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Book Two
Book II
1 THAT the male and the female are the principles
of generation has been previously stated,
as also what is their power and their essence.
But why is it that one thing becomes and
is male, another female? It is the business
of our discussion as it proceeds to try and
point out (1) that the sexes arise from Necessity
and the first efficient cause, (2) from what
sort of material they are formed. That (3)
they exist because it is better and on account
of the final cause, takes us back to a principle
still further remote.
Now (1) some existing things are eternal
and divine whilst others admit of both existence
and non-existence. But (2) that which is
noble and divine is always, in virtue of
its own nature, the cause of the better in
such things as admit of being better or worse,
and what is not eternal does admit of existence
and non-existence, and can partake in the
better and the worse. And (3) soul is better
than body, and living, having soul, is thereby
better than the lifeless which has none,
and being is better than not being, living
than not living. These, then, are the reasons
of the generation of animals. For since it
is impossible that such a class of things
as animals should be of an eternal nature,
therefore that which comes into being is
eternal in the only way possible. Now it
is impossible for it to be eternal as an
individual (though of course the real essence
of things is in the individual)—were it such
it would be eternal—but it is possible for
it as a species. This is why there is always
a class of men and animals and plants. But
since the male and female essences are the
first principles of these, they will exist
in the existing individuals for the sake
of generation. Again, as the first efficient
or moving cause, to which belong the definition
and the form, is better and more divine in
its nature than the material on which it
works, it is better that the superior principle
should be separated from the inferior. Therefore,
wherever it is possible and so far as it
is possible, the male is separated from the
female. For the first principle of the movement,
or efficient cause, whereby that which comes
into being is male, is better and more divine
than the material whereby it is female. The
male, however, comes together and mingles
with the female for the work of generation,
because this is common to both.
A thing lives, then, in virtue of participating
in the male and female principles, wherefore
even plants have some kind of life; but the
class of animals exists in virtue of sense-perception.
The sexes are divided in nearly all of these
that can move about, for the reasons already
stated, and some of them, as said before,
emit semen in copulation, others not. The
reason of this is that the higher animals
are more independent in their nature, so
that they have greater size, and this cannot
exist without vital heat; for the greater
body requires more force to move it, and
heat is a motive force. Therefore, taking
a general view, we may say that sanguinea
are of greater size than bloodless animals,
and those which move about than those which
remain fixed. And these are just the animals
which emit semen on account of their heat
and size.
So much for the cause of the existence of
the two sexes. Some animals bring to perfection
and produce into the world a creature like
themselves, as all those which bring their
young into the world alive; others produce
something undeveloped which has not yet acquired
its own form; in this latter division the
sanguinea lay eggs, the bloodless animals
either lay an egg or give birth to a scolex.
The difference between egg and scolex is
this: an egg is that from a part of which
the young comes into being, the rest being
nutriment for it; but the whole of a scolex
is developed into the whole of the young
animal. Of the vivipara, which bring into
the world an animal like themselves, some
are internally viviparous (as men, horses,
cattle, and of marine animals dolphins and
the other cetacea); others first lay eggs
within themselves, and only after this are
externally viviparous (as the cartilaginous
fishes). Among the ovipara some produce the
egg in a perfect condition (as birds and
all oviparous quadrupeds and footless animals,
e. g. lizards and tortoises and most snakes;
for the eggs of all these do not increase
when once laid). The eggs of others are imperfect;
such are those of fishes, crustaceans, and
cephalopods, for their eggs increase after
being produced.
All the vivipara are sanguineous, and the
sanguinea are either viviparous or oviparous,
except those which are altogether infertile.
Among bloodless animals the insects produce
a scolex, alike those that are generated
by copulation and those that copulate themselves
though not so generated. For there are some
insects of this sort, which though they come
into being by spontaneous generation are
yet male and female; from their union something
is produced, only it is imperfect; the reason
of this has been previously stated.
These classes admit of much cross-division.
Not all bipeds are viviparous (for birds
are oviparous), nor are they all oviparous
(for man is viviparous), nor are all quadrupeds
oviparous (for horses, cattle, and countless
others are viviparous), nor are they all
viviparous (for lizards, crocodiles, and
many others lay eggs). Nor does the presence
or absence of feet make the difference between
them, for not only are some footless animals
viviparous, as vipers and the cartilaginous
fishes, while others are oviparous, as the
other fishes and serpents, but also among
those which have feet many are oviparous
and many viviparous, as the quadrupeds above
mentioned. And some which have feet, as man,
and some which have not, as the whale and
dolphin, are internally viviparous. By this
character then it is not possible to divide
them, nor is any of the locomotive organs
the cause of this difference, but it is those
animals which are more perfect in their nature
and participate in a purer element which
are viviparous, for nothing is internally
viviparous unless it receive and breathe
out air. But the more perfect are those which
are hotter in their nature and have more
moisture and are not earthy in their composition.
And the measure of natural heat is the lung
when it has blood in it, for generally those
animals which have a lung are hotter than
those which have not, and in the former class
again those whose lung is not spongy nor
solid nor containing only a little blood,
but soft and full of blood. And as the animal
is perfect but the egg and the scolex are
imperfect, so the perfect is naturally produced
from the more perfect. If animals are hotter
as shown by their possessing a lung but drier
in their nature, or are colder but have more
moisture, then they either lay a perfect
egg or are viviparous after laying an egg
within themselves. For birds and scaly reptiles
because of their heat produce a perfect egg,
but because of their dryness it is only an
egg; the cartilaginous fishes have less heat
than these but more moisture, so that they
are intermediate, for they are both oviparous
and viviparous within themselves, the former
because they are cold, the latter because
of their moisture; for moisture is vivifying,
whereas dryness is furthest removed from
what has life. Since they have neither feathers
nor scales such as either reptiles or other
fishes have, all which are signs rather of
a dry and earthy nature, the egg they produce
is soft; for the earthy matter does not come
to the surface in their eggs any more than
in themselves. This is why they lay eggs
in themselves, for if the egg were laid externally
it would be destroyed, having no protection.
Animals that are cold and rather dry than
moist also lay eggs, but the egg is imperfect;
at the same time, because they are of an
earthy nature and the egg they produce is
imperfect, therefore it has a hard integument
that it may be preserved by the protection
of the shell-like covering. Hence fishes,
because they are scaly, and crustacea, because
they are of an earthy nature, lay eggs with
a hard integument.
The cephalopods, having themselves bodies
of a sticky nature, preserve in the same
way the imperfect eggs they lay, for they
deposit a quantity of sticky material about
the embryo. All insects produce a scolex.
Now all the insects are bloodless, wherefore
all creatures that produce a scolex from
themselves are so. But we cannot say simply
that all bloodless animals produce a scolex,
for the classes overlap one another, (1)
the insects, (2) the animals that produce
a scolex, (3) those that lay their egg imperfect,
as the scaly fishes, the crustacea, and the
cephalopoda. I say that these form a gradation,
for the eggs of these latter resemble a scolex,
in that they increase after oviposition,
and the scolex of insects again as it develops
resembles an egg; how so we shall explain
later.
We must observe how rightly Nature orders
generation in regular gradation. The more
perfect and hotter animals produce their
young perfect in respect of quality (in respect
of quantity this is so with no animal, for
the young always increase in size after birth),
and these generate living animals within
themselves from the first. The second class
do not generate perfect animals within themselves
from the first (for they are only viviparous
after first laying eggs), but still they
are externally viviparous. The third class
do not produce a perfect animal, but an egg,
and this egg is perfect. Those whose nature
is still colder than these produce an egg,
but an imperfect one, which is perfected
outside the body, as the class of scaly fishes,
the crustacea, and the cephalopods. The fifth
and coldest class does not even lay an egg
from itself; but so far as the young ever
attain to this condition at all, it is outside
the body of the parent, as has been said
already. For insects produce a scolex first;
the scolex after developing becomes egg-like
(for the so-called chrysalis or pupa is equivalent
to an egg); then from this it is that a perfect
animal comes into being, reaching the end
of its development in the second change.
Some animals then, as said before, do not
come into being from semen, but all the sanguinea
do so which are generated by copulation,
the male emitting semen into the female when
this has entered into her the young are formed
and assume their peculiar character, some
within the animals themselves when they are
viviparous, others in eggs.
There is a considerable difficulty in understanding
how the plant is formed out of the seed or
any animal out of the semen. Everything that
comes into being or is made must
(1) be made out of something, (2) be made
by the agency of something, and (3) must
become something. Now that out of which it
is made is the material; this some animals
have in its first form within themselves,
taking it from the female parent, as all
those which are not born alive but produced
as a scolex or an egg; others receive it
from the mother for a long time by sucking,
as the young of all those which are not only
externally but also internally viviparous.
Such, then, is the material out of which
things come into being, but we now are inquiring
not out of what the parts of an animal are
made, but by what agency. Either it is something
external which makes them, or else something
existing in the seminal fluid and the semen;
and this must either be soul or a part of
soul, or something containing soul.
Now it would appear irrational to suppose
that any of either the internal organs or
the other parts is made by something external,
since one thing cannot set up a motion in
another without touching it, nor can a thing
be affected in any way by another if it does
not set up a motion in it. Something then
of the sort we require exists in the embryo
itself, being either a part of it or separate
from it. To suppose that it should be something
else separate from it is irrational. For
after the animal has been produced does this
something perish or does it remain in it?
But nothing of the kind appears to be in
it, nothing which is not a part of the whole
plant or animal. Yet, on the other hand,
it is absurd to say that it perishes after
making either all the parts or only some
of them. If it makes some of the parts and
then perishes, what is to make the rest of
them? Suppose this something makes the heart
and then perishes, and the heart makes another
organ, by the same argument either all the
parts must perish or all must remain. Therefore
it is preserved and does not perish. Therefore
it is a part of the embryo itself which exists
in the semen from the beginning; and if indeed
there is no part of the soul which does not
exist in some part of the body, it would
also be a part containing soul in it from
the beginning.
How, then, does it make the other parts?
Either all the parts, as heart, lung, liver,
eye, and all the rest, come into being together
or in succession, as is said in the verse
ascribed to Orpheus, for there he says that
an animal comes into being in the same way
as the knitting of a net. That the former
is not the fact is plain even to the senses,
for some of the parts are clearly visible
as already existing in the embryo while others
are not; that it is not because of their
being too small that they are not visible
is clear, for the lung is of greater size
than the heart, and yet appears later than
the heart in the original development. Since,
then, one is earlier and another later, does
the one make the other, and does the later
part exist on account of the part which is
next to it, or rather does the one come into
being only after the other? I mean, for instance,
that it is not the fact that the heart, having
come into being first, then makes the liver,
and the liver again another organ, but that
the liver only comes into being after the
heart, and not by the agency of the heart,
as a man becomes a man after being a boy,
not by his agency. An explanation of this
is that, in all the productions of Nature
or of art, what already exists potentially
is brought into being only by what exists
actually; therefore if one organ formed another
the form and the character of the later organ
would have to exist in the earlier, e. g.
the form of the liver in the heart. And otherwise
also the theory is strange and fictitious.
Yet again, if the whole animal or plant is
formed from semen or seed, it is impossible
that any part of it should exist ready made
in the semen or seed, whether that part be
able to make the other parts or no. For it
is plain that, if it exists in it from the
first, it was made by that which made the
semen. But semen must be made first, and
that is the function of the generating parent.
So, then, it is not possible that any part
should exist in it, and therefore it has
not within itself that which makes the parts.
But neither can this agent be external, and
yet it must needs be one or other of the
two. We must try, then, to solve this difficulty,
for perhaps some one of the statements made
cannot be made without qualification, e.
g. the statement that the parts cannot be
made by what is external to the semen. For
if in a certain sense they cannot, yet in
another sense they can. (Now it makes no
difference whether we say ‘the semen’ or
‘that from which the semen comes’, in so
far as the semen has in itself the movement
initiated by the other.)
It is possible, then, that A should move
B, and B move C; that, in fact, the case
should be the same as with the automatic
machines shown as curiosities. For the parts
of such machines while at rest have a sort
of potentiality of motion in them, and when
any external force puts the first of them
in motion, immediately the next is moved
in actuality. As, then, in these automatic
machines the external force moves the parts
in a certain sense (not by touching any part
at the moment, but by having touched one
previously), in like manner also that from
which the semen comes, or in other words
that which made the semen, sets up the movement
in the embryo and makes the parts of it by
having first touched something though not
continuing to touch it. In a way it is the
innate motion that does this, as the act
of building builds the house. Plainly, then,
while there is something which makes the
parts, this does not exist as a definite
object, nor does it exist in the semen at
the first as a complete part.
But how is each part formed? We must answer
this by starting in the first instance from
the principle that, in all products of Nature
or art, a thing is made by something actually
existing out of that which is potentially
such as the finished product. Now the semen
is of such a nature, and has in it such a
principle of motion, that when the motion
is ceasing each of the parts comes into being,
and that as a part having life or soul. For
there is no such thing as face or flesh without
life or soul in it; it is only equivocally
that they will be called face or flesh if
the life has gone out of them, just as if
they had been made of stone or wood. And
the homogeneous parts and the organic come
into being together. And just as we should
not say that an axe or other instrument or
organ was made by the fire alone, so neither
shall we say that foot or hand were made
by heat alone. The same applies also to flesh,
for this too has a function. While, then,
we may allow that hardness and softness,
stickiness and brittleness, and whatever
other qualities are found in the parts that
have life and soul, may be caused by mere
heat and cold, yet, when we come to the principle
in virtue of which flesh is flesh and bone
is bone, that is no longer so; what makes
them is the movement set up by the male parent,
who is in actuality what that out of which
the offspring is made is in potentiality.
This is what we find in the products of art;
heat and cold may make the iron soft and
hard, but what makes a sword is the movement
of the tools employed, this movement containing
the principle of the art. For the art is
the starting-point and form of the product;
only it exists in something else, whereas
the movement of Nature exists in the product
itself, issuing from another nature which
has the form in actuality.
Has the semen soul, or not? The same argument
applies here as in the question concerning
the parts. As no part, if it participate
not in soul, will be a part except in an
equivocal sense (as the eye of a dead man
is still called an ‘eye’), so no soul will
exist in anything except that of which it
is soul; it is plain therefore that semen
both has soul, and is soul, potentially.
But a thing existing potentially may be nearer
or further from its realization in actuality,
as e. g. a mathematician when asleep is further
from his realization in actuality as engaged
in mathematics than when he is awake, and
when awake again but not studying mathematics
he is further removed than when he is so
studying. Accordingly it is not any part
that is the cause of the soul’s coming into
being, but it is the first moving cause from
outside. (For nothing generates itself, though
when it has come into being it thenceforward
increases itself.) Hence it is that only
one part comes into being first and not all
of them together. But that must first come
into being which has a principle of increase
(for this nutritive power exists in all alike,
whether animals or plants, and this is the
same as the power that enables an animal
or plant to generate another like itself,
that being the function of them all if naturally
perfect). And this is necessary for the reason
that whenever a living thing is produced
it must grow. It is produced, then, by something
else of the same name, as e. g. man is produced
by man, but it is increased by means of itself.
There is, then, something which increases
it. If this is a single part, this must come
into being first. Therefore if the heart
is first made in some animals, and what is
analogous to the heart in the others which
have no heart, it is from this or its analogue
that the first principle of movement would
arise.
We have thus discussed the difficulties previously
raised on the question what is the efficient
cause of generation in each case, as the
first moving and formative power.
2 The next question to be mooted concerns
the nature of semen. For whereas when it
issues from the animal it is thick and white,
yet on cooling it becomes liquid as water,
and its colour is that of water. This would
appear strange, for water is not thickened
by heat; yet semen is thick when it issues
from within the animal’s body which is hot,
and becomes liquid on cooling. Again, watery
fluids freeze, but semen, if exposed in frosts
to the open air, does not freeze but liquefies,
as if it was thickened by the opposite of
cold. Yet it is unreasonable, again, to suppose
that it is thickened by heat. For it is only
substances having a predominance of earth
in their composition that coagulate and thicken
on boiling, e. g. milk. It ought then to
solidify on cooling, but as a matter of fact
it does not become solid in any part but
the whole of it goes like water.
This then is the difficulty. If it is water,
water evidently does not thicken through
heat, whereas the semen is thick and both
it and the body whence it issues are hot.
If it is made of earth or a mixture of earth
and water, it ought not to liquefy entirely
and turn to water.
Perhaps, however, we have not discriminated
all the possibilities. It is not only the
liquids composed of water and earthy matter
that thicken, but also those composed of
water and air; foam, for instance, becomes
thicker and white, and the smaller and less
visible the bubbles in it, the whiter and
firmer does the mass appear. The same thing
happens also with oil; on mixing with air
it thickens, wherefore that which is whitening
becomes thicker, the watery part in it being
separated off by the heat and turning to
air. And if oxide of lead is mixed with water
or even with oil, the mass increases greatly
and changes from liquid and dark to firm
and white, the reason being that air is mixed
in with it which increases the mass and makes
the white shine through, as in foam and snow
(for snow is foam). And water itself on mingling
with oil becomes thick and white, because
air is entangled in it by the act of pounding
them together, and oil itself has much air
in it (for shininess is a property of air,
not of earth or water). This too is why it
floats on the surface of the water, for the
air contained in it as in a vessel bears
it up and makes it float, being the cause
of its lightness. So too oil is thickened
without freezing in cold weather and frosts;
it does not freeze because of its heat (for
the air is hot and will not freeze), but
because the air is forced together and compressed,
as..., by the cold, the oil becomes thicker.
These are the reasons why semen is firm and
white when it issues from within the animal;
it has a quantity of hot air in it because
of the internal heat; afterwards, when the
heat has evaporated and the air has cooled,
it turns liquid and dark; for the water,
and any small quantity of earthy matter there
may be, remain in semen as it dries, as they
do in phlegm.
Semen, then, is a compound of spirit (pneuma)
and water, and the former is hot air (aerh);
hence semen is liquid in its nature because
it is made of water. What Ctesias the Cnidian
has asserted of the semen of elephants is
manifestly untrue; he says that it hardens
so much in drying that it becomes like amber.
But this does not happen, though it is true
that one semen must be more earthy than another,
and especially so with animals that have
much earthy matter in them because of the
bulk of their bodies. And it is thick and
white because it is mixed with spirit, for
it is also an invariable rule that it is
white, and Herodotus does not report the
truth when he says that the semen of the
Aethiopians is black, as if everything must
needs be black in those who have a black
skin, and that too when he saw their teeth
were white. The reason of the whiteness of
semen is that it is a foam, and foam is white,
especially that which is composed of the
smallest parts, small in the sense that each
bubble is invisible, which is what happens
when water and oil are mixed and shaken together,
as said before. (Even the ancients seem to
have noticed that semen is of the nature
of foam; at least it was from this they named
the goddess who presides over union.)
This then is the explanation of the problem
proposed, and it is plain too that this is
why semen does not freeze; for air will not
freeze.
3 The next question to raise and to answer
is this. If, in the case of those animals
which emit semen into the female, that which
enters makes no part of the resulting embryo,
where is the material part of it diverted
if (as we have seen) it acts by means of
the power residing in it? It is not only
necessary to decide whether what is forming
in the female receives anything material,
or not, from that which has entered her,
but also concerning the soul in virtue of
which an animal is so called (and this is
in virtue of the sensitive part of the soul)—does
this exist originally in the semen and in
the unfertilized embryo or not, and if it
does whence does it come? For nobody would
put down the unfertilized embryo as soulless
or in every sense bereft of life (since both
the semen and the embryo of an animal have
every bit as much life as a plant), and it
is productive up to a certain point. That
then they possess the nutritive soul is plain
(and plain is it from the discussions elsewhere
about soul why this soul must be acquired
first). As they develop they also acquire
the sensitive soul in virtue of which an
animal is an animal. For e. g. an animal
does not become at the same time an animal
and a man or a horse or any other particular
animal. For the end is developed last, and
the peculiar character of the species is
the end of the generation in each individual.
Hence arises a question of the greatest difficulty,
which we must strive to solve to the best
of our ability and as far as possible. When
and how and whence is a share in reason acquired
by those animals that participate in this
principle? It is plain that the semen and
the unfertilized embryo, while still separate
from each other, must be assumed to have
the nutritive soul potentially, but not actually,
except that (like those unfertilized embryos
that are separated from the mother) it absorbs
nourishment and performs the function of
the nutritive soul. For at first all such
embryos seem to live the life of a plant.
And it is clear that we must be guided by
this in speaking of the sensitive and the
rational soul. For all three kinds of soul,
not only the nutritive, must be possessed
potentially before they are possessed in
actuality. And it is necessary either (1)
that they should all come into being in the
embryo without existing previously outside
it, or (2) that they should all exist previously,
or (3), that some should so exist and others
not. Again, it is necessary that they should
either (1) come into being in the material
supplied by the female without entering with
the semen of the male, or (2) come from the
male and be imparted to the material in the
female. If the latter, then either all of
them, or none, or some must come into being
in the male from outside.
Now that it is impossible for them all to
preexist is clear from this consideration.
Plainly those principles whose activity is
bodily cannot exist without a body, e. g.
walking cannot exist without feet. For the
same reason also they cannot enter from outside.
For neither is it possible for them to enter
by themselves, being inseparable from a body,
nor yet in a body, for the semen is only
a secretion of the nutriment in process of
change. It remains, then, for the reason
alone so to enter and alone to be divine,
for no bodily activity has any connexion
with the activity of reason.
Now it is true that the faculty of all kinds
of soul seems to have a connexion with a
matter different from and more divine than
the so-called elements; but as one soul differs
from another in honour and dishonour, so
differs also the nature of the corresponding
matter. All have in their semen that which
causes it to be productive; I mean what is
called vital heat. This is not fire nor any
such force, but it is the spiritus included
in the semen and the foam-like, and the natural
principle in the spiritus, being analogous
to the element of the stars. Hence, whereas
fire generates no animal and we do not find
any living thing forming in either solids
or liquids under the influence of fire, the
heat of the sun and that of animals does
generate them. Not only is this true of the
heat that works through the semen, but whatever
other residuum of the animal nature there
may be, this also has still a vital principle
in it. From such considerations it is clear
that the heat in animals neither is fire
nor derives its origin from fire.
Let us return to the material of the semen,
in and with which comes away from the male
the spiritus conveying the principle of soul.
Of this principle there are two kinds; the
one is not connected with matter, and belongs
to those animals in which is included something
divine (to wit, what is called the reason),
while the other is inseparable from matter.
This material of the semen dissolves and
evaporates because it has a liquid and watery
nature. Therefore we ought not to expect
it always to come out again from the female
or to form any part of the embryo that has
taken shape from it; the case resembles that
of the fig-juice which curdles milk, for
this too changes without becoming any part
of the curdling masses.
It has been settled, then, in what sense
the embryo and the semen have soul, and in
what sense they have not; they have it potentially
but not actually.
Now semen is a secretion and is moved with
the same movement as that in virtue of which
the body increases (this increase being due
to subdivision of the nutriment in its last
stage). When it has entered the uterus it
puts into form the corresponding secretion
of the female and moves it with the same
movement wherewith it is moved itself. For
the female’s contribution also is a secretion,
and has all the arts in it potentially though
none of them actually; it has in it potentially
even those parts which differentiate the
female from the male, for just as the young
of mutilated parents are sometimes born mutilated
and sometimes not, so also the young born
of a female are sometimes female and sometimes
male instead. For the female is, as it were,
a mutilated male, and the catamenia are semen,
only not pure; for there is only one thing
they have not in them, the principle of soul.
For this reason, whenever a wind-egg is produced
by any animal, the egg so forming has in
it the parts of both sexes potentially, but
has not the principle in question, so that
it does not develop into a living creature,
for this is introduced by the semen of the
male. When such a principle has ben imparted
to the secretion of the female it becomes
an embryo.
Liquid but corporeal substances become surrounded
by some kind of covering on heating, like
the solid scum which forms on boiled foods
when cooling. All bodies are held together
by the glutinous; this quality, as the embryo
develops and increases in size, is acquired
by the sinewy substance, which holds together
the parts of animals, being actual sinew
in some and its analogue in others. To the
same class belong also skin, blood-vessels,
membranes, and the like, for these differ
in being more or less glutinous and generally
in excess and deficiency.
4 In those animals whose nature is comparatively
imperfect, when a perfect embryo (which,
however, is not yet a perfect animal) has
been formed, it is cast out from the mother,
for reasons previously stated. An embryo
is then complete when it is either male or
female, in the case of those animals who
possess this distinction, for some (i. e.
all those which are not themselves produced
from a male or female parent nor from a union
of the two) produce an offspring which is
neither male nor female. Of the generation
of these we shall speak later.
The perfect animals, those internally viviparous,
keep the developing embryo within themselves
and in close connexion until they give birth
to a complete animal and bring it to light.
A third class is externally viviparous but
first internally oviparous; they develop
the egg into a perfect condition, and then
in some cases the egg is set free as with
creatures externally oviparous, and the animal
is produced from the egg within the mother’s
body; in other cases, when the nutriment
from the egg is consumed, development is
completed by connection with the uterus,
and therefore the egg is not set free from
the uterus. This character marks the cartilaginous
fish, of which we must speak later by themselves.
Here we must make our first start from the
first class; these are the perfect or viviparous
animals, and of these the first is man. Now
the secretion of the semen takes place in
all of them just as does that of any other
residual matter. For each is conveyed to
its proper place without any force from the
breath or compulsion of any other cause,
as some assert, saying that the generative
parts attract the semen like cupping-glasses,
aided by the force of the breath, as if it
were possible for either this secretion or
the residue of the solid and liquid nutriment
to go anywhere else than they do without
the exertion of such a force. Their reason
is that the discharge of both is attended
by holding the breath, but this is a common
feature of all cases when it is necessary
to move anything, because strength arises
through holding the breath. Why, even without
this force the secretions or excretions are
discharged in sleep if the parts concerned
are full of them and are relaxed. One might
as well say that it is by the breath that
the seeds of plants are always segregated
to the places where they are wont to bear
fruit. No, the real cause, as has been stated
already, is that there are special parts
for receiving all the secretions, alike the
useless (as the residues of the liquid and
solid nutriment), and the blood, which has
the so-called blood-vessels.
To consider now the region of the uterus
in the female—the two blood-vessels, the
great vessel and the aorta, divide higher
up, and many fine vessels from them terminate
in the uterus. These become over-filled from
the nourishment they convey, nor is the female
nature able to concoct it, because it is
colder than man’s; so the blood is excreted
through very fine vessels into the uterus,
these being unable on account of their narrowness
to receive the excessive quantity, and the
result is a sort of haemorrhage. The period
is not accurately defined in women, but tends
to return during the waning of the moon.
This we should expect, for the bodies of
animals are colder when the environment happens
to become so, and the time of change from
one month to another is cold because of the
absence of the moon, whence also it results
that this time is stormier than the middle
of the month. When then the residue of the
nourishment has changed into blood, the catamenia
tend to occur at the above-mentioned period,
but when it is not concocted a little matter
at a time is always coming away, and this
is why ‘whites’ appear in females while still
small, in fact mere children. If both these
discharges of the secretions are moderate,
the body remains in good health, for they
act as a purification of the secretions which
are the causes of a morbid state of body;
if they do not occur at all or if they are
excessive, they are injurious, either causing
illness or pulling down the patient; hence
whites, if continuous and excessive, prevent
girls from growing. This secretion then is
necessarily discharged by females for the
reasons given; for, the female nature being
unable to concoct the nourishment thoroughly,
there must not only be left a residue of
the useless nutriment, but also there must
be a residue in the blood-vessels, and this
filling the channels of the finest vessels
must overflow. Then Nature, aiming at the
best end, uses it up in this place for the
sake of generation, that another creature
may come into being of the same kind as the
former was going to be, for the menstrual
blood is already potentially such as the
body from which it is discharged.
In all females, then, there must necessarily
be such a secretion, more indeed in those
that have blood and of these most of all
in man, but in the others also some matter
must be collected in the uterine region.
The reason why there is more in those that
have blood and most in man has been already
given, but why, if all females have such
a secretion, have not all males one to correspond?
For some of them do not emit semen but, just
as those which do emit it fashion by the
movement in the semen the mass forming from
the material supplied by the female, so do
the animals in question bring the same to
pass and exert the same formative power by
the movement within themselves in that part
from whence the semen is secreted. This is
the region about the diaphragm in all those
animals which have one, for the heart or
its analogue is the first principle of a
natural body, while the lower part is a mere
addition for the sake of it. Now the reason
why it is not all males that have a generative
secretion, while all females do, is that
the animal is a body with Soul or life; the
female always provides the material, the
male that which fashions it, for this is
the power that we say they each possess,
and this is what is meant by calling them
male and female. Thus while it is necessary
for the female to provide a body and a material
mass, it is not necessary for the male, because
it is not within the work of art or the embryo
that the tools or the maker must exist. While
the body is from the female, it is the soul
that is from the male, for the soul is the
reality of a particular body. For this reason
if animals of a different kind are crossed
(and this is possible when the periods of
gestation are equal and conception takes
place nearly at the same season and there
is no great difference in the of the animals),
the first cross has a common resemblance
to both parents, as the hybrid between fox
and dog, partridge and domestic fowl, but
as time goes on and one generation springs
from another, the final result resembles
the female in form, just as foreign seeds
produce plants varying in accordance with
the country in which they are sown. For it
is the soil that gives to the seeds the material
and the body of the plant. And hence the
part of the female which receives the semen
is not a mere passage, but the uterus has
a considerable width, whereas the males that
emit semen have only passages for this purpose,
and these are bloodless.
Each of the secretions becomes such at the
moment when it is in its proper place; before
that there is nothing of the sort unless
with much violence and contrary to nature.
We have thus stated the reason for which
the generative secretions are formed in animals.
But when the semen from the male (in those
animals which emit semen) has entered, it
puts into form the purest part of the female
secretion (for the greater part of the catamenia
also is useless and fluid, as is the most
fluid part of the male secretion, i. e. in
a single emission, the earlier discharge
being in most cases apt to be infertile rather
than the later, having less vital heat through
want of concoction, whereas that which is
concocted is thick and of a more material
nature).
If there is no external discharge, either
in women or other animals, on account of
there not being much useless and superfluous
matter in the secretion, then the quantity
forming within the female altogether is as
much as what is retained within those animals
which have an external discharge; this is
put into form by the power of the male residing
in the semen secreted by him, or, as is clearly
seen to happen in some insects, by the part
in the female analogous to the uterus being
inserted into the male.
It has been previously stated that the discharge
accompanying sexual pleasure in the female
contributes nothing to the embryo. The chief
argument for the opposite view is that what
are called bad dreams occur by night with
women as with men; but this is no proof,
for the same thing happens to young men also
who do not yet emit semen, and to those who
do emit semen but whose semen is infertile.
It is impossible to conceive without the
emission of the male in union and without
the secretion of the corresponding female
material, whether it be discharged externally
or whether there is only enough within the
body. Women conceive, however, without experiencing
the pleasure usual in such intercourse, if
the part chance to be in heat and the uterus
to have descended. But generally speaking
the opposite is the case, because the os
uteri is not closed when the discharge takes
place which is usually accompanied by pleasure
in women as well as men, and when this is
so there is a readier way for the semen of
the male to be drawn into the uterus.
The actual discharge does not take place
within the uterus as some think, the os uteri
being too narrow, but it is in the region
in front of this, where the female discharges
the moisture found in some cases, that the
male emits the semen. Sometimes it remains
in this place; at other times, if the uterus
chance to be conveniently placed and hot
on account of the purgation of the catamenia,
it draws it within itself. A proof of this
is that pessaries, though wet when applied,
are removed dry. Moreover, in all those animals
which have the uterus near the hypozoma,
as birds and viviparous fishes, it is impossible
that the semen should be so discharged as
to enter it; it must be drawn into it. This
region, on account of the heat which is in
it, attracts the semen. The discharge and
collection of the catamenia also excite heat
in this part. Hence it acts like cone-shaped
vessels which, when they have been washed
out with hot water, their mouth being turned
downwards, draw water into themselves. And
this is the way things are drawn up, but
some say that nothing of the kind happens
with the organic parts concerned in copulation.
Precisely the opposite is the case of those
who say the woman emits semen as well as
the man, for if she emits it outside the
uterus this must then draw it back again
into itself if it is to be mixed with the
semen of the male. But this is a superfluous
proceeding, and Nature does nothing superfluous.
When the material secreted by the female
in the uterus has been fixed by the semen
of the male (this acts in the same way as
rennet acts upon milk, for rennet is a kind
of milk containing vital heat, which brings
into one mass and fixes the similar material,
and the relation of the semen to the catamenia
is the same, milk and the catamenia being
of the same nature)—when, I say, the more
solid part comes together, the liquid is
separated off from it, and as the earthy
parts solidify membranes form all round it;
this is both a necessary result and for a
final cause, the former because the surface
of a mass must solidify on heating as well
as on cooling, the latter because the foetus
must not be in a liquid but be separated
from it. Some of these are called membranes
and others choria, the difference being one
of more or less, and they exist in ovipara
and vivipara alike.
When the embryo is once formed, it acts like
the seeds of plants. For seeds also contain
the first principle of growth in themselves,
and when this (which previously exists in
them only potentially) has been differentiated,
the shoot and the root are sent off from
it, and it is by the root that the plant
gets nourishment; for it needs growth. So
also in the embryo all the parts exist potentially
in a way at the same time, but the first
principle is furthest on the road to realization.
Therefore the heart is first differentiated
in actuality. This is clear not only to the
senses (for it is so) but also on theoretical
grounds. For whenever the young animal has
been separated from both parents it must
be able to manage itself, like a son who
has set up house away from his father. Hence
it must have a first principle from which
comes the ordering of the body at a later
stage also, for if it is to come in from
outside at later period to dwell in it, not
only may the question be asked at what time
it is to do so, but also we may object that,
when each of the parts is separating from
the rest, it is necessary that this principle
should exist first from which comes growth
and movement to the other parts. (Wherefore
all who say, as did Democritus, that the
external parts of animals are first differentiated
and the internal later, are much mistaken;
it is as if they were talking of animals
of stone or wood. For such as these have
no principle of growth at all, but all animals
have, and have it within themselves.) Therefore
it is that the heart appears first distinctly
marked off in all the sanguinea, for this
is the first principle or origin of both
homogeneous and heterogeneous parts, since
from the moment that the animal or organism
needs nourishment, from that moment does
this deserve to be called its principle or
origin. For the animal grows, and the nutriment,
in its final stage, of an animal is the blood
or its analogue, and of this the blood-vessels
are the receptacle, wherefore the heart is
the principle or origin of these also. (This
is clear from the Enquiries and the anatomical
drawings.)
Since the embryo is already potentially an
animal but an imperfect one, it must obtain
its nourishment from elsewhere; accordingly
it makes use of the uterus and the mother,
as a plant does of the earth, to get nourishment,
until it is perfected to the point of being
now an animal potentially locomotive. So
Nature has first designed the two blood-vessels
from the heart, and from these smaller vessels
branch off to the uterus. These are what
is called the umbilicus, for this is a blood-vessel,
consisting of one or more vessels in different
animals. Round these is a skin-like integument,
because the weakness of the vessels needs
protection and shelter. The vessels join
on to the uterus like the roots of plants,
and through them the embryo receives its
nourishment. This is why the animal remains
in the uterus, not, as Democritus says, that
the parts of the embryo may be moulded in
conformity with those of the mother. This
is plain in the ovipara, for they have their
parts differentiated in the egg after separation
from the matrix.
Here a difficulty may be raised. If the blood
is the nourishment, and if the heart, which
first comes into being, already contains
blood, and the nourishment comes from outside,
whence did the first nourishment enter? Perhaps
it is not true that all of it comes from
outside just as in the seeds of plants there
is something of this nature, the substance
which at first appears milky, so also in
the material of the animal embryo the superfluous
matter of which it is formed is its nourishment
from the first.
The embryo, then, grows by means of the umbilicus
in the same way as a plant by its roots,
or as animals themselves when separated from
the nutriment within the mother, of which
we must speak later at the time appropriate
for discussing them. But the parts are not
differentiated, as some suppose, because
like is naturally carried to like. Besides
many other difficulties involved in this
theory, it results from it that the homogeneous
parts ought to come into being each one separate
from the rest, as bones and sinews by themselves,
and flesh by itself, if one should accept
this cause. The real cause why each of them
comes into being is that the secretion of
the female is potentially such as the animal
is naturally, and all the parts are potentially
present in it, but none actually. It is also
because when the active and the passive come
in contact with each other in that way in
which the one is active and the other passive
(I mean in the right manner, in the right
place, and at the right time), straightway
the one acts and the other is acted upon.
The female, then, provides matter, the male
the principle of motion. And as the products
of art are made by means of the tools of
the artist, or to put it more truly by means
of their movement, and this is the activity
of the art, and the art is the form of what
is made in something else, so is it with
the power of the nutritive soul. As later
on in the case of mature animals and plants
this soul causes growth from the nutriment,
using heat and cold as its tools (for in
these is the movement of the soul), and each
thing comes into being in accordance with
a certain formula, so also from the beginning
does it form the product of nature. For the
material by which this latter grows is the
same as that from which it is constituted
at first; consequently also the power which
acts upon it is identical with that which
originally generated it; if then this acting
power is the nutritive soul, this is also
the generative soul, and this is the nature
of every organism, existing in all animals
and plants. [But the other parts of the soul
exist in some animals, not in others.] In
plants, then, the female is not separated
from the male, but in those animals in which
it is separated the male needs the female
besides.
5 And yet the question may be raised why
it is that, if indeed the female possesses
the same soul and if it is the secretion
of the female which is the material of the
embryo, she needs the male besides instead
of generating entirely from herself. The
reason is that the animal differs from the
plant by having sense-perception; if the
sensitive soul is not present, either actually
or potentially, and either with or without
qualification, it is impossible for face,
hand, flesh, or any other part to exist;
it will be no better than a corpse or part
of a corpse. If then, when the sexes are
separated, it is the male that has the power
of making the sensitive soul, it is impossible
for the female to generate an animal from
itself alone, for the process in question
was seen to involve the male quality. Certainly
that there is a good deal in the difficulty
stated is plain in the case of the birds
that lay wind-eggs, showing that the female
can generate up to a certain point unaided.
But this still involves a difficulty; in
what way are we to say that their eggs live?
It neither possible that they should live
in the same way as fertile eggs (for then
they would produce a chick actually alive),
nor yet can they be called eggs only in the
sense in which an egg of wood or stone is
so called, for the fact that these eggs go
bad shows that they previously participate
in some way in life. It is plain, then, that
they have some soul potentially. What sort
of soul will this be? It must be the lowest
surely, and this is the nutritive, for this
exists in all animals and plants alike. Why
then does it not perfect the parts and the
animal? Because they must have a sensitive
soul, for the parts of animals are not like
those of a plant. And so the female animal
needs the help of the male, for in these
animals we are speaking of the male is separate.
This is exactly what we find, for the wind-eggs
become fertile if the male tread the female
in a certain space of time. About the cause
of these things, however, we shall enter
into detail later.
If there is any kind of animal which is female
and has no male separate from it, it is possible
that this may generate a young one from itself
without copulation. No instance of this worthy
of credit has been observed up to the present
at any rate, but one case in the class of
fishes makes us hesitate. No male of the
so-called erythrinus has ever yet been seen,
but females, and specimens full of roe, have
been seen. Of this, however, we have as yet
no proof worthy of credit. Again, some members
of the class of fishes are neither male nor
female, as eels and a kind of mullets found
in stagnant waters. But whenever the sexes
are separate the female cannot generate perfectly
by herself alone, for then the male would
exist in vain, and Nature makes nothing in
vain. Hence in such animals the male always
perfects the work of generation, for he imparts
the sensitive soul, either by means of the
semen or without it. Now the parts of the
embryo already exist potentially in the material,
and so when once the principle of movement
has been imparted to them they develop in
a chain one after another, as the wheels
are moved one by another in the automatic
machines. When some of the natural philosophers
say that like is brought to like, this must
be understood, not in the sense that the
parts are moved as changing place, but that
they stay where they are and the movement
is a change of quality (such as softness,
hardness, colour, and the other differences
of the homogeneous parts); thus they become
in actuality what they previously were in
potentiality. And what comes into being first
is the first principle; this is the heart
in the sanguinea and its analogue in the
rest, as has been often said already. This
is plain not only to the senses (that it
is first to come into being), but also in
view of its end; for life fails in the heart
last of all, and it happens in all cases
that what comes into being last fails first,
and the first last, Nature running a double
course, so to say, and turning back to the
point from whence she started. For the process
of becoming is from the non-existent to the
existent, and that of perishing is back again
from the existent to the non-existent.
6 After this, as said already, the internal
parts come into being before the external.
The greater become visible before the less,
even if some of them do not come into being
before them. First the parts above the hypozoma
are differentiated and are superior in size;
the part below is both smaller and less differentiated.
This happens in all animals in which exists
the distinction of upper and lower, except
in the insects; the growth of those that
produce a scolex is towards the upper part,
for this is smaller in the beginning. The
cephalopoda are the only locomotive animals
in which the distinction of upper and lower
does not exist.
What has been said applies to plants also,
that the upper portion is earlier in development
than the lower, for the roots push out from
the seed before the shoots.
The agency by which the parts of animals
are differentiated is air, not however that
of the mother nor yet of the embryo itself,
as some of the physicists say. This is manifest
in birds, fishes, and insects. For some of
these are separated from the mother and produced
from an egg, within which the differentiation
takes place; other animals do not breathe
at all, but are produced as a scolex or an
egg; those which do breathe and whose parts
are differentiated within the mother’s uterus
yet do not breathe until the lung is perfected,
and the lung and the preceding parts are
differentiated before they breathe. Moreover,
all polydactylous quadrupeds, as dog, lion,
wolf, fox, jackal, produce their young blind,
and the eyelids do not separate till after
birth. Manifestly the same holds also in
all the other parts; as the qualitative,
so also the quantitative differentia comes
into being, pre-existing potentially but
being actualized later by the same causes
by which the qualitative distinction is produced,
and so the eyelids become two instead of
one. Of course air must be present, because
heat and moisture are present, the former
acting and the latter being acted upon.
Some of the ancient nature-philosolphers
made an attempt to state which part comes
into being after which, but were not sufficiently
acquainted with the facts. It is with the
parts as with other things; one naturally
exists prior to another. But the word ‘prior’
is used in more senses than one. For there
is a difference between the end or final
cause and that which exists for the sake
of it; the latter is prior in order of development,
the former is prior in reality. Again, that
which exists for the sake of the end admits
of division into two classes, (1) the origin
of the movement, (2) that which is used by
the end; I mean, for instance, (1) that which
can generate, (2) that which serves as an
instrument to what is generated, for the
one of these, that which makes, must exist
first, as the teacher before the learner,
and the other later, as the pipes are later
than he who learns to play upon them, for
it is superfluous that men who do not know
how to play should have pipes. Thus there
are three things: first, the end, by which
we mean that for the sake of which something
else exists; secondly, the principle of movement
and of generation, existing for the sake
of the end (for that which can make and generate,
considered simply as such, exists only in
relation to what is made and generated);
thirdly, the useful, that is to say what
the end uses. Accordingly, there must first
exist some part in which is the principle
of movement (I say a part because this is
from the first one part of the end and the
most important part too); next after this
the whole and the end; thirdly and lastly,
the organic parts serving these for certain
uses. Hence if there is anything of this
sort which must exist in animals, containing
the principle and end of all their nature,
this must be the first to come into being—first,
that is, considered as the moving power,
but simultaneous with the whole embryo if
considered as a part of the end. Therefore
all the organic parts whose nature is to
bring others into being must always themselves
exist before them, for they are for the sake
of something else, as the beginning for the
sake of the end; all those parts which are
for the sake of something else but are not
of the nature of beginnings must come into
being later. So it is not easy to distinguish
which of the parts are prior, those which
are for the sake of another or that for the
sake of which are the former. For the parts
which cause the movement, being prior to
the end in order of development, come in
to cause confusion, and it is not easy to
distinguish these as compared with the organic
parts. And yet it is in accordance with this
method that we must inquire what comes into
being after what; for the end is later than
some parts and earlier than others. And for
this reason that part which contains the
first principle comes into being first, next
to this the upper half of the body. This
is why the parts about the head, and particularly
the eyes, appear largest in the embryo at
an early stage, while the parts below the
umbilicus, as the legs, are small; for the
lower parts are for the sake of the upper,
and are neither parts of the end nor able
to form it.
But they do not say well nor do they assign
a necessary cause who say simply that ‘it
always happens so’, and imagine that this
is a first principle in these cases. Thus
Democritus of Abdera says that ‘there is
no beginning of the infinite; now the cause
is a beginning, and the eternal is infinite;
in consequence, to ask the cause of anything
of this kind is to seek for a beginning of
the infinite’. Yet according to this argument,
which forbids us to seek the cause, there
will be no proof of any eternal truth whatever;
but we see that there is a proof of many
such, whether by ‘eternal’ we mean what always
happens or what exists eternally; it is an
eternal truth that the angles of a triangle
are always equal to two right angles, or
that the diagonal of a square is incommensurable
with the side, and nevertheless a cause and
a proof can be given for these truths. While,
then, it is well said that we must not take
on us to seek a beginning (or first principle)
of all things, yet this is not well said
of all things whatever that always are or
always happen, but only of those which really
are first principles of the eternal things;
for it is by another method, not by proof,
that we acquire knowledge of the first principle.
Now in that which is immovable and unchanging
the first principle is simply the essence
of the thing, but when we come to those things
which come into being the principles are
more than one, varying in kind and not all
of the same kind; one of this number is the
principle of movement, and therefore in all
the sanguinea the heart is formed first,
as was said at the beginning, and in the
other animals that which is analogous to
the heart.
From the heart the blood-vessels extend throughout
the body as in the anatomical diagrams which
are represented on the wall, for the parts
lie round these because they are formed out
of them. The homogeneous parts are formed
by heat and cold, for some are put together
and solidified by the one and some by the
other. The difference between these has already
been discussed elsewhere, and it has been
stated what kinds of things are soluble by
liquid and fire, and what are not soluble
by liquid and cannot be melted by fire. The
nutriment then oozes through the blood-vessels
and the passages in each of the parts, like
water in unbaked pottery, and thus is formed
the flesh or its analogues, being solidified
by cold, which is why it is also dissolved
by fire. But all the particles given off
which are too earthy, having but little moisture
and heat, cool as the moisture evaporates
along with the heat; so they become hard
and earthy in character, as nails, horns,
hoofs, and beaks, and therefore they are
softened by fire but none of them is melted
by it, while some of them, as egg-shells,
are soluble in liquids. The sinews and bones
are formed by the internal heat as the moisture
dries, and hence the bones are insoluble
by fire like pottery, for like it they have
been as it were baked in an oven by the heat
in the process of development. But it is
not anything whatever that is made into flesh
or bone by the heat, but only something naturally
fitted for the purpose; nor is it made in
any place or time whatever, but only in a
place and time naturally so fitted. For neither
will that which exists potentially be made
except by that moving agent which possesses
the actuality, nor will that which possesses
the actuality make anything whatever; the
carpenter would not make a box except out
of wood, nor will a box be made out of the
wood without the carpenter. The heat exists
in the seminal secretion, and the movement
and activity in it is sufficient in kind
and in quantity to correspond to each of
the parts. In so far as there is any deficiency
or excess, the resulting product is in worse
condition or physically defective, in like
manner as in the case of external substances
which are thickened by boiling that they
may be more palatable or for any other purpose.
But in the latter case it is we who apply
the heat in due measure for the motion required;
in the former it is the nature of the male
parent that gives it, or with animals spontaneously
generated it is the movement and heat imparted
by the right season of the year that it is
the cause.
Cooling, again, is mere deprivation of heat.
Nature makes use of both; they have of necessity
the power of bringing about different results,
but in the development of the embryo we find
that the one cools and the other heats for
some definite purpose, and so each of the
parts is formed; thus it is in one sense
by necessity, in another for a final cause,
that they make the flesh soft, the sinews
solid and elastic, the bones solid and brittle.
The skin, again, is formed by the drying
of the flesh, like the scum upon boiled substances;
it is so formed not only because it is on
the outside, but also because what is glutinous,
being unable to evaporate, remains on the
surface. While in other animals the glutinous
is dry, for which reason the covering of
the invertebrates is testaceous or crustaceous,
in the vertebrates it is rather of the nature
of fat. In all of these which are not of
too earthy a nature the fat is collected
under the covering of the skin, a fact which
points to the skin being formed out of such
a glutinous substance, for fat is somewhat
glutinous. As we said, all these things must
be understood to be formed in one sense of
necessity, but in another sense not of necessity
but for a final cause.
The upper half of the body, then, is first
marked out in the order of development; as
time goes on the lower also reaches its full
size in the sanguinea. All the parts are
first marked out in their outlines and acquire
later on their colour and softness or hardness,
exactly as if Nature were a painter producing
a work of art, for painters, too, first sketch
in the animal with lines and only after that
put in the colours.
Because the source of the sensations is in
the heart, therefore this is the part first
formed in the whole animal, and because of
the heat of this organ the cold forms the
brain, where the blood-vessels terminate
above, corresponding to the heat of the heart.
Hence the parts about the head begin to form
next in order after the heart, and surpass
the other parts in size, for the brain is
from the first large and fluid.
There is a difficulty about what happens
with the eyes of animals. Though from the
beginning they appear very large in all creatures,
whether they walk or swim or fly, yet they
are the last of the parts to be formed completely,
for in the intervening time they collapse.
The reason is this. The sense-organ of the
eyes is set upon certain passages, as are
the other sense-organs. Whereas those of
touch and taste are simply the body itself
or some part of the body of animals, those
of smell and hearing are passages connecting
with the external air and full themselves
of innate spiritus; these passages end at
the small blood-vessels about the brain which
run thither from the heart. But the eye is
the only sense-organ that has a bodily constitution
peculiar to itself. It is fluid and cold,
and does not exist from the first in the
place which it occupies later in the same
way as the other parts do, for they exist
potentially to begin with and actually come
into being later, but the eye is the purest
part of the liquidity about the brain drained
off through the passages which are visible
running from them to the membrane round the
brain. A proof of this is that, apart from
the brain, there is no other part in the
head that is cold and fluid except the eye.
Of necessity therefore this region is large
at first but falls in later. For the same
thing happens with the brain; at first it
is liquid and large, but in course of evaporation
and concoction it becomes more solid and
falls in; this applies both to the brain
and the eyes. The head is very large at first,
on account of the brain, and the eyes appear
large because of the liquid in them. They
are the last organs to reach completion because
the brain is formed with difficulty; for
it is at a late period that it gets rid of
its coldness and fluidity; this applies to
all animals possessing a brain, but especially
to man. For this reason the ‘bregma’ is the
last of the bones to be formed; even after
birth this bone is still soft in children.
The cause of this being so with men more
than with other animals is the fact that
their brain is the most fluid and largest.
This again is because the heat in man’s heart
is purest. His intellect shows how well he
is tempered, for man is the wisest of animals.
And children for a long time have no control
over their heads on account of the heaviness
of the brain; and the same applies to the
parts which it is necessary to move, for
it is late that the principle of motion gets
control over the upper parts, and last of
all over those whose motion is not connected
directly with it, as that of the legs is
not. Now the eyelid is such a part. But since
Nature makes nothing superfluous nor in vain,
it is clear also that she makes nothing too
late or too soon, for if she did the result
would be either in vain or superfluous. Hence
it is necessary that the eyelids should be
separated at the same time as the heart is
able to move them. So then the eyes of animals
are perfected late because of the amount
of concoction required by the brain, and
last of all the parts because the motion
must be very strong before it can affect
parts so far from the first principle of
motion and so cold. And it is plain that
such is the nature of the eyelids, for if
the head is affected by never so little heaviness
through sleepiness or drunkenness or anything
else of the kind, we cannot raise the eyelids
though their own weight is so small. So much
for the question how the eyes come into being,
and why and for what cause they are the last
to be fully developed.
Each of the other parts is formed out of
the nutriment, those most honourable and
participating in the sovereign principle
from the nutriment which is first and purest
and fully concocted, those which are only
necessary for the sake of the former parts
from the inferior nutriment and the residues
left over from the other. For Nature, like
a good householder, is not in the habit of
throwing away anything from which it is possible
to make anything useful. Now in a household
the best part of the food that comes in is
set apart for the free men, the inferior
and the residue of the best for the slaves,
and the worst is given to the animals that
live with them. Just as the intellect acts
thus in the outside world with a view to
the growth of the persons concerned, so in
the case of the embryo itself does Nature
form from the purest material the flesh and
the body of the other sense-organs, and from
the residues thereof bones, sinews, hair,
and also nails and hoofs and the like; hence
these are last to assume their form, for
they have to wait till the time when Nature
has some residue to spare.
The bones, then, are made in the first conformation
of the parts from the seminal secretion or
residue. As the animal grows the bones grow
from the natural nourishment, being the same
as that of the sovereign parts, but of this
they only take up the superfluous residues.
For everywhere the nutriment may be divided
into two kinds, the first and the second;
the former is ‘nutritious’, being that which
gives its essence both to the whole and to
the parts; the latter is concerned with growth,
being that which causes quantitative increase.
But these must be distinguished more fully
later on. The sinews are formed in the same
way as the bones and out of the same materials,
the Seminal and nutritious residue. Nails,
hair, hoofs, horns, beaks, the spurs of cocks,
and any other similar parts, are on the contrary
formed from the nutriment which is taken
later and only concerned with growth, in
other words that which is derived from the
mother, or from the outer world after birth.
For this reason the bones on the one hand
only grow up to a certain point (for there
is a limit of size in all animals, and therefore
also of the growth of the bones; if these
had been always able to grow, all animals
that have bone or its analogue would grow
as long as they lived, for these set the
limit of size to animals. What is the reason
of their not always increasing in size must
be stated later.)
Hair, on the contrary, and growths akin to
hair go on growing as long as they exist
at all, and increase yet more in diseases
and when the body is getting old and wasting,
because more residual matter is left over,
as owing to old age and disease less is expended
on the important parts, though when the residual
matter also fails through age the hair fails
with it. But the contrary is the case with
the bones, for they waste away along with
the body and the other parts. Hair actually
goes on growing after death; it does not,
however, begin growing then.
About the teeth a difficulty may be raised.
They have actually the same nature as the
bones, and are formed out of the bones, but
nails, hair, horns, and the like are formed
out of the skin, and that is why they change
in colour along with it, for they become
white, black, and all sorts of colours according
to that of the skin. But the teeth do nothing
of the sort, for they are made out of the
bones in all animals that have both bones
and teeth. Of all the bones they alone go
on growing through life, as is plain with
the teeth which grow out of the straight
line so as no longer to touch each other.
The reason for their growth, as a final cause,
is their function, for they would soon be
worn down if there were not some means of
saving them; even as it is they are altogether
worn down in old age in some animals which
eat much and have not large teeth, their
growth not being in proportion to their detrition.
And so Nature has contrived well to meet
the case in this also, for she causes the
failure of the teeth to synchronize with
old age and death. If life lasted for a thousand
or ten thousand years the original teeth
must have been very large indeed, and many
sets of them must have been produced, for
even if they had grown continuously they
would still have been worn smooth and become
useless for their work. The final cause of
their growth has been now stated, but besides
this as a matter of fact the growth of the
teeth is not the same as that of the other
bones. The latter all come into being in
the first formation of the embryo and none
of them later, but the teeth do so later.
Therefore it is possible for them to grow
again after the first set falls out, for
though they touch the bones they are not
connate with them. They are formed, however,
out of the nutriment distributed to the bones,
and so have the same nature, even when the
bones have their own number complete.
Other animals are born in possession of teeth
or their analogue (unless in cases contrary
to Nature), because when they are set free
from the parent they are more perfect than
man; but man (also unless in cases contrary
to Nature) is born without them.
The reason will be stated later why some
teeth are formed and fall out but others
do not fall out.
It is because such parts are formed from
a residue that man is the most naked in body
of all animals and has the smallest nails
in proportion to his size; he has the least
amount of earthy residue, but that part of
the blood which is not concocted is the residue,
and the earthy part in the bodies of all
animals is the least concocted. We have now
stated how each of the parts is formed and
what is the cause of their generation.
7 In viviparous animals, as said before,
the embryo gets its growth through the umbilical
cord. For since the nutritive power of the
soul, as well as the others, is present in
animals, it straightway sends off this cord
like a root to the uterus. The cord consists
of blood-vessels in a sheath, more numerous
in the larger animals as cattle and the like,
one in the smallest, two in those of intermediate
size. Through this cord the embryo receives
its nourishment in the form of blood, for
the uterus is the termination of many blood-vessels.
All animals with no front teeth in the upper
jaw, and all those which have them in both
jaws and whose uterus has not one great blood-vessel
running through it but many close together
insteadall these have in the uterus the so-called
cotyledons (with which the umbilical cord
connects and is closely united; for the vessels
which pass through the cord run backwards
and forwards between embryo and uterus and
split up into smaller vessels all over the
uterus; where they terminate, there are found
the cotyledons). Their convexity is turned
towards the uterus, the concavity towards
the embryo. Between uterus and embryo are
the chorion and the membranes. As the embryo
grows and approaches perfection the cotyledons
become smaller and finally disappear when
it is perfected. For Nature sends the sanguineous
nutriment for the embryo into this part of
the uterus as she sends milk into the breasts,
and because the cotyledons are gradually
aggregated from many into a few the body
of the cotyledon becomes like an eruption
or inflammation. So long as the embryo is
comparatively small, being unable to receive
much nutriment, they are plain and large,
but when it has increased in size they fall
in together.
But most of the animals which have front
teeth in both jaws and no horns have no cotyledons
in the uterus, but the umbilical cord runs
to meet one blood-vessel, which is large
and extends throughout the uterus. Of such
animals some produce one young at a time,
some more than one, but the same description
applies to both these classes.
(This should be studied with the aid of the
examples drawn in the Anatomy and the Enquiries.)
For the young, if numerous, are attached
each to its umbilical cord, and this to the
blood-vessel of the mother; they are arranged
next to one another along the stream of the
blood-vessel as along a canal; and each embryo
is enclosed in its membranes and chorion.
Those who say that children are nourished
in the uterus by sucking some lump of flesh
or other are mistaken. If so, the same would
have been the case with other animals, but
as it is we do not find this (and this can
easily be observed by dissection). Secondly,
all embryos alike, whether of creatures that
fly or swim or walk, are surrounded by fine
membranes separating them from the uterus
and from the fluids which are formed in it;
but neither in these themselves is there
anything of the kind, nor is it possible
for the embryo to take nourishment by means
of any of them. Thirdly, it is plain that
all creatures developed in eggs grow when
separated from the uterus.
Natural intercourse takes place between animals
of the same kind. However, those also unite
whose nature is near akin and whose form
is not very different, if their size is much
the same and if the periods of gestation
are equal. In other animals such cases are
rare, but they occur with dogs and foxes
and wolves; the Indian dogs also spring from
the union of a dog with some wild dog-like
animal. A similar thing has been seen to
take place in those birds that are amative,
as partridges and hens. Among birds of prey
hawks of different form are thought to unite,
and the same applies to some other birds.
Nothing worth mentioning has been observed
in the inhabitants of the sea, but the so-called
‘rhinobates’ especially is thought to spring
from the union of the ‘rhini’ and ‘batus’.
And the proverb about Libya, that ‘Libya
is always producing something new’, is said
to have originated from animals of different
species uniting with one another in that
country, for it is said that because of the
want of water all meet at the few places
where springs are to be found, and that even
different kinds unite in consequence.
Of the animals that arise from such union
all except mules are found to copulate again
with each other and to be able to produce
young of both sexes, but mules alone are
sterile, for they do not generate by union
with one another or with other animals. The
problem why any individual, whether male
or female, is sterile is a general one, for
some men and women are sterile, and so are
other animals in their several kinds, as
horses and sheep. But this kind, of mules,
is universally so. The causes of sterility
in other animals are several. Both men and
women are sterile from birth when the parts
useful for union are imperfect, so that men
never grow a beard but remain like eunuchs,
and women do not attain puberty; the same
thing may befall others as their years advance,
sometimes on account of the body being too
well nourished (for men who are in too good
condition and women who are too fat the seminal
secretion is taken up into the body, and
the former have no semen, the latter no catamenia);
at other times by reason of sickness men
emit the semen in a cold and liquid state,
and the discharges of women are bad and full
of morbid secretions. Often, too, in both
sexes this state is caused by injuries in
the parts and regions contributory to copulation.
Some such cases are curable, others incurable,
but the subjects especially remain sterile
if anything of the sort has happened in the
first formation of the parts in the embryo,
for then are produced women of a masculine
and men of a feminine appearance, and in
the former the catamenia do not occur, in
the latter the semen is thin and cold. Hence
it is with good reason that the semen of
men is tested in water to find out if it
is infertile, for that which is thin and
cold is quickly spread out on the surface,
but the fertile sinks to the bottom, for
that which is well concocted is hot indeed,
but that which is firm and thick is well
concocted. They test women by pessaries to
see if the smells thereof permeate from below
upwards to the breath from the mouth and
by colours smeared upon the eyes to see if
they colour the saliva. If these results
do not follow it is a sign that the passages
of the body, through which the catamenia
are secreted, are clogged and closed. For
the region about the eyes is, of all the
head, that most nearly connected with the
generative secretions; a proof of this is
that it alone is visibly changed in sexual
intercourse, and those who indulge too much
in this are seen to have their eyes sunken
in. The reason is that the nature of the
semen is similar to that of the brain, for
the material of it is watery (the heat being
acquired later). And the seminal purgations
are from the region of the diaphragm, for
the first principle of nature is there, so
that the movements from the pudenda are communicated
to the chest, and the smells from the chest
are perceived through the respiration.
8 In men, then, and in other kinds, as said
before, such deficiency occurs sporadically,
but the whole of the mule kind is sterile.
The reason has not been rightly given by
Empedocles and Democritus, of whom the former
expresses himself obscurely, the latter more
intelligibly. For they offer their demonstration
in the case of all these animals alike which
unite against their affinities. Democritus
says that the genital passages of mules are
spoilt in the mother’s uterus because the
animals from the first are not produced from
parents of the same kind. But we find that
though this is so with other animals they
are none the less able to generate; yet,
if this were the reason, all others that
unite in this manner ought to be barren.
Empedocles assigns as his reason that the
mixture of the ‘seeds’ becomes dense, each
of the two seminal fluids out of which it
is made being soft, for the hollows in each
fit into the densities of the other, and
in such cases a hard substance is formed
out of soft ones, like bronze mingled with
tin. Now he does not give the correct reason
in the case of bronze and tin—(we have spoken
of them in the Problems)—nor, to take general
ground, does he take his principles from
the intelligible. How do the ‘hollows’ and
‘solids’ fit into one another to make the
mixing, e. g. in the case of wine and water?
This saying is quite beyond us; for how we
are to understand the ‘hollows’ of the wine
and water is too far beyond our perception.
Again, when, as a matter of fact, horse is
born of horse, ass of ass, and mule of horse
and ass in two ways according as the parents
are stallion and she-ass or jackass and mare,
why in the last case does there result something
so ‘dense’ that the offspring is sterile,
whereas the offspring of male and female
horse, male and female ass, is not sterile?
And yet the generative fluid of the male
and female horse is soft. But both sexes
of the horse cross with both sexes of the
ass, and the offspring of both crosses are
barren, according to Empedocles, because
from both is produced something ‘dense’,
the ‘seeds’ being ‘soft’. If so, the offspring
of stallion and mare ought also to be sterile.
If one of them alone united with the ass,
it might be said that the cause of the mule’s
being unable to generate was the unlikeness
of that one to the generative fluid of the
ass; but, as it is, whatever be the character
of that generative fluid with which it unites
in the ass, such it is also in the animal
of its own kind. Then, again, the argument
is intended to apply to both male and female
mules alike, but the male does generate at
seven years of age, it is said; it is the
female alone that is entirely sterile, and
even she is so only because she does not
complete the development of the embryo, for
a female mule has been known to conceive.
Perhaps an abstract proof might appear to
be more plausible than those already given;
I call it abstract because the more general
it is the further is it removed from the
special principles involved. It runs somewhat
as follows. From male and female of the same
species there are born in course of nature
male and female of the same species as the
parents, e. g. male and female puppies from
male and female dog. From parents of different
species is born a young one different in
species; thus if a dog is different from
a lion, the offspring of male dog and lioness
or of lion and bitch will be different from
both parents. If this is so, then since (1)
mules are produced of both sexes and are
not different in species from one another,
and (2) a mule is born of horse and ass and
these are different in species from mules,
it is impossible that anything should be
produced from mules. For (1) another kind
cannot be, because the product of male and
female of the same species is also of the
same species, and (2) a mule cannot be, because
that is the product of horse and ass which
are different in form, [and it was laid down
that from parents different in form is born
a different animal]. Now this theory is too
general and empty. For all theories not based
on the special principles involved are empty;
they only appear to be connected with the
facts without being so really. As geometrical
arguments must start from geometrical principles,
so it is with the others; that which is empty
may seem to be something, but is really nothing.
Now the basis of this particular theory is
not true, for many animals of different species
are fertile with one another, as was said
before. So we must not inquire into questions
of natural science in this fashion any more
than any other questions; we shall be more
likely to find the reason by considering
the facts peculiar to the two kinds concerned,
horse and ass. In the first place, each of
them, if mated with its own kind, bears only
one young one; secondly, the females are
not always able to conceive from the male
(wherefore breeders put the horse to the
mare again at intervals). Indeed, both the
mare is deficient in catamenia, discharging
less than any other quadruped, and the she-ass
does not admit the impregnation, but ejects
the semen with her urine, wherefore men follow
flogging her after intercourse. Again the
ass is an animal of cold nature, and so is
not wont to be produced in wintry regions
because it cannot bear cold, as in Scythia
and the neighbouring country and among the
Celts beyond Iberia, for this country also
is cold. For this cause they do not put the
jackasses to the females at the equinox,
as they do with horses, but about the summer
solstice, in order that the ass-foals may
be born in a warm season, for the mothers
bear at the same season as that in which
they are impregnated, the period of gestation
in both horse and ass being one year. The
animal, then, being, as has been said of
such a cold nature, its semen also must be
cold. A proof of this is that if a horse
mount a female already impregnated by an
ass he does not destroy the impregnation
of the ass, but if the ass be the second
to mount her he does destroy that of the
horse because of the coldness of his own
semen. When, therefore, they unite with each
other, the generative elements are preserved
by the heat of the one of them, that contributed
by the horse being the hotter; for in the
ass both the semen of the male and the material
contributed by the female are cold, and those
of the horse, in both sexes, are hotter.
Now when either hot is added to cold or cold
to hot so as to mix, the result is that the
embryo itself arising from these is preserved
and thus these animals are fertile when crossed
with one another, but the animal produced
by them is no longer fertile but unable to
produce perfect offspring.
And in general each of these animals naturally
tends towards sterility. The ass has all
the disadvantages already mentioned, and
if it should not begin to generate after
the first shedding of teeth, it no longer
generates at all; so near is the constitution
of the ass to being sterile. The horse is
much the same; it tends naturally towards
sterility, and to make it entirely so it
is only necessary that its generative secretion
should become colder; now this is what happens
to it when mixed with the corresponding secretion
of the ass. The ass in like manner comes
very near generating a sterile animal when
mated with its own species. Thus when the
difficulty of a cross contrary to nature
is added, (when too even in the other case
when united with their own species they with
difficulty produce a single young one), the
result of the cross, being still more sterile
and contrary to nature, will need nothing
further to make it sterile, but will be so
of necessity.
We find also that the bodies of female mules
grow large because the matter which is secreted
in other animals to form the catamenia is
diverted to growth. But since the period
of gestation in such animals is a year, the
mule must not only conceive, if she is to
be fertile, but must also nourish the embryo
till birth, and this is impossible if there
are no catamenia. But there are none in the
mule; the useless part of the nutriment is
discharged with the excretion from the bladder—this
is why male mules do not smell to the pudenda
of the females, as do the other solid-hoofed
ungulates, but only to the evacuation itself—and
the rest of the nutriment is used up to increase
the size of the body. Hence it is sometimes
possible for the female to conceive, as has
been known to happen before now, but it is
impossible for her to complete the process
of nourishing the embryo and bringing it
to birth.
The male, again, may sometimes generate,
both because the male sex is naturally hotter
than the female and because it does not contribute
any material substance to the mixture. The
result in such cases is a ‘ginnus’, that
is to say, a dwarf mule; for ‘ginni’ are
produced also from the crossing of horse
and ass when the embryo is diseased in the
uterus. The ginnus is in fact like the so-called
‘metachoera’ in swine, for a ‘metachoerum’
also is a pig injured in the uterus; this
may happen to any pig. The origin of human
dwarfs is similar, for these also have their
parts and their whole development injured
during gestation, and resemble ginni and
metachoera.
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