards splits up into many; each
of these eggs is imperfect when deposited,
as with the oviparous fishes. In the cephalopoda
(as also in the crustacea) the same passage
serves to void the excrement and leads to
the part like a uterus, for the male discharges
the seminal fluid through this passage. And
it is on the lower surface of the body, where
the mantle is open and the sea-water enters
the cavity. Hence the union of the male with
the female takes place at this point, for
it is necessary, if the male discharges either
semen or a part of himself or any other force,
that he should unite with her at the uterine
passage. But the insertion, in the case of
the poulps, of the arm of the male into the
funnel of the female, by which arm the fishermen
say the male copulates with her, is only
for the sake of attachment, and it is not
an organ useful for generation, for it is
outside the passage in the male and indeed
outside the body of the male altogether.
Sometimes also cephalopoda unite by the male
mounting on the back of the female, but whether
for generation or some other cause has not
yet been observed.
16 Some insects copulate and the offspring
are produced from animals of the same name,
just as with the sanguinea; such are the
locusts, cicadae, spiders, wasps, and ants.
Others unite indeed and generate; but the
result is not a creature of the same kind,
but only a scolex, and these insects do not
come into being from animals but from putrefying
matter, liquid or solid; such are fleas,
flies, and cantharides. Others again are
neither produced from animals nor unite with
each other; such are gnats, ‘conopes’, and
many similar kinds. In most of those which
unite the female is larger than the male.
The males do not appear to have spermatic
passages. In most cases the male does not
insert any part into the female, but the
female from below upwards into the male;
this has been observed in many cases (as
also that the male mounts the female), the
opposite in few cases; but observations are
not yet comprehensive enough to enable us
to make a distinction of classes. And generally
it is the rule with most of the oviparous
fish and oviparous quadrupeds that the female
is larger than the because this is expedient
in view of the increase of bulk in conception
by reason of the eggs. In the female the
part analogous to the uterus is cleft and
extends along the intestine, as with the
other animals; in this are produced the results
of conception. This is clear in locusts and
all other large insects whose nature it is
to unite; most insects are too small to be
observed in this respect.
Such is the character of the generative organs
in animals which were not spoken of before.
It remains now to speak of the homogeneous
parts concerned, the seminal fluid and milk.
We will take the former first, and treat
of milk afterwards.
17 Some animals manifestly emit semen, as
all the sanguinea, but whether the insects
and cephalopoda do so is uncertain. Therefore
this is a question to be considered, whether
all males do so, or not all; and if not all,
why some do and some not; and whether the
female also contributes any semen or not;
and, if not semen, whether she does not contribute
anything else either, or whether she contributes
something else which is not semen. We must
also inquire what those animals which emit
semen contribute by means of it to generation,
and generally what is the nature of semen,
and of the so-called catamenia in all animals
which discharge this liquid.
Now it is thought that all animals are generated
out of semen, and that the semen comes from
the parents. Wherefore it is part of the
same inquiry to ask whether both male and
female produce it or only one of them, and
to ask whether it comes from the whole of
the body or not from the whole; for if the
latter is true it is reasonable to suppose
that it does not come from both parents either.
Accordingly, since some say that it comes
from the whole of the body, we must investigate
this question first.
The proofs from which it can be argued that
the semen comes from each and every part
of the body may be reduced to four. First,
the intensity of the pleasure of coition;
for the same state of feeling is more pleasant
if multiplied, and that which affects all
the parts is multiplied as compared with
that which affects only one or a few. Secondly,
the alleged fact that mutilations are inherited,
for they argue that since the parent is deficient
in this part the semen does not come from
thence, and the result is that the corresponding
part is not formed in the offspring. Thirdly,
the resemblances to the parents, for the
young are born like them part for part as
well as in the whole body; if then the coming
of the semen from the whole body is cause
of the resemblance of the whole, so the parts
would be like because it comes from each
of the parts. Fourthly, it would seem to
be reasonable to say that as there is some
first thing from which the whole arises,
so it is also with each of the parts, and
therefore if semen or seed is cause of the
whole so each of the parts would have a seed
peculiar to itself. And these opinions are
plausibly supported by such evidence as that
children are born with a likeness to their
parents, not in congenital but also in acquired
characteristics; for before now, when the
parents have had scars, the children have
been born with a mark in the form of the
scar in the same place, and there was a case
at Chalcedon where the father had a brand
on his arm and the letter was marked on the
child, only confused and not clearly articulated.
That is pretty much the evidence on which
some believe that the semen comes from all
the body.
18 On examining the question, however, the
opposite appears more likely, for it is not
hard to refute the above arguments and the
view involves impossibilities. First, then,
the resemblance of children to parents is
no proof that the semen comes from the whole
body, because the resemblance is found also
in voice, nails, hair, and way of moving,
from which nothing comes. And men generate
before they yet have certain characters,
such as a beard or grey hair. Further, children
are like their more remote ancestors from
whom nothing has come, for the resemblances
recur at an interval of many generations,
as in the case of the woman in Elis who had
intercourse with the Aethiop; her daughter
was not an Aethiop but the son of that daughter
was. The same thing applies also to plants,
for it is clear that if this theory were
true the seed would come from all parts of
plants also; but often a plant does not possess
one part, and another part may be removed,
and a third grows afterwards. Besides, the
seed does not come from the pericarp, and
yet this also comes into being with the same
form as in the parent plant.
We may also ask whether the semen comes from
each of the homogeneous parts only, such
as flesh and bone and sinew, or also from
the heterogeneous, such as face and hands.
For if from the former only, we object that
resemblance exists rather in the heterogeneous
parts, such as face and hands and feet; if
then it is not because of the semen coming
from all parts that children resemble their
parents in these, what is there to stop the
homogeneous parts also from being like for
some other reason than this? If the semen
comes from the heterogeneous alone, then
it does not come from all parts; but it is
more fitting that it should come from the
homogeneous parts, for they are prior to
the heterogeneous which are composed of them;
and as children are born like their parents
in face and hands, so they are, necessarily,
in flesh and nails. If the semen comes from
both, what would be the manner of generation?
For the heteroeneous parts are composed of
the homogneous, so that to come from the
former would be to come from the latter and
from their composition. To make this clearer
by an illustration, take a written name;
if anything came from the whole of it, it
would be from each of the syllables, and
if from these, from the letters and their
composition. So that if really flesh and
bones are composed of fire and the like elements,
the semen would come rather from the elements
than anything else, for how can it come from
their composition? Yet without this composition
there would be no resemblance. If again something
creates this composition later, it would
be this that would be the cause of the resemblance,
not the coming of the semen from every part
of the body.
Further, if the parts of the future animal
are separated in the semen, how do they live?
and if they are connected, they would form
a small animal.
And what about the generative parts? For
that which comes from the male is not similar
to what comes from the female.
Again, if the semen comes from all parts
of both parents alike, the result is two
animals, for the offspring will have all
the parts of both. Wherefore Empedocles seems
to say what agrees pretty well with this
view (if we are to adopt it), to a certain
extent at any rate, but to be wrong if we
think otherwise. What he says agrees with
it when he declares that there is a sort
of tally in the male and female, and that
the whole offspring does not come from either,
‘but sundered is the fashion of limbs, some
in man’s...’ For why does not the female
generate from herself if the semen comes
from all parts alike and she has a receptacle
ready in the uterus? But, it seems, either
it does not come from all the parts, or if
it does it is in the way Empedocles says,
not the same parts coming from each parent,
which is why they need intercourse with each
other.
Yet this also is impossible, just as much
as it is impossible for the parts when full
grown to survive and have life in them when
torn apart, as Empedocles accounts for the
creation of animals; in the time of his ‘Reign
of Love’, says he, ‘many heads sprang up
without necks,’ and later on these isolated
parts combined into animals. Now that this
is impossible is plain, for neither would
the separate parts be able to survive without
having any soul or life in them, nor if they
were living things, so to say, could several
of them combine so as to become one animal
again. Yet those who say that semen comes
from the whole of the body really have to
talk in that way, and as it happened then
in the earth during the ‘Reign of Love’,
so it happens according to them in the body.
Now it is impossible that the parts should
be united together when they come into being
and should come from different parts of the
parent, meeting together in one place. Then
how can the upper and lower, right and left,
front and back parts have been ‘sundered’?
All these points are unintelligible. Further,
some parts are distinguished by possessing
a faculty, others by being in certain states
or conditions; the heterogeneous, as tongue
and hand, by the faculty of doing something,
the homogeneous by hardness and softness
and the other similar states. Blood, then,
will not be blood, nor flesh flesh, in any
and every state. It is clear, then, that
that which comes from any part, as blood
from blood or flesh from flesh, will not
be identical with that part. But if it is
something different from which the blood
of the offspring comes, the coming of the
semen from all the parts will not be the
cause of the resemblance, as is held by the
supporters of this theory. For if blood is
formed from something which is not blood,
it is enough that the semen come from one
part only, for why should not all the other
parts of the offspring as well as blood be
formed from one part of the parent? Indeed,
this theory seems to be the same as that
of Anaxagoras, that none of the homogeneous
parts come into being, except that these
theorists assume, in the case of the generation
of animals, what he assumed of the universe.
Then, again, how will these parts that came
from all the body of the parent be increased
or grow? It is true that Anaxagoras plausibly
says that particles of flesh out of the food
are added to the flesh. But if we do not
say this (while saying that semen comes from
all parts of the body), how will the foetus
become greater by the addition of something
else if that which is added remain unchanged?
But if that which is added can change, then
why not say that the semen from the very
first is of such a kind that blood and flesh
can be made out of it, instead of saying
that it itself is blood and flesh? Nor is
there any other alternative, for surely we
cannot say that it is increased later by
a process of mixing, as wine when water is
poured into it. For in that case each element
of the mixture would be itself at first while
still unmixed, but the fact rather is that
flesh and bone and each of the other parts
is such later. And to say that some part
of the semen is sinew and bone is quite above
us, as the saying is.
Besides all this there is a difficulty if
the sex is determined in conception (as Empedocles
says: ‘it is shed in clean vessels; some
wax female, if they fall in with cold’).
Anyhow, it is plain that both men and women
change not only from infertile to fertile,
but also from bearing female to bearing male
offspring, which looks as if the cause does
not lie in the semen coming from all the
parent or not, but in the mutual proportion
or disproportion of that comes from the woman
and the man, or in something of this kind.
It is clear, then, if we are to put this
down as being so, that the female sex is
not determined by the semen coming from any
particular part, and consequently neither
is the special sexual part so determined
(if really the same semen can become either
male or female child, which shows that the
sexual part does not exist in the semen).
Why, then, should we assert this of this
part any more than of others? For if semen
does not come from this part, the uterus,
the same account may be given of the others.
Again, some creatures come into being neither
from parents of the same kind nor from parents
of a different kind, as flies and the various
kinds of what are called fleas; from these
are produced animals indeed, but not in this
case of similar nature but a kind of scolex.
It is plain in this case that the young of
a different kind are not produced by semen
coming from all parts of the parent, for
they would then resemble them, if indeed
resemblance is a sign of its coming from
all parts.
Further even among animals some produce many
young from a single coition (and something
like this is universal among plants, for
it is plain that they bear all the fruit
of a whole season from a single movement).
And yet how would this be possible if the
semen were secreted from all the body? For
from a single coition and a single segregation
of the semen scattered throughout the body
must needs follow only a single secretion.
Nor is it possible for it to be separated
in the uterus, for this would no longer be
a mere separation of semen, but, as it were,
a severance from a new plant or animal.
Again, the cuttings from a plant bear seed;
clearly, therefore, even before they were
cut from the parent plant, they bore their
fruit from their own mass alone, and the
seed did not come from all the plant.
But the greatest proof of all is derived
from observations we have sufficiently established
on insects. For, if not in all, at least
in most of these, the female in the act of
copulation inserts a part of herself into
the male. This, as we said before, is the
way they copulate, for the females manifestly
insert this from below into the males above,
not in all cases, but in most of those observed.
Hence it seems clear that, when the males
do emit semen, then also the cause of the
generation is not its coming from all the
body, but something else which must be investigated
hereafter. For even if it were true that
it comes from all the body, as they say,
they ought not to claim that it comes from
all parts of it, but only from the creative
part—from the workman, so to say, not the
material he works in. Instead of that, they
talk as if one were to say that the semen
comes from the shoes, for, generally speaking,
if a son is like his father, the shoes he
wears are like his father’s shoes.
As to the vehemence of pleasure in sexual
intercourse, it is not because the semen
comes from all the body, but because there
is a strong friction (wherefore if this intercourse
is often repeated the pleasure is diminished
in the persons concerned). Moreover, the
pleasure is at the end of the act, but it
ought, on the theory, to be in each of the
parts, and not at the same time, but sooner
in some and later in others.
If mutilated young are born of mutilated
parents, it is for the same reason as that
for which they are like them. And the young
of mutilated parents are not always mutilated,
just as they are not always like their parents;
the cause of this must be inquired into later,
for this problem is the same as that.
Again, if the female does not produce semen,
it is reasonable to suppose it does not come
from all the body of the male either. Conversely,
if it does not come from all the male it
is not unreasonable to suppose that it does
not come from the female, but that the female
is cause of the generation in some other
way. Into this we must next inquire, since
it is plain that the semen is not secreted
from all the parts.
In this investigation and those which follow
from it, the first thing to do is to understand
what semen is, for then it will be easier
to inquire into its operations and the phenomena
connected with it. Now the object of semen
is to be of such a nature that from it as
their origin come into being those things
which are naturally formed, not because there
is any agent which makes them from it as
simply because this is the semen. Now we
speak of one thing coming from another in
many senses; it is one thing when we say
that night comes from day or a man becomes
man from boy, meaning that A follows B; it
is another if we say that a statue is made
from bronze and a bed from wood, and so on
in all the other cases where we say that
the thing made is made from a material, meaning
that the whole is formed from something preexisting
which is only put into shape. In a third
sense a man becomes unmusical from being
musical, sick from being well, and generally
in this sense contraries arise from contraries.
Fourthly, as in the ‘climax’ of Epicharmus;
thus from slander comes railing and from
this fighting, and all these are from something
in the sense that it is the efficient cause.
In this last class sometimes the efficient
cause is in the things themselves, as in
the last mentioned (for the slander is a
part of the whole trouble), and sometimes
external, as the art is external to the work
of art or the torch to the burning house.
Now the offspring comes from the semen, and
it is plainly in one of the two following
senses that it does so—either the semen is
the material from which it is made, or it
is the first efficient cause. For assuredly
it is not in the sense of A being after B,
as the voyage comes from, i. e. after, the
Panathenaea; nor yet as contraries come from
contraries, for then one of the two contraries
ceases to be, and a third substance must
exist as an immediate underlying basis from
which the new thing comes into being. We
must discover then, in which of the two other
classes the semen is to be put, whether it
is to be regarded as matter, and therefore
acted upon by something else, or as a form,
and therefore acting upon something else,
or as both at once. For perhaps at the same
time we shall see clearly also how all the
products of semen come into being from contraries,
since coming into being from contraries is
also a natural process, for some animals
do so, i. e. from male and female, others
from only one parent, as is the case with
plants and all those animals in which male
and female are not separately differentiated.
Now that which comes from the generating
parent is called the seminal fluid, being
that which first has in it a principle of
generation, in the case of all animals whose
nature it is to unite; semen is that which
has in it the principles from both united
parents, as the first mixture which arises
from the union of male and female, be it
a foetus or an ovum, for these already have
in them that which comes from both. (Semen,
or seed, and grain differ only in the one
being earlier and the other later, grain
in that it comes from something else, i.
e. the seed, and seed in that something else,
the grain, comes from it, for both are really
the same thing.)
We must again take up the question what the
primary nature of what is called semen is.
Needs must everything which we find in the
body either be (1) one of the natural parts,
whether homogeneous or heterogeneous, or
(2) an unnatural part such as a growth, or
(3) a secretion or excretion, or (4) waste-product,
or (5) nutriment. (By secretion or excretion
I mean the residue of the nutriment, by waste-product
that which is given off from the tissues
by an unnatural decomposition.)
Now that semen cannot be a part of the body
is plain, for it is homogeneous, and from
the homogeneous nothing is composed, e. g.
from only sinew or only flesh; nor is it
separated as are all the other parts. But
neither is it contrary to Nature nor a defect,
for it exists in all alike, and the development
of the young animal comes from it. Nutriment,
again, is obviously introduced from without.
It remains, then, that it must be either
a waste-product or a secretion or excretion.
Now the ancients seem to think that it is
a waste-product, for when they say that it
comes from all the body by reason of the
heat of the movement of the body in copulation,
they imply that it is a kind of waste-product.
But these are contrary to Nature, and from
such arises nothing according to Nature.
So then it must be a secretion or excretion.
But, to go further into it, every secretion
or excretion is either of useless or useful
nutriment; by ‘useless’ I mean that from
which nothing further is contributed to natural
growth, but which is particularly mischievous
to the body if too much of it is consumed;
by ‘useful’ I mean the opposite. Now it is
evident that it cannot be of the former character,
for such is most abundant in persons of the
worst condition of body through age or sickness;
semen, on the contrary, is least abundant
in them for either they have none at all
or it is not fertile, because a useless and
morbid secretion is mingled with it.
Semen, then, is part of a useful secretion.
But the most useful is the last and that
from which finally is formed each of the
parts of the body. For secretions are either
earlier or later; of the nutriment in the
first stage the secretion is phlegm and the
like, for phlegm also is a secretion of the
useful nutriment, an indication of this being
that if it is mixed with pure nutriment it
is nourishing, and that it is used up in
cases of illness. The final secretion is
the smallest in proportion to the quantity
of nutriment. But we must reflect that the
daily nutriment by which animals and plants
grow is but small, for if a very little be
added continually to the same thing the size
of it will become excessive.
So we must say the opposite of what the ancients
said. For whereas they said that semen is
that which comes from all the body, we shall
say it is that whose nature is to go to all
of it, and what they thought a waste-product
seems rather to be a secretion. For it is
more reasonable to suppose that the last
extract of the nutriment which goes to all
parts resembles that which is left over from
it, just as part of a painter’s colour is
often left over resembling that which he
has used up. Waste-products, on the contrary,
are always due to corruption or decay and
to a departure from Nature.
A further proof that it is not a waste-product,
but rather a secretion, is the fact that
the large animals have few young, the small
many. For the large must have more waste
and less secretion, since the great size
of the body causes most of the nutriment
to be used up, so that the residue or secretion
is small.
Again, no place has been set apart by Nature
for waste-products but they flow wherever
they can find an easy passage in the body,
but a place has been set apart for all the
natural secretions; thus the lower intestine
serves for the excretion of the solid nutriment,
the bladder for that of the liquid; for the
useful part of the nutriment we have the
upper intestine, for the spermatic secretions
the uterus and pudenda and breasts, for it
is collected and flows together into them.
And the resulting phenomena are evidence
that semen is what we have said, and these
result because such is the nature of the
secretion. For the exhaustion consequent
on the loss of even a very little of the
semen is conspicuous because the body is
deprived of the ultimate gain drawn from
the nutriment. With some few persons, it
is true, during a short time in the flower
of their youth the loss of it, if it be excessive
in quantity, is an alleviation (just as in
the case of the nutriment in its first stage,
if too much have been taken, since getting
rid of this also makes the body more comfortable),
and so it may be also when other secretions
come away with it, for in that case it is
not only semen that is lost but also other
influences come away mingled with it, and
these are morbid. Wherefore, with some men
at least, that which comes from them proves
sometimes incapable of procreation because
the seminal element in it is so small. But
still in most men and as a general rule the
result of intercourse is exhaustion and weakness
rather than relief, for the reason given.
Moreover, semen does not exist in them either
in childhood or in old age or in sickness—in
the last case because of weakness, in old
age because they do not sufficiently concoct
their food, and in childhood because they
are growing and so all the nutriment is used
up too soon, for in about five years, in
the case of human beings at any rate, the
body seems to gain half the height that is
gained in all the rest of life.
In many animals and plants we find a difference
in this connexion not only between kinds
as compared with kinds, but also between
similar individuals of the same kind as compared
with each other, e. g. man with man or vine
with vine. Some have much semen, others little,
others again none at all, not through weakness
but the contrary, at any rate in some cases.
This is because the nutriment is used up
to form the body, as with some human beings,
who, being in good condition and developing
much flesh or getting rather too fat, produce
less semen and are less desirous of intercourse.
Like this is what happens with those vines
which ‘play the goat’, that is, luxuriate
wantonly through too much nutrition, for
he-goats when fat are less inclined to mount
the female; for which reason they thin them
before breeding from them, and say that the
vines ‘play the goat’, so calling it from
the condition of the goats. And fat people,
women as well as men, appear to be less fertile
than others from the fact that the secretion
when in process of concoction turns to fat
with those who are too well-nourished. For
fat also is a healthy secretion due to good
living.
In some cases no semen is produced at all,
as by the willow and poplar. This condition
is due to each of the two causes, weakness
and strength; the former prevents concoction
of the nutriment, the latter causes it to
be all consumed, as said above. In like manner
other animals produce much semen through
weakness as well as through strength, when
a great quantity of a useless secretion is
mixed with it; this sometimes results in
actual disease when a passage is not found
to carry off the impurity, and though some
recover of this, others actually die of it.
For corrupt humours collect here as in the
urine, which also has been known to cause
disease.
[Further the same passage serves for urine
and semen; and whatever animals have both
kinds of excrement, that of liquid and that
of solid nutriment, discharge the semen by
the same passage as the liquid excrement
(for it is a secretion of a liquid, since
the nutriment of all animals is rather liquid
than solid), but those which have no liquid
excrement discharge it at the passage of
the solid residua. Moreover, waste-products
are always morbid, but the removal of the
secretion is useful; now the discharge of
the semen participates in both characteristics
because it takes up some of the non-useful
nutriment. But if it were a waste-product
it would be always harmful; as it is, it
is not so.]
From what has been said, it is clear that
semen is a secretion of useful nutriment,
and that in its last stage, whether it is
produced by all or no.
19 After this we must distinguish of what
sort of nutriment it is a secretion, and
must discuss the catamenia which occur in
certain of the vivipara. For thus we shall
make it clear
(1) whether the female also produces semen
like the male and the foetus is a single
mixture of two semens, or whether no semen
is secreted by the female, and, (2) if not,
whether she contributes nothing else either
to generation but only provides a receptacle,
or whether she does contribute something,
and, if so, how and in what manner she does
so.
We have previously stated that the final
nutriment is the blood in the sanguinea and
the analogous fluid in the other animals.
Since the semen is also a secretion of the
nutriment, and that in its final stage, it
follows that it will be either (1) blood
or that which is analogous to blood, or (2)
something formed from this. But since it
is from the blood, when concocted and somehow
divided up, that each part of the body is
made, and since the semen if properly concocted
is quite of a different character from the
blood when it is separated from it, but if
not properly concocted has been known in
some cases to issue in a bloody condition
if one forces oneself too often to coition,
therefore it is plain that semen will be
a secretion of the nutriment when reduced
to blood, being that which is finally distributed
to the parts of the body. And this is the
reason why it has so great power, for the
loss of the pure and healthy blood is an
exhausting thing; for this reason also it
is natural that the offspring should resemble
the parents, for that which goes to all the
parts of the body resembles that which is
left over. So that the semen which is to
form the hand or the face or the whole animal
is already the hand or face or whole animal
undifferentiated, and what each of them is
actually such is the semen potentially, either
in virtue of its own mass or because it has
a certain power in itself. I mention these
alternatives here because we have not yet
made it clear from the distinctions drawn
hitherto whether it is the matter of the
semen that is the cause of generation, or
whether it has in it some faculty and efficient
cause thereof, for the hand also or any other
bodily part is not hand or other part in
a true sense if it be without soul or some
other power, but is only called by the same
name as the living hand.
On this subject, then, so much may be laid
down. But since it is necessary (1) that
the weaker animal also should have a secretion
greater in quantity and less concocted, and
(2) that being of such a nature it should
be a mass of sanguineous liquid, and (3)
since that which Nature endows with a smaller
portion of heat is weaker, and (4) since
it has already been stated that such is the
character of the female—putting all these
considerations together we see that the sanguineous
matter discharged by the female is also a
secretion. And such is the discharge of the
so-called catamenia.
It is plain, then, that the catamenia are
a secretion, and that they are analogous
in females to the semen in males. The circumstances
connected with them are evidence that this
view is correct. For the semen begins to
appear in males and to be emitted at the
same time of life that the catamenia begin
to flow in females, and that they change
their voice and their breasts begin to develop.
So, too, in the decline of life the generative
power fails in the one sex and the catamenia
in the other.
The following signs also indicate that this
discharge in females is a secretion. Generally
speaking women suffer neither from haemorrhoids
nor bleeding at the nose nor anything else
of the sort except when the catamenia are
ceasing, and if anything of the kind occurs
the flow is interfered with because the discharge
is diverted to it.
Further, the blood-vessels of women stand
out less than those of men, and women are
rounder and smoother because the secretion
which in men goes to these vessels is drained
away with the catamenia. We must suppose,
too, that the same cause accounts for the
fact that the bulk of the body is smaller
in females than in males among the vivipara,
since this is the only class in which the
catamenia are discharged from the body. And
in this class the fact is clearest in women,
for the discharge is greater in women than
in the other animals. Wherefore her pallor
and the absence of prominent blood-vessels
is most conspicuous, and the deficient development
of her body compared with a man’s is obvious.
Now since this is what corresponds in the
female to the semen in the male, and since
it is not possible that two such discharges
should be found together, it is plain that
the female does not contribute semen to the
generation of the offspring. For if she had
semen she would not have the catamenia; but,
as it is, because she has the latter she
has not the former.
It has been stated then that the catamenia
are a secretion as the semen is, and confirmation
of this view may be drawn from some of the
phenomena of animals. For fat creatures produce
less semen than lean ones, as observed before.
The reason is that fat also, like semen,
is a secretion, is in fact concocted blood,
only not concocted in the same way as the
semen. Thus, if the secretion is consumed
to form fat the semen is naturally deficient.
And so among the bloodless animals the cephalopoda
and crustacea are in best condition about
the time of producing eggs, for, because
they are bloodless and no fat is formed in
them, that which is analogous in them to
fat is at that season drawn off to form the
spermatic secretion.
And a proof that the female does not emit
similar semen to the male, and that the offspring
is not formed by a mixture of both, as some
say, is that often the female conceives without
the sensation of pleasure in intercourse,
and if again the pleasure is experience by
her no less than by the male and the two
sexes reach their goal together, yet often
no conception takes place unless the liquid
of the so-called catamenia is present in
a right proportion. Hence the female does
not produce young if the catamenia are absent
altogether, nor often when, they being present,
the efflux still continues; but she does
so after the purgation. For in the one case
she has not the nutriment or material from
which the foetus can be framed by the power
coming from the male and inherent in the
semen, and in the other it is washed away
with the catamenia because of their abundance.
But when after their occurrence the greater
part has been evacuated, the remainder is
formed into a foetus. Cases of conception
when the catamenia do not occur at all, or
of conception during their discharge instead
of after it, are due to the fact that in
the former instance there is only so much
liquid to begin with as remains behind after
the discharge in fertile women, and no greater
quantity is secreted so as to come away from
the body, while in the latter instance the
mouth of the uterus closes after the discharge.
When, therefore, the quantity already expelled
from the body is great but the discharge
still continues, only not on such a scale
as to wash away the semen, then it is that
conception accompanies coition. Nor is it
at all strange that the catamenia should
still continue after conception (for even
after it they recur to some extent, but are
scanty and do not last during all the period
of gestation; this, however, is a morbid
phenomenon, wherefore it is found only in
a few cases and then seldom, whereas it is
that which happens as a regular thing that
is according to Nature).
It is clear then that the female contributes
the material for generation, and that this
is in the substance of the catamenia, and
that they are a secretion.
20 Some think that the female contributes
semen in coition because the pleasure she
experiences is sometimes similar to that
of the male, and also is attended by a liquid
discharge. But this discharge is not seminal;
it is merely proper to the part concerned
in each case, for there is a discharge from
the uterus which occurs in some women but
not in others. It is found in those who are
fair-skinned and of a feminine type generally,
but not in those who are dark and of a masculine
appearance. The amount of this discharge,
when it occurs, is sometimes on a different
scale from the emission of semen and far
exceeds it. Moreover, different kinds of
food cause a great difference in the quantity
of such discharges; for instance some pungently-flavoured
foods cause them to be conspicuously increased.
And as to the pleasure which accompanies
coition it is due to emission not only of
semen, but also of a spiritus, the coming
together of which precedes the emission.
This is plain in the case of boys who are
not yet able to emit semen, but are near
the proper age, and of men who are impotent,
for all these are capable of pleasure by
attrition. And those who have been injured
in the generative organs sometimes suffer
from diarrhoea because the secretion, which
they are not able to concoct and turn into
semen, is diverted into the intestine. Now
a boy is like a woman in form, and the woman
is as it were an impotent male, for it is
through a certain incapacity that the female
is female, being incapable of concocting
the nutriment in its last stage into semen
(and this is either blood or that which is
analogous to it in animals which are bloodless
owing to the coldness of their nature). As
then diarrhoea is caused in the bowels by
the insufficient concoction of the blood,
so are caused in the blood-vessels all discharges
of blood, including that of the catamenia,
for this also is such a discharge, only it
is natural whereas the others are morbid.
Thus it is clear that it is reasonable to
suppose that generation comes from this.
For the catamenia are semen not in a pure
state but in need of working up, as in the
formation of fruits the nutriment is present,
when it is not yet sifted thoroughly, but
needs working up to purify it. Thus the catamenia
cause generation mixture with the semen,
as this impure nutriment in plants is nutritious
when mixed with pure nutriment.
And a sign that the female does not emit
semen is the fact that the pleasure of intercourse
is caused by touch in the same region of
the female as of the male; and yet is it
not from thence that this flow proceeds.
Further, it is not all females that have
it at all, but only the sanguinea, and not
all even of these, but only those whose uterus
is not near the hypozoma and which do not
lay eggs; it is not found in the animals
which have no blood but only the analogous
fluid (for what is blood in the former is
represented by another fluid in the latter).
The reason why neither the latter nor those
sanguinea mentioned (i. e. those whose uterus
is low and which do not lay eggs) have this
effluxion is the dryness of their bodies;
this allows but little matter to be secreted,
only enough for generation but not enough
to be discharged from the body. All animals
that are viviparous without producing eggs
first (such are man and all quadrupeds which
bend their hind-legs outwards, for all these
are viviparous without producing eggs)—all
these have the catamenia, unless they are
defective in development as the mule, only
the efflux is not abundant as in women. Details
of the facts in each animal have been given
in the Enquiries concerning animals.
The catamenia are more abundant in women
than in the other animals, and men emit the
most semen in proportion to their size. The
reason is that the composition of their bodies
is liquid and hot compared to others, for
more matter must be secreted in such a case.
Further, man has no such parts in his body
as those to which the superfluous matter
is diverted in the other animals; for he
has no great quantity of hair in proportion
to his body, nor outgrowths of bones, horns,
and teeth.
There is evidence that the semen is in the
catamenia, for, as said before, this secretion
appears in the male at the same time of life
as the catamenia in the female; this indicates
that the parts destined to receive each of
these secretions are differentiated at the
same time in both sexes; and as the neighboring
parts in both become swollen the hair of
puberty springs forth in both alike. As the
parts in question are on the point of differentiating
they are distended by the spiritus; this
is clearer in males in the testes, but appears
also about the breasts; in females it is
more marked in the breasts, for it is when
they have risen two fingers’ breadth that
the catamenia generally begin.
Now, in all living things in which the male
and female are not separated the semen (or
seed) is a sort of embryo; by embryo I mean
the first mixture of male and female; hence,
from one semen comes one bodys—for example,
one stalk of wheat from one grain, as one
animal from one egg (for twin eggs are really
two eggs). But in whatever kinds the sexes
are distinguished, in these many animals
may come from one emission of semen, showing
that the semen differs in its nature in plants
and animals. A proof of this is that animals
which can bear more than one young one at
a time do so in consequence of only one coition.
Whereby, too, it is plain that the semen
does not come from the whole of the body;
for neither would the different parts of
the semen already be separated as soon as
discharged from the same part, nor could
they be separated in the uterus if they had
once entered it all together; but what does
happen is just what one would expect, since
what the male contributes to generation is
the form and the efficient cause, while the
female contributes the material. In fact,
as in the coagulation of milk, the milk being
the material, the fig-juice or rennet is
that which contains the curdling principle,
so acts the secretion of the male, being
divided into parts in the female. Why it
is sometimes divided into more or fewer parts,
and sometimes not divided at all, will be
the subject of another discussion. But because
it does not differ in kind at any rate this
does not matter, but what does matter is
only that each part should correspond to
the material, being neither too little to
concoct it and fix it into form, nor too
much so as to dry it up; it then generates
a number of offspring. But from this first
formative semen, if it remains one, and is
not divided, only one young one comes into
being.
That, then, the female does not contribute
semen to generation, but does contribute
something, and that this is the matter of
the catamenia, or that which is analogous
to it in bloodless animals, is clear from
what has been said, and also from a general
and abstract survey of the question. For
there must needs be that which generates
and that from which it generates; even if
these be one, still they must be distinct
in form and their essence must be different;
and in those animals that have these powers
separate in two sexes the body and nature
of the active and the passive sex must also
differ. If, then, the male stands for the
effective and active, and the female, considered
as female, for the passive, it follows that
what the female would contribute to the semen
of the male would not be semen but material
for the semen to work upon. This is just
what we find to be the case, for the catamenia
have in their nature an affinity to the primitive
matter.
21 So much for the discussion of this question.
At the same time the answer to the next question
we have to investigate is clear from these
considerations, I mean how it is that the
male contributes to generation and how it
is that the semen from the male is the cause
of the offspring. Does it exist in the body
of the embryo as a part of it from the first,
mingling with the material which comes from
the female? Or does the semen communicate
nothing to the material body of the embryo
but only to the power and movement in it?
For this power is that which acts and makes,
while that which is made and receives the
form is the residue of the secretion in the
female. Now the latter alternative appears
to be the right one both a priori and in
view of the facts. For, if we consider the
question on general grounds, we find that,
whenever one thing is made from two of which
one is active and the other passive, the
active agent does not exist in that which
is made; and, still more generally, the same
applies when one thing moves and another
is moved; the moving thing does not exist
in that which is moved. But the female, as
female, is passive, and the male, as male,
is active, and the principle of the movement
comes from him. Therefore, if we take the
highest genera under which they each fall,
the one being active and motive and the other
passive and moved, that one thing which is
produced comes from them only in the sense
in which a bed comes into being from the
carpenter and the wood, or in which a ball
comes into being from the wax and the form.
It is plain then that it is not necessary
that anything at all should come away from
the male, and if anything does come away
it does not follow that this gives rise to
the embryo as being in the embryo, but only
as that which imparts the motion and as the
form; so the medical art cures the patient.
This a priori argument is confirmed by the
facts. For it is for this reason that some
males which unite with the female do not,
it appears, insert any part of themselves
into the female, but on the contrary the
female inserts a part of herself into the
male; this occurs in some insects. For the
effect produced by the semen in the female
(in the case of those animals whose males
do insert a part) is produced in the case
of these insects by the heat and power in
the male animal itself when the female inserts
that part of herself which receives the secretion.
And therefore such animals remain united
a long time, and when they are separated
the young are produced quickly. For the union
lasts until that which is analogous to the
semen has done its work, and when they separate
the female produces the embryo quickly; for
the young is imperfect inasmuch as all such
creatures give birth to scoleces.
What occurs in birds and oviparous fishes
is the greatest proof that neither does the
semen come from all parts of the male nor
does he emit anything of such a nature as
to exist within that which is generated,
as part of the material embryo, but that
he only makes a living creature by the power
which resides in the semen (as we said in
the case of those insects whose females insert
a part of themselves into the male). For
if a hen-bird is in process of producing
wind-eggs and is then trodden by the cock
before the egg has begun to whiten and while
it is all still yellow, then they become
fertile instead of being wind-eggs. And if
while it is still yellow she be trodden by
another cock, the whole brood of chicks turn
out like the second cock. Hence some of those
who are anxious to rear fine birds act thus;
they change the cocks for the first and second
treading, not as if they thought that the
semen is mingled with the egg or exists in
it, or that it comes from all parts of the
cock; for if it did it would have come from
both cocks, so that the chick would have
all its parts doubled. But it is by its force
that the semen of the male gives a certain
quality to the material and the nutriment
in the female, for the second semen added
to the first can produce this effect by heat
and concoction, as the egg acquires nutriment
so long as it is growing.
The same conclusion is to be drawn from the
generation of oviparous fishes. When the
female has laid her eggs, the male spinkles
the milt over them, and those eggs are fertilized
which it reaches, but not the others; this
shows that the male does not contribute anything
to the quantity but only to the quality of
the embryo.
From what has been said it is plain that
the semen does not come from the whole of
the body of the male in those animals which
emit it, and that the contribution of the
female to the generative product is not the
same as that of the male, but the male contributes
the principle of movement and the female
the material. This is why the female does
not produce offspring by herself, for she
needs a principle, i. e. something to begin
the movement in the embryo and to define
the form it is to assume. Yet in some animals,
as birds, the nature of the female unassisted
can generate to a certain extent, for they
do form something, only it is incomplete;
I mean the so-called wind-eggs.
22 For the same reason the development of
the embryo takes place in the female; neither
the male himself nor the female emits semen
into the male, but the female receives within
herself the share contributed by both, because
in the female is the material from which
is made the resulting product. Not only must
the mass of material exist there from which
the embryo is formed in the first instance,
but further material must constantly be added
that it may increase in size. Therefore the
birth must take place in the female. For
the carpenter must keep in close connexion
with his timber and the potter with his clay,
and generally all workmanship and the ultimate
movement imparted to matter must be connected
with the material concerned, as, for instance,
architecture is in the buildings it makes.
From these considerations we may also gather
how it is that the male contributes to generation.
The male does not emit semen at all in some
animals, and where he does this is no part
of the resulting embryo; just so no material
part comes from the carpenter to the material,
i. e. the wood in which he works, nor does
any part of the carpenter’s art exist within
what he makes, but the shape and the form
are imparted from him to the material by
means of the motion he sets up. It is his
hands that move his tools, his tools that
move the material; it is his knowledge of
his art, and his soul, in which is the form,
that moves his hands or any other part of
him with a motion of some definite kind,
a motion varying with the varying nature
of the object made. In like manner, in the
male of those animals which emit semen Nature
uses the semen as a tool and as possessing
motion in actuality, just as tools are used
in the products of any art, for in them lies
in a certain sense the motion of the art.
Such, then, is the way in which these males
contribute to generation. But when the male
does not emit semen, but the female inserts
some part of herself into the male, this
is parallel to a case in which a man should
carry the material to the workman. For by
reason of weakness in such males Nature is
not able to do anything by any secondary
means, but the movements imparted to the
material are scarcely strong enough when
Nature herself watches over them. Thus here
she resembles a modeller in clay rather than
a carpenter, for she does not touch the work
she is forming by means of tools, but, as
it were, with her own hands.
23 In all animals which can move about, the
sexes are separated, one individual being
male and one female, though both are the
same in species, as with man and horse. But
in plants these powers are mingled, female
not being separated from male. Wherefore
they generate out of themselves, and do not
emit semen but produce an embryo, what is
called the seed. Empedocles puts this well
in the line: ‘and thus the tall trees oviposit;
first olives...’ For as the egg is an embryo,
a certain part of it giving rise to the animal
and the rest being nutriment, so also from
a part of the seed springs the growing plant,
and the rest is nutriment for the shoot and
the first root.
In a certain sense the same thing happens
also in those animals which have the sexes
separate. For when there is need for them
to generate the sexes are no longer separated
any more than in plants, their nature desiring
that they shall become one; and this is plain
to view when they copulate and are united,
that one animal is made out of both.
It is the nature of those creatures which
do not emit semen to remain united a long
time until the male element has formed the
embryo, as with those insects which copulate.
The others so remain only until the male
has discharged from the parts of himself
introduced something which will form the
embryo in a longer time, as among the sanguinea.
For the former remain paired some part of
a day, while the semen forms the embryo in
several days. And after emitting this they
cease their union.
And animals seem literally to be like divided
plants, as though one should separate and
divide them, when they bear seed, into the
male and female existing in them.
In all this Nature acts like an intelligent
workman. For to the essence of plants belongs
no other function or business than the production
of seed; since, then, this is brought about
by the union of male and female, Nature has
mixed these and set them together in plants,
so that the sexes are not divided in them.
Plants, however, have been investigated elsewhere.
But the function of the animal is not only
to generate (which is common to all living
things), but they all of them participate
also in a kind of knowledge, some more and
some less, and some very little indeed. For
they have sense-perception, and this is a
kind of knowledge. (If we consider the value
of this we find that it is of great importance
compared with the class of lifeless objects,
but of little compared with the use of the
intellect. For against the latter the mere
participation in touch and taste seems to
be practically nothing, but beside absolute
insensibility it seems most excellent; for
it would seem a treasure to gain even this
kind of knowledge rather than to lie in a
state of death and non-existence.) Now it
is by sense-perception that an animal differs
from those organisms which have only life.
But since, if it is a living animal, it must
also live; therefore, when it is necessary
for it to accomplish the function of that
which has life, it unites and copulates,
becoming like a plant, as we said before.
Testaceous animals, being intermediate between
animals and plants, perform the function
of neither class as belonging to both. As
plants they have no sexes, and one does not
generate in another; as animals they do not
bear fruit from themselves like plants; but
they are formed and generated from a liquid
and earthy concretion. However, we must speak
later of the generation of these animals.
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